Let's hope it doesn't become defunct.
"Developer Buying Hollywood Palladium
The Hollywood venue is to be sold for an estimated $65 million, but a restoration may not be feasible.
By Roger Vincent, Times Staff Writer
June 30, 2006
The fast-moving makeover of the Hollywood district may soon include a new development on the site of the Hollywood Palladium, the famous concert hall that has hosted such top musical acts as Glenn Miller and the Grateful Dead.
Whether the building itself can survive the transition is unclear.
Combined Properties Inc. is buying the 66-year-old Sunset Boulevard venue with the intention of developing its large parking lot — possibly with residences, stores and a hotel, said Marianne Lowenthal, executive vice president of the Beverly Hills firm.
She declined to say how much the company is paying for the property, but local real estate observers value the deal at about $65 million.
The Palladium has been a shining piece of Hollywood history. It was built by former film producer Maurice M. Cohen on the site of the original Paramount Studio. His ambition was to create a music mecca where ordinary Angelenos could see top celebrities.
After opening night on Halloween 1940, The Times wrote: "The million-dollar ballroom-cafe, which can accommodate comfortably 7,500 persons, was literally packed to the rafters when band leader Tommy Dorsey blew the first blast from his trombone and his orchestra let loose with some jive and swing music."
Dorsey's singers included a skinny young man from New Jersey named Frank Sinatra.
Preservationists have been worried that Hollywood's real estate boom might lead to the razing of the Palladium to make way for shops, restaurants and condominiums, which are enjoying popularity among buyers attracted to the district's surging nightlife and urban vibe.
"We are going to try our hardest to save the Palladium and restore it," Lowenthal said.
Such a project, however, would be "very expensive," she acknowledged. "We are analyzing it right now and working to come up with plans everyone would be excited about."
Combined Properties has the Palladium in escrow and expects to take title by summer's end.
The company has specialized in building neighborhood shopping centers including Foothill Town Center in Foothill Ranch and is moving toward the type of mixed-use developments gaining popularity in urban areas. It has three such projects planned in West Hollywood.
If Combined Properties can keep the Palladium in place, it would have an easier time of getting a development surrounding it approved, said Leron Gubler, president of the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce.
"It's an important landmark and a lot of people would be very strongly opposed to losing it," he said. "In the interest of moving forward on a quick timetable, it would be a good idea" to save it.
Among those ready to fight for the Palladium is the Los Angeles Conservancy, Executive Director Linda Dishman said.
The building does not have official landmark status, she said, but it was designed by noted Los Angeles architect Gordon Kaufman, who also designed Santa Anita Park in Arcadia.
"Hollywood is known internationally as an entertainment capital, so it is important to keep venues that continue to serve that use," Dishman said. "The Palladium still has a very active place in entertainment today."
The current owner, Palladium Investors Ltd., didn't respond to requests for comment, but President Alan Shuman acknowledged to the Los Angeles Business Journal last week that a sale was being discussed.
Development on the Palladium block on Sunset between Argyle Avenue and El Centro Avenue has been expected, said real estate broker Steven Tronson of Ramsey-Schilling Co., because the district around nearby Vine Street has seen a recent burst of activity. More than $1.2 billion in development including condos, stores, apartments and a hotel are planned or underway.
In 1942, management at the Palladium bragged that a million people a year were going there to dance and escape the pressures of World War II. Big bands led by Glenn Miller, Artie Shaw, Les Brown, Harry James and Stan Kenton performed there, and their shows were broadcast to millions of radio listeners nightly.
The venue retained its appeal for top acts through the years and was also the site of graduation parties for generations of high school seniors. In 1961, the Palladium became home to Lawrence Welk's television show and has been the site of many award events, including the Emmys and Grammys.
As musical tastes changed, so did the performers. The Rolling Stones, James Brown, Led Zeppelin, the Who, Bon Jovi and the Red Hot Chili Peppers have all taken the stage at the Palladium.
The current burst of real estate development is "probably the most exciting time for Hollywood since that era when the Palladium was so great," Gubler said. "It would be in everybody's interest to do a project that could clean up the building."
www.latimes.com/business/l...88451.story
"Developer Buying Hollywood Palladium
The Hollywood venue is to be sold for an estimated $65 million, but a restoration may not be feasible.
