March 2010

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Mel Haber at Melvyn's Bar at the Ingleside Inn.

Mr. Palm Springs, Mel Haber, at Melvyn's in the Ingleside Inn.

For a good 30 years, Charlie Farrell, who, with Ralph Bellamy, spent about $6,000 to start the Racquet Club in 1933 (shortly after the opening they sent out invitations to their friends, the Hollywood elite, offering $50 memberships and received exactly four responses; but Charlie got the last laugh when he sold the property in 1959 for $1.2 million) was Mr. Palm Springs. Then in the late ‘70s a faux-hippie named Sonny Bono moved into town, became the mayor, started up the Palm Springs Film Festival, got rid of all the spring break riff-raff (you could attribute that whole scene—thousands of college students cruising up and down Palm Canyon while drinking, puking, and showing their tits–to Troy Donahue and Connie Stevens who got hammered around the pool at the Desert Palms Inn in the 1963 teen flick “Palm Springs Weekend”).

After Bono crashed and burned skiing into a tree at Lake Tahoe in 1998 there really wasn’t a face to Palm Springs. Maybe the only person who has come close to carrying on the Mr. Palm Springs legacy started by Charlie Farrell would be Mel Haber. Mel doesn’t have the star wattage of Farrell or Bono but he’s been running the curiously intriguing Ingleside Inn since 1975 when he bought the rundown property and emptied his bank account to renovate it.

I haven’t stayed at Mel’s place for a few years but it’s always fun to drop in at the bar of his eatery, Melvyn’s, and chat with Mel if he’s around. He’s got so many good stories to tell that, if you’re not careful, you’ll find that hours have gone by and now you need to ask Mel for a table in a restaurant because you’re getting hungry.

When Haber bought the Ingleside Inn, which started out as a private estate built in 1925 by the widow of the man who designed the Pierce Arrow automobile, he discovered fifteen drawers full of index cards containing personal information about former guests.

An undated penny postcard of the Ingleside Inn.

An undated penny postcard of the Ingleside Inn.

“I thumbed through some of them and actually got goose pimples,” says Haber. “The names were legendary. I found a registration card for Salvador Dali on which had been penciled, ‘I believe he is a painter.’ There was one for Elizabeth Taylor that said ‘Movie Actress’ with several question marks after it. There was a card for Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Goldwyn of Hollywood, California, and someone had penciled in ‘No Good. They’re Jewish.’ Another card said Earl Martyn and penciled alongside it was ‘Howard Hughes; wants no one to know.’”

Of course, this was all before Haber showed up. But you get a pretty good idea of just who has stayed or dined at the Ingleside Inn since then by checking out the B&W photos hanging on the restaurant walls. There’s Haber with Bob Hope, Haber with John Travolta, Haber with Joan Collins (you get the idea). So many of the women in these photos have puffy faces and towering hair and greatly resemble the Gabor sisters. Or maybe they are the Gabor sisters.

And has Haber been keeping little note cards since he bought the place? He’s not saying. But my guess is absolutely.

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Charlie Farrell with Marilyn Monroe at the Racquet Club in Palm Springs.

Charlie Farrell with Marilyn Monroe at the Racquet Club in Palm Springs.

From a story about Charlie Farrell, founder of the Palm Springs Racquet Club, that ran in a 1963 issue of Sports Illustrated:

There is the (Racquet Club) story about the time some years back when a lady visitor from the East sat herself on a stool at the bar, ordered a cocktail, and asked Tex Gregg, the bartender, if there were any movie celebrities around. Tex cased the room, then turned to Clark Gable, who was also seated at the bar, and asked, “Have you seen any movie starts around?”

“Nope,” said Gable. “Haven’t seen a single one.”

Or this one: For several years Jack Benny used to have an annual skit on his weekly radio program called “Murder at the Racquet Club.” In one such, Benny, as the sheriff of Riverside, drove up to the front gate of the Racquet Club and demanded admittance so he could investigate the homicide. “Are you a member?” intoned a voice over the club’s public-address system.

“No,” answered Sheriff Benny.

“Then you can’t come in,” said the voice.

“All right, throw the body over the wall,” Benny shouted back.

Shortly after this profile of Farrell was published, the Racquet Club was sold and quickly became a pale shadow of its riotous past. His wife, Virginia, died in 1968 and Farrell, fed up with the whole scene, gave up the life of the bon vivant to stay home in his bathrobe and watch TV night and day, waiting for the end to come. Unfortunately, he had a bit of a wait; the years were unkind to Farrell who, they say, descended into senility and decrepitude.

Charlie with his "My Little Margie" co-star Gale Storm, who he reportedly detested (the feeling was mutual).

Charlie with his "My Little Margie" co-star Gale Storm, who he reportedly detested (the feeling was mutual).

