A demure Jenna Jameson at the Los Angeles Theatre (Photos by Lina Lecaro)
Cocaine & Cops!We were at a wild Silver Lake house party off Hyperion late Saturday night, one of two soirees for the hipster hookup flick
The Boys and Girls Guide to Getting Down (also being referred to around town as “that Cahuenga movie,” since it prominently features the crowded avenue’s bars). The preview screening at
Avalon was followed by a cast-and-crew bash at the adjacent restaurant
Honey, but the S’Lake shindig — held at one of the party houses from the film — was surely more true to its sex- and drug-fueled depravity. When we arrived, around midnight, a posse of punkettes (in St. Paddy’s Day green) were grinding on each other in the pungent, smoke-filled dance room, while outside, on the sardine-packed yard, very inebriated young rock dudes stomped on cacti, chugged beer and hit on buzzed babes who squeezed past. After a longish wait for what we thought was the restroom, we heard a burly guy in black say slyly, “This line is for the
coke room.” “Is there a toilet
in the coke room?” we asked hopefully. There wasn’t, and we never actually entered. That was probably a good choice: After we left, the bash was apparently broken up by the LAPD — helicopters, squad cars, poised shotguns and all — just like a scene in the movie. We doubt anyone gave doughnuts to the cops, though, as the partiers did in the film. Check out all the sniffing, whiffing and kissing when
The Guide opens at the
Mann’s Chinese 6 this Friday (running for one week only). After-party at the
Beauty Bar, of course.
Ain’t it Grand (Ave.)?It’s still too sketchy for us to live in, but downtown definitely beats Hollywood for going out: less traffic, less moolah, less velvet-rope burn. It’s no wonder D-town’s boomin’. Let’s hope it doesn’t go too far, though: Many of the new living spaces go for seven figures, and we even heard rumors that Posh & Bex were looking at some swanky pads east of the Civic Center. (
Shall we call them Pex for short? —ed.)
Based at Broadway and Ninth, the arty collective
BOXEight get props for putting the focus back on the beauty and character of L.A.’s old, under-used architectural treasures. Not only did they choose the palatial
Los Angeles Theatre as a venue for two nights of music and clothing-designer action (an alternative to Smashbox’s Fashion Week shows), but they’re bringing new life to the previously neglected
Grand Ave. Nightclub with a monthly gathering called
Art Bar.
The Grand old building’s usual crowd includes
salsersos and Top 40 fans, but owner
Gary Warfer told us he’s looking to attract a more rockin’ scene and has some biggie band bookings in the works. With a groovy new paint job and seating/eating area, it sure looks nicer than it did back when it was a rave fave, and we know it works as a rock venue:
Tiger Mask had its first (and last)
L.A. Shakedown garage-a-thon there a few years ago, and though there were problems with that event, the space wasn’t one of them. We’ll keep ya posted on the plans for Grand’s return to grandeur in the coming months.
Revelers at The Boys and Girls Guide to Getting Down house party in Silver Lake
Hot & Hammy Media WhoresThe Los Angeles Theatre provided a charming, ornate backdrop for BOXEight’s three highly entertaining fashion shows and after-parties. Friday, a group show featuring the local lines
Kit Pistol,
Rock N Roll Beauty and
Goddollars was zesty fun, but it only warmed up the runway for the main event: the flamboyant, uniform-inspired frocks of Salt Lake City provocateur
Jared Gold (see A Considerable Town for full review). Gold’s show attracted a Technicolor brew of tatted art tarts, spiffed-up rockers (
Eric Erlandson,
Miss Derringer’s
Elizabeth McGrath and
Morgan Slade), hot & hammy media whores (celebutante author
James St. James,
Anna Nicole Smith “pal”
Bobby Trendy in a puffy shirt and stripper boots), and industry playas & pets, including
Amy Heckerling (
Fast Times,
Clueless),
Heather Tom (
Young & the Restless),
Jennifer Carpenter (
The Exorcism of Emily Rose) and porn queen
Jenna Jameson (sporting a bob haircut). Catwalk prancers were plucked from
America’s Next Top Model,
Janice Dickensen’s Modeling Agency and outer space — uh, we mean cyberspace. (Pink princess
Jeffree Star, currently No. 1 on iTunes’ dance-music chart with his EP
Plastic Surgery Slumber Party, worked it like Wonder Woman.) Overheard at the show’s close: “Well, that was the hippest crowd and show in L.A. Fashion Week. We might as well take the rest of the week off!”
Of course,
we didn’t. We returned for
Eduardo Lucero’s show the following night, where a more sophisticated, mostly Latin crowd gathered to eyeball Lucero’s Studio 54–ish getups. We were banished to bad seats in the back, but even from that distance, we thought the collection was hit-and-miss. We actually preferred the edgy ensembles we saw on latecomers
after the show — including members of
Orgy and
The Living Things who funneled into the theater for
Stephen Hauptfeur’s post-fashion show happening. The androgynous NYC electro-poppers
Dangerous Muse and
Suicide Club (led by
Morphine Generation designer
Erik Hart) provided the sounds but, alas, Nightranger had other (drunken) fish to fry. It was St. Paddy’s Day, after all.
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