Paul Coates — Confidential File, February 7, 1959




CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Mash Notes and Comments

Paul_coates
(Press Release) "In MGM’s ‘Some Came Running,’ Shirley MacLaine scores a triumph in the role of Ginny, one of the ‘un-respectable’ characters in the James Jones novel.

"To Shirley, however, Ginny was not ‘the real slob’ pictured in the book.

"She’s supposed to be a tramp, but she isn’t really,’ says Shirley in this week’s Look magazine.

"’She wants to love one man and stick with him.

"’She has a great capacity for giving love and is more of a woman than most women.

"’I loved this girl so much . . . All of us making the picture were in love with Ginny.

1959_0207_cover
"’Dean Martin actually cringed when he had to refer to her as a pig in
one scene.’" (signed) Publicity Department, Look Magazine, New York
City.

-He should hear what she called him.

* *

"Dear Mr. Coates:

"I have always admired you and your column, that is until Monday when you wrote your views about Fidel Castro and beards.

"Fidel Castro must find peace and comfort living as he does and he is
so beloved by his people for what he is and does, not how he looks.

"Frankly, to me, a man looks very strange with his face smooth-shaven. A man looks beautiful with a beard.

"Life intended man to have a beard to protect his face, just as we have
hair on our scalps to protect our heads." (signed) Catherine August,
Glendale

-Maybe you have, lady. But not me.

* *

1959_0207_christopher

Richard Bergholz interviews
Warren Christopher.


"Fidel Castro’s beard is a symbol.

"At present, the man is not concerned with personal hygiene. His only concern is Cuba’s future.

"A beatnik may also wear a beard, with no place to go and hardly without a future in a coffee shop.

"Castro is a man of the future, going places with a beard, no razor
blades, no deodorants. Many of the rest of us are all hygiene, not
going any place and with very little future.

"P.S.: Castro’s beard is worth $25,000. Yours is worth nothing." (signed) Herman Hermosillo, 3651 1/2 Armour Ave., L.A.

-$25,000! I’d sell my whole head for that.

* *

(Press Release) "Because he had nerve enough to talk back to a ‘wise guy’ stranger, Sal Mineo was launched on a career that has culminated with his starring role in Walt Disney’s ‘Tonka.’

"It all began when a talent scout stopped Sal on a Bronx street and asked him if he’d like to become an actor.

"’I
thought he was a wise guy,’ says Sal, with a grin. ‘I gave him a lot of
smart back talk. He thought I was kind of different from the other kids
in the Bronx because I would stand up and speak for myself.

"’My
advice to any kids who figure on a show-business career is to talk up a
storm!’ says Sal. ‘Believe me, nobody gets anywhere by staying
silent.’" (signed) Walt Disney Productions Burbank.

-Kid, you never heard of Gary Cooper?
 

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Trial of Former Mayor’s Aide to Begin, Feburary 7, 1939

1939_0207_lockheed

It’s a bit hard to tell from reference photographs, but I believe this is a
Lockheed Hudson being assembled in Burbank.

1939_0207_cover
Trial of Joe Shaw, brother of recalled Mayor Frank Shaw, on 66 counts of altering public records.

1939_0207_shaw
Fire Department official says he collected $10,000 from men seeking jobs and promotions.

1939_0207_gold_brick

Retired dentist A.G. Tibbetts is the victim of the old "gold brick" fraud. Helen Ardelle and Percy Flumerfelt were charged with defrauding Tibbetts out of $2,000 to dig up a cache of gold in Mexico.

The brick, allegedly part of the Mexican gold and worth $7,000, was mostly copper and lead, with a value of 70 cents.   

1939_0207_union_station
Illinois Society plans Lincoln Day picnic.
1939_0207_trainIsn’t this a great picture? This is the christening of the Seaboard Airline Railway’s Silver Meteor for the New York World’s Fair.
1939_0207_theater
Chaplin finishes story for "The Dictators." Filming to begin in March.
1939_0207_sports
Women’s golf tournament at
Los Angeles Country Club.
Posted in #courts, broadcasting, City Hall, Downtown, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, LAPD, Music, Sports, Stage | Comments Off on Trial of Former Mayor’s Aide to Begin, Feburary 7, 1939

Sholem Aleichem Turns 150

1929_0707_yiddish_theater

By Jonathan Kirsch

1940_0305_tevya The writer known as Sholem Aleichem (Sholem Rabinovich, 1859-1916) was a towering figure in the Yiddish-speaking world, praised in his own lifetime as "the Jewish Mark Twain." The critic Irving Howe later singled him out as "the one absolute Yiddish genius." When Aleichem died, some 100,000 mourners crowded the New York neighborhood in which he spent the last years of his life.

