Home Blog Page 2093

Parade Grand Marshal? Miss America!

Miss America 2009 Katie R. Stam, who hails from Seymour, Indiana, will ride as grand marshal in this year
Miss America 2009 Katie R. Stam, who hails from Seymour, Indiana, will ride as grand marshal in this year

Reigning Miss America Katie Stam, a beauty queen from Seymour Indiana, will ride as grand marshal in this year’s Fourth of July parade, presented by the Palisades Americanism Parade Association (PAPA).   ’We came up with the idea to invite Miss America as a way to add a new, exciting element to the parade, and it worked,’ said PAPA President Rob Weber.   Palisades Patrol, sponsor of Miss America’s appearance, is offering local youngsters the opportunity to ride with Miss America on her parade float. Two seats will be auctioned via a blind bidding process, as an additional fundraiser for PAPA.   On July 4, the winning riders will be seated at Miss America’s table during the pre-parade VIP luncheon. After a one-on-one photo opportunity with Miss America, the riders will join her on their waiting float and begin an exciting journey along the parade route. Each auction package also includes four reception tickets and four seats on the reviewing stand for the use of family or friends of the rider.   Bidding is subject to the following limitations: (1) Rider must be between the age of 5 and 16; (2) Rider or the bidding adult must be a resident of Pacific Palisades, Malibu, West Los Angeles or Santa Monica; (3) Parents/Guardians may not accompany riders on the float (security will be provided by Palisades Patrol); (4) No refunds will be given if the rider is unable to attend.   E-mail bids or questions to palisadesparade@yahoo.com, including name, address and telephone number. Winners will be the two highest bids received by May 22 at 5 p.m. Minimum bid is $500. Winners will be notified immediately, and payment via check or PayPal is required within 72 hours. Payments may be treated as donations to PAPA, a nonprofit Section 501(c)(3) organization.

Dom DeLuise, 75; Actor Was Town’s 1984 Honorary Mayor

Actor Dom DeLuise, photographed at his home in the Riviera neighborhood of Pacific Palisades, where he lived for many years.
Actor Dom DeLuise, photographed at his home in the Riviera neighborhood of Pacific Palisades, where he lived for many years.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Actor Dom DeLuise, a former honorary mayor of Pacific Palisades, died peacefully in his sleep on May 4, with his family by his side. He was 75. A jovial man of great girth and gusto with a joie de vivre and a hearty, hoarse laugh, DeLuise was best known as a comic actor and the co-star of many a Mel Brooks comedy, including ‘Blazing Saddles,’ ‘Silent Movie,’ ‘History of the World, Part I,’ ‘Spaceballs’ and ‘Robin Hood: Men in Tights.’ He also co-starred in numerous comedies with best friend Burt Reynolds, among them ‘Smokey and the Bandit II,’ ‘The End,’ ‘The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas’ and the ‘Cannonball Run’ series. ‘It was always great fun to work with Burt because you could ad lib,’ DeLuise told the Palisadian-Post in 2006. ‘I feel like Burt is my brother because we have so much fun together.’ ‘I met Dom several times,’ said actor Steve Guttenberg, also a former Palisades honorary mayor, in an e-mail to the Post. ‘He was so kind and generous. He was a true artist, always creating something: comedy, food, a routine with his birds.’ Born in Brooklyn, New York, on August 1, 1933, Dominick DeLuise grew up with two siblings in an Italian immigrant family. ‘My father used to yell and scream a lot,’ DeLuise told the Post. ‘When he would leave the room, we would all be trembling and I’d make some sort of joke about him scaring us. This is when I first realized I could in fact make people laugh.’ After graduating from Manhattan’s High School of the Performing Arts, DeLuise spent his summers at the Cleveland Playhouse. In 1961, he debuted in the off-Broadway hit, ‘Little Mary Sunshine.’ He met his wife, actress Carol Arthur, while appearing in a summer production of ‘Summer & Smirk’ in Provincetown, Massachusetts. He also starred in the 1968 Broadway production of Neil Simon’s ‘Last of the Red Hot Lovers.’ His first television appearance, as ‘Dominick the Great’ on ‘The Garry Moore Show,’ led to a variety of television credits, including a regular role on ‘The Entertainers’ with Carol Burnett and Bob Newhart. For 12 years, he appeared on ‘The Dean Martin Show.’ He also made myriad memorable appearances as a guest or guest host on ‘The Tonight Show.’ After moving to Los Angeles, DeLuise broke into the movie business appearing in Sydney Lumet’s 1964 drama ‘Failsafe’ and the 1966 Frank Tashlin comedy, ‘The Glass Bottom Boat.’ He was cast in Brooks’ first feature, ‘The Twelve Chairs,’ at the urging of Brooks’ wife, actress Anne Bancroft. He received $15,000 to play in (Continued on Page 3) the 1967 low-budget but still-appreciated comedy. DeLuise also memorably played the heavy in a pair of comedies written and directed by Gene Wilder: ‘Sherlock Holmes’ Smarter Brother’ and ‘World’s Greatest Lover.’ ‘I was able to watch my dad work with Gene Wilder and Gilda Radner,’ David DeLuise, star of Disney Channel’s ‘Wizard of Waverly Place,’ told the Post last December. ‘We got to go on the set of ‘Cannonball Run’ and we got to meet Jackie Chan. It was pretty amazing.’ Years after Bancroft had helped DeLuise, the rotund actor returned the favor by starring in her 1980 directorial debut, ‘Fatso,’ a bittersweet drama. DeLuise enjoyed a healthy side career by lending his distinctive voice to animated features, among them Disney’s ‘Oliver & Company,’ ‘All Dogs Go to Heaven’ and several ‘An American Tail’ movies. DROP CAP Married in 1965, DeLuise and his wife Carol raised their sons Peter, Michael and David, in Pacific Palisades, and they all have become actors. Their ranch house was always filled with an assortment of tropical fish and pet birds (including Dom’s beloved Charlie, an Amazon parrot, and Pavarotti, a cockatiel. See the Postcard photo, page 2.) DeLuise served as grand marshal of the town’s Fourth of July parade in 1983, and, from 1984 through 1986, he was honorary mayor. Current honorary mayor Gavin MacLeod told the Post this week, ‘Every time I knew I was going to see Dom, I got excited because he was really a ray of sunshine in this dark world. From the first time I ever saw him on TV, he was a person who made you heal because he made you laugh. Laughter is healing because of the endorphins it releases. Dom was a healer.’ ‘He was so funny,’ MacLeod continued. ‘I was over at his house once and I asked him, ‘How’s your diet going?’ He said, ‘It’s going great. But then, at 3 a.m., I hear the pork chops in the refrigerator calling out, ‘Come eat me, come eat me!” At the 1986 Chamber of Commerce installation dinner, held at the Bel-Air Bay Club, executive director Arnie Wishnick recalled, ‘The community was saying good-bye to Dom DeLuise and welcoming incoming honorary mayor Chevy Chase. The room was packed. One guest was unable to find a babysitter and brought the baby. Instead of a reverential, respectful installation, the well-behaved infant sent Dom and Chevy into a hilarious routine of baby jokes.’ In May 2006, Friends of Film honored DeLuise with a lifetime achievement award at the third annual Palisades Film Festival. He received the honor at Chefmakers Cooking Academy on Via de la Paz, and Friends of Film executive director Bob Sharka joked, ‘We’re very proud to be honoring Dom’I can’t think of a better place to hold this event, as Dom is a local guy who, like me, is no stranger to the kitchen.’ In fact, DeLuise authored three best-selling cookbooks containing his favorite Italian recipes (‘Eat This: It’ll Make You Feel Better,’ ‘Eat This Too’ and ‘Eat This Again’), hosted a cooking segment on radio, and even had his own Web site where he sent out monthly recipes and cooking tips. He also wrote seven children’s books, including ‘Charlie the Caterpillar’ and ‘The Pouch Potato.’ ‘A lady once pinched my cheeks in an elevator and said, ‘I’d like to make soup for you,” DeLuise once told the Post, confirming how he projected an image as everyone’s favorite uncle. ‘They wouldn’t do that to Burt Reynolds or Spencer Tracy,’ he added with a laugh. Last December 19, DeLuise revealed on ‘Entertainment Tonight,’ with son David nearby, that he had recently overcome prostate cancer. David DeLuise said of his oft-recognized father: ‘Getting a great table at a restaurant because Dad is famous is nice, but then you gotta deal with the fans coming up to your father during dinner.’ He added, ‘I’ve never ever been on a set where someone hasn’t walked up to me and told me a story about their experience working with my dad, which makes me comfortable.’ ‘He was supremely talented,’ Guttenberg said. ‘Who could forget ‘The End,’ ‘The Twelve Chairs,’ ‘Failsafe,’ and his hilarious role as the director in ‘Blazing Saddles?” ‘Dom’s exuberance for life was awesome,’ MacLeod added. ‘With his departure, there is a vacancy that I don’t know who could fill.’ In 2006, the Post asked DeLuise how he hoped to be remembered. He responded: ‘They’re going to remember that I was round, that I was friendly, that I didn’t put anybody down when I did my jokes, and there was the smell of garlic in my home at all times.’

Petrick Educator Award Winners Are Announced

The Palisades Charter Schools Foundation has announced six winners of the Lori Petrick Excellence in Education Award, which is given annually to educators within the Palisades Charter Complex. The winning educators, who also receive a $2,000 grant, include Lisa Timmerman (Marquez’first grade); Julie Paiva (Kenter’first grade); Karyn Newbill (science), Steve Engelmann (science) and Bella McGowan (counseling) at Palisades Charter High School; and Lara Jacques, Vanessa Ling Dokku and Yosuke Miyoshi in Paul Revere Middle School’s music department. Educators were asked to submit either a 10-minute videotape or a 2,000-word essay describing their teaching goals, style and innovative methods. Judges Merle Price (professor of education at Cal State Northridge, formerly a Palisades High principal and Los Angeles School District Deputy Superinten-dent) and Michelle Bennett (former principal at West-wood Elementary and a retired district administrator) made classroom visits to observe the applicants. ‘We spent two inspirational days visiting the educators and came away knowing that many positive and important things happen every day in classrooms throughout the Complex,’ the judges wrote. ‘We are particularly pleased that the awards touch the elementary, middle and high school this year.’ The awards, presented since 2003, pay homage to the late Lori Petrick, who was a popular third- and fourth-grade teacher at Marquez and Palisades schools, respectively. Price and Bennett singled out three teachers in the Revere Music Department because of their inspiring interaction with and the large number of students (600) they reach. ‘We were impressed with the focus and the total engagement in the classes,’ the judges wrote. ‘Students were playing and singing in one voice. The classes were fun, disciplined and skilled.’ McGowan’s office at PaliHi has a sofa and a dog, Murphy. Her availability to any student at any time is inspirational. ‘She meets with teachers, parents and students and works closely with the nurse,’ Price and Bennett wrote. ‘Kids in need are referred to her and she’s there for them.’ The judges noted that environmental science teacher Engelmann ‘provides a respectful, supportive learning environment. His project-based classroom was run as if it were a seminar. He had gentle, but clear, expectations.’ Writing about Newbill, a marine-biology instructor, the judges observed that ‘she had kids in the palm of her hand. She had microscope work and sushi eating’at the same time.’ After visiting Kenter Elementary, the judges praised Paiva’s lovely, relaxed demeanor: ‘She easily transitioned students from a math lesson to a writing lesson through yoga. The students were totally focused.’ Timmerman provides a creative learning environment with a colorful and inviting classroom, the judges commented. ‘She was organized and interdisciplinary, using small-groups and literature to teach writing to her first-grade students.’ The Petrick Awards reception will be held on Sunday, May 31 from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Oak Room, on Swarthmore Avenue. The Palisadian-Post will profile the winning teachers in future issues.