By Roger Vincent, Times Staff Writer
June 30, 2006
The fast-moving makeover of the Hollywood district may soon include a new development on the site of the Hollywood Palladium, the famous concert hall that has hosted such top musical acts as Glenn Miller and the Grateful Dead.
Whether the building itself can survive the transition is unclear.
Combined Properties Inc. is buying the 66-year-old Sunset Boulevard venue with the intention of developing its large parking lot — possibly with residences, stores and a hotel, said Marianne Lowenthal, executive vice president of the Beverly Hills firm.
She declined to say how much the company is paying for the property, but local real estate observers value the deal at about $65 million.
The Palladium has been a shining piece of Hollywood history. It was built by former film producer Maurice M. Cohen on the site of the original Paramount Studio. His ambition was to create a music mecca where ordinary Angelenos could see top celebrities.
After opening night on Halloween 1940, The Times wrote: "The million-dollar ballroom-cafe, which can accommodate comfortably 7,500 persons, was literally packed to the rafters when band leader Tommy Dorsey blew the first blast from his trombone and his orchestra let loose with some jive and swing music."
Dorsey's singers included a skinny young man from New Jersey named Frank Sinatra.
Preservationists have been worried that Hollywood's real estate boom might lead to the razing of the Palladium to make way for shops, restaurants and condominiums, which are enjoying popularity among buyers attracted to the district's surging nightlife and urban vibe.
"We are going to try our hardest to save the Palladium and restore it," Lowenthal said.
Such a project, however, would be "very expensive," she acknowledged. "We are analyzing it right now and working to come up with plans everyone would be excited about."
Combined Properties has the Palladium in escrow and expects to take title by summer's end.
The company has specialized in building neighborhood shopping centers including Foothill Town Center in Foothill Ranch and is moving toward the type of mixed-use developments gaining popularity in urban areas. It has three such projects planned in West Hollywood.
If Combined Properties can keep the Palladium in place, it would have an easier time of getting a development surrounding it approved, said Leron Gubler, president of the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce.
"It's an important landmark and a lot of people would be very strongly opposed to losing it," he said. "In the interest of moving forward on a quick timetable, it would be a good idea" to save it.
Among those ready to fight for the Palladium is the Los Angeles Conservancy, Executive Director Linda Dishman said.
The building does not have official landmark status, she said, but it was designed by noted Los Angeles architect Gordon Kaufman, who also designed Santa Anita Park in Arcadia.
"Hollywood is known internationally as an entertainment capital, so it is important to keep venues that continue to serve that use," Dishman said. "The Palladium still has a very active place in entertainment today."
The current owner, Palladium Investors Ltd., didn't respond to requests for comment, but President Alan Shuman acknowledged to the Los Angeles Business Journal last week that a sale was being discussed.
Development on the Palladium block on Sunset between Argyle Avenue and El Centro Avenue has been expected, said real estate broker Steven Tronson of Ramsey-Schilling Co., because the district around nearby Vine Street has seen a recent burst of activity. More than $1.2 billion in development including condos, stores, apartments and a hotel are planned or underway.
In 1942, management at the Palladium bragged that a million people a year were going there to dance and escape the pressures of World War II. Big bands led by Glenn Miller, Artie Shaw, Les Brown, Harry James and Stan Kenton performed there, and their shows were broadcast to millions of radio listeners nightly.
The venue retained its appeal for top acts through the years and was also the site of graduation parties for generations of high school seniors. In 1961, the Palladium became home to Lawrence Welk's television show and has been the site of many award events, including the Emmys and Grammys.
As musical tastes changed, so did the performers. The Rolling Stones, James Brown, Led Zeppelin, the Who, Bon Jovi and the Red Hot Chili Peppers have all taken the stage at the Palladium.
