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Travel back to Hollywood’s Golden Age through legendary celebrity homes where history, architecture, and stardom collided in ...
You order a cocktail at the bar and nod at Douglas Fairbanks and Rudolph Valentino, who are hobnobbing with Gloria Swanson and Greta Garbo. Josephine Baker is warming up by the piano.
The starriest cemetery in Los Angeles has been bringing together movies, audiences, and even Paul Reubens, for 24 years.
The cemetery and the adjacent studio have always had a close connection; Paramount stars like Douglas Fairbanks, Valentino and Tyrone Power found their final resting places there, and Cecil B ...
Who wouldn’t want to live on the fifth floor of Los Angeles’ new Gower Court building, an architectural landmark with one of ...
Some go back to the silent era – think of the ghosts of Chaplin, Douglas Fairbanks, Rudolph Valentino and Mary Pickford. They’re ghosts that walked – and later talked – thanks to the ...
John Gilbert was an American screenwriter, actor, and director, who made a name for himself during the silent film era as “The Great Lover.” He was often in a fierce contest regarding popularity with ...
For a tragically brief time in the 1920s, Rudolph Valentino romanced the world. The “Latin Lover” was one of the biggest stars on the silver screen—and when his life was cut brutally short ...
As a new Hollywood A-lister, Rudolph Valentino had a reputation to uphold. So, he got himself an Isotta-Franschini Town Car and then, ordered another one, a roadster, for $25,000.