LAUSD Teacher Layoffs Still Uncertain

Los Angeles Unified School District officials fielded questions about the school board’s recent decision to lay off teachers and support personnel during an informational meeting at Paul Revere Middle School on April 30. LAUSD faces a $596 million budget shortfall this fall and about 80 percent of the district’s budget is allocated to employees’ salaries and benefits. In March, some of the teachers and classified staff in the Palisades Charter Complex (Paul Revere Middle, Palisades, Canyon, Topanga, Marquez and Kentor elementary schools) received notification letters that they could be laid off. Vivian Ekchian, LAUSD’s interim chief of human resources, explained to an audience of 350 community members that the district will not know the exact number of teachers and classified staff that will be laid off until after the district learns how many employees will retire. The deadline for notification is May 15. The California Education Code mandates that employees who are subject to layoff must be released by seniority order. Therefore, senior employees retain the right to a position over employees with less seniority. For example, the district has decided to cut math and reading coaches, and many of them have seniority. Those coaches now have the right to replace a teacher with less teaching experience, Ekchian said. As a result, interns will be laid off first, followed by teachers who have taught for less than two years. Those who are laid off will be able to return to the district any time an opening becomes available, and they will be brought back in order of seniority, Ekchian said. In the meantime, they can substitute teach. ‘We will try hard to get them back to the school site they left,’ Ekchian said, adding that district officials recognize it’s important to have stability at school sites. Individual schools with openings will have the opportunity to interview senior employees who were displaced because their positions were eliminated. They can select candidates who best fit their schools, Ekchian said. ‘We will honor the hiring process at the schools. It’s really a community-based decision,’ said Michelle King, Local District 3 superintendent. One audience member asked why the district was not using all of the federal stimulus money this year to keep teachers and class sizes the same. School board member Marlene Canter responded, ‘I am of the opinion that it would be a short-term gain for a long-term loss ‘ I have to do what I think is best for the district, not just for today, but over the long haul.’ Canter, representing District 4 until July 1, said the federal government gave the district the one-time money with the intention that it be used over a three-year period. ‘The superintendent is open to using it all if there are financial solutions on the back end,’ said Matt Hill, assistant to Superintendent Ramon Cortines. District officials are talking with teacher and classified bargaining units about the possibility of furlough days and freezing salaries, which would mean less teachers would have to be laid off, Hill said. ‘If our partners [the unions] are willing to concede, there will be more money for [this fall],’ Canter said. Hill added that depending on the outcome of the May 19 special election, the district could be faced with even more cuts for 2009-10. This month, the state government will also revise the budget, which means there could be additional cuts to the 2008-09 school year. By the time that happens, ‘it will be too late to make cuts, so it will be added to the deficit for [the 2009-10 school year],’ LAUSD spokeswoman Lydia Ramos told the Palisadian-Post. Hill encouraged the crowd to advocate legislators in Sacramento for more education funding. Canter added: ‘It’s time for us to come together and not pull apart.’

Thursday, May 7 – Thursday, May 14

THURSDAY, MAY 7

Historian Marc Wanamaker will discuss ‘Early Beverly Hills and Beverly Hills 1930-2005’ at the Pacific Palisades Historical Society meeting, 7 p.m. at the Aldersgate Retreat Center, 925 Haverford. The public is invited. Richard Milner discusses and signs ‘Darwin’s Universe: Evolution from A-Z,’ 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore.

FRIDAY, MAY 8

Final weekend of the Theatre Palisades production of ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,’ 8 p.m. at Pierson Playhouse, 941 Temescal Canyon Rd. Performances are Fridays and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. Tickets: Call (310) 454-1970 or visit www.theatrepalisades.org.

SATURDAY, MAY 9

Fire Service Recognition Day, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., hosted by Fire Station 69, corner of Sunset and Carey. All ages invited.

MONDAY, MAY 11

Sunrise Senior Living hosts a free Alzheimer’s support group on the second Monday and fourth Wednesday of each month, 6:30 p.m. at 15441 Sunset. RSVP: Bruce Edziak at (310) Moonday, a monthly Westside poetry reading, 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore. (See story, page 18.)

TUESDAY, MAY 12

‘Wonderful World of Stories and Songs’ with Ken Frawley, for children ages 3 and up, 4 p.m. in the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. Public invited.”” ”

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13

League of Women Voters meeting, 12 noon in the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. The public is invited. Glen Howell will speak about Malibu’s Adamson House at the monthly meeting of the Palisades AARP chapter, 2 p.m. at the Woman’s Club, 901 Haverford. The public is invited.

THURSDAY, MAY 14

Chamber of Commerce mixer, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., hosted this month by Trish Bowe at her State Farm Insurance office, 845 Via de la Paz, Suite 12. (See story, page 7.) Public invited. Pacific Palisades Community Council meeting, 7 p.m. at the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. The public is invited. Mireya Navarro discusses and signs ‘Green Wedding: Planning Your Eco-Friendly Celebration,’ 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore.

Ishaq Shahryar Remembered For Solar Energy Innovations

Pacific Palisades resident Ishaq Shahryar, a scientist and entrepreneur who spent his life advancing solar technology, died April 12. He was 73 years old. Born January 10, 1936 in Kabul, Afghanistan, Shahryar earned a scholarship in 1956 to attend college in the United States at UC Berkeley. After one year, he transferred to UC Santa Barbara, where he earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in physical chemistry and international relations, respectively. After completing his schooling, Shahryar worked for aerospace companies that manufactured space solar cells for NASA’s unmanned satellites. In the early 1970s, when the government began looking for alternative sources of energy, Shahryar took a job with Spectrolab, a division of Hughes Aircraft. With the help of two other scientists, he invented low-cost solar (photovoltaic) cells and developed the process of screen-printing cells on solar panels, which is still used in the market today. When Hughes Aircraft wanted to focus more on space, Shahryar founded his own company, Solec International, Inc., in 1976. His company, located in Hawthorne, commercialized the photovoltaics field. He moved to Pacific Palisades in 1981 and three years later married Hafizah Mansury. They had two children, Alexander, who lives in Pacific Palisades, and Jahan, who is studying political science at UC Santa Barbara. Shahryar received a U.S. patent for creating a 20-percent-efficient silicon solar cell in 1993. A year later, he sold Solec International to Sanyo/Sumitomo of Japan and then founded and managed Solar Utility, Inc., in Los Angeles. In 2001, he applied for a new patent that reduces the manufacturing cost of silicon solar cells by 50 percent. In 2002, Shahryar sold his company in order to volunteer as the Afghan ambassador to the United States. He was the first Afghan ambassador in 23 years for the United States, representing the government of Hamid Karzai for one year. He helped to found American University of Kabul and the Afghanistan Technical and Vocational Institute. Last year, Shahryar, with his son Alexander, opened Sun King Solar, Inc. in Pacific Palisades to install solar panels on commercial and residential buildings. [The Palisadian-Post highlighted his new business in ‘Meet Our Local Sun King’ on October 1, 2008.] Shahryar is survived by his wife and children as well as extended family and numerous friends. Services were held on April 18 at Forest Lawn in Hollywood Hills. Donations in his honor can be made to any charity.

