For those looking for a multicultural event good for the whole family, Young Angels’ production of Rhythm & Moves is set for Saturday, May 23 at 2 p.m. at St. Eugene School, 9521 S. Hass Avenue. Congolese band, Balobi Bandeko, tap legend Mark Goodman and Frit & Frat hip hop will provide the rhythm, served up with food from Veronica’s Fufuland and Flossie’s Southern Cuisine. St. Eugene School in Inglewood saw the ABC’s on the wall as one student after another was told by their families that there was not enough money to pay even a reduced tuition next year. The largely Nigerian congregation wanted to help the kids and share their cultural heritage. Young Angels of America, a Palisades-based group of high school kids, helped turn the dream into a reality. Young Angels of America is a community service organization that teaches affluent kids about event production and philanthropy. The group of teenagers decided to sponsor the event and approached African radio guru, Nnamdi Moweta of KPFK. They asked him to come to the rescue, and he did. For tickets ($20 online; $25 at the door, students, $15), visit steugeneschool.org.
Boxer Is Honored with Angel Award by Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation
Arsenio Hall, Johnny Gill and Eddie Murphy strike boxing poses with Sugar Ray Leonard just before presenting his award at the JDRF Gala Tribute on May 7 at the Beverly Hilton. Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
Sugar Ray Leonard made a career of beating the odds. Now, he’s on a mission to win a fight far more important than any he had as a Hall of Fame boxer. It is a fight against diabetes–a disease that has afflicted millions of Americans, including his own father. Leonard, who lives near Riviera Country Club, has for many years served as the international chairman of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation’s “Walk for a Cure” and on May 7 he was presented with the Angel Award during a Gala Tribute called “Finding a Cure: A Love Story” last Thursday at the Beverly Hilton. “I was a pretty tough fighter, but these kids are the true fighters, every day,” Leonard said in his acceptance speech. “Yes, I’m making another comeback, but not in the ring. This is a fight to knock out juvenile diabetes. And this is one fight we can all win.” Leonard’s 12-year-old daughter Camille, a sixth-grader at St. Matthew’s, introduced him to the gathering of donors, doctors and dinner guests. “A lot of people call Sugar Ray Leonard ‘champ.’ I just call him Papa,” she said. “He is an inspiration to me and I am proud that he is getting honored here tonight.” Then, comedian Arsenio Hall, singer Johnny Gill and actor Eddie Murphy took the stage to present Leonard with his award–one he is just as proud of as any he won as one of the world’s most adored and recognizable athletes. “It said that it takes dedication, intensity and grace to be a champion,” Hall said. “Well, Ray applies those same attributes to this foundation.” Leonard, who retired for good in 1997, won an Olympic gold medal in 1976 and went on to win world titles in five different weight classes. He was named “Fighter of the Decade” for the 1980s. Several other Palisadians were there, including longtime Palisades High football supporter Joe Spector and 16-year Highlands resident Jeff Wald, a boxing promoter and producer of “The Contender,” the reality television series which Leonard hosts. Also attending were John McNamee and his wife and Jody, who have a family member afflicted with the disease and expressed gratitude for Francine R. Kaufman, M.D., who was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award. McNamee coaches his two sons’ Palisades Pony Baseball Association’s Mustang Yankees team and is a big supporter of JDRF. Singer Kenny Loggins performed four songs to cap off the benefit, which raised $865,000 for diabetes research. Leonard signed a pair of boxing gloves and volunteered to play a round of golf at Riviera with a lucky winner at the evening’s live auction.
Bo Hirsch’s thoroughbred Papa Clem will run in the Preakness Stakes this Saturday at Pimlico.
