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Lowe Debuts Terranea in Palos Verdes

Terranea, located on the Palos Verdes peninsula with dramatic views of Catalina Island, offers a 360-room hotel, 20 bungalows, 50 oceanfront casitas and 32 ocean-view villas, plus a 9-hole golf course, a 25-room spa, three ocean-view pools, scenic bluff-top trails, and a secluded beach cove.
Terranea, located on the Palos Verdes peninsula with dramatic views of Catalina Island, offers a 360-room hotel, 20 bungalows, 50 oceanfront casitas and 32 ocean-view villas, plus a 9-hole golf course, a 25-room spa, three ocean-view pools, scenic bluff-top trails, and a secluded beach cove.

Lowe Enterprises, a national real estate development, investment and management firm with Pacific Palisades leadership, opened Terranea Resort on June 12, bringing Los Angeles County its first true coastal resort.   The Mediterranean-styled 582-room resort is set on 102-acres that span the coastline atop the bluffs in Rancho Palos Verdes, a verdant peninsula 20 miles south of Los Angeles International Airport. ‘Ten years and $480 million in the making, Terranea is the crowning achievement of our company,’ said Bob Lowe, chairman and CEO of Los Angeles-based Lowe Enterprises, and a long-time resident of Rustic Canyon with his wife, Beth. ‘This is a rare property; one of Southern California’s most scenic with stunning vistas and natural coastal habitat. We have been mindful of its singular beauty and environmental resources in our planning and are confident that it quickly will become a sought-out destination for local visitors as well as national and international guests.’ Terranea, which may well be the last large resort built along the Southern California coast, is managed by Lowe subsidiary, Destination Hotels & Resorts. The 600 jobs it has created again make the site one of the area’s largest employers as it was for several decades when Marineland of the Pacific, an ocean-themed attraction, was located here. ‘The property’s location will introduce a whole new generation to a part of Los Angeles that feels worlds away from the dynamic city,’ noted Rob Lowe, CEO of Lowe Hospitality Group, the firm’s national hotel, resort and resort residential community acquisition, development and management division. He also lives in Pacific Palisades with his wife, Suzanne, and their two children. ‘It’s been 20 years since Marineland brought visitors here and since then, the property has been enjoyed from afar by millions as a favorite Hollywood filming location.’ Terranea (terra-NAY-a) is comprised of a 360-room hotel, 20 bungalows, 50 oceanfront casitas and 32 ocean-view villas. The resort’s amenities include The Links at Terranea, one of the world’s most dramatic 9-hole golf courses; The Spa at Terranea with 25 treatment rooms; three ocean-view pools; a secluded beach cove and a collection of eight distinctive restaurants, bars and lounges. A children’s center offers interactive nature programs. Making Terranea even more attractive to visitors are several miles of scenic bluff-top trails that connect to miles of off-property coastal trails. Terranea expects to welcome many social and business gatherings in its 135,000 square feet of meeting and event space. This includes 60,000 square feet of indoor facilities with a stylish ballroom and 75,000 square feet of outdoor meeting space and gathering lawns, all designed to showcase the Pacific Ocean locale. ‘Terranea feels secluded and private, providing an oceanfront escape that transports guests to another world, but is still close to all the attractions of one of the world’s great cities,’ said Terri A. Haack, executive vice president and managing director of the new resort. ‘In addition,’ added Haack, ‘our staff has received many hours of training to ensure that Terranea offers a level of gracious, highly personalized service found only in the most exclusive resorts.’ Terranea was developed with great care and sensitivity to protect the natural environment and scenic coastline. Lowe Enterprises preserved 45 stately trees on the site that date back over 50 years, which were carefully boxed prior to construction and then replanted. In addition, Lowe planted 14 acres of natural coastal sage scrub habitat to recreate the natural California coastal terrain. Finally, Terranea includes a series of water-quality systems to treat and clean rainwater runoff and help protect the ocean. ‘We are proud that Terranea provides access to irreplaceable land while safeguarding its beauty and nurturing the flora and fauna ‘ all for benefit of generations to come,’ said Rob Lowe. ‘It is our vision that people will come away from Terranea compelled to become caretakers with us, of the land and the ocean that make Southern California one of the world’s most precious locales.’ For more information, visit www.terranea.com or call (866) 802-8000. For a video overview of Terranea, please visit: http://www.terranea.com/palos-verdes-videos.php. Destination Hotels & Resorts is consistently rated one of the top 10 independent hospitality management companies in the United States with more than 30 luxury and upscale hotels, resorts and conference centers. To protect and preserve the unique communities in which the company operates, Destination launched Destination Earth, an environmental sustainability program in 2008. In addition to Terranea in the greater Los Angeles area, Destination operates properties in key metropolitan areas and resort markets including Washington, D.C., Denver, San Diego, Santa Fe, Aspen, Palm Springs, Houston and Lake Tahoe. Destination is a subsidiary of Los Angeles-based investment, development and management firm Lowe Enterprises. Visit: www.destinationhotels.com. Lowe Enterprises is a leading national real estate investment, development and management firm. Over the past 37 years, it has developed, acquired or managed more than $16 billion of real estate assets nationwide. In addition to its Los Angeles headquarters, the company maintains regional offices in Denver, Irvine, San Francisco, Sacramento and Washington, D.C. Visit: www.loweenterprises.com. A third Lowe son, Michael (who also lives in the Palisades), is executive vice president and chief investment officer of Lowe Enterprises, and president of Lowe Enterprises.