Community Expo Is Set for May 17

The Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce will hold its first Community Expo on Sunday, May 17, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., along Antioch Street, Via de la Paz and Swarthmore Avenue (below Sunset). The streets will be closed to cars. Admission is free. The ambitious Expo will include booths promoting local health, environment, technology, financial, home and garden-related businesses, nonprofits and other businesses, vendors and organizations. Other highlights will include a display of classic and exotic cars, plus featured entertainment. The goal, according to the Chamber’s Community Expo Committee, ‘is to provide the residents of the community with a wide variety of information and education in a relaxed, familiar setting that encourages interaction between the attendees and participating vendors.’ To participate, applications must be completed and returned by Friday, May 8. Set up and teardown hours and instructions will be provided upon registration. For more information and to get an application, contact the Chamber at (310) 459-7963, or stop by the office at 15330 Antioch. Ramis Sadrieh, founder and owner of Technology for You!, is chairing the Community Expo Committee. Other members include include 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) and Sadrieh (Technology). Donohue is in charge of the Classic Auto Display Committee.

John Fante: Father of L.A. Lit

But to Vickie Fante Cohen and Her Brother, Jim Fante, He Was Simply ‘Father’

Pacific Palisades became a part of Jim and Vickie Fante’s lives. The Malibu-based Fante family shopped in the village and ate at House of Lee. “I’m sorry we don’t have the house anymore,” she says of their Cliffside Drive home.
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Jim Fante is weeping. He sits across from his sister, Victoria, at the dining room table of her Sunset Mesa home. A watercolor of their childhood family home, the Pt. Dume hacienda nicknamed ‘Rancho Fante,’ hangs near the window, which boasts a panoramic view of the Queen’s Necklace. A small, framed 1960s photo of John Fante, avuncular and distinguished with pipe in hand, stands on the kitchen counter. The tears stream down Jim’s face as he shares with the Palisadian-Post his favorite part from his father’s second novel, the 1939 Los Angeles-set masterpiece, ‘Ask the Dust.’ This particular passage, in the voice of the young writer Arturo Bandini”Fante’s literary alter ego of four novels”is a meditation on bigotry: ‘I have seen them stagger out of their movie palaces and blink their empty eyes in the face of reality once more, and stagger home, to read the Times, to find out what’s going on in the world. I have vomited at their newspapers, read their literature, observed their customs, eaten their food, desired their women, gaped at their art. But I am poor, and my name ends with a soft vowel, and they hate me and my father, and my father’s father, and they would have my blood and put me down, but they are old now, dying in the sun and in the hot dust of the road, and I am young and full of hope and love for my country and my times, and when I say Greaser to you it is not my heart that speaks, but the quivering of an old wound, and I am ashamed of the terrible thing I have done.’ As Jim finishes, Vickie appears visibly moved. One gathers that, as much as Jim has taken himself aback by the power of his father’s writing, even after so many reads, Jim is not surprised. Such was Fante’s command over the written word. ‘Ask the Dust’ follows the exploits of 20-year-old Bandini, author of the short story ‘The Little Dog Laughed,’ who lives off of its residuals at the fleabag hotel Alta Loma, on the crest of downtown’s Bunker Hill (an L.A. which no longer exists). Ostensibly a writer’s doomed romance, subtextually a love letter to the City of Angels, ‘Dust,’ at its core, comments on bigotry, the layers of it. ‘Bandini felt the bigotry that he hated for himself,’ Jim explains, ‘and projected it on Camilla because [as a Mexican immigrant] she represented the only thing lower than him.’ Jim prefers his father’s earlier stories, primarily ‘Dust,’ over Fante’s latter-day work. He feels his father became distracted by his Hollywood screenwriting assignments, and that Fante’s output became increasingly glib. ‘It’s so raw and honest,’ Jim, 58, says of ‘Dust.’ ‘I love his prose.’ If his semi-autobiographical Bandini novels are to be believed, Fante was simultaneously proud of his Italian-American culture and self-conscious about it. Given the immigrant family he sprang from and the era in which he grew up in, Fante could not avoid his ethnicity. In his fiction, he courageously faced it head on, in all of its paradoxical glory. But his protective pride over his craft and his angst regarding his place in the literary world may have gotten the better of him in the long run. ‘It was Mom’s opinion that he was his own worst enemy,’ Vickie, 59, says. In the late 1930s/early 1940s, Fante wrote poetry masquerading as prose; novels rich with quasi-autobiographical detail and perceptive humor, which were not fully appreciated until near his death in 1983. When his novels failed to provide a steady income, he turned to Hollywood screenwriting in the 1940s through 1960s; a m’tier he detested. Years later, Charles Bukowski fell in love with the economical, impressionistic prose of ‘Dust,’ and he vocally proclaimed that the novel single-handedly inspired him to write. Bukowski ultimately helped get Fante’s books back in print via the small Santa Barbara publisher Black Sparrow and pave the way for a wider Fante appreciation. ‘Fante was the hip guy who was not afraid to write about his feelings, which is why Bukowski championed him,’ says Richard Schave, founder of Esotouric, which conducts a bus tour of Fante’s L.A. ‘Bukowski was central to the fact that we’re having this conversation right now,’ Fante biographer Stephen Cooper (2000’s ‘Full of Life’) tells the Post. ‘Had Bukowski not jumped in, Fante would’ve fallen through the cracks of history.’ Jim and Vickie tell the Post the story of their relationship with their father, a complicated man who was alternately loving, aloof, big-hearted, short-tempered, and bitter over his treatment by Hollywood, by New York, even by Adolph Hitler himself. Born in 1909 to an Italian father and Italian-American mother, Fante chronicled his turbulent Boulder, Colorado childhood in his first published novel, ‘Wait Until Spring, Bandini’ (1938), in which he captured his dysfunctional immigrant family, headed by his father, a hard-working, alcoholic womanizer. [‘The Road to Los Angeles,’ which Fante had written first, surfaced posthumously in 1985]. Fante was writing in the Sacramento Bee when Joyce Smart, a Stanford graduate and former editor of the college newspaper, caught his columns. ‘She wrote letters to Dad relating to things he was writing about,’ Vickie says. ‘My mother comes from a family that’s conservative, wealthy and white. Grandma said, ‘Don’t you go meet him! You’ll marry him!” John and Joyce eloped in 1936, and Joyce’s mother promptly disinherited her for four years. The feeling from Fante toward his mother-in-law was mutual. ‘He took great satisfaction in peeing on her lawn,’ Jim says of Fante (who comically riffed on such escapades and tensions in his 1977 novel, ‘Brotherhood of the Grape’). When the Post asks whether their grandmother objected to the couple marrying because Fante was a writer, Jim and Vickie laugh, chiming in simultaneously: ‘Because he was Italian!’ Despite the family drama, John and Joyce complemented each other. ‘She supported him,’ Vickie says of Joyce. ‘They fought, but they had political fights. She was a Republican, he was a Democrat.’ Vickie adds that, throughout their marriage, it was Joyce who took care of Fante’s affairs, saving all of his manuscripts and letters and, in later years, lording over his dealings with Hollywood. Until the publication of ‘Wait Until Spring, Bandini,’ Fante wrote for periodicals. He had begun writing professionally at the age of 23 with the publication of his first short story in The American Mercury, and his stories continued to appear in such magazines as The Atlantic Monthly, The Saturday Evening Post, Collier’s, Esquire, and Harper’s Bazaar. ‘Ask the Dust’ followed a year after ‘Wait’ in 1939, capturing, in Fante’s precise style, the poetry of life in downtown L.A., the horrors of the 1933 Long Beach earthquake, the restless drive of the young, ambitious writer’s struggle against the forces of the universe to find success. Of all of Fante’s children”Nicholas, Dan, Vickie and Jim”the oldest son became the most troubled. Jim remembers Nick as ‘brilliant, a math genius with an IQ of 160. When he was 5 years old, he played chess with several of Dad’s friends at once and beat them all. ‘Nick worked as a toolmaker for most of his life,’ he continues. ‘Nick went to the Navy and came back and alcoholic and he never kicked it.’ Nicholas died of alcoholism in 1997. Fante scoffed at the idea of his children ‘taking up his line of work. ‘He would have terrible arguments with Dan,’ Jim says. ‘He wanted Dan to go to a trade school and become a plumber. Something practical.’ Only Dan, the second-oldest, became a writer (in the Bukowski mold). The 65-year-old author of ‘Chump Change,’ and ‘Spitting Off Tall Buildings’ has insinuated in the press that their father was an angry drunk, but if Fante went through a volatile, alcoholic stage, Vickie and Jim, youngest of the Fante kids, did not witness it. They were babies when Fante acquired enough success to relocate from Mid-Wilshire to Malibu in 1951. But Jim and Vickie do not deny that their father was a complicated man: dominating, with a short fuse. ‘He was someone you didn’t want to mess with,’ Jim says. ‘He had the most remarkable use of words I had ever seen,’ Jim says. ‘It was like going through the wood-shredder. They wouldn’t realize he had destroyed them until later.’ Fante’s work time was sacred. ‘When he was writing,’ Jim says, ‘you couldn’t make any noise. Mom would run interference. When we watched TV, it was the show he wanted to watch. When we went out, it was where he wanted to go.’ Vickie admits she was disappointed when she became homecoming princess at Santa Monica High and her father didn’t show up. Jim remembers returning from his Cal State Northridge graduation ceremony: ‘Dad was sitting in a recliner in front of the TV. I said, ‘Well, Dad, I graduated! I’m done!’ His response was, ‘Can you change it to Channel 2 for me?’ ‘I remember being hurt, and I talked to Mom about it. She must have scolded him for it. He went into a Santa Monica pawnshop and he bought me a new watch,’ Jim says, laughing. ‘When he was in a black mood, he wouldn’t talk,’ Jim continues. But the siblings also remember their father’s mix of generosity and braggadocio with great fondness, such as the time Vickie really wanted a horse. She received a note from her dad, working in Italy, which read, ‘This is a little letter about something big. Yes, you may have the horse!’ When Vickie desired a pair of shoes, Fante entered the store, pointed to the pair, and told the salesperson, ‘I’ll take them in every color!’ ‘Vickie and I had friends come over not to see us but to see Dad,’ Jim recalls. ‘He would tell them stories and they loved that. And every time he told the story a little bit different.’ Vickie recalls the time she made a mistake of bringing an Italian joke home to the dinner table. ‘Dad was furious,’ Vickie recalls. ‘He said, ‘You don’t ever say things about Italians.” She and Jim also recall a man who loved animals. Many a mammal had made Rancho Fante its residence over the years. The horse Fante allowed his daughter to get was named Stardust, and later on they had two more stallions. There was also a quartet of bull terriers (Mingo, Rocco, Dominic and Elizabeth Anne), a pair of mutts (Ginger and Duchess), Willy the German Shepherd, four cats (Joe, Oliver, Gomez and Tahuti), a donkey named Jenny, two pairs of Chihuahuas (Lucky and Kita, Mitzi and Sam), an Akita dubbed Buck, Corky the beagle, an iguana, a pair of guinea pigs (Scruffy and Phoebe), and a goose named Ambrose (not to mention the chicken coop). All that was missing, evidently, was a pair of monkeys and Noah with his ark. Jim says his father was an avid golfer and ‘a huge, huge, huge sports fan, he watched everything.’ His literary heroes were Knut Hamsun, Sherwood Anderson, and Friedrich Nietzsche. On TV, Fante enjoyed watching Jackie Gleason and Johnny Carson, and in the movies, anything starring Humphrey Bogart. But heaven help anyone who put out inferior product. The Fante children insist they never saw many films in their youth because if their father, a tough critic, didn’t like the first few minutes of a movie, he walked out on it. ‘He was such a complicated person,’ Jim says. ‘As time went on and his career dwindled, he took jobs he was embarrassed about. Movies such as ‘Maya the Magnificent’ with Jay North. He was very disgusted to write that one, and he took a lot less money for it.’ Another badge of dishonor: ‘Going My Way’ with Gene Kelly. Jim and Vickie even remember a moment when an abashed Fante gathered all of his children before him to inform them that he had no choice but to work in Hollywood to make a living. As he ventured deeper into screenwriting for the studios”working on screenplays for such films as ‘My Man and I,’ ‘The Reluctant Saint,’ ‘Something for a Lonely Man,’ ‘My Six Loves,’ and ‘Walk on the Wild Side”’Fante strayed from writing novels. It would be a long stretch until his next one, ‘Full of Life’ (1952), arrived. ‘It was biggest success of his career,’ Jim says. ‘The movie did very well.’ The film version, starring Richard Conte and Judy Holliday, was directed by Richard Quine, whose 1954 film noir, ‘Pushover,’ featured Kim Novak in her debut role. Novak became a friend of Fante’s after the author wrote the screenplay for her movie, ‘Jeanne Eagels.’ Once, the famous actress was over at Rancho Fante when Nick Fante asked Novak if he could borrow her white Corvette to impress a guy he knew down at the gas station. Novak suggested one better: drive her sports car to the station with movie star Kim Novak riding alongside. In Hollywood, Fante also befriended Malibu residents such as ‘Then Came Bronson’ star Michael Parks and Martin Sheen. When Peter Sellers was attached to star in a movie based on Fante’s ‘My Dog Stupid’ (which never materialized), he dined at the Fantes’ home, where the ‘Pink Panther’ star won over the writer. ‘They just loved each other,’ Vickie recalls. Fante knew John Steinbeck and Ernest Hemingway, but his closest friend from the literary community was William Saroyan. He no doubt related to the ethnic playwright, an Armenian-American, who was about Fante’s age and who told blue-collar stories set in Saroyan’s native Fresno. By the 1960s, Fante followed the money to Europe, where he worked on screenplays for such producers as Dino de Laurentiis. He fell in love with Italy, where his ancestors hailed from. ‘If he could, he would sell the Malibu house and move to Italy,’ Vickie says. ‘He used to talk about it.’ Joyce returned from Northern California one time to find a ‘For Sale’ sign planted outside the family home. She was livid. But by the early 1970s, Fante’s career was dead. The reason the novel ‘1933 Was a Bad Year’ had not surfaced until following his death is because, in the 1960s, ‘it was flatly rejected,’ Jim says. ‘They wrote a letter that was very upsetting. It said, ‘When you get to the point where you’re as good as the guy who wrote ‘Full of Life,’ contact us. He was devastated. ‘By the time we were in high school, they were broke all the time,’ Jim continues of their parents. Luckily, Joyce had invested in land. ‘She had inherited some property,’ Vickie says, ‘and during the dry period, she would sell off parts of it.’ Call it the ‘Ask the Dust’ curse: the bad luck which has perpetually plagued what many Fante scholars consider his greatest literary accomplishment. For the last seven years, Fante’s novels have been published by a large publisher, HarperCollins. But that was not always the case. ‘He writes ‘Ask the Dust’,’ Jim says, ‘and he was considered on a level with Steinbeck, Faulkner and Hemingway.’ Unfortunately, Stackpole Sons, ‘Dust”s original publisher, also released an English-language edition of ‘Mein Kampf,’ evidently without permission. Hitler promptly sued Stackpole and won. As a result, the financially damaged Stackpole neglected marketing ‘Ask the Dust,’ which bit the dust commercially in 1939. The year that ‘Dust’ was published, Fante’s novel found itself in stellar company. Cooper calls 1939 ‘an annus mirabilis’ which also saw the release of Steinbeck’s ‘The Grapes of Wrath,’ Nathanael West’s ‘Day of the Locust,’ and Raymond Chandler’s ‘The Big Sleep.’ Hemingway’s ‘For Whom the Bell Tolls’ came out only a year later, and Budd Schulberg’s ‘What Makes Sammy Run?’ came out in 1941. The summer of 1939 saw the release of such classics as ‘The Wizard of Oz,’ ‘Wuthering Heights,’ ‘Stagecoach,’ ‘Of Mice and Men,’ and the ‘Titanic’ blockbuster behemoth of its era, ‘Gone With the Wind.’ So it was an especially fertile creative period in American history, and Cooper deems Fante ‘an important figure in 20th century literature.’ Three decades after ‘Dust”s release, Robert Towne, one of Hollywood’s greatest screenwriters (and a Palisadian), fell in love with ‘Dust,’ which he came across while researching 1974’s L.A. history-steeped ‘Chinatown.’ Mel Brooks, who has produced such diverse fare as ‘The Elephant Man’ and ‘Frances,’ once owned the rights to ‘Dust’ but let them lapse. Now Towne excited Fante with several meetings at Rancho Fante to discuss a film adaptation, which Towne wanted to title ‘The Love of Arturo Bandini for Camilla Lopez.’ ‘When he first told my father that he wanted to do it, Dad was very excited,’ Jim says. ‘They had several meetings about it at our house. Then it became a tremendous source of frustration.’ Towne spent the better part of three decades working on other projects. At various points, Johnny Depp and Val Kilmer had committed to playing Bandini. But by the time Towne’s film was released, 23 years after Fante’s death, it starred Colin Farrell and Salma Hayek, and the ‘Los Angeles’ depicted in the movie was constructed in South Africa. Despite Towne’s pedigree and his passion and promotion for his project, the 2006 film version of ‘Dust’ failed to ignite critics and audiences and it quickly disappeared. The movie’s marketing may have been a victim of tensions between Paramount Pictures and Tom Cruise, who co-produced Towne’s movie with his producing partner, Paula Wagner. This was, after all, in the wake of Cruise’s May 2005 ‘Oprah’ couch-jump incident. By mid-2006, Sumner Redstone, chairman of Paramount’s parent company Viacom, had publicly chastised Cruise. Shortly after, Paramount ended its 14-year relationship with Cruise and, that November, Cruise/Wagner Productions set up shop at United Artists. ‘It’s very sad,’ Vickie says. ‘It’s had a lot of bad luck for such a great book. If the movie had been a success, maybe it would’ve changed things.’ What Hollywood began, diabetes finished. By the early 1970s, Fante’s waning screenwriting career and maple syrup-flow of literary output was exacerbated by his deteriorating health. Diabetes robbed him of his toes, then his feet and his legs, then his sight…but never his spirit. When Fante wrote ‘Brotherhood of the Grape’ (about an L.A. writer who, while visiting his Italian-immigrant family in San Joaquin Valley, gets roped into assisting his dominating father on his final masonry gig), one of the first people he gave it to was Towne, who forwarded it to ‘The Godfather’ director Francis Ford Coppola. The pair flipped over ‘Grape’ and ‘they took him out on the town in San Francisco,’ Jim says. ‘It was a big deal.’ By the early 1980s, a blind Fante wrote his final Bandini epic, ‘Dreams From Bunker Hill,’ by dictating the book to Joyce. ‘He had been very disoriented for a long time,’ Jim says, adding the book seemingly flowed out of him. ‘She wrote it down on yellow pads as fast as she could. They worked on it for months.’ Jim never did meet Fante’s champion, but he phoned Bukowski to inform him when his father, 74, passed away on May 8, 1983. Bukowski’s reaction was ‘Oh, [expletive]!’ and he hung up. ‘That was the only conversation I had with him,’ Jim says. Joyce died in 2005 at age 91. Today, John and Joyce’s offspring have produced nine grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. In recent years, Cal State Long Beach has been an epicenter for Fante fever, thanks to such teachers as Cooper and Teresa Fiore. ‘The poet Gerald Locklin, a friend of Bukowski’s, was including Fante in his Cal State Long Beach classes in the ’70s and ’80s,’ says Cooper, a professor of English at the university. ‘David Fine, a former professor of English, wrote what is still the definitive book on the Los Angeles novel. In 1995, Cal State Long Beach sponsored a three-day conference on Fante. David and I had this brainstorm to celebrate and investigate Fante. The turnout was in the hundreds and from all over the world. The L.A. Times writer [now book section editor] David Ulin covered the conference.’ Cooper explains his personal attraction to Fante’s prose. At age 24 in the early 1970s, Cooper had found a copy of ‘Dust’ at a now-defunct Westwood bookstore. ‘I was young and trying to write a novel,’ Cooper says. ‘The identification factor was off the chart.’ As the years transpired, ‘I kept waiting for someone else to write a biography,’ Cooper continues. Realizing no one had, he finally wrote his Fante portrait, ‘Full of Life,’ based on extensive interviews with Joyce and her offspring. ‘What was challenging was gaining the trust of John Fante’s widow,’ Cooper says. ‘She’s a very savvy, very worldly, sophisticated woman. She’d been approached by other hopeful biographers. I wrote her a letter and she screened me for I don’t know how many meetings on her patio and in her living room.’ Delving headfirst into writing Fante’s biography, Cooper says, ‘One of the great adventures is that nobody knew nothing about Fante. He was all but completely forgotten.’ Despite the efforts of Cal State Long Beach’s English faculty, a full-blown Fante appreciation in America has yet to calcify. In recent summers, Torricella Peligna”the town of origin of Fante’s lineage, located in Abruzzo, Italy”has hosted a Fante festival. Fante, who has been translated into more than 20 languages, has a bigger following abroad than in his native country. (Cooper says a French translation of ‘Dust’ kicked off a European Fante fervor in the early 1980s). ‘They were fast to seize upon the reappearance of Fante’s work in large part because of Bukowski’s fame over there,’ Cooper says. ‘But then Fante got a foothold on his own strengths.’ As they give Fante’s personal effects”first typewriter, his letters and manuscripts, even a lock of his hair snipped by Joyce”to UCLA, which acquired them for posterity, Vickie and Jim are optimistic that an American revival”make that a long-deserved recognition”will finally come to John Fante. ‘My hope,’ Vickie says, ‘is that he will become as well known as Steinbeck, Faulkner and Hemingway.’ Then Vickie shares an anecdote. Recently, she was at Spectrum gym on Sunset at Pacific Coast Highway. She happened to be within earshot of two men, in their early 20s, one of whom recommended to the other his all-time favorite book. ‘That’s my father,’ Vickie proudly told the young men. ‘He wrote ‘Ask the Dust.”