After a strong fourth-place finish in the Kentucky Derby, Papa Clem will run in this Saturday’s Preakness Stakes, the horse’s owner Bo Hirsch confirmed Monday. Hirsch, who grew up in Pacific Palisades and still lives here, made the decision after watching the three-year-old bay colt battle to the wire in the “Run for the Roses,” finishing out of the money by merely a head. “He’s a very honest horse,” Hirsch said while packing for Tuesday afternoon’s flight to Maryland. “He got bumped around a bit in the Derby, otherwise he might have finished second. The weekend forecast is cloudy and clear so I’m hoping for a fast track so we all have a fair shot.” The field is expected to be one of the strongest at Pimlico in years and, barring scratches, will include the top four Kentucky Derby finishers, pre-Derby favorite Friesan Fire, seventh-place horse Join in the Dance and filly sensation Rachel Alexandra, fresh off her resounding victory in the Kentucky Oaks. “This race should favor some speed and it’s a dirt track (one and 3/16 miles), similiar to the Derby,” Hirsch said. “I’ll be disappointed if we don’t light up the board.” Post positions were drawn Wednesday and Papa Clem will start from Gate #7–the same place he started from in Kentucky. He started at 12-1 odds. The $1-million Preakness is the second jewel in horse racing’s Triple Crown. Start time is tentatively scheduled for 3:05 p.m. on NBC.
A Year After Half-Point Loss Dolphins Leave No Doubt in Semifinals Victory
Justin Atlan and the Dolphins aced their semifinal test against Taft on Tuesday, ending the fourth-seeded Toreadors’ reign as section champions.
Palisades High’s boys’ tennis team had good reason to be confident heading into Tuesday’s City semifinal showdown against defending champion Taft. After all, the Dolphins had routed Taft at the Fresno Tournament back in March. However, in that match the Toreadors were without City Individual singles champion Josh Tchan, so Palisades was eager to prove its superiority even with Taft’s top player in the lineup. The top-seeded Dolphins did that and then some, crushing the Toreadors 25 to 4 1/2, ending Taft’s two-year reign and exorcising the demons of last year’s half-point loss in the finals. “It wasn’t in the finals but at least we got to play them again and the score speaks for itself,” said Palisades’ senior captain Jeremy Shore, who teamed with Brandon Clark to sweep at #1 doubles. “We’re better than we were last year and we’ve had them on our radar all season.” Taft Coach Tom Wright strangely opted to move Tchan down to doubles, hoping he and partner Sergio Valenzuela could pick up 4 1/2 points by winning their three sets, 1/2 more than the four points Tchan would have earned by sweeping four singles sets. However, the strategy backfired when Shore and Clark beat the Taft tandem, 7-6 (7-4 in the tiebreaker). “I’m not sure why he did that,” Palisades Coach Bud Kling said of his counterpart’s decision to play Tchan in doubles. “It was odd because Josh hasn’t played doubles all season. I’m not sure the potential reward was worth the risk.” Even had the ploy worked it would not have been nearly enough to save the Toreadors, who did not earn a point in 16 single sets and won only three of nine doubles sets. Justin Atlan swept, 6-2, 6-0, 6-0, 6-0, at #1 singles, Oliver Thornton swept, 6-1, 6-0, 6-0, 6-0, at #2 singles, Max Licona swept, 6-1, 6-2, 6-0, 6-2, at #3 singles and Kyung Choi swept, 6-0, 6-0, 6-2, 6-0, at #4 singles for Palisades, which advanced to Thursday’s final against third-seeded Granada Hills at Balboa Tennis Center in Encino.
Bukeni Waruzi, executive director of Ajedi-Ka (a nonprofit organization that demobilizes child soldiers) talks to Palisades Charter High School students about his work and explains how they can help. Photo: Maya Myers
Gazing out at nearly 500 Palisades Charter High School students, Madeleine spoke shyly and in nearly perfect English. Her first words: ‘I am a former child soldier.’ Madeleine, whose last name was not released for security purposes, shared her experiences as a child soldier in the Democratic Republic of Congo when she spoke in Mercer Hall on April 28 as part of a tour organized by the Human Rights Watch Student Task Force. The Los Angeles-based HRWSTF, launched in 1999, brings high school students together to advocate for children’s rights around the world. Madeleine, now 18, spent three years in a Mai-Mai militia group, which recruited her at the age of 11. She was released from the militia thanks to Bukeni Waruzi, the executive director of Ajedi-Ka, a nonprofit organization that demobilizes, rehabilitates and reintegrates child soldiers into society. Waruzi, who also spoke at the assembly, brought Madeleine to a transition center before she rejoined her parents. He later asked her to speak out internationally about her experiences as a child soldier, though doing so made it too dangerous for her to return home. She now attends school in New York City, where she is a junior and has plans to study international justice in college. Hani Tajsar, a PaliHi junior and president of the school’s chapter of HRWSTF, met Madeleine in New York City in February as part of the Red Hand Campaign, which sought to encourage world leaders to take action against the use of child soldiers. Youth from around the world met with United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and presented a book containing 250,000 red hands representing individual protesters. PaliHi collected about 2,600 of those hands. Tajsar, 16, said he was glad Madeleine could visit the school so that his peers could also hear her story. She spent one week in Los Angeles, visiting schools such as Crossroads, Santa Monica High, Valencia High and Marlborough. ‘This news doesn’t get that much media attention,’ Tajsar said. ‘It’s good to make the students aware of the issues around the world.’ Waruzi showed the students part of his 2005 documentary ‘A Duty to Protect,’ which he directed and produced in the Democratic Republic of Congo. He decided to make the documentary because he wanted to raise awareness through the child soldiers’ powerful stories. ‘I could have written a book about it, but I wanted to have the rough voices of the kids,’ Waruzi said. The documentary follows 15-year-old Mafille, who spent 1′ years in an armed group, and 16-year-old January, who has been in a militia group for six years and has earned the rank of sergeant first class. While Mafille was raped and does not want to return to the militia group, January describes a different experience in which she feels a sense of pride for her service. Madeleine used to be friends with January, so she had difficulty watching the documentary during the school tours. More than 20,000 children have been recruited to armed groups in the Congo, and Waruzi has demobilized more than 300 of them. The militia groups promote violence and substance abuse. They set up camp far from town centers, which makes it difficult for children to leave. In addition, the children have to sleep outside and do not have access to medical care. Waruzi brings the kids to a transition center before they are reintegrated back into society, often returning to their families. Many of these former child soldiers do not have the resources to return to school, Waruzi said. In the Congo, parents have to pay for their child’s education from kindergarten through university. One year of primary school costs about $150 a year, including fees, books and tuition. To help, PaliHi’s HRWSTF is hosting a spare-change fundraiser for Ajedi-Ka and another nonprofit organization in Colombia that demobilizes child soldiers. ‘Even with our spare change, we can make a difference,’ said PaliHi art teacher Angelica Pereyra, who helped found the school’s HRWSTF chapter 10 years ago. She and Spanish teacher Sandra Martin oversee the club. Pereyra hopes PaliHi is able to raise enough money to support the education of at least two former child soldiers. Madeleine also encouraged the students to write letters to their senators and representatives advocating change. ‘This country is very powerful,’ she said. ‘The youth are very powerful.’ Junior Joshua Pandy gave Madeleine a poem he wrote called ‘Fight for Your Life’ to thank her for visiting. A video of the assembly will be available on the HRWSTF Web site www.hrwstf.org along with a copy of Pandy’s poem.
Matthew Kadenacy likes the feel of manning a fire truck at Fire Service Recognition Day last Saturday at Fire Station 69. More than 1,000 visitors enjoyed free hot dogs and watched demonstrations that included firefighter Marc Samana jumping from an aerial ladder into air bag. In addition, Rich Wilken was recognized as the town’s new honorary fire chief.