Medved to Discuss Local Film Locales

Author Harry Medved, best known as the co-author, with older brother Michael Medved, of the ‘Golden Turkey Awards: The Worst Achievement in Hollywood History’ books, will discuss film locations in the Santa Monica Mountains when the Chautauqua Series continues on Tuesday, July 21, 7:30 p.m., in Temescal Gateway Park, 15601 Sunset Blvd.   The event, which will include a short video presentation of movie clips, is sponsored by the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy and presented by the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority. ‘I’m going to talk about how you can use movies as a tool to help plan your mini-getaway in Santa Ynez Canyon,’ says Medved, who is director of public relations at Fandango.com. The Palisades High alum notes that since Thomas Ince shot silent movies (from 1911 to 1919), various films have been shot in Santa Ynez Canyon, which today encompasses Palisades Drive and the Highlands. ‘The Post Telegrapher,’ which Ince shot with Francis Ford and was released in May 1912, is one of the movies shot in the Canyon.   The neighboring Santa Monica Mountains have doubled for Africa (Paramount Ranch in the first 3-D movie, ‘B’wana Devil’), Korea and Wales (Malibu Creek State Park in ‘M*A*S*H,’ and ‘How Green Was My Valley,’ respectively). Shooting in the Santa Monica Mountains reached a fever pitch in the 1960s and 1970s, before private land held by Paramount and 20th Century Fox was sold. Still, filming in the mountains persists, as attested by a ‘True Blood’ shoot in recent weeks, across from Malibu Creek. Medved adds that, to his knowledge, the only movie shot in Temescal Gateway Park has been ‘The Number 23’ starring Jim Carrey (2007). One of the features Medved brought to Fandango’s Web site is its ‘Summer Movie Guide’ section, where people can plan visits to locations used in the filming of such motion pictures as ‘Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen’ (San Pedro), ‘Land of the Lost’ (Trona Pinnacles) and the upcoming ‘Iron Man 2’ (Sepulveda Dam). Following the lecture, Medved will sign copies of the book he co-authored with his PaliHi pal, Bruce Akiyama, ‘Hollywood Escapes: The Moviegoer’s Guide Exploring Southern California’s Great Outdoors.’ The Chautauqua Series meets the third Tuesday of every month at 7:30 p.m. Meet at the Rubell Memorial Lawn. (Please note: Culture in the Canyon will move its programs to this location for July and August.) Free admission and parking. Open to the public. Coffee will be provided.

From Drawing Panels to Appearing on Them

Stan Sakai (left), his comic-book character, Usagi Yojimbo, and his buddy, famed MAD magazine cartoonist Sergio Aragones. Aragones illustrated the cover for the convention's commemorative 40th anniversary book (inset).
Stan Sakai (left), his comic-book character, Usagi Yojimbo, and his buddy, famed MAD magazine cartoonist Sergio Aragones. Aragones illustrated the cover for the convention’s commemorative 40th anniversary book (inset).

