Where to stay when you leave.
HotelChatter Hollywood Star Map Stop #15: The Culver Hotel
8/03/2006 at 10:22 AM
Tags: Los Angeles Hotels, HotelChatter-Hollywood-Star-Map

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Anytime we find something historic in Los Angeles (historic=before 1970s) we get real excited. The Culver Hotel has been on our list of things to do for quite some time and the other month we finally got a chance to look around.
What makes the Culver Hotel genuinely historic is a) it was built in 1924; b) it's currently a registered local landmark and on the state and national list of registered historical places and c) all of Hollywood's golden era stars spent their nights here, most notably Clarke Gable and Judy Garland.
The hotel was the vision of real estate developer Harry Culver who thought the land he would later name after himself, Culver City, was the perfect stopping place for those passing through from Hollywood to the beaches of Santa Monica. The first thing he did was attract the movie studios to film their movies and build their offices in Culver City. Once he had an influx of glamorous movie stars and film crews, he needed a place for them to stay.
Thus the birth of the Culver Hotel, a "wedged-shape Renaissance revival-style beauty, fashioned with sculpted stone, brick, ornate overhanging eaves and 200 magnificent windows." Indeed it is one of the most authentic looking things in Los Angeles, which is saying a lot. Inside the hotel has a wide open lobbyand a winding staircase that leads to the second-floor offices where Harry Culver had his personal office and where many folks today use as their own offices.
More on the hotel's then and now after the jump
Perhaps the most famous or infamous guests in the hotel's early years were the Munchkins, who stayed there while filming the Wizard of Oz. Judy Garland also used to spend many nights here and the hotel has a small room with five windows that is called the Judy Garland room. There is a large painting of Judy Garland over the bed which can appear rather frightening but some die-hard Judy Garland fans insist on staying in this room.
Rounding out the famous list is Vivien Leigh, Clark Gable (during the filming of Gone with the Wind), Joan Crawford, Greta Garbo, Buster Keaton, Ronald Reagan, and Red Skelton. The hotel was even once purchased by John Wayne who spent so many nights there he figured he should own it.
Today after a few change of ownership hands (John Wayne sold it to the YMCA), the hotel has been restored to its early glory and had the rooms modernized with individual baths and furnished with antiques, although some are a bit gaudy.
The lobby lounge and bar (still popular with industry people at the Sony Studios next door) is set to undergo a renovation as is the hotel restaurant which will be helmed by Bigg's of Long Beach (voted one of the top 25 restaurant in LA by the LA Times). These renovations on the ground floor should add some much needed luster to the hotel which despite the structure's good condition, still looks a tad run-down.
The hotel rooms themselves are set to undergo a makeover to be done by Spring 2007. The rooms here are very spacious but the decor is a little cheesy since its mostly done to "remind" you of the 1930s/40s/50s. Even the elevators are a little frightening with floral wallpapering.
We mock it only because we think the hotel has great potential to become a stylish boutique hotel a la Kimpton or JDV but some Hollywood movie buffs (ie. calling Judy Garland fans) will absolutely love the faux-authenticity of the decor.
Related Stories:
· Culver Hotel reviews [TripAdvisor]
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