David and Elyse Walker at the Wellness Community banquet. Photo: Vince Bucci
Since opening in 1912, the Beverly Hills Hotel has remained the crown jewel of glamour and class among the city’s hospitality establishments. After all, notable guests have included everyone from Howard Hughes, Rudolph Valentino, Greta Garbo and Mary Pickford, to John and Jacqueline Kennedy, The Beatles and Brad and Angelina Jolie Pitt. Add another power couple to the list: David and Elyse Walker. Pacific Palisades-based clothing retailer Elyse Walker, with her eponymous flagship store on Antioch, and her 2008 sequel, the adjoining Elyse Walker Men, has all but put the Palisades on the fashion world map. Last Thursday, she and her husband, David, a real estate investor, were honored at the Beverly Hills Hotel by The Wellness Community’West Los Angeles (TWC-WLA), an organization dedicated to providing support, education and hope to people affected by cancer. The tribute took place at the nonprofit’s 11th Annual Tribute to the Human Spirit Awards gala. Elyse and David were honored for their continued support and fundraising for research, treatment and cures for breast cancer, and they follow a distinguished roster of honorees: ‘Spider-Man’ movie producer Laura Ziskin, actors Alec Baldwin (’30 Rock’) and Eric McCormack (‘Will & Grace’), actress Katherine Heigl (‘Grey’s Anatomy’), and former Palisades honorary mayor Steve Guttenberg (‘Cocoon’). Elyse Walker’s Pink Parties have, in four years, raised $3.7 million toward breast-cancer research at Cedars-Sinai Women’s Cancer Research Institute, where David Walker serves on the board of governors. Saluted at the affair, alongside the Walkers: long-time TWC-WLA supporters Hella and Chuck Hershson; and Nigel Lythgoe, co-creator and executive producer of ‘So You Think You Can Dance’ and executive producer of seven seasons of ‘American Idol,’ as well as the award-winning charity-fest television special ‘Idol Gives Back.’ ‘Each of our honorees are extraordinary role models and dedicated supporters,’ said Ellen Silver, executive director of TWC-WLA. ‘The impact of their contributions is immeasurable.’ Actress Marilu Henner emceed the gala. ‘What I love about the Wellness Community,’ the ‘Taxi’ actress told the Palisadian-Post, ‘is that they don’t just focus on a cure, but on the total picture.’ Elyse Walker began throwing her annual Pink Party, a high-profile mix of celebrity and fashion, in memory of her mother, Barbara Yvonne Feder, who lost her struggle with ovarian cancer in 1989 at the tender age of 42. Prior to the banquet, Elyse explained to the Post how she was moved to organize her event after hearing a talk by Maria Shriver. ‘It was the most beautiful, most motivating speech I ever heard,’ she said. Last year, actress Jennifer Garner, currently starring in the romantic comedy ‘Ghosts of Girlfriends Past’ (and, as of mere weeks, a Pacific Palisades resident) top-lined the Pink Party. This year’s fundraiser is scheduled for September 12. David Walker, president and co-founder of the JRK Birchmont Investment Fund, told the Post that he felt ‘honored to be a part of this event and all of the goodness that the Wellness Community does.’ Originally from Queens, New York, the Tulane University graduate moved to Los Angeles in 1996. He and Elyse, who met at a New York bar, love living in Pacific Palisades, where they reside with sons Ryan, 17, and Kevin, 15. ‘It’s the best place on Earth,’ David said. Ryan Walker, who DJs at Bergamot Station and other Westside locations as one half of Tree Frog, with his buddy Scott Cohen, said that his parents’ honor was ‘very cool,’ and that his mother ‘knows how to balance things.’ From the dais, Henner, an author of eight books about life and fitness, proved a game and enthusiastic hostess. She also noted that after two failed marriages, she had wed Michael Brown, ‘my college roommate’s boyfriend.’ He’s a two-time cancer survivor (bladder and lung), and a keeper, she said, observing that ‘Marriage is like cooking waffles. You throw the first ones out!’ Onstage, David Walker paid tribute to his wife who was standing next to him. ‘I do not have to look very far for my inspiration,’ David said, as he gazed into his wife’s eyes, ‘for all I have to do is look at Elyse.’ Joking that he was merely Elyse’s ‘trophy husband,’ David praised his wife as ‘a fundraising juggernaut,’ the way she masterminds her Pink Party events. ‘There is no more deserving person than my wife.’ Elyse, in an emotional speech, paid loving tribute to her mother and added how appropriate it was that this event fell on the week of Mother’s Day, as ‘The Pink Party is me honoring my mother.’ Elyse was about to leave the podium when a thought crossed her mind. She pivoted back, grabbed the microphone, and, directing her comment at the emcee, she quipped, ‘Marilu, I’m going to keep my first round of waffles!’ For information on the Wellness Community, visit www.twc-wla.org.