Today, however, he has been almost totally eclipsed by Isaac Bashevis Singer, the Nobelist whose work appeared first in Yiddish in the Jewish Daily Forward and then in the New Yorker. Compared with Singer, the comic tales of Aleichem strike critics as old-fashioned and sentimental. Indeed, if Aleichem is remembered at all nowadays, it is because his stories of Tevye and his daughters were the basis for "Fiddler on the Roof."

To introduce Aleichem to a new readership — and to commemorate the 150th anniversary of his birth — Viking is publishing a new edition of "Tevye the Dairyman" and "Motl the Cantor’s Son," the books that made him famous, and a long out-of-print novel, "Wandering Stars," all freshly and lucidly translated by Aliza Shevrin.

Read more >>>

Posted in books, Downtown, Film, Hollywood, Music, Stage | Comments Off on Sholem Aleichem Turns 150

Found on EBay — L.A. Streetcar

Streetcar_ebay
A 1958 slide of a streetcar has been listed on EBay. According to the vendor, the car is on the V Line. Note the ad for the Mirror-News! Bidding starts at $3.89.
Posted in Freeways, Transportation | 1 Comment

Matt Weinstock — February 6, 1959




Wrong Number

Matt_weinstockd
Tonight as usual TV addicts will turn on a program titled "77 Sunset Strip," a private eye action thriller featuring Efrem Zimbalist Jr., Roger Smith, Edward Byrnes, beautiful girls in deep trouble and a reverberating and contagious theme song.

The
address 77 Sunset Strip is a phony. There’s no such number. It has no
significance except it sounded good when the program was put together.

However,
the office front used in the drama is authentic. It is the office of
the Mary Webb Davis modeling agency, 8532 Sunset Blvd., next to Dino’s
Lodge, also featured in the series. Of course, facsimiles of the office
front, the parking lot and Dino’s have been built on a Warner Bros.
sound stage. This is what people see on TV.

BUT THIS TOUCH of
realism has had a strange effect. Life is not the same around the
agency — which furnishes models for film commercials, fashion shows
and photographic ads — since the program became popular. Incidentally,
it has been there for 12 years.

Mail keeps coming there for Zimbalist,
and tourists tie up traffic stopping for a look and to snap pictures of
the office front. As a result, Otis Jenkins, the cleanup man, works
twice as hard polishing the brass on the door.

One other
thing, Mary Webb Davis hasn’t mentioned it to the gang at Warner Bros.,
but the handle of the door in the studio replica is on the wrong side.

* *

Lincoln_cent
A NEW LINCOLN
cent
will be put in circulation on Abe’s birthday, next Thursday. A few are
out already. Lincoln’s head is the same as on the others, but the
reverse or "tails" side will have a design of the Lincoln Memorial.

And
before people become befuddled as they usually are by new coins or any
rumors about them, Genghis Cohen, Hollywood numismatist, passes along
the information that they aren’t fakes, they aren’t rare, they aren’t
going to be recalled, and coin dealers are not about to pay premium
prices for them.

By the way, the proper word is cent, not penny, a colloquialism, but people have never bought it.
Lincoln_wheat

* *

STOP THE presses! A National Geographic news bulletin, which came in the mail, sates, "The male pipefish,
like its relative the seahorse, incubates its young in a blood pouch
into which the female has deposited the eggs. Understandably, for many
years, the males were thought to be females. Even after the sexes were
distinguished in 1831, a controversy over the matter raged for
decades."

A moment of silence, everyone, to pity the poor pipefish.

