Saturday, August 28, 2010

Ghosts of Los Angeles I

History’s randomness is what haunts; the way two unrelated stories immersed in shadow and question marks collide in some tangible way, totally unexpectedly, thrusting pathos upon the ordinary and the mundane, somehow leaving you with no answers even after the curtains of shadows are opened, often only momentarily, affording a glance of something you thought you’d never see.

More and more I feel like Los Angeles is America’s great undiscovered city. The conventional wisdom is that there’s no there there (Gertrude Stein’s famous quote, often erroneously attributed to Los Angeles, when in fact she was referring to her hometown of Oakland), a state of mind prevalent among even those who grew up there. Yet, the city’s shadowy history is enough to suck in thousands who have a hard time explaining – even coming to grips with – its relentless pull. Bunker Hill. Skid Row. The Black Dahlia. Ed Wood, Jr. The Manson murders. George Reeves. Film Noir. Robert Kennedy. Richard Ramirez. Even East Hollywood and Charles Bukowski.

At 5533 Hollywood Boulevard stands the Gershwin Hotel, formerly the St. Francis Hotel, built in 1926 near Western Ave. It’s the kind of pre-Depression throwback that adds so much character to a city –bricks, outdoor fire escapes, arched doorways, old windows. A prime candidate – if there ever was one in this city that cares so little for its history that you get the feeling it actually hates it – for the wrecking ball. I’ve snapped many a photo of it myself for no other reason than it’s a great old building, and I worry on every trip to L.A. that it may not be there the next time I come back.

The hotel, however, boasts a couple of celebrity guests. Although this hasn’t been verified, a woman working at the Gershwin in 2003 told author Matt Dukes Jordan that Bukowski stayed there a couple of times while he still lived in East Hollywood.

What has been verified is the presence of James Earl Ray, who arrived in Los Angeles in his white Mustang on November 19th, 1967, with a spare tire full of Mexican cannabis and dreams of producing pornography. In less than five months, the spectre-like Ray would assassinate Martin Luther King, Jr. from the bathroom window of a Memphis flophouse, but in late ’67, the 40 year-old southern racist was a character straight out of a Raymond Chandler novel: an awkward, angry, hypochondriac speed-freak who had spent as much time in jail as in the real world, comfortable only with prostitutes and down-and-outs, drinking and shooting pool in seedy dive bars. During his stay in the City of Angels, Ray got into a bar room brawl on Hollywood Boulevard, graduated from bartending school, took dance lessons in Long Beach, and had his nose altered by a plastic surgeon. For half his stay he lived in room 403 of the St. Francis Hotel. He checked out on March 18th, 1968, and drove into history.

Strangely, Ray is exactly the kind of man Bukowski crossed paths with every week. It’s enticing to think that perhaps the two men bumped into each other during those four months in late ‘67/early ’68. Bukowski was living in his bungalow at 5124 DeLongpre at the time, and occasionally visited Le Sex Shoppe at 5507 Hollywood Blvd – just a few doors down from the St. Francis. At any rate, it’s the kind of fascinating historical footnote that most people visiting Los Angeles are utterly oblivious to, preferring instead to spend their time and money at Hollywood and Highland, an area where all history and heritage has recently been obliterated in the name of mega entertainment complexes and chain stores. I suppose you can’t force people to see the stuff that's genuinely interesting. And probably the story of the St. Francis Hotel wouldn’t interest them anyway. It’s a bum rap Los Angeles is stuck with – an ignorant, shallow population of locals and tourists, caught up in the tragic notion that L.A. is all about the Chinese Theater, and the Walk of Fame. And little else.

15 comments:

Skyray said...

I lived in this building when it was the St. Francis hotel. I also worked there in fact. That place had a reputation, it had history and it had character. A good friend of mine was killed there and another committed suicide. This is one place I will never forget having lived in though some might prefer to.

Anonymous said...

I also lived in this building when it was St. Francis Hotel. Only for a couple months way back in 1991. I had to move out surreptitiously because I didn't have money for rent and I ended up leaving a suitcase in the closet. I think I was in room 401 or 403, can't remember exactly. I know it probably sounds like an awful existence, but, my memories from those days are fond.

tato said...

I had some friends who lived at the St Francis hotel in '75 or '76. In fact a family of 4 kids and their mother lived there. I never went inside but met the kids across the street at an arcade. They later moved to an apartment a few blocks away on Harvard, a big step up.

Steven said...

