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The LA Weekly named Café Largo "LA's Best Supper Club" in 1990. [3] The New York Times ran a substantive review "A Place for Poetry in Land of Pictures" on July 12, 1989. [4] Several reviews were published in Newsweek, LA Style, LA Times, Los Angeles, Buzz, Exposure, Movieline, The Edge, Details, Village View, Vogue, Interview, Playboy, and US ...
The Tower Theater, in Fresno's Tower District. The Warnors Theater in Downtown Fresno built in 1928. The Azteca Theater in Fresno's Chinatown. [1] In Los Angeles County: The Los Angeles Music Center, in Los Angeles, containing multiple pavilions. In Monterey County: The Forest Theater, in Carmel-by-the-Sea, contains multiple venues.
The California club changed its name to "Club 9900" for a few months, but as of June 2008, the club was closed, and its landmark building was listed as available for lease. [10] [11] [12] In late January 2011, the building was demolished, despite objections from the Los Angeles Conservancy. [13] [14] [1]
The building was the first in Los Angeles to have two elevators—one for the public and the other for members. The men's dining room, reading room, bar and lounge were on the top floor. On the floor below was the ladies' dining room. Exterior street view of the former five-story California Club clubhouse on Fifth Street and Hill Street. 1905 ...
The California Theatre was a Beaux-Arts cinema at 810 S. Main Street in Downtown Los Angeles. It opened December 24, 1918 by Fred Miller as Miller's California Theatre. It originally housed 2,000, later capacity was lowered to 1,650. The architect was Alex B. Rosenthal, who also designed the Granada Theatre in Santa Barbara, California.
Club Fuck! (also known as Club FUCK!) [1] was a nightclub that officially began the summer of 1989 and was hosted by Miguel Beristain, Cliff Diller, and James Stone. [2] [3] The weekly party was located at Basgo's Disco in the Silver Lake neighborhood of Los Angeles.
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The Carthay Circle Theater opened at 6316 San Vicente Boulevard on May 18, 1926, with a showing of The Volga Boatman (1926), [1] and was considered developer J. Harvey McCarthy's most successful monument, a stroke of shrewd thinking that made a famous name of the newly developed Carthay Center neighborhood [2] [3] in Los Angeles, California. [4]