* *
1959_0207_malibu

THE PUBLIC PRINTS — Tom and Helen Ferril’s
weekly Rocky Mountain Herald of Denver has a town-naming game going.
Recent creations: Dirty, Wash.; Tomato, Kan.; Five, Minn.; Kiss, Me.;Yernamis, Md.; Hittor, Miss.; and Feeling, Ill. . . . As you may have read, Hedy Lamarr
and her estranged husband, Howard Lee, are exchanging legal insults.
Meanwhile, back at Aspen, Colo., where ski lodges are springing up like
jacks-in-the-box (it isn’t mushroom country), Lee’s luxurious new Villa
Lamarr, Time magazine reports, is being called Hedy’s Beddies.

* *

1959_0206_7th_sealLAST ROUNDUP
When a horse to heaven is consigned
It is bound to leave its whoas behind.
— JOSEPH P. KRENGEL

* *

WHILE WE’RE on this animal kick, Gene Coughlin, an incorrigible pixie, wishes to unleash the following on the world:

The only one who knows if a giraffe has halitosis
Is another giraffe who wants to rub noses.

* *

AT RANDOM — FM
station KNOB refers to programs featuring vocalists as Tonsil Time . .
. To Judge David W. Williams’ charge that gambling laws were being
enforced mostly against Negroes, Chief Parker expressed surprise that
"one possessed of judicial temperament" would say such a thing. My, my,
look who’s talking about judicial temperament.


Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock — February 6, 1959

Paul Coates — Confidential File, February 6, 1959




CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Good Scout’s Bid Makes Cub Happy

Paul_coates_3
I promised you this report.

It’s my final one, I hope, on a kid named Butch Harris, who a few
months ago got his first lesson in how little some big people act.

Nine-year-old Butch was refused membership in Cub Pack 298, here in L.A., because he is a Negro.

The decision was made by several parents of pack members that their children "weren’t ready to integrate."

For the past weeks, certain adult leaders of the pack refused to
compromise their stand, in spite of efforts by both the Boy Scouts and
the sponsoring Kiwanis Club to settle the matter quietly and peacefully.

But it seemed that the harder the Boy Scout organization worked to
bring about understanding, the more determined the opposition became.

One parent who said he saw no reason why Butch shouldn’t be allowed in
the pack suddenly found himself minus any number of "friends" he’d
known for years.

The man’s wife began getting the "cold" treatment from neighbors.

1959_feb_6_cover_3
The situation got loud and messy. Unbelievably messy. After listening
to all they could stand, a few parents gave up, pulling their sons out
of the pack.

The "segregation" element became louder, more adamant.

Then, a couple weeks ago, local Scout authorities realized that the
situation was hopeless. They issued their ultimatum: Make 298 an open
pack or lose your charter.

Mass resignations followed.

Today, Pack 298 has three members. Butch is one of them. The other two are also Negro boys.

But it’s an open pack. A few parents of former members have already
indicated that they’re ready to put their boys back into uniform. The
sponsoring Kiwanis group is confident that 298 will build up again into
a fine organization.

I hope so, and I’m not the only one.

Personal Letter to Butch

1959_0206_runover
A letter arrived at Butch Harris’ house this week from another of
his many friends. It was written on state of California stationery. It
read:

"Dear Butch:

"By the time you receive this letter I trust you will be a fine Cub Scout.

"You know, Butch, my wife and I have mentioned several times how very
much we would like to have you see the Capitol of our wonderful state
of California.

"This is a little invitation to you to visit us for a day during your
spring vacation. You talk this over with your mother and father and if
they agree to let you come all the way to Sacramento, we will take care
of your transportation.

"Both
my wife and I think that it would be nice for a young man who will no
doubt become an outstanding Boy Scout some day to see your state
officeholders — the men who are elected to office — work.

"Please let me know if you would like to come visit us."

The letter was signed: Glen M. Anderson, lieutenant governor.

 

Posted in Columnists, Countdown to Watts, Homicide, Paul Coates | 2 Comments

Voices — Christine Collins, August 28, 1932


Walter_collins_mugshot_nd_01
Walter Collins in an undated prison photo.
1932_0828_christine_collins_01_01

1932_0828_christine_collins_02_01

Posted in #courts, Changeling, Film, Hollywood | 1 Comment

February 5, 1959: Burbank Finds 1959 Time Capsule

February 5, 2009: The time capsule placed in the Magnolia Boulevard bridge in 1959.Photograph by Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times
The 50-year-old time capsule about to be freed from the Magnolia Boulevard Bridge.