... I lived at the St Francis in 1985...tenants used to gather on the rooftop for a beer and a smoke after work and dinner, at sunset and into evening...watching the Hollywood Boulevard cruising from couches on the rooftop on weekends was mandatory...some beautiful and colorful people and memories, really...I carved my name and a big star into wet cement on the Hollywood Boulevard sidewalk across the street then (‘85), and it stayed there undisturbed until 2017...20-30 Latinx Transexuals would gather to work the Hollywood Boulevard and St Andrews Corner every night, under my 2nd-floor window ...a block down Hollywood Boulevard at Western Avenue, 40-80 people would herd on the corner at the Hot Dog Stand all night long during the crack epidemic there, smoking crack and looking for pieces on the ground - insane...I seen some shit around there, including drug raids in the hotel, lots of gun brandishing and plenty public lewdness... I was bit of a gargoyle at night there...once a cartel-type dude downstairs on the sidewalk pointed his 357 at my window where I was perched on the 2-foot wide window sill, and I quickly ducked inside for awhile - lol...the place was a private club ran by Al Capone back in his day...Cubans ran a large cocaine trade around those corners for a long time...I worked for the Jewish owners briefly at the property...behind the false walls are/were 20-foot ceilings with gothic arches and pillars, the cellars vast and concrete...I read a deep article decades ago and it recounted grand balls, movie moguls, stars, gangsters, musicians, drugs, alcohol, gambling, entertainment and crystal chandeliers during the roaring’20s and later...I fear the multi-level basement cellars lead to a dimensional portal if you touch the wrong wall block - lol...one day the manager Raul, who’s job included receiving the entire mail delivery daily and sorting into tenants’ pigeonholes until they passed his security door then he’d hand each their mail, he stole and cashed over $50k in Social Security checks, burglarized my apartment for clothes and cash, and disappeared forever - lol...St Francis Hotel - a real trip!..

A recordkeeper said...

My uncle, whom is no longer with us, managed this hotel as it was the St Francis.
The tales of Goons from Vegas and the photos of the filthy disgusting people that resided within its walls.

Today this horseshoe shaped building is refurbished a d added luster. But the seedy underbelly of Malice and Richco remains untarnished in my mind.

I have yet to visit, however I have a large photograph taken by my uncle and I now possess. It is a reminder to myself where He started and where my training came from.

It will always hold a space in my heart.

I miss you uncle Rick. The stories will live with me forever.

Unknown said...

I also lived in this building with my son and his mother it 1997-98 this where I lived when my son caleb was born we lived on the 4th floor in a very small room for 2 adults and a new born child I had started working for the hotel reconstruction of rooms and then we moved on the fifth floor that had a kitchenette the management really helped a lot with having a home to live it was our safe placed while living in Hollywood

Unknown said...

I stayed there too in the late 90's if remember correctly I think the doorman got murdered

Unknown said...

I lived next to this place at 5555 hollywood blvd from around 1988 to 1991 the bars and the Le sex shoppe where still around. There was an archaic across the stree and lots of gang activity. That area was filled with drug addicts and prostitutes. I've never been in this building but it sounds very historic

Anonymous said...

Has anyone heard the story of the "Creepie Peepie of St Francis"? It's from the 1970's. Involves some people I knew and a bunch of LSD, nakedness, slinking down the hallways with a blanket wrapped around him like the "Hooded Claw" from the cartoons, and then on the outside ledge, naked, flapping a blanket and shouting.
Just another night in Hollywierd. Ah the memories!

Anonymous said...

Bob the hotel manager in 1975 told me that anytime a single guy asked for a room overlooking Hollywood Blvd ,he knew that the guy would only be there until the police came to arrest him for taking all his clothes off and standing on the window sill to flash the boulevard.It used to happen all the time and management liked the easy money from the flashers.

jeffhanna7 said...

Richard Lamparski, author of the "Whatever Became Of?" books, interviewed 1930's & 40's actor Frankie Darro at the seedy St. Francis Hotel-Apartments in the 1970's. Darro was sadly a drunk & lived there with his wife. The couple began fighting during the interview.

Anonymous said...

Frankie Darro was my next door neighbor on the 4th floor of the St Francis Hotel in 1975.

Shannon said...

Great to see this! I stayed at the St Frances in 1979, I was sixteen and had come from the UK, it was the most fantastic freak show I ever could have imagined! The LA punk scene was in full swing, and a friend and I shared a room, it was $2.50 a night, I guess we lived there a few weeks. There was every type of weirdo there, just hanging out in the foyer was a surreal movie. I was broke, and technically a runaway, lived from shoplifting and begging, the nights were spent at the punk venues like the Masque. There was every race and sexual orientation represented, there was a black guy with no legs with a kinda hot-rod wheelchair, an obese woman who kept her door open and sat with a view up her dress, a rampant gay couple in the room next door. But all in all everyone was friendly, tolerant and didn’t ask questions. I’m glad I looked the place up, it was a special time. Within a few months I was in Eastlake juvenile hall awaiting deportation.

Anonymous said...

I lived at the St Francis two times in 94-95 I had a room on St Andrew's on 3rd floor. Hookers used to pick up guys then call police on them have them arrested. Then the hookers and pimp boyfriend would rob and steal the car while he was being booked. Later I lived on the fifth floor facing Hollywood Blvd and a mouse used to come into the room and sleep in the sofa. I considered him a pet. I was going through a ruff point in life he gave me comfort. Also there was a ghost of a Nun I could feel from time to time in both rooms. She had a overwhelming presence of peace. Many a drug addict lived there then lots of wild stuff.

A-dogg said...

I currently live here 5533 Hollywood Blvd in 401 for 4 years now the stories I here are amazing my unit is definitely occupied by some kind of spirit it definitely lets me know I'm not alone but won't hurt me but definitely makes it clear that there not going anywhere. Neighbors are all stuck up think there better I have a few friends who I've met while living here they do as well this is definitely a spot I will always remember I met the love of my life in the Laundry room in Nov of 2020 this place holds a special memories in my heart so crazy the history it holds glad to be apart of the life of the st Francis hotel now the Gershwin apartments I love you LA not Los Angeles it's the initial for Laura Allison or Laura Aaron love you baby your my dream come true