Mulholland Drive - From Hollywood to the San Fernando Valley
During our driving tour of Hollywood, Carrie McCoy and I had  already experienced several adventures. First, we had viewed a LACoFD training exercise  at the Hollywood Bowl.  For lunch, we stopped at Legendary Paul Pink’s Hot Dogs  on La Brea Ave. After lunch, we drove toward Mount Lee to take pictures of the Hollywood Sign.  Then, we departed Hollywood, via the  Yellow Brick Road, better known as Mulholland Drive. 
In its first mile, Mulholland Drive climbs from Cahuenga Pass to the 
crest of  the Hollywood Hills. A quick series of switchbacks and hairpin
 curves introduces  the neophyte motorist to the full Mulholland Drive 
experience. As Jim Morrison once sang in Roadhouse Blues, "Keep your 
eyes on the road, your hands upon the wheel." If you do not, you could 
easily leave the roadway or mix with oncoming traffic. Until you pull 
over to let them pass, many drivers  will tailgate you there at any 
speed. Over the decades, auto and motorcycle  racing on Mulholland Drive
 has cost many lives. Since we were on a sightseeing  tour, I pulled 
aside often, thus allowing traffic to clear.
Our first stop was at the Hollywood Bowl  Overlook.
 Although the view down-canyon to the Hollywood Bowl was  disappointing,
 the view east to Hollywood and Downtown Los Angeles was classic.  In 
the foreground were the Hollywood Freeway and the  Capitol Records Building. Seven miles east was the Emerald  City,
 better known as the skyline of Downtown Los Angeles. From the  
overlook, on that clear day, we could see the LA Basin in all of its 
glory.
With tour buses often crowding the small lot, Hollywood Bowl Overlook parking is limited.
 Just  west of the overlook, there is adequate, if crumbling street-side
 parking. From  there, however, one must cross through traffic to see 
the views. Like many  places with limited parking and extraordinary 
views, people tend to linger. For  them, it is like owning the view 
without having to pay for it. I walked in,  looked around, took my 
pictures and returned to my vehicle.
While walking back to my car, I looked up to see an infamous, yet iconic single family home.  Designed by  architect Harry Gesner,
 the "Haynes House", as it was originally known, came to roost on its 
prominent  hillside location in 1975. Although another of Gesner’s 
houses inspired the  Sydney Opera House, the Gesner house at 7000 Macapa
 Drive has inspired more  scorn than praise. 
With its Gesner-signature roof design, what I call the "Paraglider House" is the  antithesis of Frank Lloyd Wright's “organic  architecture”.
 According to FLW, building atop the crest of a hill destroys  the hill.
 Viewed from the Hollywood Freeway below, the structure looks like an  
overgrown beach shack, silently screaming, “Look at me. Look at me”. I 
would  prefer a house above the Hollywood Bowl Overlook that could 
project itself into group consciousness  with less blatancy.
The public record on the Paraglider House is mixed. In early 2010, the 
owner had  listed it for $2,695,000, or almost exactly one thousand 
dollars per square  foot. Apparently, it sold later that year for $2.0 
million. Even that was  expensive for a thirty-five year old, 
three-bedroom, three-bath house  encompassing 2,698 square feet. In 
essence, someone bought the view, not the  house. In October 2011, a  Google Street View showed the house stripped to the studs and under  reconstruction. As of this writing, construction was ongoing.
As
 one might experience anywhere on Mulholland Drive, our sojourn west 
included  many tight turns and a few confusing street signs. Needing a 
rest, we stopped at  one of many turnouts provided along the road by the
  Santa Monica Mountain  Conservancy. By then we were well away from Hollywood and approaching the  San  Fernando Valley.
 Having grown up in Burbank, California, I knew how hazy the sky  could 
be in The Valley. From our perch atop the Hollywood Hills, we marveled 
at  the clear sky and long views.
To our right, we could see Mt. Lee, famed for its Hollywood Sign and 
named for early Los Angeles car dealer and broadcaster Don Lee. At the 
top of Mt. Lee stands a communications tower that dates back to at least
 1941. In the late 1930s, the first Los Angeles television broadcasts 
emanated from that tower. During my high school days in the 1960s, you 
could still drive to the top of Mt. Lee and enjoy a 360-degree view of 
Los Angeles and the Valley. Today, a gate far below prevents traffic 
from surmounting Mt. Lee. From our vantage that day, we could see an 
end-on view of the Hollywood sign, clinging to the  far-right slope of 
the mountain. My father's memories of Los Angeles television history 
follow below.
 Dr. Loron N. McGillis: “The call letters for the first Los  Angeles television station were W6XAO.  They transmitted from the communication tower atop Mt. Lee. When the station came on in the early evening, we watched on our 7" Motorola TV.
 During the day, they broadcast the traditional Indian Head test 
pattern, with emanating black and white bars. There was also a news tape
 running across the bottom of the screen. In 1948, the station became  KTSL and in 1951, they changed again, to KNXT. In  the 1980s, they changed again to the current KCBS TV.”