By MICHAEL AUSHENKER Staff Writer For Palisadians driving down to Comic-Con International next week, the pop culture extravaganza, which showcases the latest in movies, television, video games, and, oh, yeah, comics, returns to the San Diego Convention Center July 22”July 26. One cartoonist you’ll be hearing a lot about this year will be Stan Sakai. Sakai has been attending for 30 years, but this convention will be particularly memorable, as Comic-Con”in the midst of celebrating its own 40th anniversary”will honor 25 years of Sakai’s comic-book series ‘Usagi Yojimbo.’ Currently reaching issue #123, ‘Usagi Yojimbo’ tells the tale of the titular samurai bunny; a genial book featuring an adventure-seeking warrior in the middle of 17th century Japan. Such characters as the lovely Mariko, mentor Katsuichi, Gen the Bounty Hunter, Shingen the Neko Ninja, Stray Dog, the wizard Kitsune, and Spot the Wonder Lizard have joined the ‘ronin rabbit’ on his journey. ‘The politics and the culture of Japan had changed at that time,’ Sakai explains regarding his interest in this era of the country’s history. ‘Foreign traders coming in, Samurai culture. It was very exciting, very turbulent. Not politically, as the shogun had unified the country, but sociologically very turbulent.’ Over the decades, ‘Usagi’ has been distributed by four different publishers, but the product has always been Sakai’s vision. ‘I own the characters,’ he says. ‘My publisher has no input. It’s pretty rare in comic books to have that autonomy.’ Sakai sets the tone of his book, which is for general audiences. ‘Basically, I write for myself,’ Sakai says. ‘These are the stories that I would like to read. It’s more instinctual there are certain. The violence is toned down and it’s never gratuitous.’ Since the mid-1990s, ‘Usagi Yojimbo’ has been published by Dark Horse Comics, best known for such Hollywood-adapted comics as ‘The Mask’ and ‘Hellboy.’ Over that time, ‘Usagi’ has shared some history and storyline crossovers with another anthropomorphic-hero series, ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,’ both in comic book and animated cartoon form (Comic-Con will also honor the Ninja Turtles’ 25th anniversary next week). In 1991, Sakai fast-forwarded his characters for ‘Space Usagi,’ a futuristic spin-off. The Oregon-based Dark Horse will be going all out to celebrate ‘Usagi”’s 25th this year. In addition to the regular series from Dark Horse Comics, this summer will see a new trade paperback collection, ‘Bridge of Tears’ (collecting issues #94 through 102 of Sakai’s series); and a self-contained, fully painted, 64-page graphic novel in November, ‘Yokai.’ ‘Yokai are the demons, ghosts and goblins from Japanese culture,’ Sakai says. ‘My editor, Diana Schutz, suggested for the 25th anniversary let’s do something special. I told her I’d need three months, she gave me 2 and a half months, finished it in less than that.’ In addition to Dark Horse’s plans, former publisher Fantagraphics will collect all of its early ‘Usagi’ comics”seven trade paperbacks’ worth””in a massive 1200-page, two-volume slipcase special edition. ‘Usagi’ is not the only comics Sakai works on. For 25 years, Sakai has moonlighted as the letterer on MAD magazine cartoonist Sergio Aragon’s’ long-running hit comic-book series, ‘Groo the Wanderer.’ For about as long, Sakai has lettered Sunday editions of ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’ syndicated newspaper strip. ‘I do it mainly because I get to work with [‘Spider-Man’ co-creator and writer] Stan Lee,’ Sakai says. Sakai has many fond memories of attending Comic-Con: ‘I remember Jack Kirby’s 70th birthday party at the basement at the Hotel San Diego, which is no longer there. And when the convention was held at the El Cortez Hotel, Sergio singing at the top of his lungs, probably ‘Lady of Spain.” Sakai emphasizes that he does not feel confined by ‘Usagi”s period-piece backdrop. ‘I can do whatever type of story I want to: mystery, romance, horror, humor,’ Sakai says. ‘I can do any type of genre I want. And this is without the interference of a publisher.’ The recently wrapped ‘Traitors of the Earth’ story arc incorporated a Western concept, zombies, in the form of a resurrected defeated samurai army. And his process has not changed much over the years. ‘With the major story arcs, I know what will happen months from now,’ he says. ‘But figuring out what happens next month, that’s the hard part.’ He relishes the research process, which can mean trips to the Pacific Asia Museum in Pasadena, or the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachussetts, ‘which has a wonderful Japanese wing. ‘The research comes from necessity,’ he continues. ‘I use it as part of the story.’ His upcoming story ‘Shoyu’ will feature how soy sauce was made in the 17th century. Published in 12 countries, ‘Usagi’ has won every major industry award, including the Inkpot, three Will Eisner Awards, a Harvey Award, and two Spanish Haxtur Awards. Sakai is nominated for yet another Eisner this year in the Best Continuing Series category. The series was also honored in 2003 by the National Cartoonist Society. This winter, Sakai and Aragon’s will be guests of a convention in Finland, and Sakai will continue to Japan, where he was born but has only visited once as an adult. Born in Kyoto, Sakai grew up in Hawaii, where he received his fine arts degree at the University of Hawaii. In 1977, his continuing study led him to Art Center College of Design, located in Pasadena, where he now calls home with wife Sharon and their children, Hannah, 18, and Matthew, 17. Sakai adds that Hannah, an artist and manga enthusiast, will attend her 19th Comic-Con this year. A photo was taken of Lee with Hannah at her first convention, age six months. ‘Next time I went to Stan’s office,’ Sakai recalls. ‘The photo of Hannah and Stan was right there next to Stan and President Reagan.’ [DROPCAP] Comic-Con’s 40th year will prove a landmark one for Japanese culture in comics and cartoons. In addition to Sakai’s honor (and, arguably indirectly, the Ninja Turtles), revered animator Hayao Miyazaki (the creator behind feature animated films ‘Princess Mononoke’ and the Academy Award-winning ‘Spirited Away’) will make his first Comic-Con appearance. Fueled on the samurai movies and Kurosawa films he used to watch growing up, Sakai began sketching his Usagi character (loosely based on the ronin Miyamoto Musabia, a warrior, philosopher, poet and painter who lived in the 17th century) as far back as 1982. After the character debuted in an anthology comic in 1984, Sakai decided to make a series of it. The anthropomorphic ‘Cerebus,’ one of the most successful independently published comic books of all time, made waves at the time. Sakai decided to make his entire cast of characters animals: ‘I drew a rabbit with is ears up and I just loved his design.’ ‘Usagi’s design has changed a lot,’ Sakai says. ‘He’s taller, has a bump on nose, he’s not as cute and cuddly. I think the stories have become more sophisticated. I’ve matured as a storyteller.’ ‘I usually do short stories, which lead up to long story arc, and back to short stories again,’ Sakai says. ‘Older readers prefer the longer arcs. But short stories are a good place for new readers to jump on board.’ ‘Everything is done by hand, even the lettering,’ Sakai says. ‘I love the feel of the Bristol board and I love having the original art. There seems to be more of the personality of the creator in there.’ Sakai befriended MAD legend Aragones early in his relocation to California simply by finding him in the phone book. But ‘Usagi’ is a solitary creation. Sakai does not tend to share his ideas or pages with his fellow cartoonists beforehand. He recalls with some mirth of a lesson learned the hard way some years back. ‘I showed Sergio my artwork for my kite story. He took it over to a corner and looked at it, came back and said, ‘Oh it’s a good story!” After the issue came out, people told me, ‘I liked how the way you drew Groo.’ Sergio had secretly drawn his character into a crowd scene on one of my pages. And I didn’t know until after it was published!’ Sakai will be stationed at table # 4906 in the Dealer’s Room at Comic-Con International. He will also sign books at the Dark Horse table, where a 25th anniversary ‘Usagi’ poster will be distributed. Sakai will also appear on the following panels: ‘Groo the Wanderer,’ Thursday, July 23?2:30-3:30 p.m., Room 8; ‘Graphic Novels Sense of History,’ Saturday, July 25, 5:00-6:00 p.m., Room 8; and ‘Stan Sakai: 25th Anniversary of Usagi Yojimbo,’ Sunday, July 26, 1:30-2:30 p.m., Room 8.

