A June visit to a glorious collection of art-filled historic sites.
A September stroll through a century-old cemetery, filled with surprisingly lively souls.
A December feast -- yes, eating and drinking -- in half a dozen historic homes.
If you haven't tried one of WAHA’s legendary annual events, you're in for a treat. Here’s our lineup for 2010. Watch this site for ticket ordering information.
Saturday, August 14, 1:30-4:30 p.m.
William Andrews Clark Library gardens, 2520 Cimarron St. (Kinney Heights)
What better way to spend a summer afternoon than eating ice cream, socializing with neighbors and listening to musical entertainment? Please put on your summer whites or Victorian-inspired attire, and join WAHA at its Ice Cream Social, returning to West Adams after a too-long hiatus.
In the 1980s and 1990s, WAHA tradition called for an annual Ice Cream Social, with sweets and frozen treats, games and lots of fun for kids and grown-ups alike. But as WAHA invented some new activities, the Ice Cream Social fell by the wayside, albeit with fond memories. This summer, WAHA is bringing the event back – and happily, at a great venue we are sure you all want to see.
The William Andrews Clark Memorial Library is one of Los Angeles’s major landmarks and scholarly library resources, noted for its rare books, Oscar Wilde collection, and fine printing. The library was erected by William Andrews Clark, Jr., and named after his father, who had built a mining fortune in Montana. The son, a prominent Los Angeles book collector and philanthropist, had a house at the corner of Adams Blvd. and Cimarron Street, and from 1924 to 1926 he constructed the library and its formal gardens on the same lot.
In addition to ice cream, cookies, and music, we will have a cake walk. This game is a combination of musical chairs and a raffle -- the person who lands on the winning square wins a cake. There will also be raffle prizes and other surprises.
All in all, a lovely way to while away a summer afternoon in Historic West Adams.
If you would like to donate baked goods or volunteer to help, please contact .
Book It: A Society Columnist's Heritage plus Cagney & Lacey Producer's Memoir in
Historic Lafayette Square Villa, 4 p.m. (Reception); 5 p.m. (author talk and book signing)
at the former home of Princess Conchita Pignatelli (RSVP required)
WAHA invites you to meet TV producer Barney Rosenzweig and tour a literary legend's
former home at one of our periodic "Books in Historic Places" events next week.
Rosenzweig will talk about growing up in Boyle Heights, his lifetime in television, and
his memoir, Cagney & Lacey and Me: An Inside Hollywood Story, Or How I Learned to
Stop Worrying and Love the Blond. This author talk and book signing will be held at a home
associated with another Hollywood literary figure, society columnist Princess Conchita
Pignatelli, whose father was the namesake for Sepulveda Boulevard. (The book will be
available for purchase and signing at this event.)
In a media landscape today filled with strong female voices, it is worthwhile
remembering there was a time not too long ago when most women journalists were relegated
to newspapers' "Society" pages and a TV program about two women detectives was considered
"groundbreaking."
But as television producer Rosenzweig recalls in Cagney & Lacey and Me, in the
mid-1970s, when the feminist movement was in full gear, he realized that "never in the
history of motion pictures or television had Hollywood made a film where two women related
to each other as did Paul Newman and Robert Redford. In other words, there had never been
a buddy movie featuring women. Why not make one?"
Rosenzweig's light bulb moment eventually morphed into the popular TV series about two
female New York City police detectives, Cagney & Lacey, which aired on CBS from 1982
to 1988. The show starred Sharon Gless as Christine Cagney, a single, career-minded
woman, and Tyne Daly as Mary Beth Lacey, a married working mother. The series received 14
Emmys over the course of its run, and changed the course of women characters on
television.
A generation earlier, Princess Conchita Sepulveda Chapman Pignatelli made headlines -
literally - as the leading society columnist for William Randolph Hearst's Los Angeles
Examiner newspaper. The famed princess (who was the daughter of Ygnacio Sepulveda and the
ex-wife of a Papal prince) was a contemporary of and friendly competitor to gossip
columnists Louella Parsons and Hedda Hopper. As a reporter for nearly three decades, from
the early 1930s until the Examiner closed its own doors and merged with the Herald-Express
in 1962, Princess Pignatelli profiled the royal families of Europe, General MacArthur's
return to the U.S. and Hollywood stars such as Sophia Loren. During much of this period,
Princess Pignatelli held home court at a 1926 Spanish Revival villa in Lafayette
Square.
Barney Rosenzweig is one of television's best-known producers (along with Cagney &
Lacey, he helmed John Steinbeck's East of Eden, The Trials of Rosie O'Neill and Christy).
He has three daughters, including Allyn Rosenzweig Mango. Allyn and her husband, David
Mango, are newer West Adams residents and they have just restored the Princess Pignatelli
house.
Our hosts have invited us to tour the house during the reception before the author talk
and book signing. The event is free (we do ask you to RSVP so we can provide enough food
and beverage) but the books are not, and will be for sale.
If you want to attend the May 15 book signing you must RSVP to: