A film installation at Mitchell-Innes & Nash in New York reveals L.A.'s Ambassador Hotel in its final days. Plus, it's Tonys season, in our weekly arts newsletter.
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[Essential Arts] I drank all the tequila at one of the Academy Museumâs recent unveiling parties and could really use an entire platter of [modeum jeon]( right now. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, arts and urban design columnist for the Los Angeles Times, and Iâm here with your weekly culture newsletter and L.A.'s most appetizing Korean fritters. Remembering the Ambassador Los Angeles filmmaker Pat OâNeill had only ever been inside the Ambassador Hotel once in his life before he began work on a project about the building that would absorb him for years. It was the 1950s. He was a boy. And his great-grandfather was visiting from Kansas. âHe was a grand sort of person,â OâNeill says of his great-grandfather. âHe stayed there, and we went to visit him and have dinner with him.â At that point, the Ambassador, which had opened its doors in 1921, was more than three decades old. âIt already was quite worn,â he recalls. He hardly could have imagined then what would become of the building â or that he would spend years in the 1990s working on a film that would take place within its walls. [A film still shows the facade of the Ambassador Hotel with a group of ghostly figures gathered under the porte cochere.]
Pat OâNeill shot âThe Decay of Fictionâ in the 1990s and early 2000s when the Ambassador Hotel had already shut down and was in a state of decay. (Pat OâNeill / Mitchell-Innes & Nash) Designed by architect Myron Hunt in a Mediterranean style, the Ambassador Hotel, for decades, was the epitome of glamour in Los Angeles â the stamping ground of Rudolph Valentino, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Elizabeth Taylor, Frank Sinatra, Joan Crawford and, on at least one occasion, Albert Einstein. It served, for a time, as a home to the Academy Awards, and its famed Cocoanut Grove nightclub boasted [Casbah-inspired interiors]( studded with fake palm trees (leftover set pieces from Valentinoâs 1921 silent film âThe Sheikâ â or so the legend goes). By the â60s, the hotelâs glamour (and the neighborhoodâs) had faded, and its eventual demise was precipitated by the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy in its pantry in 1968. After that, the Ambassador became associated in name with Kennedyâs death. âPeople just didnât want to come into the place except to gawk at the pantry, the hotelâs former publicist Margaret Burk told [Los Angeles magazine]( in 1998. In 1989, the Ambassador shut down. Following a protracted battle over the site that involved the L.A. Unified School District and Donald Trump, much of the hotel was demolished in 2005. The site is now occupied by the Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools, [an educational complex]( with parts of the old hotel â a diner turned into a teachersâ break room, the Cocoanut Grove rebuilt as an auditorium â integrated into the new design. Remarkably, OâNeill, an artist and experimental filmmaker who grew up in Los Angeles and taught for spells at UCLA and CalArts, managed to gain access to the Ambassador when it was in its somnolent state in the 1990s and early 2000s. At the time, the hotel was empty, in a process of continuous decay and employed as the occasional film set (âPretty Womanâ was shot there) and a training site for the LAPDâs SWAT team. Through a friend, OâNeill secured permission to shoot the hotel, and he proceeded to create a startling and surreal visual record of the Ambassadorâs dilapidated guest rooms, its grand banquet halls, the empty swimming pool and the labyrinthine passageways through which Kennedy was led to his unexpected death. To give the footage an uncanny feel, OâNeill (who for years had a day job working in special effects) built a special rig that could shoot in time lapse â one frame every 10 seconds â so that on playback, the action would move with greater speed. He captured the buildingâs architecture, but he also recorded plays on light and time. Over these images, he layered ghostly images of actors inhabiting the hotel, as well as performers engaged in frantic dance sequences. âThe Decay of Fiction,â as his film is called, debuted in 2002. To watch it is to see a building dream. [A still shows ghostly black-and-white images of two women in housekeeper costumes whispering to each other in a kitchen.]
Pat OâNeillâs âThe Decay of Fiction,â originally released as a feature film in 2002, has scenes with actors laid over footage of the Ambassador Hotel shot shortly before much of it was demolished. (Pat OâNeill / Mitchell-Innes & Nash) In 2018, OâNeill reconceived the film as an immersive, five-channel art installation that [went on view]( at Philip Martin Gallery in Culver City. It is one of those shows I regret not covering at the time. Thankfully, I get a do-over because the installation version of âThe Decay of Fictionâ is now on view at Mitchell-Innes & Nash in New York. The installation takes a film about architecture and turns it into an architectural work. For OâNeill, who in 1989 created [a meditative film]( âWater and Power,â about the ways in which water makes feasible the very idea of Los Angeles, the works focused on the Ambassador were an opportunity to immerse himself in a singular Los Angeles building. âI liked the presence of it,â he says of the hotel. âI like dealing with buildings and neighborhoods that have interesting histories.â In a quiet and surreal way, he captures those histories and preserves them so that the Ambassador, though long gone, manages to remain with us in spirit. Pat OâNeill, âThe Decay of Fiction,â is on view at Mitchell-Innes & Nash in Manhattan through Oct. 23, [miandn.com](. [A darkened gallery has floor-to-ceiling images projected along its walls from Pat O'Neill's Ambassador Hotel film.]
An installation view of Pat OâNeillâs âThe Decay of Fictionâ at Mitchell-Innes & Nash in New York City. (Pat OâNeill / Mitchell-Innes & Nash)
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Tony! Tony! Tony! Itâs Tonys season! Wait, is it? Or is time in the pandemic a flat circle and itâs simply that the much-delayed Tony Awards finally hit the stage? All of the above. Times theater critic Charles McNulty was on the case, and he reports that [this was one awards show that was definitely of our time](. âNot even the most bulldozing Broadway producer could pretend that weâre back to normal,â he writes. âBut this reunion of the Broadway community jogged the memory of what weâve been missing these last 18 months â virtuosity and emotional courage made flesh.â [Leslie Odom Jr., in a black tux, performs before a row of dancers on a stage.]
Leslie Odom Jr., who hosted part of the 74th Annual Tony Awards, performs onstage at the Winter Garden Theatre. (Theo Wargo / Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions) Jessica Gelt, in the meantime, reports on how the showâs producers seemed intent on making it [as difficult as possible]( to watch the Tonys. Part of the show aired on CBS; the other part, on Paramount+. And, oh, âCBS is continuing its archaic tradition of delaying its broadcast in the Pacific time zone until three hours after East Coast fans get to watch live.â Because Lord knows no one would ever give away the winners via social media or a news alert. ð [Hereâs the full list of winners](. âMoulin Rouge! The Musicalâ had 10 wins, while âJagged Little Pillâ took home two awards. Matthew López took home the prize for best play for âThe Inheritance,â becoming the first Latino to win the top drama category. Except that López doesnât use the word âLatino,â preferring âLatiné,â an alternative to âLatinx,â which does away with the gender binary employed in Spanish. [Gelt explains](. [Matthew López gets his bow tie fixed by a friend on the red carpet at the Tony Awards.]
In his acceptance speech at the Tony Awards, Matthew López (getting his tie fixed) stated, âWe have so many stories to tell.â (Bryan Bedder / Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions)
On and off the stage Theater had a joyous moment this week, but it is still contending with reckoning. The Timesâ Ashley Lee reports on the Williamstown Theatre Festival in Massachusetts, the influential Berkshires festival that has long been an important professional pit stop for up-and-coming theater workers. She spoke with [more than two dozen current and former staffers]( contending with what they allege are ârepeated safety hazards and a toxic work culture under the guise of prestige.â As former lighting department head Brandon Bagwell told her: âThe festival is trying to look like they have soil that is incredibly nutritious, but artists are being brought into soil that does not actually foster their growth.â Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.]( After nearly two years of pandemic closures, the Center Theatre Group [has announced its 2022 lineups]( for the Mark Taper Forum and Kirk Douglas Theatre. Expect Jeremy O. Harrisâ âSlave Playâ and Rajiv Josephâs âKing James,â among other very intriguing works. ADVERTISEMENT
Meanwhile, at the academy After years of planning, construction, musical chairs on the executive team and other delays, the Academy Museum finally opened this week. Naturally, [there was a gala]( â with appearances by Spike Lee, Nicole Kidman, Laverne Cox, Cher, Lady Gaga and countless other stars. (Iâm loving Ruth E. Carterâs brilliant red gown.) The red carpet for the event was green! No doubt a nod to the design of the buildingâs Ted Mann Theater, whose seats are also green. The shade is also a favorite of the buildingâs lead architect, Renzo Piano, [who took me on a tour earlier this week](. Piano told me that he would very much like it if all of Los Angeles would stop calling the spherical Geffen Theater the âDeath Star.â He prefers âthe Bubbleâ or âflying vessel.â The building, he says, is about love, not death. âFor me, itâs like a flirt. Itâs a little love story between the older lady there, the May Co. building ... and we have the young flying vessel landing here.â [Renzo Piano looks into the distance while standing on the red-carpeted bridge that leads to the Geffen Theater.]
Pritzker Prize-winning Italian architect Renzo Piano sees the design for the Academy Museum as recognizing L.A.'s growing urbanity. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times) My colleague Greg Braxton got to hang with a true GOAT â greatest of all time. Thatâd be filmmaker Spike Lee, who has [a gallery devoted to all of his inspirations]( filmic, musical and otherwise. âIâm elated,â Lee says of the installation. âIâm happy and honored that this exhibition is here for the opening of the museum.â New York Times film critic Manohla Dargis has [a review]( of the Academy Museumâs exhibitions: âThe industryâs ugliness, its racism and sexism, is directly addressed, but the emphasis is on diversity and pluralism, not past and present sins. Call it a museum of good intentions.â ICYMI, here is [The Timesâ guide]( to visiting the museum. In other academy-adjacent news: The museumâs chief artistic and programming officer, Jacqueline Stewart, was named a recipient of a MacArthur fellowship this week (a.k.a. the âgeniusâ grant). [Among the winners]( were husband-and-wife L.A. filmmakers Cristina Ibarra and Alex Rivera, who received grants for their individual bodies of work â though they have collaborated on at least one occasion: the 2019 hybrid documentary-feature [âThe Infiltrators.â]( Classical notes Classical music critic Mark Swed has been listening to the birds, [the suite of birdsong-inspired compositions]( by Olivier Messiaen, that is. Piano Spheres staged a performance of the 13 solo pieces, titled âCatalogue dâOiseaux,â at the Audubon Center at Debs Park. âThe evocations come across not as translations of one kind of sound into another,â writes Swed, âbut as hearing birds speak in astonishing piano accents.â [Pianist Thomas Kotcheff, in a blue shirt, plays a baby grand piano on an outdoor patio.]
Pianist Thomas Kotcheff plays a movement from Messiaenâs âCatalogue dâOiseaux.â (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times) It has been a historic season for the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl, and Swed reports that it has been [âthe most satisfyingâ in memory](. âGraying and at 40 well past his âDudeâ days,â he writes, Phil musical director Gustavo Dudamel âhas become a magisterial, if still youthfully exuberant, music director who takes everything he conducts with great seriousness and great joy.â Visual culture Artist Alison Saar has a gangbusters two-part survey on view at the Armory Center for the Arts in Pasadena and the Benton Museum of Art at Pomona College (which is looking [very snazzy]( in a beautifully proportioned new building designed by Machado Silvetti). When âAlison Saar: Of Aether and Eartheâ opened in July, Times art critic Christopher Knight [wrote of the work]( that âitâs hard to think of any recent art more salient right now.â This week, [I sat down for a Q&A]( with Saar to talk about how her work has been shaped by race, history, politics and womanhood. We also talk about how she has reimagined the stereotypical character of Topsy from âUncle Tomâs Cabinâ for our age. âI was intrigued with her owning that she is fierce,â she tells me. âIn that fierceness, there is resilience. She is ready to fight back.â [Alison Saar is seen in profile, supporting her chin with her hand.]
Artist Alison Saar at her Laurel Canyon home. (Christina House / Los Angeles Times) Definitely related: Independent arts writer Colony Little talks to Saarâs mother, Betye Saar, about [her watercolors of Black dolls]( on view at Roberts Projects. What Iâm reading (and writing) âWe all identified with the notion of reusing coffee cans for starting veggie seeds or storing leftovers in old sour-cream containers â and we all understood the power of transforming the shame that clings to such acts into celebrations of pragmatism.â Poet, artist and essayist Raquel Gutiérrez has [an absolutely beautiful essay]( on rasquachismo and queer spaces in Places Journal. The term, which emerges from Mexican slang used to denote something vulgar or of little value, has been embraced by artists and urbanists who see in it an aesthetic of resilience. In July, while I was in New York, I saw El Museo del Barrioâs new triennial, âEstamos Bien â La Trienal 20/21â (which closed last week). In a piece for the New York Review of Books, I write about how the show captures a moment in which Latino identity [is in wild flux](. Itâs a show where rasquachismo is definitely present. Happy Hispanic Heritage Month! Speaking of Latino identity: âWhile big broadcast media would like us all to gather round the old tube and watch a variety show of similarly tinted celebrities wax poetic about our collective glories,â writes Daniel Hernandez, âthe emoji generation has had other ideas.â Hernandez writes about how Hispanic Heritage Month [has been turned into a meme]( â reflecting âthe state of ambivalence that we have about ourselves.â Essential happenings Matt Cooper [rounds up the weekendâs best happenings]( including a series of outdoor dance performances choreographed by Jacob Jonas that kick off this weekend. Organized by the Wallis, this weekendâs shows will be in Century City; future gigs will take place in other locations, including downtown and in Santa Monica. Passages Carlisle Floyd, a composer and librettist whose operas explored the culture and traditions of the South, including the 1955 opera âSusannah,â has [died at the age of 95](. As part of its Overlooked No More series, the New York Times pens [a belated obit]( for the Mexico-based surrealist painter Remedios Varo, who died in 1963 at the age of 54. âHer style was reminiscent of Renaissance art in its exquisite precision,â writes Julia Bozzone, âbut her dreamlike paintings were otherworldly in tone.â In other news â I am very into [this photo essay]( on Dominican car culture.
â Aaron Sorkin [speaks out]( (finally) about working with producer Scott Rudin, whose alleged bullying work style was the subject of a Hollywood Reporter [exposé]( in the spring.
â The New Yorkerâs Alex Ross [writes about]( the architecture of Richard Neutra, including the Lovell Health House, recently acquired by gallerists Iwan and Manuela Wirth.
â âUnapologetically utilitarian.â [A design history]( of the dingbat.
â [Construction has kicked off]( on a 19-story housing project by Joseph Wong Design Associates for the unhoused on skid row.
â How did a Cameroonian teenagerâs drawing end up in a painting by Jasper Johns? Geoff Edgers of the Washington Post [has the story](.
â The Underground Museum has awarded its inaugural Noah Davis Prize to [honor innovative curators](. This yearâs winners include Jamillah James of the ICA LA, as well as Candice Hopkins and Thomas Jean Lax.
â A grant from the Svane Family Foundation will allow the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco to [acquire works by local artists](.
â [A report]( by Monument Lab and financed by the Mellon Foundation shows that of the 50 individuals most represented in 50,000 U.S. monuments, 88% are white men and half were slave owners.
â âBehind the Frameâ is an artistic video game that explores [art, cats, love and loss](. And last but not least ... [The winning submissions]( of the miniature dry stone wall building contest in Ireland. (Hat tip to [@imagineterrain]( for the wonder that is this link.) ADVERTISEMENT
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