The world view of Hollywood
has come a long way since the infamous landmark signature sign was
built in 1923. At that early age, Hollywood was not yet the motion
picture capital of the world it is today. In fact, the huge
letters spelled "HOLLYWOODLAND" and were built to
advertise and sell the properties of a development in a new
housing subdivision below it in the Beechwood Hills.
Perched on top of Mount Lee,
the tallest peak in L.A., the letters for the original sign were
thirty feet wide and fifty feet tall. They were studded with four
thousand low wattage light bulbs, which were lit each night and
changed daily by a caretaker who actually lived in a house behind
one of the "L’s"! The total cost for the sign’s
construction was $21,000.00. As time went on, the light bulbs were
all stolen.
The original sign which was
maintained (except for the stolen bulbs) until 1939, was largely
neglected until it was rebuilt in 1949. At this time, the last
four letters were permanently removed. In 1978, a fund raiser
granted $27,200 towards the installment of new all- steel
letters and the sign was unveiled a third time to a television
audience of six million. Now it stands 450 feet across, is still
fifty feet tall and weighs in at 450,000 pounds.
Legendary Tinseltown has
always been notorious for being glittery and glamorous, but at the
same time, for being sordid and scandalous. It is all depending on
who you talk to (or who you talk about)! Hedy Lamarr, glamour girl
and starlet of the ‘30’s once said "Any girl can be
glamorous. All you have to do is stand still and look
stupid." It was not so easy it seemed, to aspiring actress
Peg Entwhistle who, in 1932 dramatically dove to her death from
one of the sign’s enormous letters. Apparently, after silent
films with the advent of "talkies," many would-be stars
lost hope for lack of having star quality voices! Cary Grant,
elite Hollywood star even said, "Everyone wants to be Cary
Grant… Even I want to be Cary Grant!"
Today, it is illegal to
trespass on the property. Far from the roads on an undeveloped
hillside, it is fenced in and armed with a high-tech alarm system.
There are still ways to enjoy a glimpse of this piece of Hollywood
heritage. For the closest view possible, drive up Beechwood Blvd,
which is North of Hollywood Blvd, Northeast of the downtown area.
This is a long, windy road that still has many of the original
"Hollywoodland Development" homes on it. From most of
the way up, the sign is in plain view. Towards the top, it is
obscured. At home, log on to http://www.rfx.com/hollywood to see a
twenty-four hour live spy-cam that takes random pictures at the
site. Of course, when you are in Hollywood, it is always there,
looming proudly above the city with many points of vantage. It
isn’t hard to miss -- or to marvel at-- when you see it.