Jia-Rui Chong
Times Staff Writer
With a hammer and a chisel, a Burbank city worker this morning carved out a tiny silver time capsule 50 years after it was first tucked into the base of the Magnolia Bridge.

“It was there — we found it,” said deputy city manager Joy Forbes, excitement and relief bubbling through her voice. Continue reading

Posted in @news, Film, San Fernando Valley | 2 Comments

February 3, 1939: Nuestro Pueblo

February 3, 1939: Nuestro PuebloNotice the item about the police psychiatrist. This post will eventually be filled by Dr. Joseph Paul De River.

Posted in Homicide, LAPD, Nuestro Pueblo | Comments Off on February 3, 1939: Nuestro Pueblo

Vin Scully Hosts Game Show, February 6, 1969

1969_0206_cover


1969_0206_scully
In a skit, Tim Conway portrays San Francisco State President S.I. Hayakawa as a samurai warrior preparing to battle student radicals.


Vin Scully was hitting the game-show circuit.

The legendary Dodgers broadcaster had signed on to host "It Takes Two" on NBC. In an interview Feb. 11 with Times columnist Charles Maher, Scully sounded very much like a man thinking about life after baseball.

"I might be the poor man’s Art Linkletter," he said. "Maybe that’s what I hope to do — some day."

Maher added: "Some day may be very close at hand."

Thankfully, it wasn’t. Scully is still very much with the Dodgers.

"I’d like to try it just to see if I can do it. So if the time comes when I want to call it a career with the Dodgers, I’d have something else to do," Scully said. Seems impossible that he thought a Plan B was necessary.

"I really love baseball. … The only thing I hate — and I know you have to be realistic and pay the bills in this life — is the loneliness on the road," Scully said. "I know there are a lot worse jobs. I used to wash dishes in a hotel. And I used to be a mailman. And once I was a milkman. I had to get up at 2:30 in the morning to load the truck. That was beautiful. Doubleheaders and traveling are sensational next to that.

"I’ve got a racket. But I hate to see nights and days go by without seeing the family. Time is the most precious thing of all, and I hate to squander it."

— Keith Thursby

Posted in broadcasting, Dodgers, Television | 5 Comments

Movie Star Mystery Photo

2009_0204_mystery_photo
People didn’t care much for the last mystery photo. Here’s one you may like better.

Update: Herb Nichols and Pete Nowell guessed that our mystery fellow is Chargers football coach Sid Gillman making a guest appearance on "The Rifleman." Notice he’s even wearing his little bow tie. According to The Times, the episode aired Feb. 16, 1960, although imdb doesn’t list Gillman in the cast.

Posted in broadcasting, Mystery Photo, Television | 24 Comments

House on Haunted Hill, February 9, 1959

1959_0209_boxoffice_cover_crop I’ve been exploring 1959 copies of Boxoffice that have been uploaded to issuu.com. The website is extremely hard to navigate and its search engine is useless. However, Google does a good job of ferreting out articles.

One particularly interesting article notes that 554 theaters across the country reopened in 1958, many of them in smaller communities. Theaters were being renovated or upgraded to show films in Todd-AO or Cinemiracle (like Grauman’s Chinese in Hollywood).

Top hit of the week? "House on Haunted Hill."

Here’s a link to the Feb. 9, 1959, edition.

Posted in Film, Hollywood | Comments Off on House on Haunted Hill, February 9, 1959

Anorexia, 1902 Style

1902_0305_lie_down

Evidently lying down with a cinder block on your stomach
is tonic for the "emaciated woman," shown above.

1902_0305_exercise
Posted in anorexia, Fashion | Comments Off on Anorexia, 1902 Style

Found on EBay — 1908 Rainier

Rainier_model_d_ebay
The 1908 Rainier in all its aged glory.
A 101-year-old touring car on its third owner has been listed on EBay. According to the vendor’s information, the car was purchased in Los Angeles and driven by the Asbury family, which gave the car to the family chauffeur when the rear axle housing broke. The chauffeur replaced the piece with a Pierce-Arrow rear end, but wisely threw all the original Rainier pieces in the back seat. When the chauffeur died, the car was sold at auction to the vendor’s grandfather, a car enthusiast. Bidding starts at $185,000.  The vendor says that on the way home from a 1938 horseless carriage gathering, this car was clocked at 70 mph.
Posted in Freeways, Transportation | 4 Comments

Matt Weinstock — February 5, 1959




Sleeping Dogs Roused

Matt_weinstockd
A man came into the Earl V. Lewis camera shop several weeks ago and
asked if a batch of old, unedited home movies could be spliced. He’d
inherited them, he explained, from the estate of a relative who one had
lived in the old country.