Dr. Loron N. McGillis: “The call letters for the first Los  Angeles television station were W6XAO.  They transmitted from the communication tower atop Mt. Lee. When the station came on in the early evening, we watched on our 7" Motorola TV.
 During the day, they broadcast the traditional Indian Head test 
pattern, with emanating black and white bars. There was also a news tape
 running across the bottom of the screen. In 1948, the station became  KTSL and in 1951, they changed again, to KNXT. In  the 1980s, they changed again to the current KCBS TV.” 
Panning my camera to the left,  Spokesmodel Carrie McCoy
 appeared in my  rangefinder. With lush vegetation behind her and a 
smile on her face, I could  not resist taking yet another picture of the
 original “Valley Girl”, from  Burbank, California. “Look”, Carrie said,
 “From here, you can see Universal City  and Warner Bros. Studios”. 
 As
 I looked down from a curve on Mulholland Drive, the most prominent 
building in view had a huge sign that read,  “NBCUniversal", with no 
separation between those two iconic  names. In a not-so-subtly way, the 
resident media giants NBC and Universal  Studios had melded into one. It
 reminded me of the dark days in the 1970s, when  executives briefly 
renamed Warner Bros. Studios, “The Burbank Studios”.
 When the  next intergalactic mega-media firm takes over NBCUniversal, 
that prominent  office tower will display yet another in a long list of 
corporate logos.
As
 I looked down from a curve on Mulholland Drive, the most prominent 
building in view had a huge sign that read,  “NBCUniversal", with no 
separation between those two iconic  names. In a not-so-subtly way, the 
resident media giants NBC and Universal  Studios had melded into one. It
 reminded me of the dark days in the 1970s, when  executives briefly 
renamed Warner Bros. Studios, “The Burbank Studios”.
 When the  next intergalactic mega-media firm takes over NBCUniversal, 
that prominent  office tower will display yet another in a long list of 
corporate logos.
Even in Los Angeles, few people remember who built what we now call the 
 NBCUniversal Building in Universal City. In the 1970s, at the height of
 his  wealth and fame, oilman J. Paul Getty commissioned the building as
 the Getty Oil  Company headquarters. Although the building looks 
rectangular to the casual  observer, its narrow lot and adjacency to the
 Hollywood Freeway dictated a  trapezoidal shape. Although any form 
other than rectilinear creates triangular  offices and wasted space, 
Getty and his oil company had money to burn. To make  the edifice look 
more impressive, Getty specified an exterior clad in Italian  marble. In
 1976, prior to completion of the building, J. Paul Getty died.
 In
 1984, when giant Texaco Oil purchased Getty Oil, the building became 
the  Texaco Building. In 1985, when Texaco lost in court to Pennzoil, 
that smaller  company became sole owner of both Getty Oil and the Getty 
Building. If there was  ever a Texaco sign at the top of that building, 
it did not last for long. As  with media companies, Old Energy
 oil companies come and they go. Only their  buildings remain to hint at
 their former glory. Exactly how the Getty Building  morphed into the 
NBCUniversal Building, I cannot say. If history foretells anything, that
 building will not be the NBCUniversal Building  forever.
In
 1984, when giant Texaco Oil purchased Getty Oil, the building became 
the  Texaco Building. In 1985, when Texaco lost in court to Pennzoil, 
that smaller  company became sole owner of both Getty Oil and the Getty 
Building. If there was  ever a Texaco sign at the top of that building, 
it did not last for long. As  with media companies, Old Energy
 oil companies come and they go. Only their  buildings remain to hint at
 their former glory. Exactly how the Getty Building  morphed into the 
NBCUniversal Building, I cannot say. If history foretells anything, that
 building will not be the NBCUniversal Building  forever.
Panning to the right of the Getty/Texaco/Pennzoil/NBCUniversal Building,
 I  realized that I was looking down upon both Universal Studios and 
Warner Bros.  Studios. In the 1960s, Universal Studios was a relatively 
small affair, with a  concentration of buildings and activities on 
Lankershim Blvd., in North  Hollywood. With the advent of the Universal 
Amphitheater, the Universal Studios  Tour and Universal City Walk, most 
of the “back lot” succumbed to development.  For reasons unknown, there 
is only one exception to that over-development.
On a hillside lot, overlooking the corner of Barham Blvd. and Buddy Holly Drive,
 a  haunted house once stood. Having sneaked up to the house with my 
high school  friends, I know that it was haunted. At night, we could see
 a dim light glowing  inside the house. As we approached from below, I 
tripped over a half buried  headstone and fell headlong down a muddy 
slope. Using a flashlight, we read the  names and dates of death on 
several tilting headstones. After determining that  one grave was that 
of a child, we scrambled back to our car, never to return.  That haunted
 house is gone now, but remnants of the circular driveway are still visible on Google Earth.
All good ghost stories and all good Hollywood auto tours must end. 
Carrie and I  still had one last stop to make at the intersection of  Mulholland Drive and  Interstate I-405. There, we planned to visit with  Coney the Traffic Cone, where  he stood guard over the missing bridge lane at  Mulholland Drive in Sepulveda  Pass.
 
By James McGillis at 04:53 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link

 
