THE AMBASSADOR HOTEL

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'The Ambassador Hotel' was a landmark hotel in Los Angeles, California from 1921 until it was demolished in late 2005 and early 2006.

Contents
Background
The RFK shooting
After the death of RFK
Filming at the hotel
Decision to demolish
The Demolition
Cocoanut Grove preservation
2006 - 2010
See also
External links

Background


The Ambassador Hotel formally opened on January 1, 1921 and was located at 3400 Wilshire Boulevard, between Catalina Street and Mariposa Avenue, in the center of Los Angeles mid-Wilshire District. Designed by Pasadena architect Myron Hunt, the Ambassador Hotel was known in the early 1920s until the late 1960s as the winter residence of numerous prominent Hollywood actors/actresses and as the site of several Academy Awards ceremonies.
Perhaps as many as seven U.S. Presidents stayed at The Ambassador Hotel, from Hoover to Nixon, along with heads of state from around the world. For decades, the hotel's famed Cocoanut Grove nightclub hosted the biggest names in entertainment, serving as the launching point of such performers as Frank Sinatra, Barbra Streisand, Judy Garland, Bing Crosby, Liza Minnelli, Merv Griffin, and Richard Pryor.

The RFK shooting


In the pantry area of the hotel's main kitchen, shortly after midnight on June 5, 1968 and following a short victory speech in the Embassy Room ballroom of The Ambassador Hotel, the winner of the California Democratic presidential primary election, Senator Robert F. Kennedy, was shot along with five other persons. Palestinian immigrant Sirhan Bishara Sirhan was arrested at the scene as the alleged lone gunman. Kennedy died one day later from his injuries, while the other victims survived their wounds. During the demoliton of The Ambassador Hotel in late 2005 and early 2006, portions of the area where the 1968 shooting took place were set aside and removed from the site.

After the death of RFK


The death of Robert F. Kennedy (RFK) coincided with the beginning of the hotel's demise, hastened by the decline of the surrounding neighborhood. By the 1970s, the gang and drug problems in the area near the hotel were already becoming severe, and worsened as time went on. Despite a renovation of the Cocoanut Grove in the mid 1970s, under the creative control of Sammy Davis, Jr., the hotel was not able to return to its former splendor, and closed in 1989.

Filming at the hotel


The hotel was a frequent site of movie, music video and television filming, having served as a location for such films as ''The Graduate'', ''Hoffa'', ''Beaches'', '', ''Catch Me If You Can'', ''Crazy'', ''The Mask'', ''Without You I'm Nothing'', ''Crazy in Alabama'', and ''Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas''. Emilio Estevez's movie ''Bobby'' managed to film there in late 2005, even as the adjoining wing was being demolished. The Ambassador Hotel's Cocoanut Grove also played host to rock legend Roy Orbison and several rock performers in the 1987 TV special ''Roy Orbison and Friends, A Black and White Night''

Decision to demolish


From 2004 to 2005, The Ambassador Hotel was totally closed and became the focus of a battle between the Los Angeles Unified School District, who wanted to clear the site and build a school; Sirhan Sirhan, who, through his lawyer the late Lawrence Teeter, wanted to conduct more testing in the pantry where Robert F. Kennedy was shot; and preservationists (L.A. Conservancy and the Art Deco Society), who wanted the hotel and its various elements saved and integrated into the future school.
Following much litigation, a settlement was reached at the end of August 2005, allowing the The Ambassador Hotel demolition to go forward in exchange for the establishment of a $4.9 million fund, earmarked for saving historic school buildings in the Los Angeles Unified School District.

The Demolition


On September 10, 2005, a final public auction was held for the remaining hotel fittings and work soon began on demolition of The Ambassador Hotel. On January 16, 2006, the last section of The Ambassador Hotel fell, with most of the demolition taking place in 2005, leaving only the annex that housed the hotel entrance, a shopping arcade, the coffee shop, and the Cocoanut Grove, all of which were promised to be preserved in some manner and used in the new school. A wake attended by hundreds was held for The Ambassador Hotel on February 2, 2006 at the Gaylord Apartments and adjoining restaurant H.M.S. Bounty [1], both part of a historic building built in 1924, directly across the street from the Ambassador; Diane Keaton, who was one of many who fought for the preservation of the hotel, was among the speakers at the ceremony.

Cocoanut Grove preservation


The Cocoanut Grove nightclub has been renovated a number of times before, destroying much of its architectural integrity, and it was promised that it would undergo yet another major transformation before emerging as the auditorium for the new school. Also promised was preservation of the attached ground floor coffee shop, designed by noted black architect, Paul Williams.

2006 - 2010


LAUSD plans to build Central Los Angeles New Learning Center #1 K-3 [2] and Central Los Angeles New Learning Center #1 4-8/HS [3]. LAUSD plans to open the K-3 facility in 2009 and the 4-8 and high school facility in 2010. The north side of the new school will suggest the original facade of the hotel and north lawns will remain much the same, as seen from Wilshire Boulevard.

See also



Robert F. Kennedy

Robert F. Kennedy assassination

External links



TheAmbassadorHotel.com

Ambassador Hotel image library

The Ambassador's Ambassador of Goodwill - "Art The Doorman" - includes many vintage photographs

"Late Check-Out: Images From The Ambassador Hotel's Final Two Years"

The Ambassador's Last Stand

Seeing Stars: The Ambassador Hotel

"Dead inn" by Hank Stuever: ''Washington Post'', April 18, 2004

"Last Looks", an exhibit featuring LMGA Location Manager's Photos of the hotel's last days

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