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Mitchel manufactured Hollywood's early film cameras used by Charlie Chaplin, and for filming The Wizard of Oz. Later, it was used as the Norden bombsight facility during World War II. In 1968 the building was bought and transformed into The Factory nightclub, named after the furniture manufacturing business in the lower floor of the building ...
The Abbey Food and Bar is a gay bar in West Hollywood, California. The Abbey is a core part of LGBT culture in Los Angeles, and has expanded several times since its establishment in 1991. In 2016, the Abbey opened the adjacent nightclub The Chapel at the Abbey. In 2006, owner and founder David Cooley sold a 75-percent stake of the Abbey to SBE ...
This gay bar/restaurant is more than 30 years old, which is about the mean age of the clientele that frequents its pleasant outdoor patio eating area and adjacent dance club, the Chapel at the Abbey.
Map of Same-Sex Couples in the West Los Angeles Area. The City of West Hollywood is the thriving core of the LGBT community and nightlife, and as of 2014 its population was about 40% LGBT. It had the nicknames "Gay Camelot" [35] and "Boys Town". [36]
West Hollywood, California United States 1960s 2013 [94] ... A long running lesbian bar on the West Coast. [133] [64] XX+: Washington, D.C. United States 2018 closed
David Cooley, owner of West Hollywood institution the Abbey, a gay bar and nightclub, has listed the business for sale after 32 years.
The Troubadour is a nightclub located in West Hollywood, California, United States, at 9081 Santa Monica Boulevard just east of Doheny Drive and the border of Beverly Hills. Inspired by a visit to the newly opened Troubadour café in London, it was opened in 1957 by Doug Weston as a coffee house on La Cienega Boulevard , then moved to its ...
Early in 1957, club operator and co-owner Charlie Morrison died at his Beverly Hills, California, home. [9] The Mocambo remained in business for one final year, before closing its doors on June 30, 1958. [10] The building was then sold, reopened as a supper club called The Cloister, and eventually demolished. [11]