Welcome To The Hollywood Hightower!
I love iconic Hollywood, and it is disappearing – but there is a website that is fighting back! Alison Martino’s terrific website “Vintage Los Angeles” has a wide variety of stories about some of entertainment’s most fascinating haunts, including a great story about this cool building, which has also inspired some of Hollywood’s greatest Artists!
“Vintage Los Angeles” Rocks!
Here is what Alison posted on her Facebook page for “Vintage Los Angeles:”
“The Hollywood Hightower” is located on High Tower Drive in the Hollywood Hills tucked behind Hollywood Bowl. It was designed in 1935 by Carl Kay – and can be seen in Robert Altman’s 1973 film ‘The Long Goodbye” as detective Philip Marlowe’s apartment played by Elliot Gould. (note: more on this film in a moment)
Alison adds: “It was apparently the inspiration for Raymond Chandler’s book, “The High Window” in which Chandler describes the residence of Philip Marlowe as being on the cliffs above High Tower Drive in a building with a fancy elevator tower.”
“Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love also lived here for a few years in the early 90s. Kurt wrote most of, “IN UTERO” in one of these apartments. See the awesome documentary, “Hit So Hard” for more insight.”
Oh yeah, IT HAS AN ELEVATOR!
First of all, thanks to “Curbed LA” for this great shot of the hightower, and make sure you go to Alison’s great “Vintage Los Angeles” website for all kinds of great Hollywood history – the link is at the bottom of this story!
Also, rush on over and “like” her Facebook page so you can get more great stories of vintage Los Angeles!
https://www.facebook.com/VintageLosAngeles
And of course, it’s time to look at a classic film from the 70’s that has a “Hightower” connection!
“The Long Goodbye!”
If you want an inside tour of the “Hollywood Hightower” and don’t happen to live in Hollywood, well as Alison pointed out, Robert Altman’s neglected masterpiece “The Long Goodbye” was filmed there!
First, check out the trailer:
Robert Altman directed this quirky, “L.A. Noir” starring Elliot Gould as detective Philip Marlowe…based on Raymond Chandler’s brilliant series of novels about the “tough as nails” detective…in such classics as “The Big Sleep” and “The High Window”…
Here is how the film’s plot is described by the website IMDB: “Chain-smoking, wisecracking private eye Philip Marlowe drives a buddy from LA to the Tijuana border and returns home to an apartment full of cops who arrest him for abetting the murder of his friend’s wife. After Marlowe’s release, following the reported suicide in Mexico of his friend, a beautiful woman hires him to locate her alcoholic and mercurial husband. Then, a hoodlum and his muscle visit to tell Marlowe that he owes $350,000, mob money the dead friend took to Mexico.”
This film was completely overlooked when it was released in 1973: Altman’s acerbic approach was radically different than previous films like “The Big Sleep” with Humphrey Bogart as Marlowe…but it is full of great moments and mood.
FYI, Elliott Gould improvised the scene in police custody in which he smears fingerprint ink all over his face.
Detective: “Listen – what are you here for, Marlowe?”
Philip Marlowe: [smearing fingerprint ink under his eyes] “Well I’m here ’cause I’m gettin’ ready for the big game Saturday. You know, we’re playing Notre Dame and I hope I catch a touchdown pass.”
“The Long Goodbye” is also one of Arnold Schwarzenegger’s earliest movie roles!
Check out this classic Robert Altman film!
The “Ball Four” Connection!
Yes, baseball’s original “bad boy”, pitcher Jim Bouton, has a role in “The Long Goodbye”! If you don’t know Bouton, he wrote what is the greatest baseball memoir of all time, about his comeback effort on the Seattle Pilots expansion team:
Read all about this classic baseball book by clicking onto my story here:
http://johnrieber.com/2013/09/17/ball-four-baseballs-most-controversial-and-best-book/
So many ways to appreciate the “Hollywood Hightower!”
And of course, Alison shares other great stories of vintage Hollywood on her blog, which you can see here:
http://martinostimemachine.blogspot.com
And here are two other stories I posted related to “Vintage Los Angeles”:
Alison hosted a special screening of “Sunset Boulevard” at the “Million Dollar Theater” in downtown Los Angeles – see the whole story here:
I completely support Alison’s effort to keep vintage Los Angeles alive – there are so many great stories about this city – like this classic film noir:
You can read more about “Chinatown” by clicking here:
