Beverly Wilshire Hotel
Beverly Wilshire Hotel | |
![]() The Beverly Wilshire Hotel in 2007 | |
Location | Beverly Hills, California, USA |
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Coordinates | 34°4′1″N 118°24′3″W / 34.06694°N 118.40083°W |
Built | 1928 |
Architect | Walker & Eisen[1] |
NRHP reference No. | 87000908[1] |
Added to NRHP | June 12, 1987 |
The Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel, commonly known as the Beverly Wilshire Hotel, is a historic, luxury hotel in Beverly Hills, California, located at the intersection of Wilshire Boulevard and Rodeo Drive. It was completed in 1928 and has been used as a shooting location for films and television series.
History
[edit]
The Beverly-Wilshire Apartment Hotel opened on January 1, 1928. It was constructed by real estate developer Walter G. McCarty on the site of the former Beverly Hills Speedway. At the time, the city had fewer than 18,000 residents. The E-shaped structure was built of Tuscan stone and Carrara marble in the Italian Renaissance style. It was soon after renamed The Beverly Wilshire Hotel.
McCarty sold the hotel on November 1, 1944 for $2.25 million to Arnold Kirkeby,[2] who made it part of his Kirkeby Hotels chain.[3] Between 1946 and 1957, the hotel was renovated in stages, to designs by noted African American architect Paul Revere Williams.[4] A ballroom was added to accommodate the popular big bands of the day. An Olympic-sized swimming pool was built and championship tennis courts were added, with tennis champion Pancho Gonzalez as tennis director.[5]
Kirkeby sold the hotel in 1955 to Evelyn Sharp.[6] She sold the hotel in 1961 to William Zeckendorf's Webb and Knapp firm, along with the Gotham Hotel and the Stanhope Hotel in New York for $25 million.[7] Later that same year, the hotel was sold again to a group of investors headed by Hernando Courtright,[5][8] a Zeckendorf executive who had been in charge of the redevelopment of the Twentieth Century-Fox backlot as Century City.[9] The hotel was rebranded as Hernando Courtright's Beverly Wilshire Hotel. Courtright added a new tower wing in 1971, doubling the size of the hotel.[10]
In 1985, just months before his death, Courtright sold the hotel for $125 million to Hong Kong-based Regent International Hotels, which renamed it The Regent Beverly Wilshire. In 1986, Regent International Hotels was bought by EIE, part of the business empire of flamboyant Japanese billionaire developer Harunori Takahashi.[11] Regent gutted and renovated the historic Wilshire Wing in 1988 at a cost of $100 million, to designs by Gruen Associates.[12] The newer Beverly Wing in the rear was renovated in 1989 for a further $60 million.[13] In 1992, EIE sold Regent International Hotels to Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts and the hotel was renamed The Regent Beverly Wilshire, a Four Seasons Hotel, though its ownership remained with EIE subsidiary Hotel Investment Corp.[14]
In February 1996, Hotel Investment Corp sold the hotel for $100 million to BW Hotel LLC,[14] a Hong Hong consortium of eight companies, led by Lai Sun.[15] In 2006, the hotel was again renamed following a renovation, dropping the Regent affiliation and becoming Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel.[16] In January 2025, Four Seasons and BW Hotel LLC, owner of Beverly Wilshire, jointly announced that Four Seasons will conclude management of the hotel at the end of the term of its management agreement in December 2025, after which date the hotel will operate independently as The Beverly Wilshire.[17]
Notable guests and events
[edit]On Saturday, October 9, 1937, F. Scott Fitzgerald lunched at the Beverly Wilshire with Ginevra King, whom he'd known when they were both young and who is held to have been a model for Daisy Buchanan, in his The Great Gatsby.[18]: 86–87
In July 1940, the Beverly Wilshire agreed to accommodate Paul Robeson at the then "exorbitant" rate of $100 per night and only if he would register under an assumed name. Robeson was about to perform at the Hollywood Bowl accompanied by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. He accepted the hotel's terms but then "defiantly" spent every afternoon sitting in the lobby, where he was widely recognized. Los Angeles hotels lifted their restrictions on black guests soon after.[19]: 100–110 [20]
On November 18, 1966, Sandy Koufax, star pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers, announced his sudden retirement from baseball at the age of 30 due to his ailing arm in a press conference at the Beverly Wilshire.[21]
Elvis Presley and later Warren Beatty spent a number of years in the hotel. It was the home of John Lennon, when he was separated for several months from his wife Yoko Ono.[22]
The American socialite and Woolworth department store heiress Barbara Hutton spent her last years in near poverty and poor health in the hotel and died there in May 1979.[5]
In 1990, the Beverly Wilshire was the primary setting for the movie Pretty Woman, though most interior scenes were actually shot at the defunct Ambassador Hotel nearby.[22] It also became a common filming location for HBO's Entourage television series, with cast and crew filming there at least three times per season when it was produced from 2004 until 2011.[23]
Scottish author Andrew O'Hagan related, in the London Review of Books, that he was once seated next to then 73-years old Joan Didion in some event at a "weird Italian-Japanese restaurant," when she beckoned him closer. "Hoping," he wrote, "for a deathless secret of the sort once whispered to her by Ernest Hemingway or Greta Garbo," he heard Didion say emphatically, "Whenever you're in Los Angeles, you must always stay at the Beverly Wilshire." And that was it.[24]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "The Beverly Wilshire Hotel". National Park Gallery. United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service. June 12, 1987.