Tracey Hiete, Jimmy Smith Celebrate June Wedding

Tracey Hiete, daughter of Mary and Kurt Hiete of Pacific Palisades, married Jimmy Smith, son of Margaret and the late Frank Smith of Cootamundra, Australia, on Saturday, June 13. The wedding ceremony took place at the Turtle Bay Resort on Oahu, Hawaii. A dinner/dance reception was held in the Sunset Room, overlooking Turtle Bay. The bride’s sisters, Tiffany Fedorczyk and Terri Linville, were matrons of honor. Sister-in-law Jen Hiete was a bridesmaid. The best man was longtime friend Tim Russell. The groomsmen were Justin Dooley, Wayne Geber and Paul Limbrey. After graduating from the University of Australia, Jimmy played professional rugby for seven years. Currently, he works as a sports announcer on radio and TV for the Australian national rugby team. Tracey is a graduate of Corpus Christi, Marymount High School, and Duke University, which she attended on a tennis scholarship. After playing professional tennis for several years, she moved to Australia. She is currently selling Trimble software. The newlyweds honeymooned in Hawaii and now reside in Sydney.

Stafford and Tenzer Plan Wedding July 31

  Dr. Mark and Mrs. Marie Stafford of Pacific Palisades are pleased to announce the marriage of their daughter, Natalie, to Scott Tenzer, son of Bert and Regina Tenzer of Malibu. The bride-to-be earned her bachelor of arts degree in psychology from Loyola Marymount. She is a graduate of Cal State Northridge, where she received a master of arts degree in early childhood special education. She is currently employed as a program supervisor for Inclusive Education and Community Partnership and is pursuing her board certification in behavior analysis. The groom-to-be is a production manager for the business news television program, ‘Heartbeat of America.’ He is also pursuing a music career in film composition. The couple, who will marry on July 31 at the Bel-Air Bay Club, are looking forward to a honeymoon in Tahiti.

Julie Kellman Wins National Honor

18-year-old Transforms the Landscape into Basic Forms

Palisades resident Julie Kellman is one of 20 Presidential Scholars for 2009.
Palisades resident Julie Kellman is one of 20 Presidential Scholars for 2009.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

When Julie Kellman looks out the window of her father’s Cessna skimming above urban freeways or rural byways, she fixes on pattern and texture over transport and utility. Like Matisse, the photographer Kellman transforms the material world into geometry. ‘My photos are not so much different in subject, but different in quality of line,’ says Kellman, who this year kept advancing higher and higher in the youngARTS competition, recognized by a panel of professional photographers. youngARTS is the core program of the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts (NFAA). Selected in January, along with 140 high school seniors from a pool of 6,000, who originally registered for the contest, Kellman spent a week in Miami, where she was able to work with professional photographers and add to her portfolio. Two months after returning home, the Pacific Palisades resident learned that she had been chosen a Silver Award winner, which carried a $5,000 prize and an exhibition at the Baryshnikov Arts Center in New York City Her talent was further recognized when she was named a Presidential Scholar and spent a week in Washington, D.C. in June.   Twenty students from across the nation are chosen annually to receive this designation, from the fields of cinematic arts, dance, music, photography, theater, visual arts, voice and writing. During those five days in the Capitol, Kellman participated in seminars, visited government officials and elected representatives and attended cultural events’all of it culminating in a White House-sponsored event at which she was awarded the Presidential Medallion by Vice President Joe Biden. Kellman, 18, was encouraged to enter the youngArts contest by her Marlborough photography teacher, Judith Tanzman. ‘She has confidence in students,’ Kellman says. ‘From the point you get your grounding, she says, ‘Apply to contests.” The school also provided support by paying the contest fees, covering one piece for underclassmen and a whole portfolio for seniors. Kellman presented a suite of aerial shots, taken with her Nikon D40X (which she bought with the money she made working two summers at Bentons Sports Shop on Swarthmore). Her initial inspiration to focus on the landscape as seen from the air was a result of flying across the country in her father’s Cessna, stopping along the way to visit colleges. ‘Dad was really great taking back up in the air to photograph both urban and rural landscapes up and down the California coast. Kellman’s work reveals not only the encroaching built landscape, but also emphasizes the graphic qualities. Roads become ellipses, fields seem like perfect rhomboids and neighborhoods match up in chevron shapes. For the first round of the NAFA contest, Kellman sent digital images, but as the field narrowed, judges wanted to see printed work, not exceeding 18 x 24 inches. Kellman’s portfolio makes an impressive statement at 13 x 19 inches. The oldest of three girls, Kellman traces her fascination with cameras to the simple, spontaneous disposable. ‘I used to sit on the bus to Marlborough staring out the window and watching the day to day activity, finding pattern in the mundane.’ She deepened her interest with classes at Marlborough, UCLA’s Design Media Arts Summer Institute and one particularly challenging six-week program at Cal State L.A. summer school for the arts. ‘The course was taught by graduates of the program. My teacher, Mr. Ayers, had us work on self-portraits and then a small series.’ She built her NAFA portfolio in the Marlborough AP photo class’her last at the school, which dictated 10 pieces in breadth’a non-associated subject, and 10 in her concentration, which entailed creating an idea and slowly evolving it over time. Unlike many photographers, Kellman began with digital imaging, visual design and Web-based work, and then got into darkroom and traditional photography. Glad for the traditional approach at Marlborough, Kellman appreciates still photography and has her favorites. ‘I like the way Richard Avedon set up pictures and portraits,’ she says. On the other hand, she likes the spontaneity in Henri Cartier-Bresson’s work. ‘He started the idea of ‘in-the-moment photography.’ In an oblique way, Kellman believes that her parents’ work has influenced her. ‘Dad [Phil Kellman] works with perception as a professor of cognitive psychology at UCLA. He wrote a book on infant perception ‘Cradle of Knowledge,’ (The MIT Press). My mom [Pam Hilpert] is a doctor who specializes in women’s health and radiology. It dawned on me how images are in my family’s life.’ Kellman looks upon this year of her various honors with openness, and perhaps a bit of incredulity, beginning with her first notification. ‘Two days before Thanksgiving I got a phone call informing me that I had been selected for the youngArts week in Miami,’ she recalls. ‘I thought it was a telephone solicitation.’ A major component of the whole experience in Miami, New York and Washington, D. C. was the friendships that bloomed among the other contestants she met along the way. In Miami, we photographers got a different experience from the other artists, who spent the week working in art studios,’ she says. ‘Because you can’t stay in one place for long, we got to go on incredible shooting outings.’ They went through Little Havana, enjoyed caf’ con leche and got a good idea of the local scene. In a sharp contract, they also walked around the tourist mecca South Beach, where they learned a little bit more about the development of the Miami gold coast. ‘The time there with our teachers, who also were judging our work, was great for us because we came together as a group and got to know each other’s work,’ Kellman says of the five photography winners. ‘Rodney was the only guy, and he was already in college at the Pratt Institute. He does more with messages. HIV/A.I.D.s drives a lot of his work. Annie was from Mississippi. She had taken a lot of photos of abandoned buildings and has also followed a circus. Jill was from Yuma, Arizona and wasn’t driven to things other than photography. She wasn’t a scholar, had a 1.3 grade point average, but it showed me that there are a lot of different mindsets about academics. Rachel was from New York and focused on city life. Annie, Jill, Rachel and Julie were chosen as Silver Award winners and went on to New York. Kellman stays in contact with her NAFA friends through a strong Facebook group. She has also been recommended to be an advisor to the 2010 winners next year, which is something she’d like to do. Looking towards her freshman year at Washington University in St. Louis, she displays all the enthusiasm and appetite for many interests, including philosophy and computer science. With that in mind, she enrolled in the college of art and sciences, over fine arts, but no doubt will be recording it all.

