Tiki Central / Locating Tiki / Lo-Ray's, Long Beach, CA (restaurant)
Post #785440 by HotelCharlieEcho on Wed, Mar 28, 2018 5:59 PM
H
HotelCharlieEcho
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Mar 28, 2018 5:59 PM
Name:Lo-Ray's Description: Does not appear on either Critiki or in Tiki Road Trip. The location at 558 East Willow Street in Long Beach is currently an empty lot. Lo-Ray's was a restaurant and cocktail lounge serving tropical drinks, Chinese food and a "pupu plate". Also featured live entertainment on piano and live comedy shows. (As a side note, it's unclear how the name was derived, although it was owned at least for a time by a Raymond F. Phillips, so possibly a name combo like Jakamos, another long-gone Long Beach Poly-pop place?) The first mention of it I could find was in the August 14, 1962, Long Beach Independent, when it was referenced as being located on the same property as the Orbit Coffee Shop: However, later ads in the Independent would claim it was established in 1963: Apparently a popular early source of entertainment at Lo-Ray's was Frank Lotgering, Jr., appearing as Red Lester the Clown: Another attraction was waitress Loretta Campbell, "swish[ing] around in wearing black net stockings, high heels and a leotard":
For most of the 1960s one or more of the Pagay family served Lo-Ray's as a chef. Brothers Frank and Robert are mentioned in this review from the April 29, 1966, Independent: By November 21, 1968, Ernie Pagay was getting top chef billing: By July 23, 1971, Ray Phillips and chefs Robert/Bobby and Ernie Pagay had either added or moved on to a new venture, the Velvet Horn in Buena Park: (By the way, Ernie Pagay would also serve a stint at another Long Beach area Poly-pop restaurant, the Tahiti Hut (covered on Tiki Central here: http://www.tikicentral.com/viewtopic.php?topic=49157&forum=2).) It appears that former manager Charles Hudson may have purchased the place by the time this review ran in the Independent on July 14, 1972, and had installed a new chef, Marv Fredenberg:
Sure wish I could see what that menu and those centerpiece models looked like. Here's another review from a couple months later: At the beginning of the 1970s, the advertising became a little less...well, boring, and at least added some Poly-pop graphics: For some reason, Lo-Ray's seems to have become a popular place with stickup artists in the early 1970s, first in 1972: And then again in 1973: By at least July 12, 1974, the space had changed its name to Tee-Cee's: I couldn't find any exterior shots anywhere, and no ephemera except for this very plain matchbook: Anybody have anything else on this one? [ Edited by: HotelCharlieEcho 2018-03-28 18:10 ] |