Music teachers at Paul Revere Charter Middle School, (left to right) Vanessa (Ling) Dokko, Yosuke Miyoshi and Lara Jacques are the recipients of a Lori Petrick Excellence in Education Award. Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
The three members of Paul Revere Middle School’s Music Department’Lara Jacques, Vanessa (Ling) Dokko and Yosuke Miyoshi’have received a 2008-2009 Lori Petrick Excellence in Education Award. The award, which includes a $2,000 stipend, is given annually by the Palisades Charter Schools Foundation to educators within the Palisades Charter Complex. The four other 2009 winners will be profiled in upcoming issues. Judges selected the three music teachers because ‘of their inspiring interaction with, and the large number of students [600] they reach.’ When this reporter visited a recent joint planning period, it soon became obvious why music classes are popular at Revere: the teachers’ enthusiasm and esprit de corps were infectious. Between the three, they teach 18 performing groups (four of which meet during lunch). Band students, taught by Miyoshi, can participate in drum line, beginning winds, jazz band, and intro, senior or advanced band. Jacques instructs beginning strings, orchestra (including intro, senior and advanced). She also teaches symphony and chamber orchestras. Vocalists and choirs are Dokko’s expertise and include sixth-grade and mixed choir, show and concert choirs, Revere Singers and Madrigals. The three are not 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. teachers. Dokko and Miyoshi stayed after school and evenings to make live music possible for last weekend’s spring musical ‘Bugsy Malone.’ In late March, they joined with Jacques to take 150 students to the Heritage Festival in the San Francisco Bay area. At the festival, the band and choir won a silver award and the orchestra received a gold. ‘We all did really well, especially for a first time,’ said Jacques, who also accompanied the students on a tour of the UC Berkeley campus. In order to make the trip possible, the teachers helped organize donation drives, bake sales, and holiday wreaths for sale. During a Holiday Stroll in the business district last December, student groups played music and sang for tips. Miyoshi also assisted Palisades High band teacher Arwen Hernandez in last year’s Pacific Palisades Fourth of July parade. Jacques, who has a 12-year-old daughter in Revere’s vocal program, started teaching at the school in 1994. ‘I was an Army brat and lived all over the United States and Europe,’ said Jacques, who graduated from UCLA with a bachelor’s degree in clarinet performance and a master’s degree in education. Currently, she’s working on a second master’s, with an emphasis in conducting, by taking a three-summer program at Colorado State University in Fort Collins. Jacques began teaching orchestra in 1998 and has applied to take the Revere orchestra to the National Orchestra Festival in Santa Clara in early June. Dokko grew up in West Covina and graduated from UCLA in 2003 with a B.A. in music education. She was student teaching at Revere when the choir teacher, Jan Smith, retired. Dokko applied for the job and was hired. Originally she had planned to teach elementary and preschool and wasn’t quite sure about middle school. ‘I was scared at first, but I got to know the kids really well and the staff was supportive,’ said Dokko, who married in June. At UCLA, Dokko and Miyoshi lived three doors from each other in a dorm. Miyoshi, who plays trombone, was in the UCLA marching and pep band. ‘I went to Alabama for football games and Michigan, North Carolina and Minnesota for basketball games,’ he said. ‘We also got to record music for two movie sound tracks.’ Miyoski graduated in 2004 with a B.A. in music trombone performance and a teaching credential and started his career at Santana High School in Santee. He taught a year before coming to Revere. ‘I was unsure about middle school,’ he said. ‘Now I enjoy it more than high school.’ Teaching in a public school can have its disadvantages, like having to rely on a 50-year-old timpani that is beyond repair and a 30-year-old piano that needs to be replaced, but somehow the teachers continue to be upbeat. When asked what they’d like to see changed, Jacques instantly responded, ‘I’d like more double basses; mine are kind of ratty.’ Miyoshi added, ‘We’d all like to see Vanessa [Dokko] have a new piano.’ Revere students range from eager beginners to those who have taken private lessons since they were five. As diverse as the teachers’ personalities are, a common thread unites them. ‘We’re all musicians,’ Jacques said. ‘We have a passion for the same things.’ Dokko said, ‘We’re all flexible. Musicians have the same mentality and are able to work together without an ego.’ Miyoshi added, ‘We all do the same job and all have the same goals.’ They are also generous with their praise, crediting the strength of the award-winning program not only to the current administration’s support, but to the 50-year music tradition at Revere.