Hannah Redmond, 99; Active in League of Women Voters

Hannah Morton Redmond, long-time community volunteer and a Rustic Canyon resident for 55 years, died in Santa Monica on June 8 at the age of 99. She would have celebrated her 100th birthday in October. Born and raised in St. Joseph, Missouri, Mrs. Redmond was the daughter of Joseph Morton and Pearl Jane King Morton. She graduated in 1927 from Central High School and attended St. Joseph Junior College before earning a bachelor’s degree from the University of Missouri. She was a member of Chi Omega sorority and later became a member of Junior League and the League of Women Voters in St. Joseph. After a vacation trip to California in the 1930s, she decided to relocate to Los Angeles, where she had cousins who lived nearby. She admitted that her decision was influenced somewhat by hay fever: California didn’t harbor the ragweed that caused her such discomfort in the Midwest. She worked first for the Los Angeles Board of Education and later for Wilshire Oil Company. She had begun studies to become a petroleum engineer when mutual friends introduced her to Rod Redmond, whom she later married on the day after D-Day in 1944. They had each developed an interest in travel, and over the course of their marriage, they continued the interest together, including a memorable trip on a freighter from Amsterdam to South Africa, visits to Mrs. Redmond’s brother in The Hague, and travels to Central America and Mexico. Born at a time before women had gained the vote, Mrs. Redmond valued the right highly throughout her life and advocated for informed and active participation of voters in their government. She continued her active involvement with the League of Women Voters organization in Los Angeles, serving on the Board of Directors and continuing to be a member of the Pacific Palisades unit until her death. She remarked on Inauguration Day this year that she was pleased to live to see Barack Obama elected President. Mrs. Redmond had also been active with the PTA at Canyon School, Paul Revere Junior High, and Palisades High School. She served as president of both the Santa Monica and Angeles Girl Scout Councils. She was preceded in death by her husband, Rod; one sister, Margaret Morton; and four brothers, William, David, Joseph Jr., and John. She is survived by daughter Jane Mueller of Fremont, son John Redmond (wife Marilyn White-Redmond of Pacific Palisades), sisters Mary Hillix and Katherine Nelson of St. Joseph, and grandchildren Kathleen Olstein (husband Erik), Annie Mueller and Sean Redmond, and three great-grandsons. A memorial service is planned for Saturday, July 25 at 1:30 p.m. at the Unitarian Church of Santa Monica. Memorial contributions may be made to the League of Women Voters of Los Angeles, 3250 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 1005, Los Angeles, CA 90010-1512.

LAPD and Residents Use Radar and Letters to Attack Speeding

Since January 31, when Palisades Charter High School senior Nick Rosser died in an automobile accident on Palisades Drive in the Highlands, the Los Angeles West Traffic Division and numerous residents have partnered to discourage speeding.   ’I am really proud and impressed with the community on their participation in trying to save lives and for taking this issue so seriously,’ said Nancy Lauer, commanding officer for the West Traffic Division (which includes Pacific Palisades, Westchester, Brentwood, Westwood, Century City, Venice, Hancock Park and Miracle Mile).   Starting in March, the division began training community volunteers to use radar speed guns. The volunteers take photographs of speeders, record their license plate numbers and write down vehicle descriptions. They report their findings to the division, which sends out warning letters.   So far, the division has sent out hundreds of letters, which Lauer thinks are effective because they either encourage the vehicle owners to slow down or alert them that a family member was speeding.   In the past few months, the number of volunteers participating has declined from 14 to 6, said Paul Glasgall, a Highlands resident and volunteer organizer. He and the other volunteers are actively recruiting through local homeowners associations.   On May 19, the volunteers’ most recent outing, they spotted 75 vehicles driving at least 15 miles per hour over the 35-mph posted speed limit near Avenida de Santa Ynez and lower Palisades Circle, Glasgall said. One vehicle, driven by a teenager, was traveling 78 mph.   The speed limit on Palisades Drive is 35 mph in the commercial area near Sunset Boulevard, 25 mph in the Calvary Christian School zone when school is in session, 45 mph through the canyon and 35 mph near the residential area at Avenida de Santa Ynez.   In addition to the volunteers’ efforts, the West Traffic Division’s Community Traffic Services Unit was out on May 9, May 13, June 16 and June 23. The unit issued about 20 citations, primarily to speeders. The LAPD reserve motor officers patrolled on May 25, May 30 and June 6 and issued warnings to more than 50 drivers and cited several others.   ’There has really been an ongoing effort,’ Lauer said.   Since January, the division has received three reports of traffic collisions on Palisades Drive. A speeding vehicle hit a stationary object (most likely a parked vehicle) on June 17 near Palisades Drive and Palisades Circle. A vehicle improperly turned and hit another vehicle on March 3 and again on May 16, close to the intersection of Palisades Drive and Sunset.   ’None of these crashes involved serious injuries, so I would say that the shared enforcement efforts of the LAPD, the community, concerned parents and Palisades High School have been a success,’ Lauer said. This spring, PaliHi hosted an assembly about safe driving.   Lauer said the division ‘will continue to be highly visible and working in the area, and we hope the community keeps working as well.’   In other traffic-related news, Lauer said she continues to receive complaints about motorcycles driving recklessly and noisily on Sunset Boulevard at night, [‘Residents Upset by Loud Motorcyclists,’ Palisadian-Post, October 30, 2008], and she plans to increase enforcement this summer.   LAPD Senior Lead Officer Michael Moore reported at the Pacific Palisades Community Council meeting last Thursday that the police are discussing setting up a checkpoint on Sunset to discourage the motorcyclists from speeding.   To volunteer as a traffic monitor on Palisades Drive, send an e-mail to speedwatch@safepalisades.com or pglasgall@aol.com.