The current burst of real estate development is "probably the most exciting time for Hollywood since that era when the Palladium was so great," Gubler said. "It would be in everybody's interest to do a project that could clean up the building."
www.latimes.com/business/l...88451.story
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Mon, July 17, 2006 - 1:38 PMI hear they are knocking it down. -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Mon, July 17, 2006 - 5:03 PMI figured I might as well put in a link for the Los Angeles Convervancy. Some might not be aware of it.
www.laconservancy.org/ -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Mon, July 17, 2006 - 11:08 PMInteresting stuff. I just drove by it the other day. I've seen notable bands there, too -- like Jane's Addiction and the Butthole Surfers.
Those multi-use properties are the wave of the future. Shopping and living right on top of each other. I've seen several of those types of developments popping up around town in more run-down areas, and they certainly spruce up a corner. I think it's the next big thing in this city.
I think, however, that the Palladium is possibly worth preserving. Although it's not a particularly glitzy venue, and I never really thought the architecture was very outstanding. But in a few more decades it may seem more special. And it definitely has historical value.
Hmmmmmmm... I wonder what's going to happen. -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Tue, July 18, 2006 - 11:30 AMTrue the outside is nothing to write home about, but I love the ballroom. I posted a few pictures up.
I've seen so many performances there I can't even remember them all. I recall The Ramones, Sonic Youth, Bauhaus, Paul Weller, Public Enemy, Social Distortion, Oingo Boingo, Brazillian carnivals. When I was 18 I got to meet David Bowie up in the balcony during a Peter Murphy show. Man, it would be a shame to see that place go. -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Tue, July 18, 2006 - 12:48 PMThey should restore it as it was. It was quite beautiful in the 40s, even from the outside. It's horrible now. I don't know how they made the ballroom look so big in the pic! :)
I also remember seeing some hip-hop show there in the early 90s with a bunch of artists performing late into the night. That was the first time I ever saw a nasty girl fight up close and personal.
Goo is still one of my all-time favorite albums.
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Fri, July 21, 2006 - 4:07 PMThe security are assholes there. -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Fri, July 21, 2006 - 11:13 PMI like the floor. I saw Nick Cave there, I think the last time he was here.
I went to one of the teenage fairs there, I put it on another thread a while back.
I 'd be sad if they knocked it down.
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Sat, July 22, 2006 - 3:10 PMOne of the reasons we stopped going there. Not that we ever got roughed up, but watching them literally throw kids out the door made me sick. Last time I was there I had a press pass, so I didn't get the Auschwitz treatment at the door, but I watched as the security was taking away peoples lighters, inhalers (medical) and pretty much anything else they might have in their pockets other than car keys and money and throwing it all in plastic bins. At thirty or thirty five or whatever TicketBastard's price is now I don't know if I'm willing to pay to be treated like I'm being rounded up into a gas chamber.
All that aside, I have seen a lot of good shows there - but that's probably because I only went to shows I really wanted to see. -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Sat, July 22, 2006 - 5:54 PMTotally Aartvark! They are pretty harsh there. It is all because of that stupid gangster rap X-Mas show which happened some years back. Then it started to get all Nazi Germany.
I have seen some good ones too. I think it should be fixed up at least and fix that sound system too.
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Thu, January 18, 2007 - 2:31 PMHollywood would not be whole without the Paladium!
I can remember Lawrence Welk there! I didn't attend - my mother did. She used to go dance to Spade Cooley on the Santa Monica pier too.
I've seen so many shows at the Palladium & never had a bad time Talking Heads, Sly & the Family Stone, Patty Smith, English Beat, King Sunny Ade, Fania All Stars with Celia Cruz & Tito Puente & Stevie Wonder sat in, jeez reggae shows I can't count with 5+ bands before reggae was popular, & rock shows when they would have a slew of bands cz none were icons yet but it was live r n r -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Thu, January 18, 2007 - 3:34 PMI was in it only once,during Halloween,1987 i believe,the only thing i remember a big group of orange clad "stewardesses that did a number on stage and i have a picture of a guy dressed as a unicorn....weird times in Hollywood.