When he died, a few months short of his 90th birthday (a lot of bio’s say he died at 88 or 89 but Farrell, like a lot of Hollywood stars, fibbed a bit about his age over the years), even the local press didn’t take notice for several weeks. Charlie Farrell, the soul of conviviality, founder of the Racquet Club, former mayor, star of the silent screen and TV, ended his life a reclusive desert rat. He was buried, without services (and with almost no mourners) twenty years ago in Welwood Murray Cemetery in Palm Springs. For years it was almost impossible to visit Farrell or other well-known celebrities buried there, like Nellie Coffman and mid-century modern architect Albert Frey, as the cemetery was locked and gated. These days it’s open daily for visitors. Charlie, who always knew how to pick his real estate, has a prime location in row 10-3, plot G. Virginia, who he always referred to as his “beautiful, long-suffering wife,” resides next door in plot F.

I have to say–I think there’s a movie here.

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Marilyn Monroe strutting her stuff at the Racquet Club in Palm Springs.

Marilyn Monroe strutting her stuff at the Racquet Club in Palm Springs. Photo by Bruno Bernard.

This is the way we started eons ago, after being booted out of the Garden of Eden. Huddled together near a small reflecting pool of water in the desert beneath an astonishing sky full of fiery meteorites hissing in the torpid night, unable to sleep, desiring to tell each other stories; to dance, to cry, to shout out into the darkness.

That’s how Palm Springs started out as well, evoking some latent memory deep within us of other faraway locales—Turkey or Greece or maybe Morocco. A small band of Agua Caliente natives telling stories around their sacred hot springs were eventually replaced by artists and then movie stars who gathered around glittering pools, cocktails in hand, spinning their own yarns, with the promise of romance as heavy in the air as the scent of night-blooming jasmine.

In the ‘30s and ‘40s, celebs congregated at small hotels and semi-exclusive estates. And while they may have ridden horses or played tennis during the day, the real action didn’t heat up until after the sun went down. Like moths to the flame, the Hollywood elite would congregate at private bungalows and Spanish-style guest houses until someone finally suggested shifting the party to one of the illegal gambling parlors in Cathedral City or maybe the Racquet Club’s Bamboo Bar where, on any given night, you might find Joan Crawford, Clare Bow, Errol Flynn, Cary Grant or Gloria Swanson. Drinking, flirting, pairing off.

This was the desert my parents glowingly described to my sister and me following their own infrequent retreats to Palm Springs in the ‘60s when they were trying to patch up their marriage.

On one such trip, I remember my mother calling my sister to say they were sitting around the pool enjoying cocktails with Mr. Troy Donahue. Mother put him on the phone. My sister, who must have been about 16, turned a whiter shade of pale and screamed. Once the story got around school, she suddenly became exotic, desirable, popular. That’s what a little glamour—even someone else’s—could do for you.

The first hotel in Palm Springs opened in 1886, but it was Nellie Coffman who discovered how to brew romance in the desert. Not when she built the Desert Inn in 1908 but when she added the town’s first swimming pool 17 years later. Before that long-forgotten but oh-so-momentous occasion, Palm Springs was just a dowdy little health retreat. A place the infirm came to take in the dry air, the hot mineral springs. But once Nellie added cooling, alluring water—a pool—romance and glamour followed as naturally as restless stirrings at a high school prom. Others soon stole the formula. When the El Mirador opened in 1928, its 75-foot pool attracted so many members of the Hollywood community that they pushed out the arty crowd that had preceded them. The city’s reputation was made.

If Nellie Coffman was the mother of Palm Springs, Charlie Farrell was the father. Farrell—who made a number of silent pictures in the ‘20s but is probably best remembered as the TV dad in “My Little Margie” with Gale Storm (how’s that for a Hollywood name?)—was playing tennis with Ralph Bellamy at El Mirador when they were bounced off the courts because Marlene Dietrich wanted to play (and, so the story goes, because they were Jewish). In response, they bought some land across the street and opened their own joint in 1932. The Racquet Club would become the hangout for the next 30 years.

It’s still there, having been reconceptualized as a private community of bungalows, townhouses, and lofts (the most prestigious of which are the seven historic Albert Frey residences which are currently being restored and upgraded). I took a stroll around the grounds Sunday morning, listening to the songbirds flitting in the mature tamarisk trees that Farrell planted as a wind break for his tennis courts years ago. If you know a bit of the history of the place you can search out the Spencer Tracy cottage which sits next door to what was once Joan Crawford’s bungalow. Not far away is the bungalow where, they say, Johnny Hyde first discovered Marilyn Monroe back in 1948.

Marilyn with Johnny Hyde at the Racquet Club.

Marilyn with Johnny Hyde at the Racquet Club.