Monty Python’s Innes Doc Opens Film Fest

“The Seventh Python” director Burt Kearns (left), a Palisades resident, and producer Brett Hudson
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

Call Neil Innes the missing link of the legendary six-man British comedy troupe Monty Python. Or perhaps Shemp to their Three Stooges. You’ll also call him funny, outrageous, even musically inclined. The enigmatic Innes is the subject of a documentary, ‘The Seventh Python,’ which opens the Sixth Annual Pacific Palisades Film Festival on May 14. ‘Neil’s a great songwriter, a great comedian, and a great philosopher,’ says ‘Seventh”s director/co-producer, Burt Kearns. ‘And all this while rejecting the star-making machinery, which is quite relevant today.’ With the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band in 1968, Innes recorded ‘I’m The Urban Spaceman,’ the group’s only hit, which was produced by Paul McCartney.   ’Neil appeared in The Beatles film ‘Magical Mystery Tour,” Kearns continues. ‘He appeared in the last season of Monty Python’s ‘Flying Circus.’ They did a parody of the Beatles called The Rutles. It was brought to ‘Saturday Night Live’ by Eric Idle in the late 1970s. The Rutles took on a life of its own.’ Indeed, when ‘Spamalot’ arrives in L.A. in July, the Python musical will contain Innes’ ditties (‘Brave Sir Robin’). ‘Our film is a crowd-pleaser, with lots of laughs and songs,’ Kearns says. ‘How it came together, that’s a movie unto itself,’ says ‘Seventh’ co-producer Brett Hudson.   Kearns has lived in Pacific Palisades since 2000. And, in addition to ‘Seventh Python”s director, the documentary has other local ties. Supervising producer Alison Holloway lives here (conveniently, Kearns’ wife) and associate producer Joachim ‘J.B.’ Blunck”an Emmy-winning producer/director and former Palisadian”now resides in Malibu, where producer/musician Hudson (one of the original Hudson Brothers and an uncle of actress Kate Hudson) also lives. And, Kearns notes, ‘My son Sam is a production assistant on the film.’ Blunck co-created the syndicated television show, ‘A Current Affair,’ which Kearns worked on in 1989, when syndication was awash in tabloid news magazines. Kearns joined ‘A Current Affair’ after three years as a producer/writer on ‘Hard Copy.’ (‘I was kidnapped by a group of Australians,’ Kearns facetiously describes his kangaroo jump to ‘Affair’). Previous to ‘Hard Copy,’ Kearns worked for CBS News. Since the tabloid news genre faded, with its aesthetics since appropriated by mainstream news programs (’48 Hours,’ ‘Dateline’), Kearns launched Tabloid Baby (www.tabloidbaby.blogspot.com), a Web site commenting on celebrities and media. Kearns met Hudson in the late ’90s while working on Miramax’s ‘The Best Money Can Buy.’ They plugged away on the TV pilot for Harvey Weinstein, who was consumed with ‘Shakespeare in Love”s Oscar campaign. ‘We were afraid to interrupt him and give him the tape,’ Kearns recalls. By the time Weinstein finally saw it, he was battling ABC over the short-lived ‘Clerks’ cartoon. ‘Nothing came of our pilot,’ Kearns says. ‘But it was great, we had Bruce Vilanch writing on it.’ Kearns and Hudson formed Frozen Pictures, producing documentary-style programming, including ‘All the President’s Movies’ for Bravo, Showtime’s ‘My First Time,’ and ‘Adults Only: The Secret History of the Other Hollywood,’ which, after Court TV tried to bury it with a Sunday-night airing, pulled in the highest ratings for original programming in the channel’s history. ‘What Burt and I like to do,’ Hudson says, ‘is not give our point of view. We lay the truth out and let viewers decide.’ In 2006, Frozen released the Burt Reynolds comedy ‘Cloud Nine.’ Originally from Connecticut, where he wrote for community newspapers in Richfield and Wilton, Kearns relocated to the Palisades from the Hollywood Hills. ‘We moved here because we had a son,’ says the Marquez Knolls resident. Today, Sam is 12 and a Paul Revere Middle School student, while daughter Sally Jade, 8, attends Marquez Elementary. ‘Living near the beach is terrific,’ Kearns says. ‘We filmed ‘Cloud Nine’ on Will Rogers Beach near Temescal.’   Kearns got the idea for ‘Seventh Python’ while working on a doc called ‘Death of a Beatle.’ ‘I went to London and traced John Lennon’s life,’ he says. ‘The person I wanted to interview was the guy who played John Lennon in The Rutles.’ ‘As a musician, I listen to his melodies, his harmonics,’ Hudson says. ‘He’s very clever. The guy had fame in front of him on a silver platter and he rejected it. Given my background, I find that unique.’ Kearns credits associate Bonnie Rose for playing a key role: ‘Bonnie had brought him to Hollywood in 2002. We thought he’d be a good documentary subject. ‘I don’t like what tabloid television gave birth to, this whole culture of stalking celebrities. The film with Neil is an antidote to that, the way he could influence culture and not be a part of it.’ Some footage comes from Innes’ 2002 Hollywood performances at 1600 and Lava Lounge, and a Melbourne, Australia appearance. ‘Everything went into a box for a few years as we tried to raise money to finish it,’ Kearns says. ‘In 2007, we interviewed John Cleese. We finished the film in 2008.’ In addition to Cleese, Kearns interviewed Pythons Idle and Michael Palin. ‘We couldn’t get Terry Gilliam [former Python/movie director],’ Kearns adds, ‘because he was out raising money for the movie Heath Ledger was supposed to do when he died.’ Musician Aimee Mann and cartoonist Matt Groening (‘The Simpsons’) also appear in ‘Seventh.’   ’It’s not archival-looking black-and-white footage,’ Kearns says. ‘You’re seeing the Pythons today.’   Last summer, ‘Seventh Python’ debuted at American Cinematheque’s Mods and Rockers festival, and has since screened in Chicago, New Jersey, and at the Las Vegas Film Festival, where it won a Golden Ace Award. Up next for Frozen: documentaries on Latin rocker Chris Montez, and on John Lennon’s seven-month ‘lost weekend,’ with mistress May Pang. Last year, Hudson conquered throat cancer, and this inspired ‘The Clinic,’ about his journey to Germany to get cured. This is also in development, as is the pair’s scripted comedy, ‘Live From The Gaza Strip.’ For now, all eyes are on ‘Seventh”s Palisades premiere. ‘This is literally a homecoming,’ Kearns says. ‘To be invited to the festival is in itself a great honor. And then to be opening it!’ ‘The Seventh Python’ screens with Jennifer Clary’s short, ‘The Christmas Conspiracy,’ at 7 p.m., Pierson Playhouse, 941 Temescal Canyon Rd. Tickets: www.FriendsOfFilm.com. Visit www.TheSeventhPython.com

Palisades Party Boosts Icelandic Pop Music

Jon Por Birgisson of Sigur Ros (center) is flanked by hosts Scott Hackwith and Lanette Phillips, who opened up their home for an Icelandic music event organized by Anna Hildur (not pictured).
Jon Por Birgisson of Sigur Ros (center) is flanked by hosts Scott Hackwith and Lanette Phillips, who opened up their home for an Icelandic music event organized by Anna Hildur (not pictured).
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer

‘The sweetness of the gentle breeze/brings back precious memories,’ sang the 20-something brunette Lay Low in a Pacific Palisades backyard on April 25. Well, the Palisades must have brought back scores of memories for the singer-songwriter, given the gusts whisking through town that Saturday. No matter, such weather is a joke compared to what they’re used to in Iceland, where Lay Low and her peers hail from. The musicians were guests of honor at an Icelandic pop music party in the Palisades, hosted by music-industry veteran Phillips and husband Scott Hackwith. The idea: spotlight Iceland’s vital music scene as the country’s government faces bankruptcy during this pandemic economic meltdown. A notable was Jon Por Birgisson of the group Sigur Ros, arguably the highest-profile Icelandic act in America beyond Bjork.   Among the 75 people in attendance: Haukur, frontman of the Reykjavik group Dikta (who performed), Palisadian movie producer Steve Chasman (the ‘Transporter’ movies), his wife Nadia, and daughters Shana, 6, and Cylia, 3, ‘How High’ director (and son of Bob) Jesse Dylan, Santa Monica restaurateur Juliano of Juliano’s Raw, and Robi Dr’co Rosa, Grammy-winning songwriter of Ricky Martin’s biggest hits, ‘Livin’ La Vida Loca’ and ‘She Bangs.’ Looking Silver Lake hip in goatee, tattoos and jeans, Rosa, a resident of L.A. and Puerto Rico, told the Palisadian-Post, ‘I travel a lot so I love learning through music.’ The former member of Menudo brought his sons, Revel, 14, and Redamo, 8, to expose them to Icelandic music. Birgisson (whose band is on a sabbatical) told the Post that coming from Iceland’s barren landscapes, he was impressed with lush, green Pacific Palisades: ‘I grew up in the countryside, in Mosfellsb’r.’ This event was important ‘to support our music scene during this current economic crisis.’ ‘Everyone’s trying to stick together,’ said Lay Low (n’e Louisa Elisabet Sigrunardiltiv). As she spoke, her countrymen were voting for a new government. She was hopeful that a new liberal contingent would break Iceland’s conservative governing body. (In fact, Iceland elected its first left-wing government in two decades that weekend). But the spirit of the afternoon was fun over foment. ‘Lanette and Scott went to such a length to get all of these people here for Icelandic music,’ said Kari Sturluson, Sigur Ros and Lay Low’s manager. Post-party, Phillips”executive producer at Mighty 8, which produces videos”said, ‘We are hoping to do this every year.’