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Sun, January 28, 2007 - 12:42 PMI 1st saw the English Beat as a front band for the Clash at the Palladium in their 1st American show. About 15 yrs ago I danced at a show & when my friend asked for a autograph They asked Me for one & said thanks for dancing!! They were so cool cz it was them & their music that got me out of my stupor of non movement (amongst other hardworking bands) Now I'm health wise not up to my old ska trix & dance kicks but they are playing at a small club here in San Luis
I'm trying to figure if I can push a 60yo body into shape in a week {{((*~~*))}}
That's some tough aerobic workout<<<<O2O2O>>>>
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Thu, December 14, 2006 - 3:38 PMMy boyfriend went to the Wolfmother show there the other night. One of the guards said the date with the wrecking ball is in two weeks. So there you have it. -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Thu, December 14, 2006 - 4:50 PMJeez still?and i am reading "Wilshire Blvd"?I wish they'd get it over with ,bastards.Another hole in the ground ,i thought the days of the "stripmalls"were over? -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Wed, December 20, 2006 - 12:16 AMNo mention on the Palladium website and they've got a New Year's event planned. No mention in the local papers... They could be planning on doing it in the dark of night though. -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Wed, January 17, 2007 - 6:06 PMAnd...again some news...i drove by The Palladium and saw a sign that was an announcement(and not one of a closed/demolition)
Good news? -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Thu, January 18, 2007 - 4:07 PMTwo days ago I drove by and the marquee said it was closed for remodelling. There's hope. -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Thu, January 18, 2007 - 4:14 PMYES! That is what i read! And the building looked so good in the sun,such great lines.Wich reminds me,that Pan Pacific Auditorium was a gem ... -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Fri, January 19, 2007 - 1:50 PMI have a poster of the Pan Pacific on my wall at work...
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Thu, January 18, 2007 - 5:27 PMI hope Remodeling doesn't mean Dismantling And Replacing With Great Big Retail/Residential Complex. -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Thu, January 18, 2007 - 9:40 PMMy thought,safe the facade and put a monster behind it... -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Fri, January 19, 2007 - 12:57 AMHere's a link to an old postcard of the place in its heyday:
www.radioarchives.org/picture...dium.jpg
A monster would fit pretty well.
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Thu, January 25, 2007 - 9:25 AMThe website says closed for remodeling. "The Grand Re-opening date TBA"
hollywoodpalladium.com/
Sooo...I guess we're not losing it after all??! -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Thu, January 25, 2007 - 10:05 AMThat's what the signs say on most restaurants that have gone out of business. Closed For Remodeling tends to mean Remodeling into something completely different. My ex-favorite Chinatown dim sum place, Grandview Gardens, was remodeled into a vacant lot about ten years ago and seems to be doing very well. -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Sat, January 27, 2007 - 1:58 PMoohh oh oh ha haha a vacant lot & doing wellll
That's funny but sad to hear. Someplaces are just part of _____
& awful when not respected for the contribution to the environmental society
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Re: Saved?
Thu, April 12, 2007 - 1:42 PMwww.latimes.com/entertainm...30576.story
So they'll probably douchify it, but it's better than a wrecking ball! -
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Re: Saved?
Sun, April 15, 2007 - 1:20 PMThank you for the post. I'm so happy to hear there are plans to keep it and update it. I have not been there and am looking forward to going in the future. -
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Re: Saved?
Mon, April 16, 2007 - 11:19 AMI drove by last week9early April and the signage was off the billboard plus i noticed a hole in it...I figured THAT WAS IT.
Good news i guess....
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Fri, October 12, 2007 - 3:26 PMMorrissey has been performing there almost every night this month so far. I guess it's back! Anybody know the story? -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Fri, October 12, 2007 - 3:51 PMThe linked story had the info.
Morrissey asked to be the Palladium's final shows before closing. They had originally intended to close and begin the refurbishment earlier, but after he requested they pushed back the start date.
Nothing in the original article particularly scared me. There WILL have to be some changes - I'd imagine the current plates they put over the stairs will be made permanent rather than the current scary plywood/steel arrangement. Something to either open up the "lobby" bar or use the space more effectively would likely also be in the plans, sad though I'll be to lose the only place in the venue that doesn't involve waiting half an hour for a drink. -
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Re: Hollywood Palladium
Fri, May 9, 2008 - 3:05 PMSomething is happening,Who knows what?
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