From Ray Mungo’s book Palm Springs Babylon: “Hyde was fifty-three years old at the time, married and the father of four sons, representing top stars such as Bob Hope, Lana Turner, and Rita Hayworth. Marilyn was a nubile twenty-two. Hyde fell madly in love with her, made a complete fool of himself over her, left his wife and family, and arranged cosmetic nose and chin surgery for Marilyn in 1950. His infatuation with the blonde bombshell did in his ailing ticker; Johnny Hyde suffered a heart attack at the Racquet Club on December 17, 1950, and died the following day.”

Love and lust in the desert.

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Letter from Santiago

Okay, yesterday I ran a letter I received from my friend Killy Stanton who lives with her husband, Robert, and sons in Temuco, Chile, which was about 160 miles from the epicenter of the quake. As she reported, things were very, very scary for her and her elderly parents (her husband was in Santiago with their son when the quake hit). Today, I’m going to run a letter I got from another good friend, Liz Caskey. Liz lives in Santiago where she operates a food and wine tour company, Liz Caskey’s Culinary & Wine Experiences. Liz notes, as did another Santiago tour operator, Brian Pearson, whose letter we ran yesterday, that things are pretty normal in Santiago and they hope everybody doesn’t get all scared off by the media reports of damage in the south and cancel trips to Chile. Here’s her report from the capital:

The San Pedro bakery in Santiago. Photo courtesy of Liz Caskey.

The San Pedro bakery in Santiago. Photo courtesy of Liz Caskey.

Dear Friends and Family,

I want to truly thank you for your continued support during these tough times in Chile. It has been so wonderful to hear from you all through calls and e-mail as Chile deals with the aftermath of the quake. We appreciate your prayers and thoughts.

To give you an update, now 5 days from Saturday’s devastating events, things in Santiago are thankfully normal, as in much of the country. As you know, with Chile’s long geography, the majority of the country is functioning perfectly normal with the exception of the affected areas within 100 miles of the Concepción area and the coastline hit by the tsunami. While the news images continue to show looting, please know that the military, Red Cross, and many volunteers have already arrived with food, water, and aid. Electricity and communicatio(ns are being restored as we speak to these areas. Today (Friday), there is a huge drive, Teletón, raise millions of dollars to provide temporary housing for every family who lost their home. There is a sense of real solidarity here. The of light of hope has appeared for these people. The next huge step is reconstruction.

The wine industry here did suffer some serious losses of inventory and damage to facilities, mostly in the regions of the Maule, Curicó, and some areas of Colchagua. Others escaped completely unscraped. I will be posting later this week with a full update since many of you have asked. It is a complex situation since harvest is due to start any day and vintners trying to manage where they will make the 2010 vintage in some cases.

Many of you have also requested information on how you can contribute to the rebuilding efforts in Chile. Beyond the Red Cross, which is for aiding relief efforts, we suggest these three ways.

1. Travel to Chile

If you have traveled to Chile, have a trip scheduled here, or know people that do, please encourage friends, family, and colleagues to still come. Refer them to my blog, where I directly addressed this issue yesterday. The images the media is “exporting” and messages the US State Department issuing are harmful for the country in the long term and can impact its tourism. The information they are providing is simply not accurate since many people do not understand the country’s geography and where the quake is contained. They stick all of Chile in the disaster boat and this is completely false. Chile is operative and normal in ALL areas minus the above-mentioned affective area. We have had clients on wine tours this week and heading to points in Patagonia with zero problems or alterations. Don’t let TV paranoia ruin what makes Chile so wonderful. Help spread the word.

2. Support Local Business & Reconstruction

Our business has started a direct initiative to support a local non-profit foundation with a school and organic farm we visit with our tours to channel funds to families affected by the quake both locally and in the south. We are donating a significant portion of the proceeds from our Eat Wine Santiago guide, a food & drink e-guide to the capital. Please help our efforts by purchasing this e-guide. Ask your family and friends to help too. Even if you/they don’t plan on coming to Santiago, Eat Wine Santiago includes a great wine list, insight into Chile’s food/wine culture, will directly contribute to reconstruction efforts in Chile, and seriously, costs less than a dinner for one or a bottle of decent wine. We also will be offering free updates for the first two editions for friends, family, and colleagues who may have Chile on the horizon in the future. Click here for more information.

3. Buy Chilean

Now more than ever, please buy Chilean. Organize a “Support Chile” dinner party or wine tasting. Accompany with classic dishes like Cazuela, Savory Chicken stew, ceviche, or Ensalada Chilena, Chilean tomato salad. You can find recipes on my blog. Serve Chilean wines from Sauvignon Blanc to Carmenere which you can find throughout the US/Canada easily. Incorporate Chilean ingredients like fresh fruit (blueberries, peaches, and grapes at this time of year). At Wholefoods and gourmet grocers you can find Olave olive oil and the piquant smoked chili spice, Merkén.

