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Hollywood and Vine was the second busiest intersection in the city, after Wilshire Boulevard and Western Avenue. [ 3 ] In the 1930s, radio station KFWB spoke of "broadcasting live from Hollywood and Vine," and newspaper columnists Hedda Hopper and Jimmie Fidler regularly touted the intersection's mystique.
Simon's first non-fiction book, Blacklisting Myself: Memoir of a Hollywood Apostate in the Age of Terror, [11] was published by Encounter Books in February 2009. It was republished in 2011 with additional material under the title Turning Right at Hollywood and Vine: The Perils of Coming Out Conservative in Tinseltown
Larry Edmunds Bookshop is an independent bookstore located at 6644 W. Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California that specializes in film, television, and theater. . Containing more than 20,000 books, 6,000 original posters, and 500,000 photographs, [1] it is the last of many bookstores that once lined Hollywood Boulevard [2] [3] and was declared by film critic and historian Leonard Maltin ...
Now: Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. Hollywood Heritage advised the 1980s remodel based on archival photos of the hotel's 1920s heyday, and Hollywood has returned.
Vine Theatre, formerly Admiral Theatre and Rector’s Admiral Theatre, also known as Vine Street Theatre, Dolby @ Vine, and Dolby Screening Room Hollywood Vine, is a historic movie theater located at 6321 W. Hollywood Boulevard, near the intersection of Hollywood and Vine, in Hollywood, California.
Hollywood and Vine is a 1945 American comedy film directed by Alexis Thurn-Taxis, featuring the dog who played Daisy in Columbia's Blondie film series. The film is also known as Daisy Goes Hollywood in the United Kingdom and as Happily Ever After in the United States.
Wallichs Music City was located on the northwest corner of Sunset & Vine and operated from 1940 to 1978. Owner Glenn E. Wallichs, along with Tin Pan Alley songsmith Johnny Mercer and ex-Paramount movie producer Buddy De Sylva, had founded Capitol Records, [8] starting in a small office on Vine Street in 1942 [9] and then moving to larger offices above the store in 1946.
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