- ^ "Marks v. Walter McCarty Corporation (1948)". FindLaw.
- ^ "Beverly-Wilshire Apartment Hotel, Beverly Hills, CA". Pacific Coast Architecture Database. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ "Beverly Wilshire Hotel, Beverly Hills". Paul Revere Williams project. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ a b c "The Beverly-Wilshire Hotel". Travel Guide. September 2, 2011. Archived from the original on April 25, 2012. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ "Beverly Wilshire Hotel nomination". National Park Service. National Register of Historic Places Inventory. May 15, 1987. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ "Zeckendorff Buys Three More Hotels". Cervi's Rocky Mountain Journal. Colorado Historic Newspapers Collection. August 16, 1961. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ Thackrey Jr, Ted (February 25, 1986). "Famous for Two Elegant Beverly Hills Hostelries : Innkeeper Hernando Courtright Dies". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ Oates, Marylouise (April 25, 1988). "Last Hurrah for Hernando's Hideaway". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ Delugach, Al (November 6, 1985). "Famed Beverly Wilshire Hotel Sold : Investor Group Led by Hong Kong Firm to Pay $125 Million". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ Sterngold, James (February 12, 1991). "A Japanese Symbol of Excess". The New York Times. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ Del Rosso, Laura (April 22, 2007). "The Beverly Wilshire undergoes a transformation". Travel Weekly. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ Ryon, Ruth (December 4, 1988). "Hotel Wing to Reopen in 'Rehearsal' : Beverly Wilshire Employees Will Occupy Rooms". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ a b Iritani, Evelyn (February 17, 1996). "Hong Kong Group Buys Beverly Wilshire". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ "Lai Sun leads US hotel purchase". South China Morning Post. February 17, 1996. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ "Regent Beverly Wilshire Renamed". eHotelier. September 26, 2006. Archived from the original on January 5, 2018. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ "Four Seasons to End Management of Beverly Wilshire at End of 2025". Luxury Travel Advisor. January 31, 2025. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ West III, James L. W. (2005). The Perfect Hour: The Romance of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ginevra King, His First Love. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-1-4000-6308-6 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ Robinson, Earl; Gordon, Eric A. (1998). Ballad of an American: The Autobiography of Earl Robinson. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810834330.
- ^ Dreier, Peter (May 8, 2014). "We Are Long Overdue for a Paul Robeson Revival". Los Angeles Review of Books.
- ^ Maher, Charles (November 19, 1966). "Koufax Quits Because of Ailing Arm". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ a b "The Regent Beverly Wilshire Hotel". Seeing Stars. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ Grieve, Cayte (July 28, 2009). "Los Angeles: Top 10 'Entourage' Hotspots". BlackBook. Archived from the original on September 11, 2011. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
- ^ O'Hagan, Andrew (June 26, 2025). "Air-Conditioned Unease". London Review of Books. Retrieved June 27, 2025.
External links
[edit]- Hotels in Beverly Hills, California
- Wilshire Boulevard
- History of Los Angeles
- Hotel buildings completed in 1928
- Hotel buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Los Angeles
- Buildings and structures on the National Register of Historic Places in Los Angeles County, California
- Hotels established in 1928
- Four Seasons hotels and resorts
- 1928 establishments in California