The job was done and the other day, when he came into the store again, he was asked if it had been satisfactory.

The customer shook his head sadly and told what had happened.

"He’d invited some friends to view the historic shots and as one
sequence followed another he did a running commentary, pointing out
relatives. At one point he thought he recognized some footage of
himself as a small boy taken in the early 1930s.

Suddenly, to his horror, shots of the same people came into view-
entertaining German storm troopers in their home and giving theHeil Hitler salute.

* *

1959_0205_valens01
ONLY IN L.A. —
Driving in the curb lane on W 1st Street to make
a right turn at a corner, Atty. Al Matthews found his path blocked by a
city truck. A man on a raised platform was changing the bulb in a
street light. As the signal changed to green Al shouted, "Are you
leaving?" The driver cupped his car and Al shouted again. "Are you
leaving?" The driver shrugged and yelled back, "Leaving? No, I am
existing."

* *

KITCHY-KITCHY-COO
Ever so much more infantile
Than the tiny baby’s smile
Is the gibberish employed by man
To entice the baby to smile again.
— GUY MULLEN

* *

THE RECENT CBS documentary "The Changing Face of Hollywood" had, among others, the voice of Sam Arkoff, producer of "I was a Teen-Age Werewolf."

1959_0209_boxoffice_cropAsked by Joe Laitin in a recorded interview if there are any taboos in the making of horror movies. Arkoff
replied jocularly that his monsters didn’t drink or smoke, and even if
they occasionally carried off a screaming blond their intentions were
honorable.

On hearing the complete broadcast Arkoff said he didn’t realize it was going to be such a serious discussion. He told Laitin, "I think I’ll demand equal time to reply to myself."

* *

IN OBSERVANCE of his 12th
year in public relations and advertising, Jim Bishop got out a press
release acknowledging his debt to the night janitor and the switchboard
operator.

The janitor’s initiative in cleaning not only the
wastebaskets but the desks of correspondence, files and unanswered
phone messages, he stated, enabled the staff to begin each day with a
fresh, uncluttered approach.

1959_0205_valens02
The phone girl, he announced, had been appointed executive co-ordinator of client and media relations, so she may be able to concentrate on reading Abby Van Buren’s column and thereby give outstanding service to clients’ problems — if they can ever get through.

As
part of an expansion program, he added, a new set of plastic coffee
mugs have been obtained by Green Stamps, and the rest of the room has
been tastefully redone in Annual Report Red.

* *

AROUND TOWN — A
teacher at a junior high in San Fernando Valley greeted a new class
Monday with, "Everything you’ve heard about me is true!" . . . A
committee of East L.A. residents is urging Gov. Brown to appoint
Alberto Diaz, editor of the Belvedere Citizen, to the State Athletic
Commission. Someone asked Al what his qualifications were and he
replied, "I boxed in the Army. I won two and lost one, by a knockout. I
know how it feels not to be able to get up off the floor" . . . Oops,
the 1959 plastic wallet calendars issued to members by the Water and
Power employees credit union have no Dec. 30 — they jump from the 29th
to the 31st. Maybe it would be better that way. In fact there’s a
school of thought that holds the entire last week of December might
well be eliminated.

Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock — February 5, 1959

Paul Coates — Confidential File, February 5, 1959

CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Soiled Politics in Rosarito Raid

Paul_coates I’m back from the sleepy little border village of Tijuana after a quick visit to its dirty little jail.

And glad to be back.

Feeling much better now, thank you.

Had a hot bath to wash away the itchy feeling that I trust was all in my imagination. And I’ve had a few hours sleep to wipe clear the initial shock of what I saw.

Jails at their architectural best were not designed to rival Hilton hotels. But the Tijuana clink is one of the most evil-smelling, dirtiest-looking zoos I’ve ever seen.

And the sight of cells packed with Americans who were held for the reason that they got caught in the middle of a foreign political battle was one I won’t forget in a hurry.

