Monday, February 6, 2012

Beverly Hills, CA

Jill's Journal: There’s not too many cities more fun to spend a day in than Beverly Hills. If you’ve never been to the famed 90210 zip code, well, then whatever you’ve heard about Beverly Hills is probably all true. The homes are mansions, the people are glamorous, the cars cost more than some houses, and the shopping is beyond upscale.

Beverly Hills is part of the “Platinum Triangle,” which also includes the extremely wealthy L.A. neighborhoods of Bel Air and Holmby Hills. There are probably more celebrities, media moguls, record executives, heirs and heiresses, and otherwise excessively loaded people in this area than in any other part of the world. Here’s a fun fact: the operating budget for the City of Beverly Hills (with a mere 34,000 residents) is more than $300 million, comparable to the gross national product of the British Virgin Islands.

Suddenly our beat-up little minivan feels grossly inadequate!

Here’s a typical residential street in Beverly Hills. They’re all immaculate with lots of meticulously-groomed greenery.

This is the gate to what has to be the most famous house in the area: Hugh Hefner’s Playboy Mansion.

This driveway is a bit more on the infamous side…Heidi Fleiss ran her high-priced brothel from here.

Far ritzier is the exclusive Beverly Hills Hotel. The “Pink Palace” has been named one of the best places in the world for spotting celebrities, any time of the day and any day of the week. The hotel fiercely guards its guests’ privacy, whether they’re there for lunch or overnight. And yet, if you can think of a celebrity or a president or a member of a royal family, chances are they’ve been photographed here. It’s been at the height of luxury since it was built in 1912 and remains that way now. It’s currently owned by the sultan of Brunei and its most-sighted celebrity is believed to be Jennifer Aniston. Elizabeth Taylor honeymooned here with six of her eight husbands. Howard Hughes paid $350,000 a year for the privilege of living here in the 1950s. It was featured on the cover of The Eagles’ “Hotel California.” The “cheap” rooms start at $445 a night, or you can go for the presidential suite’s 24-karat gold bathroom fixtures for $8,150 a night. And the presidential bungalows? If you have to ask how much they are, you can’t afford it.

Here’s another famed Beverly Hills hotel…the (Regent) Beverly Wilshire. This is where Richard Gere and Julia Roberts rendezvoused in “Pretty Woman.” Olympian Esther Williams also taught a teenaged Elizabeth Taylor how to swim in the pool. And people like Elvis Presley, John Lennon, and Warren Beatty have lived here long-term.

One can’t visit Beverly Hills without taking a turn on Rodeo Drive.

Every major clothing and jewelry designer in the world seems to have a shop here. It’s the place to see and be seen.

An offshoot of Rodeo is this European-style pedestrian street where the “Two Rodeo” shops beckon.

Back on Rodeo, a Bugatti Veyron Grand Sport is parked in front of Bijan, the exclusive men’s wear store that is said to be the most expensive store in the world. You need an appointment just to get in the door. Bijan’s clothing is so luxurious that not only have a half dozen U.S. presidents and other countries’ heads of states worn it, but so have fashion-conscious sports stars like Michael Jordan, celebrities too numerous to count, and even other designers like Giorgio Armani and Oscar de la Renta! When other designers wear your clothes, I think that means you’ve officially arrived. As for the car, it’s worth $1.7 million and goes from 0 to 253mph in under 60 seconds.

One more shot of that car. It makes the BMW parked in front of it look rather pedestrian, doesn’t it?

Behind the big Beverly Hills sign, one can see the Beverly Hills Civic Center. The City Hall, library, police station, and more are there. Yes, that's the same police station featured by Eddie Murphy in “Beverly Hills Cop.”

The girls honestly didn’t care one bit about Beverly Hills. Their favorite part of the city? Undoubtedly this big tree in Beverly Gardens Park. They spent a very happy half-hour climbing all over it.

Here’s the very cool Paley Center for Media. Anyone can walk in, borrow a cubicle, and watch or listen to over 150,000 old t.v. or radio shows. Chris Rock sat here for hours in 2005 studying old Oscar broadcasts before he hosted the Academy Awards.

This place is truly amazing. The Greystone Mansion, built in 1928 by an oil tycoon, was the most expensive house ever built in California at its time. At over 400 acres, it was also the largest estate in Beverly Hills. The house alone featured over 46,000 square feet of living space.

These days, the City of Beverly Hills owns it and has turned its grounds into a city park. The mansion itself is one of the most-used sets in movies and television. If you’ve ever watched a movie or t.v. or a music video or a commercial, it’s virtually guaranteed you’ve seen Greystone somewhere even though you don’t know it. Spiderman (1, 2, and 3), The Bodyguard, Indecent Proposal, The Social Network, X-Men…and the list goes on and on and on.

Finally, a decent view of downtown L.A.!

I have to share this: my friend Leo wrote today regarding the smog in recent pictures. He far prefers to call it L.A.’s “beautiful golden mist.” His version is way better than mine, isn’t it? :)

Our Beverly Hills excursion ended with a very fun visit from Rob’s lifelong friend Pat. The two met as toddlers in Tahoe and have been close friends almost ever since. Nearly forty years of friendship; that’s something to write home about.

2 comments:

gretchenhs said...

Oooo, I loved my first tour of Beverly Hills! Thanks.

Hey girls, I like the big tree too!

Andrea Kanelopoulos - Anam Nostos House said...

You are making me so homesick! I so remember my year there and nannying in BH...amazing place it is! I have a couple old friendships too, something else for sure! Cheers!