John Gay Recalls Screenwriting Career

Screenwriter John Gay with his daughter, Jennifer Gay Summers, at his home in Pacific Palisades.
Screenwriter John Gay with his daughter, Jennifer Gay Summers, at his home in Pacific Palisades.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

By SONIA HEMINGWAY Special to the Palisadian-Post When a Pulitzer Prize-winning author tells you that you should write a book about your life, you most likely have some good stories to tell. Over 10 years ago, author Frank Gilroy urged longtime Pacific Palisades resident and friend John Gay to chronicle the many stories of his 50 years in television and movies as an actor and screenwriter. The resulting book, titled ‘Any Way I Can,’ was written with the help of John’s daughter, journalist and actress Jennifer Gay Summers. ‘Frank knew I would never do it without Jennifer,’ says Gay, 85. ‘He told me to do it, and Jennifer made me do it.’ ‘I came over with a tape recorder,’ says Jennifer, ‘and I said, ‘Dad, just start talking.” Eighty-eight cassette tapes later, Jennifer faced the formidable task of transcribing the details of her father’s life from his childhood until 1963, when Gay began recounting his experiences with some of the most legendary actors and directors in Hollywood history in a meticulous daily journal. ‘We read every page of every journal,’ she says. ‘It took us years.’ As a teenager growing up in Southern California (he was born in Whittier), Gay recalls his early brushes with celebrity, from catching a glimpse of Judy Garland at the Beverly Hills Hotel to seeing Alfred Hitchcock in the lobby of the Academy Theater during a screening of his movie ‘Rebecca.’ Little did he know that several years later his experiences would come full circle as he collaborated with Garland’s husband, Vicente Minnelli, on ‘The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.’   After serving in the Coast Guard during World War II and receiving an honorable medical discharge, Gay followed his passion for theater, beginning his formal acting training at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in Manhattan. ‘Live theater is everything, it always has been,’ he says. ‘As soon as I got out of the Coast Guard, I didn’t want to go to university. I wanted to go to the American Academy. That was theater.’   He made the transition from actor to screenwriter when fianc’e Bobbie Meyer landed a part on Kraft Television Theatre. Dismayed by the quality of the dialogue, Gay felt he could write a better script. The resulting show, ‘Apartment 3C,’ starred John and Bobbie Gay, became one of the first sit-coms on live television. ‘When television came out, it was something so new, so revolutionary, that the opportunities were endless,’ Gay says. ‘If you could just pick yourself up, you could do it. And that’s what I did.’ Gay experienced the ultimate Hollywood rite of passage, living with Bobbie in less than ideal quarters and producing various scripts without a sale. However, the seemingly mythical break occurred with perfect dramatic timing, just as he and his wife (with new baby Jennifer) found an affordable house deep in the New Jersey countryside, in the middle of a pasture. In 1957, he received a phone call from the most successful independent film company in Hollywood at the time, asking him to write a motion picture for them. That fateful call set into motion a series of events that turned into his first feature film, ‘Run Silent, Run Deep’ (1958) starring Clark Gable and Burt Lancaster.   ’It was overwhelming,’ Gay says. ‘I had no other employment then and it gave me an accelerated introduction into a screenwriting career. It came about because all three men behind the production company, Harold Hecht, James Hill and Lancaster, happened to see a television play of mine that they liked so much that they decided to hire me! Some luck, some talent; it can work wonders.’ Gay caught another break when asked to write the screenplay adaptation of Terrence Rattigan’s play, ‘Separate Tables’ (1958), starring Deborah Kerr, Rita Haworth and David Niven, for which he received an Oscar nomination.   After years of walking a tightrope between success and failure, Gay felt financially secure enough to purchase a home in the Palisades Riviera (just down the street from his friend, ‘Twilight Zone’ writer Rod Serling), where he and Bobbie raised their three children. In the midst of the family’s move, he found himself on a plane to Mexico to shoot John Huston’s film ‘The Unforgiven,’ with Audrey Hepburn and Burt Lancaster. Gay details Huston’s terse and often intimidating style. ‘If an actor didn’t feel comfortable and asked for direction, Huston’s answer would be, ‘Do it again.’ I couldn’t get over how little discussion was given to actors in terms of their characters. I heard later that he wanted his actors to be unencumbered by thoughts of the director.’ With his career as a screenwriter established, Gay found himself traveling around the world, writing roles for actors like Henry Fonda, Rod Steiger, Rex Harrison, Paul Newman, Bette Davis (‘A Piano for Mrs. Cimino’) and collaborating with directors like Henry Hathaway. He describes his experiences working with Anthony Hopkins on ‘The Bunker’ and ‘The Hunchback of Notre Dame.’ ‘Watching him in rehearsals was an inspiration in itself. Always trying different approaches in every scene. Never satisfied. Always brilliant.’ He recalls a teenage Liza Minnelli, visiting her father in Europe while on vacation from boarding school in Switzerland. ‘Effervescent and charming. You could sense her talent even then. And you could also sense they adored each other. That deep affection continued until the day he died.’ Gay went on to write 39 films (including ‘The Happy Thieves,’ ‘The Courtship of Eddie’s Father’ and ‘The Hallelujah Trail’) and five television miniseries, while garnering numerous awards, including the Writers Guild Laurel Award for Television Lifetime Achievement. The publication of his book (available at Village Books on Swarthmore) has been bittersweet for Gay and his daughter. ‘It has been an incredible experience to do this with one’s father,’ says Jennifer. ‘By the end, we were finishing each other’s sentences. I got to see how I grew up through a whole new set of eyes. It was a real journey, but so worth it.’ Even though he is retired, Gay has not stopped writing. ‘It’s an addiction,’ he says. ‘Once the fingers get going’how can you enjoy retirement when a screenplay or stage play is still possible? Keep working. Keep happy.’