1959_0205_mirror_cover The fact that they were arrested in a gambling raid on a casino they were clearly led to believe was legally open is bad enough.

But the harsh, unreasonable terms of the bail set by a federal judge to keep them locked up were incredible.

What purpose this bizarre bit of Pan American diplomacy serves I cannot fathom. If you take the situation to its highest level, the raid was obviously pulled on orders of Mexico’s new president Adolfo LopezMateos. 

The rumor has been racing around Tijuana since before Lopez Mateo’s inauguration two months ago that el presidente nuevo had a yen to "get" Baja California’s Gov. Braulio Maldonado.

Under Adolfo Ruiz Cortines, who went out of office Dec. 1, Maldonado had free reign in his state. Reportedly an old Veracruz buddy of Cortines, the governor was even being considered as presidential material.

However, Maldonado’s general obstreperousness ired the new federal regime. His fingers were allegedly in too many jam jars, including the casino gambling activities at Rosarito Beach. 

Although the rattling of the casino’s dice could be heard around the world, the governor reportedly answered in the negative every time an inquiry was made from the federal district as to whether nasty games of chance were being conducted in Baja California. 

Thus came the plan to embarrass Maldonado but good. Initial strategy was to catch the governor himself in the act of rolling snake-eyes, but that got goofed-up.

Instead of Maldonado, the feds settled for a few tanks full of American tourists, leaving Braulio to suffer a less direct type of embarrassment.

Bad in Any Language

This, in my opinion, is a real dirty way to play. Even for Latin American politics, it’s dirty.

1959_0204_jail To help prevent another occurrence of this or any other subtle or flagrant tortures of Americans visiting Mexico, I have a suggestion for the State Department.

I’d like to see them run off little pamphlets to be handed to every American tourist who steps off U.S. soil into Mexico.

The pamphlets should point out that Mexican law isn’t the same as American law.

They should warn us that if we pitch pennies or look over someone’s shoulder and see a pair of dice, we could conceivably spend two or three years in federal prison.

Also, they should point out that we’re committing a crime if we permit a drunk to ram into the rear end of our cars.

I think it’s only intelligent for us to protect our citizens by informing them, before they step across the border, that they’re proceeding at their own risk.

And the risk can be extremely great.

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Voices — Christine Collins, August 25, 1932

1932_0825_warden_01
Posted in #courts, Changeling, Film, Hollywood | 4 Comments

February 5, 2009: Burbank to Open Time Capsule!

February 1, 1959: Burbank Time Capsule

A representative from the city of Burbank says:

On Thursday, February 5, 2009, at 10:30 a.m., the city of Burbank will be opening a time capsule that was placed in the Magnolia Boulevard bridge when it was built in 1959. There will not be a big ceremony, but the press is invited to attend.

Posted in San Fernando Valley, Science, Transportation | 3 Comments

Nuestro Pueblo, February 1, 1939

1939_0201_nuestro

This is the bluff overlooking the Cornfield and a good route into downtown
if the Pasadena Freeway is jammed.

I’ve been neglectful in posting Nuestro Pueblo — so many stories, only one Larry Harnisch. Here’s an interesting entry on a part of downtown Los Angeles that had vanished by 1939. Notice the story about police corruption continuing on Central Avenue. The Times rarely covered the African American community, so this story is particularly noteworthy.
Posted in Countdown to Watts, Downtown, LAPD | Comments Off on Nuestro Pueblo, February 1, 1939

Company Town

1915_0409_de_mille

As long as we are talking about the early days of the movie industry and Cecil B. De Mille, here’s a 1915 interview with him.

Lasky_studio_nd
Los Angeles Times file photo

And in going through the De Mille photos, I found this undated picture of the Lasky studio, which has been turned into a museum.

Lasky_studio_1993

Photograph by Mike Meadows / Los Angeles Times

And here’s the studio in 1993. But what’s this? There’s a porch. Hmm.

Lasky_studio_2009

And here’s the current photograph from the Hollywood Heritage Museum website.

1979_0919_lasky_studio
And in 1979 on the Paramount lot. No porch. The barn was turned into the studio’s gym and used by Marlon Brando and Paul Newman, The Times says.
Posted in Film, Front Pages, Hollywood | 1 Comment