Tiki Central / General Tiki / The poetry of Don Blanding / Vagabond's House
Post #394116 by bigbrotiki on Tue, Jul 15, 2008 11:08 AM
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Tue, Jul 15, 2008 11:08 AM
Thank you, Boris, you are a dedicated urban archeologist! Here's a quote from a patron of that period: Nice try with the facade-to-menu comparison, Boris, but the whole building housing the theater and the restaurant was built in the so-called ornate Churri#@$%&e (!) style, as it states here!: "The Vagabond/Hayworth Theater (designated in 1983 as Los Angeles Historic Cultural Monument 268) is representative of the Spanish Colonial Revival style, also called the ornate Churriqueresque style. The building was designed in 1926 by noted architect Stiles O. Clements, a major Los Angeles figure, who designed about 100 buildings along Wilshire Blvd." ...while the illustration on the menu clearly depicts the traditional shield of a Dayak warrior from Malaysia, Borneo: Now you should have known that! :D The choice of this logo is further proof that the restaurant subscribed to a broader Seven Seas/Ports of Call/Exotica concept (just like the poem) rather than being strictly Polynesian....(or, that owner and customers really did not care or notice :D ) Now here's a snag: If the Vagabond THEATRE opened in 1926, but Blanding's book was not published before 1928, how could it have been named after it? Here is my urban archeology theory: ...and last not least, a little off-topic:
Forgotten by many, but not by all: [ Edited by: bigbrotiki 2008-07-15 11:45 ] |