
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/GettyImages-1011555408-8061e02331bf446e9037691ef69550e2.jpg)
The Beverly Hills Hotel went through several ownership changes in the 1980s. Withīen Silberstein’s death in 1979, ownership passed to his two daughters, Muriel Slatkin and Seema Boesky, wife of Ivan Boesky, the Wall Street arbitrageur. The hotel made another film appearance in 1978 when Broadway playwright Neil Simon, a frequent guest, filmed California Suite at the property. Receiving her Academy Award for Network in 1977. Charlie Chaplin, a frequent guest in the 1920s, returned in 1972 to accept an honorary Oscar. In the 1970s, John Lennon and Yoko Ono hid out in a bungalow for a week. Towards the end of the decade, Marilyn Monroe and Yves Montand checked into bungalows 20 and 21 while filming Let’s Make Love. Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and the rest of the Rat Pack engaged in prodigious drinkingīouts in the Polo Lounge. In 1956, the hotel’s pool and cabana club were backdrops for Gregory Peck and Lauren Bacall in Designing Women. Gallery in the hotel’s lower level, and Liz began a tradition of frequenting bungalows with six of her eight husbands. Included the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon, King Albert of Belgium, the Crown Prince of Monaco, John Wayne and Henry Fonda. Meanwhile, the hotel’s popularity with royalty and celebrities continued to escalate.

In the early 1950s, Detroit real-estate magnate Ben Silberstein purchased the hotel for $5.5 million. In 1949, architect Paul Revere Williams designed the newĬrescent Wing, as well as re-imagined the Polo Lounge, Fountain Coffee Shop and lobby in their still-stylish pink-and-green motif. The exterior was first painted distinctive pink in 1948 to complement the sunset colors and the country club style of that time. Toward the end of the decade the hotel had its first major facelift, and in 1947 it opened the Crystal Room and the Lanai Restaurant (later renamed TheĬoterie). Restaurant after matches in the bean fields. It was Courtright who renamed El Jardin Restaurant the Polo Lounge in honor of a celebrity band of polo players who toasted victories at the Including Loretta Young, Irene Dunne and Harry Warner. The late 30s, The 1940s were a captivating time for The Beverly Hills Hotel, thanks to new owner Hernando Courtright, a vice president of Bank of America, who purchased it in 1941 with friends The bean fields surrounding The Beverly Hills Hotel into prime real estate. More stars followed, including Charlie Chaplin, Gloria Swanson, Buster Keaton, Rudolph, Valentino, Tom Mix, and Will Rogers, transforming Hills soon became one of the world’s smartest addresses. Then, in 1920, Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks built their county home, Pickfair, in the nearby hills. Property as situated “halfway between Los Angeles and the sea.”īy 1914, Beverly Hills had attracted enough residents to incorporate as a city.

On opening invitations, Anderson described the Investing $500,000, then a staggering sum, Green hoped to lure wealthy Easterners to retire in what were then open fields north of Los Angeles. Stucco exterior and terra cotta-colored roof tiles, and named it after Beverly Farms, his home in Massachusetts. Anderson to build a sprawling hotel in Mission Revival style on 12 acres, with white Once owned by the Mexican government in the foothills of the Santa Monica Mountains. Hoping to ignite a land rush, developer Burton Green, President of the Rodeo Land and Water Company, bought land Designed by Elmer Grey, the celebrity hotel opened its doors on May 12,ġ912, two years before the city of Beverly Hills was officially incorporated. Like Hollywood itself, the history of The Beverly Hills Hotel is a 20th-century tale of glamour, riches and romance. In the centre of Beverly Hills, and is surrounded by 12 acres of lush, tropical gardens and exotic flowers. The 5 star Los Angeles hotel is located on Sunset Boulevard, Over the last century, Hollywood stars haveĮnjoyed the timeless glamour of this dramatically beautiful setting, drawn in by the relaxed surroundings and seamless service. Affectionately known as the ‘Pink Palace’, The Beverly Hills Hotel is famous for legendary service and legendary guests.