Bluffs, Incline Projects Updated at Meeting

The Santa Monica Palisades Bluffs Improvement project will begin after Labor Day and the long-delayed California Incline Reconstruction project is now scheduled for January 2011, according to Mark Cuneo, Santa Monica’s principal civil engineer. At a Pacific Coast Highway (PCH) Task Force meeting held last Thursday, Cuneo was questioned about the projects. ‘The Palisades Bluffs project has been put out to bid,’ he said. The project involves drilling and installation of 100 hydraugers (perforated pipes) vertically and horizontally into the sides of the bluffs from the McClure Tunnel to the northwest boundary of Santa Monica at Adelaide Drive. The pipes will improve groundwater drainage, which will help stabilize the bluffs. Construction will start at the City’s north boundary and is expected to last into spring 2010. The lane closest to the bluffs will be closed for northbound traffic from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday through Thursday.   The California Incline bridge project, originally scheduled to begin last spring, has been delayed several times, most recently due to geotechnical issues.   ’We must improve the hillside above the bluffs,’ Cuneo said. ‘We have revised the project’s old documents, and they will be circulated in the fall of this year.’ He predicted that the Santa Monica City Council will vote on the plans next spring and that the $12-million construction project will be completed in early 2012.   The Incline Bridge was built in 1939 and the new bridge is eligible for federal funding. ‘An all-concrete structure will be built,’ Cuneo said, noting that construction will not only require lane closures on PCH, but will close the primary route from PCH into Santa Monica. Those traveling south on PCH worry that this closure will cause traffic gridlock on secondary streets.   ’When the Incline is closed, it will create a traffic nightmare,’ said Aron Miller, field representative for Senator Fran Pavley, who hosted the meeting. He commutes daily to Pavley’s Santa Monica office from the Valley via PCH.   ’We urge you to do construction 24 hours a day and include incentives to construction crews so that they get it done as quickly as possible,’ said Richard G. Cohen, chair of the Pacific Palisades Community Council.   ’We’re looking at it,’ said Cuneo, noting that projections for round-the-clock operations predict a nine-month construction period, rather than the projected year. However, concrete pours require a cure time, which will dictate the time needed.   According to Cuneo, the primary detour replacing the Incline will be the off ramp (Moomat Ahiko Way), next to the pier, which feeds onto Ocean Avenue. He was asked what plans are being made to accommodate the increased traffic through Santa Monica Canyon as people use West Channel Road to 7th Street in Santa Monica.   ’We will try to discourage that as much as possible,’ said Cuneo, who promised further discussions with the City of Los Angeles.   Palisades residents asked James Riley, Caltrans senior transportation engineer, for a study at the corner of Chautauqua and PCH, which feeds into West Channel Road. The intersection causes confusion because two intersecting roads join PCH at the same location. There are also two different left-turn options.”””””’   ’That intersection has come up in discussion,’ Riley said. ‘We can look at it.’   One official thought that the Incline project could actually help traffic flow through that area, but that wasn’t the consensus among those present.   ’I think it’s going to be total gridlock,’ said LAPD motor officer Christopher Smythe. ‘Traffic speeds will be so low that accidents will go down.’   (Additional news from the meeting will be published next week.) Another area of concern along PCH was raised by Palisades Community Council member Stuart Muller, who asked if the K-rails and other construction debris stored along PCH between Potrero and Temescal Canyons could be removed by Caltrans. ‘It’s a scenic highway, and we want this stuff cleaned up,’ Muller said. Riley responded that he would investigate. ”””””’An additional problem raised at the meeting involves a dangerous situation on PCH, just south of Sunset. Motorists leaving Gladstone’s parking lot must exit south, but can make a Caltrans-approved U-turn in the middle of PCH at the exit/entrance to Malibu Village. Resident Jean Rosenfeld suggested that the Gladstone’s parking exit be closed, which would force drivers to enter PCH at the light at Sunset. Caltrans will explore that possibility.