Article: Nicholas Ray
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The Zwebell apartment buildings are highly prized, especially Andalusia, which is now a condo with units over a million dollars. The largest, with 3 bedrooms on 2 floors, which the Zwebells occupied, cost over $2M. (The one shown in the article for $849K is one of the 3 smallest units.) Most of the buildings are in good shape and command high rent. Villa Primavera, while it certainly is costly to rent, as everything in WeHo is, was never as inviting as the others. The apartments are small and very dark, and the courtyard has seen better days. The courtyard set for "In a Lonely Place" (hardly the best noir film) was loosely inspired by the Villa, while the interiors were a complete Hollywood fabrication.
I thought it might be worthwhile to try to illustrate this subject---specifically, a bit of the settings for "In a Lonely Place." I took a few screen shots of images found online . . .
We start with a shot of Bogie, at the door of Gloria Grahame's dwelling, a set mentioned by Roderick. The carved door is one of several we see in the following stills.
(Sorry about the superimposed graphics; I couldn't get rid of them.)

Is there something a bit odd about this door ?

Anybody recognize the painting on the wall ? (For some reason, my mother had this reproduction on our wall, for a while.)

Another look at the painting . . .

An elliptical-arched fireplace opening---so Mission Revival !

More doors:

And the pièce de resistance: What could possibly explain the irregularities in this door ? A contest between studio carpenters, to see what they could put over on the director ?

We start with a shot of Bogie, at the door of Gloria Grahame's dwelling, a set mentioned by Roderick. The carved door is one of several we see in the following stills.
(Sorry about the superimposed graphics; I couldn't get rid of them.)

Is there something a bit odd about this door ?

Anybody recognize the painting on the wall ? (For some reason, my mother had this reproduction on our wall, for a while.)

Another look at the painting . . .

An elliptical-arched fireplace opening---so Mission Revival !

More doors:

And the pièce de resistance: What could possibly explain the irregularities in this door ? A contest between studio carpenters, to see what they could put over on the director ?

New book on Ray, by his daughter, Nicca ... on Librarything's monthly request list, free from the publisher:
Request it!
Request by Feb 24
On sale May 05
Ray By Ray: A Daughter's Take on the Legend of Nicholas Ray by Nicca Ray (Three Rooms Press)
Description: Nicholas Ray was cinema. The legendary director of such classic films as Rebel Without a Cause was an innovative force who dramatically changed the Hollywood landscape. He was also Nicca Ray’s dad, Nick.
After he disappeared from her life in 1964, Nicca began to imagine her father as a hero who would return and whisk her away from a life in LA where she never felt safe. However, the man who finally reappeared was not the legendary figure she dreamed of. Through his movies and letters along with her intimate interviews of family members and Hollywood icons, Nicca stitches together the seemingly disparate pieces of the real Nicholas Ray: A man so devoted to his craft he insisted on spending the last hours of his life surrounded by a film crew; a man who lost everything to drugs and gambling; an absentee father she longed to connect with.
Both well-researched and deeply personal, Ray by Ray: A Daughter's Take on the Legend of Nicholas Ray unravels the lives entangled in Nick’s, including those of Gloria Grahame, Dennis Hopper, Wim Wenders, and the Ray family itself. Nicca tracks her father’s whereabouts during the years he was missing from her life and works to reconcile his artistry with his persona. In discovering the truth about her father, she navigates her own path beyond the shadows cast by the Golden Age of Hollywood.
An essential new perspective on Nicholas Ray, with more than 50 photos and letters from the author's personal archive, Ray by Ray redefines this legendary figure through the eyes of a daughter searching for the truth about her father.
"Nicholas Ray invented the meme of teenage anguish. His daughter Nicca lived it. The first miracle is that she survived. The second is that she created this beautiful, heart-breaking book, in which she maps the intersecting arcs of her life and her father's, creating a dazzling geometry of self-creation and self-destruction." �Peter Trachtenberg, author, Another Insane Devotion
» Publisher information
Request it!
Request by Feb 24
On sale May 05
Ray By Ray: A Daughter's Take on the Legend of Nicholas Ray by Nicca Ray (Three Rooms Press)
Description: Nicholas Ray was cinema. The legendary director of such classic films as Rebel Without a Cause was an innovative force who dramatically changed the Hollywood landscape. He was also Nicca Ray’s dad, Nick.
After he disappeared from her life in 1964, Nicca began to imagine her father as a hero who would return and whisk her away from a life in LA where she never felt safe. However, the man who finally reappeared was not the legendary figure she dreamed of. Through his movies and letters along with her intimate interviews of family members and Hollywood icons, Nicca stitches together the seemingly disparate pieces of the real Nicholas Ray: A man so devoted to his craft he insisted on spending the last hours of his life surrounded by a film crew; a man who lost everything to drugs and gambling; an absentee father she longed to connect with.
Both well-researched and deeply personal, Ray by Ray: A Daughter's Take on the Legend of Nicholas Ray unravels the lives entangled in Nick’s, including those of Gloria Grahame, Dennis Hopper, Wim Wenders, and the Ray family itself. Nicca tracks her father’s whereabouts during the years he was missing from her life and works to reconcile his artistry with his persona. In discovering the truth about her father, she navigates her own path beyond the shadows cast by the Golden Age of Hollywood.
An essential new perspective on Nicholas Ray, with more than 50 photos and letters from the author's personal archive, Ray by Ray redefines this legendary figure through the eyes of a daughter searching for the truth about her father.
"Nicholas Ray invented the meme of teenage anguish. His daughter Nicca lived it. The first miracle is that she survived. The second is that she created this beautiful, heart-breaking book, in which she maps the intersecting arcs of her life and her father's, creating a dazzling geometry of self-creation and self-destruction." �Peter Trachtenberg, author, Another Insane Devotion
» Publisher information
Goodness. And all I have is this photo of H H Harris's Birtcher house, with Ray's Hollywood Graham (or, correctly, Graham Hollywood).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham-Paige

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham-Paige

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Yes. Note the Wright/Schindler fireplace seating . . .
https://www.flickr.com/photos/michael_locke/29997684612 (Lautner and De Long houses, too)
https://monocle.com/magazine/issues/103 ... rovements/

https://www.flickr.com/photos/michael_locke/29997684612 (Lautner and De Long houses, too)
https://monocle.com/magazine/issues/103 ... rovements/