I promise to keep you all updated and in the loop of our efforts to turn a devastating situation into a promising one. If there’s one thing I have learned in life, with the right attitude, we as human beings are capable of confronting any situation and doing anything we put our mind to. As they say here, Chile se la puede. Chile can do it. We are doing it. Chile will step forward. But in addition to your prayers, I hope you will consider supporting us the reconstruction directly here in Chile.

Please feel free to e-mail me directly at liz@lizcaskey.com with any questions you may have.

Un abrazo cariñoso,

Liz & Team

p.s. This photo is taken at San Pedro bakery in Barrio Brasil, a family-run bakery and one of my favorites in Santiago for delicious marraqueta bread. One of the many faces of small business in Chile.

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Letter from Temuco, Chile

I have a lot of friends in Chile and have been getting reports from Santiago to Patagonia regarding damage from the massive 8.8 earthquake that hit central Chile last Saturday. Two good friends, Robert and Killy Stanton, live within the shadow of three volcanos in Temuco which is 433 miles south of Santiago. It’s a gorgeous area, known as the gateway to Chile’s Lake District with its forests of alerce, a sequoia-like giant that can live for 3,000 years. But Temuco was also only 160 miles from the quake’s epicenter—way too close for comfort as Killy reported to me in this e-mail sent shortly after the quake:

The Stanton family in Temuco, Chile.

The Stanton family in Temuco, Chile.

I must say it was one of the most frightening nights of my life as I was alone here on the farm taking care of my parents (as Robert was in Santiago meeting Matthew, who had just returned from Kenya), when the earthquake struck at 0345H.  The house shook so violently and great chunks of masonry came falling down, glass was flying everywhere and everything was shattering all around me and I could hardly stand up, as I ran out of the house round to the guest wing where my parents live, and when I got to my mother she was so terrified she could hardly breathe, she had actually been thrown out of her bed!  Of course just being the two of us we couldn’t move my father who is an invalid, and was in the room next to hers, but amazingly enough he didn’t even wake up!!

Once the quaking stopped, all I could hope was that we had been in the epicentre and that Robert and the boys in Santiago were all right.  As we all know now, it was in fact Concepcion and Santiago felt it as strongly as we in Temuco did.  Robert and Matthew were in an apartment on the 19th floor which swayed like a willow tree and creaked and groaned, but they managed to get out down the stairs, rescuing a little girl on the way whose parents had left her alone that night to go to a party!  William was at work in his office finishing up a project (at 345am!!!!!) and all alone on the 16th floor with furniture and water cannisters flying around, but he found his way in the dark down 16 flights of stairs as there were no emergency lights!!

We were without water and electricity until just a few hours ago, and some of our “aftershocks” have measured 7 on the richter scale, so those are pretty scary too, but we have to get used to it, as they say that we might have tremors for up to a year.  Meanwhile chaos is reigning everywhere.  The airport is closed, Robert and Matthew can’t get back to Temuco as the roads are chaotic and dangerous and Lawrence is stuck in Lima.  In Temuco there is no petrol at the service centres, the shopping mall has been closed for 3 weeks for repairs and all the other supermarkets are running out of supplies, with people getting aggressive and threatening violence towards the staff.  I have stayed away as we have farm produce, potatoes, apples and I have stuff in the freezer for a couple of weeks,and I only have myself and my parents to feed, but it is not much fun!  I would love to have Robert and Matthew home and Lawrence back in Santiago with William, but I will have to be calm and patient!!

Take care and all the best,

Killy Stanton

And from Brian Pearson, an American ex-pat who has lived in Chile for some 7 years now and runs a tourism company out of Santiago called Santiago Adventures:

We hope for better reporting  in the presentation of Chile’s current situation. As expected, the international media has focused only on the most severely damaged areas. They have done this without clear indications of the geography of a country that is 2,800 miles long. This has led to confusion and much unnecessary worry regarding the 6 million people in Santiago where very few people were injured. The major damages are 3 to 5 hours south of Santiago where, sadly, there were many deaths and there are many people still missing or trapped in buildings.

It is also unfortunate that the US government has recommended not traveling to Chile for tourism. Approximately 5% of the Chilean economy is based on tourism. The best way to help the people of Chile is to make sure that the world is correctly informed that Chile is open for business despite the country’s current effort to restore the areas affected by the earthquake. The main tourist destinations San Pedro de Atacama in the north, Patagonia in the south and Easter Island were unaffected by the earthquake. People should consider Chile very safe to visit once the Santiago airport is fully operational in the coming days. With a few minor inconveniences, we are very confident in our ability to deliver the same level of service we have always provided to our customers.

How you can help? If you would like to offer your assistance to Chile earthquake relief, please donate to the Red Cross which has committed to assisting Chile with their relief efforts www.redcross.org.

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