Classic Vintage Cars Will Join Hybrid Cars of the Future
Cars like this 1951 Woodie, owned by Mike Dituri, will be on display along Via de la Paz this Sunday.
Pacific Palisades, get ready for an old-fashioned block party! The Chamber of Commerce is organizing its first Community Expo, an event designed to involve local businesses of all stripes”this Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., on Antioch Street and Via de la Paz, in the heart of the village. Both streets will be closed to traffic. The Community Expo, with 44 participating local businesses, will include booths promoting local health, environment, technology, financial, home and garden-related businesses, nonprofits and other businesses, vendors and organizations. ‘This year, because of the economy,’ said Community Expo Committee member Sandy Eddy, ‘we knew many people were struggling, so we decided to consolidate the individual fairs of years past. We lowered the prices of the booths, and we opened it up to the entire business community.’ The strategy appears to have worked. As of a couple of weeks ago, booths for this Sunday’s event had sold out. ‘The Chamber deemed that it would be more fun and more educational if all of our spring events were held on one day and not on separate days,’ noted Arnie Wishnick, the Chamber’s executive director. ‘We feel that this single event is going to be a kick!’ Ramis Sadrieh, founder and owner of Technology for You!, is chairing the organizing committee, which includes Brett Bjornson, Esq. (Professional Law Corporation), Joyce Brunelle (Suntricity, Inc.), Roberta Donohue (publisher, Palisadian-Post), Sandy Eddy (SJE Nonprofit Consulting), Angela Parker (Body Inspired Fitness), Christopher Scott (C. Scott Design Group) and Greg Wood (chief financial officer at Palisades Charter High School). Heading the various sub-committees: Brunelle (Environmental), Bjornson (Financial), Eddy (Health), Scott (Home and Garden Design), Sadrieh (Technology) and Donohue (Classic Auto Display). Bjornson, who spearheaded last year’s Financial Fair, said this year’s strategy makes sense. ‘I think the festival feel will permeate an event like this, especially with the auto show that’s included. I understand the Rotary Club is going to have a basketball hoop with prizes.’ Eddy, who co-chaired the Health Fair from 2002-2007, said that she will join the Expo right after Dr. Susan Love’s Love Walk event wraps up in the Huntington, and she’s encouraging all Love Walk participants to do the same: ‘We worked really hard, and we’ve secured great sponsors, such as Pharmaca and Time-Warner.’ At the Expo’s Health and Fitness section, Parker said visitors can get a ‘free body-fat test’ at her booth and receive one free class, while gaining free information and other goodies at adjoining booths. Another highlight will be the return of a local tradition that rolled into town every year from 1995 to 2004: the Palisades Auto Show, chaired once again by Donohue, publisher of the Palisade-Post and president of Post Commercial Printing. Her committee consists of Tim Marschall, president of TMC General Contractors; Ed Lowe, the Post’s graphics supervisor; the YMCA’s Carol Pfannkuche and Nicole Rosenloecher; Phil Kamins, DDS; and the Chamber’s Marilyn Crawford. Donohue also singled out Jon Stokes, the Palisadian behind Stokes Tire Pros of Santa Monica, for sponsoring this portion of the Expo. More than 30 cars will be hand, from a 1933 Ford three-window coupe and a 1936 Bentley drophead coupe, to a 1960 Studebaker Lark convertible, a 1968 Ford Thunderbird, and a 1967 Porsche. The ’60 Austin Healey Roadster is another head-turner: va-va-va-vroom! ‘Not only will we have some awesome cars,’ Donohue said, ‘but, at the end of the street (Via), we’ll have a moon bounce and a slot-car race game for the kids.’ She added that Patrick Hildebrand, founder of the venerable music academy and instruments shop, Amazing Music, will provide live entertainment. He will perform on the main stage at Via and Antioch with his band, comprising youth of all ages who have learned to play at his studio. Hildebrand’s band will jam all day long, rocking out with some car-themed rock and surf music. ‘The car display is a really great addition because it will bring a lot more people and families,’ Eddy said. ‘It’s going to be a lot of fun.’ In addition to hot rods of years past, visitors can get a glimpse of the cars of the future. ‘I always feel that solar is the ultimate green,’ said Brunelle, on behalf of the Environmental section, which will include her solar installation business, Echo by Design, Environmental Sculpturing, E Center, Ford’s Plumbing and Heating, and The Maid’s Home Services. ‘Mike Sullivan’s L.A. Car Guy Family of Dealers [based in Santa Monica] is our sponsor,’ Brunelle said. ‘They’re going to bring out the 2010 Prius, which is not even on the market yet, plus a hybrid Volkswagen and an RXH Lexus hybrid SUV.’ ‘The Home and Garden section and the Eco section represent a new foray for the Chamber,’ said Scott, who will share a booth with Susan Carroll, owner of Gift Garden Antiques. ‘We’ll have a comprehensive overview of what the Palisades has to offer, including Barry Shaw, a design/building contractor; the interior design firm Susan Jay Designs; and Claire Buchanan from Carpets West. ‘This is a great chance for people to realize just how many services are offered in our community,’ Scott continued. ‘They’ll see that they can fulfill most of their home needs right here in the Palisades without having to drive to Santa Monica or beyond.’ On Sunday, said Bjornson, ‘people can wander up one side of the street and down the other, while visiting a wide spread of businesses. Bringing them all together on one day makes for a more interesting event.’
The living room of Will Rogers Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
The legendary actor and humorist Will Rogers, who grew up roping and riding on his family’s ranch in Oklahoma’s Indian Territory, furnished his rustic ranch house in Pacific Palisades with textiles, paintings, etchings and sculptures inspired by the American West. ‘Will’s life is embedded in these pieces of artwork,’ said museum curator Rochelle Nicolas-Booth, as she gestured around his restored ranch house at Will Rogers State Historic Park. ‘They capture his interests and the era that he lived in.’ In addition to being an actor, humorist, author, columnist and vaudeville performer, Rogers was a cowboy. He once said, ‘Every man has wanted to be a cowboy. Why play Wall Street and die young when you can play cowboy and never die?’ In 1928, Rogers and his family moved into the ranch house, which he had constructed on 186 acres above Rustic Canyon, and he filled his new home with artwork of fellow cowboys. Rogers, who was born in 1879, learned to rope from a freed slave and later dropped out of high school to become a cowboy in a cattle drive. His roping skills eventually became so advanced that he made it into the Guinness Book of Records. As evidenced in his 1922 film ‘The Ropin’ Fool,’ he could twirl three ropes: one to lasso the rider, one for the horse’s head and one for the horse’s back legs. The Palisades ranch house where Rogers lived with his wife, Betty, and their three children, Will Jr., Mary and Jim, originally had six rooms. Over the years, the Rogers family added north and south wings for a total of 31 rooms. Rogers even had the ceiling raised so he could practice roping tricks in the living room, Nicolas-Booth said, chuckling. Rogers died in an Alaska plane crash in 1935, and Betty Rogers deeded the property to the state in 1944 before she died. In 2006, California State Parks restored the ranch house to its original layout. Today, docents give tours of the house, sharing stories about the Rogers family and the featured artists. CHARLES RUSSELL The majority of Rogers’ art collection is contained within the living and dining rooms, including four Charles Russell oil and watercolor paintings, featuring ropers, horses and Native Americans. ‘His artwork gives an accurate depiction of the time,’ Nicolas-Booth said. Russell (1864-1926) completed about 4,000 works of art in his lifetime. He was inspired by his travels through places such as New Mexico, Arizona, Wyoming and Colorado. Much of his work can be seen at the C.M. Russell Museum in his hometown of Great Falls, Montana. Born in St. Louis, Russell, like Rogers, had aspirations of becoming a cowboy. At 16, he moved to Montana, where he eventually took a job as a wrangler. A self-taught artist, he spent much of his time sketching what he observed. His wife, Nancy, promoted his art and was partially responsible for his success. Rogers hosted art receptions for Russell, his close friend. Russell gave Rogers the sash he used while painting, which is now displayed next to his photograph in the south corner of the living room. When Russell died, Rogers described him by saying, ‘No man, in my little experience, ever combined as many really unusual traits ‘ He not only left us great living pictures of what our West was, but he left us an example of how to live in friendship with all mankind.’ HOSTEEN KLAH Proud of his Indian heritage, Rogers also collected Native American art. It is believed that Hosteen Klah (1867-1937), a Navajo Indian, weaved the rug now located in front of the picture window in the southern corner of the living room, Nicolas-Booth said. ‘This is a very rare textile because it was uncommon for men to weave,’ the curator said, adding that it is made of natural plant pigments and fibers. The women taught Klah (also a medicine man) to weave because he was considered a nadle, which means ‘one who is transformed’ or ‘one who changes.’ A nadle can be born female, male, or a hermaphrodite. To preserve Navajo history, Klah wove images of the sand paintings used in Navajo ceremonies. He also co-founded the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian in Santa Fe, New Mexico. EDWARD BOREIN Rogers was also a huge fan of his friend Edward Borein’s work, purchasing 33 of the artist’s etchings, lithographs, watercolors and pen-and-ink-drawings. Similar to Russell, Borein (1872-1945) was a cowboy artist who captured the lifestyle of the West. He grew up in Oakland and began sketching at five years old. After one month at the San Francisco Art Association’s Art School, he left to work as a cowboy on ranches along the California coast. He later returned to art, working as an illustrator for Bay Area newspapers and magazines. He also lived in New York for a number of years, where he studied at the Art Students League, learning the craft of etching. He ultimately settled in Santa Barbara with his wife, Lucille. One of Borein’s illuminated letters to Rogers is showcased in Will Jr.’s room. In the letter, he writes birthday wishes to Rogers, joking that instead of candles on the cake, there should be chewing gum sticks. Rogers loved to chew gum, and historians have even found his gum stuck underneath some of the tables in the ranch house, Nicolas-Booth said. HOWARD CHANDLER CHRISTY In 1939, the year after Will’s death, Betty Rogers commissioned Howard Chandler Christy to paint her and Will’s portraits, which now decorate the dining room wall. The artist asked Betty to sit for hers, and he used nine different photos of Will. Christy (1873-1952) painted many notables, including aviator Amelia Earhart, President Franklin Roosevelt and newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst. A native of Ohio, Christy attended the Art Students League in New York. His illustrations soon appeared regularly in magazines such as Scribner’s, Century and Harpers. During World War I, he designed posters for the war effort, and created the famous recruitment poster of an attractive blonde, the ‘Christy Girl,’ in a naval uniform with the line, ‘Gee! I Wish I Were a Man, I’d Join the Navy.’ OTHER NOTABLES In addition to Christy, the Rogers family commissioned other artists for portraits. The family asked Tex Wheeler (1900-1955) to create a plaster sculpture (polychrome) of Rogers after his death. Will Jr. stood in for Will, who is depicted on horseback with his head bowed. California artist Dudley Carpenter (1870-1955) used conte pastel to draw Will Jr. and Mary in 1927. The drawings can be viewed in Will’s study in the north wing of the house. California artist Clarence R. Mattei (1882-1945) also painted a portrait, displayed in the library/sitting room, of Mary at 17. Mary, a Broadway actress, collected the work of French artist Louis Icart (1890-1950). ‘He was known for his romantic, erotic drawings of women,’ Nicolas-Booth said. ‘He was kind of risqu’ for the time.’ Icart, an artist of the art deco period, found inspiration in his wife, Fanny. The two paintings displayed in Mary’s room are of a young woman gaily holding her sunhat while standing next to her Afghan hounds. Another is of a young woman who is whimsically gazing out her bedroom window. In addition to artwork of the Rogers family and the American West, visitors can also view political cartoons gifted to Rogers. Nicolas-Booth encourages people to visit the house more than once. ‘We try to keep it interesting, so we do rotate pieces of the Rogers collection,’ she said. Ranch house tours are Tuesdays through Fridays at 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. On Saturdays and Sundays, the house can be viewed between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tours typically start at the top of the hour. Information: (310) 454-8212, ext. 103.
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