The Big Goodbye: A Noir Photo Tour of Raymond Chandler’s Los Angeles In 1994 In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994 In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994 In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner along the corridor and down in the night elevator to the City Hall lobby. I went out the Spring Street side and down the long flight of empty steps and the wind blew cold. I lit a cigarette at the booth. My car was still out at the Jeeter place.” —“Trouble Is My Business” (1939); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “Newton Street In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner was a block of cheap clothing stores In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner arcades of slot machines In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner without moving their lips.” —“Spanish Blood” (1935); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “It was an old hotel that had once been exclusive and was now steering a shaky course between a receivership and a bad name at Headquarters.” —“Nevada Gas” (1935); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “In and around the old houses there are flyblown restaurants and Italian fruit stands and cheap apartment houses and little candy stores where you can buy even nastier things than their candy.” —The High Window (1942); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “And there are ratty hotels where nobody except people named Smith and Jones sign the register and where the night clerk is half watchdog and half pander.” —The High Window (1942); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “Out of the apartment houses come women who should be young but have faces like stale beer; men with pulled-down hats and quick eyes that look the street over behind the cupped hand that shields the match flame; worn intellectuals with cigarette coughs and no money in the bank; fly cops with granite faces and unwavering eyes; cokies and coke-peddlers; people who look like nothing in particular and know it In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “Out of the apartment houses come women who should be young but have faces like stale beer; men with pulled-down hats and quick eyes that look the street over behind the cupped hand that shields the match flame; worn intellectuals with cigarette coughs and no money in the bank; fly cops with granite faces and unwavering eyes; cokies and coke-peddlers; people who look like nothing in particular and know it In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner ’ she said. ‘I’m all through being fond of people.’ She glanced briefly towards the high-backed chair. ‘I stopped being fond of him last night. He asked me about you In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner built in 1896 In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner built in 1896 In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner long ago In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner like the room clerk.” —The Little Sister (1949); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “Room 332 In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “Room 332 In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “Room 332 In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner the Bradbury Building In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner the Bradbury Building In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner slack-jawed and watery-eyed on a piece of folded burlap on top of a wooden stool. He looked as if he had been sitting there since the Civil War and had come out of that badly.” —The High Window (1942); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “I got in with him and said eight In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner as if he was carrying the elevator on his back.” —The High Window (1942); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “It had been a nice place once In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner and from the days of its niceness there still remained that funny little funicular railway In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner which crawled up and down a yellow clay bank from Hill Street.” —“The King in Yellow” (1938). The neighborhood of Bunker Hill was razed in the 1950s and 1960s to make way for downtown's corporate hub of enormous glass buildings. Angel's Flight In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner was preserved as a reminder of that once-beautiful Victorian neighborhood.; Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner Pay attention In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner Pay attention In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner but I didn’t move.” —The Big Sleep (1939); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “The Treloar Building was In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner on Olive Street In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner on the west side. The sidewalk in front of it had been built of black and white rubber blocks. They were taking them up now to give to the government.” —The Lady in the Lake (1943). The Oviatt Building is the model for Chandler's Treloar Building.; Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner Downtown's beautiful art deco Oviatt Building; Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner The Oviatt Building is the model for Chandler's Treloar Building.; Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “The Athletic Club was on a corner across the street and half a block down from the Treloar Building.” —The Lady in the Lake (1943). The prestigious Los Angeles Athletic Club is still in operation In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner when Raymond Chandler was an oil executive who took his lunches and meetings there.; Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “I went into the club library. It contained books behind glass doors and magazines on a long central table and a lighted portrait of the club’s founder. But its real business seems to be sleeping.” —The Lady in the Lake (1943); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “Outward jutting bookcases cut the room into a number of small alcoves and in the alcoves were high-backed leather chairs of an incredible size and softness. In a number of chairs old boys were snoozing peacefully In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner thin racking snores coming out of their pinched noses. I climbed over a few feet and stole around to the left.” —The Lady in the Lake (1943); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “It was one of the mixed blocks over on Central Avenue In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner almost the end of March In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner My Lovely (1940). In that novel In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner My Lovely (1940). In that novel In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner Farewell" data-rightCaption="In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner">and the afternoon breeze made the unpruned shoots of last year’s poinsettias tap-tap against the cracked stucco wall. A line of stiff yellowish half-washed clothes jittered on a rusty wire in the side yard." —Farewell In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner and the afternoon breeze made the unpruned shoots of last year’s poinsettias tap-tap against the cracked stucco wall. A line of stiff yellowish half-washed clothes jittered on a rusty wire in the side yard." —Farewell In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner on the east fringe of San Angelo. Narrow but expensively paved streets wind around in the hills In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner Raymond Chandler lived on Redesdale Avenue in Silver Lake In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner Raymond Chandler lived on Redesdale Avenue in Silver Lake In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner then the road dropped In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner went between banks high enough to put the whole street in shadow. Then a gun roared around a bend ahead of us.” —“Finger Man” (1934). This is the bigger Silver Lake apartment that Chandler and his wife moved into when he began making money as a writer.; Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “He drove down to Wilshire and we turned east again. Twenty-five minutes brought us to the Bryson Tower In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner up marble steps In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner and over a lobby that was too big and a carpet that was too blue.” —The Lady in the Lake (1943). The Bryson Tower In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner still retains features of its past grandeur.; Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner The lobby of the Bryson Tower; Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “The corridor on the sixth floor was narrow and doors had frosted glass panels. It was older and much dirtier than my own building. It was loaded with doctors In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner Christian Science practitioners not doing too good In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner the kind of doctors and dentists who just scrape along.” —The Long Goodbye (1953); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “The motor of the gray Plymouth throbbed under her voice and the rain pounded above it. The violet light at the top of Bullock’s green-tinged tower was far above us In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner crippling city.” —The Big Sleep (1939); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “The rushing sound of the traffic had died a little and the air from the open window In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner had that tired end-of-the-day smell of dust In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner sunlight rising from hot walls and sidewalks In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner drifting down from the residential hills above Hollywood — if you had a nose like a hunting dog — a touch of that peculiar tomcat smell that eucalyptus trees give off in warm weather.” —The High Window (1942); Credit: Gustavo Turner In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner “Wonderful what Hollywood will do to a nobody In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner a he-man hero with shining eyes and brilliant smile reeking of sexual charm out of some overgrown kid who was meant to go to work with a lunchbox. Out of a Texas car hop with the literacy of a character in a comic strip it will make an international courtesan In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner a he-man hero with shining eyes and brilliant smile reeking of sexual charm out of some overgrown kid who was meant to go to work with a lunchbox. Out of a Texas car hop with the literacy of a character in a comic strip it will make an international courtesan In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner a he-man hero with shining eyes and brilliant smile reeking of sexual charm out of some overgrown kid who was meant to go to work with a lunchbox. Out of a Texas car hop with the literacy of a character in a comic strip it will make an international courtesan In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner a he-man hero with shining eyes and brilliant smile reeking of sexual charm out of some overgrown kid who was meant to go to work with a lunchbox. Out of a Texas car hop with the literacy of a character in a comic strip it will make an international courtesan In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner a he-man hero with shining eyes and brilliant smile reeking of sexual charm out of some overgrown kid who was meant to go to work with a lunchbox. Out of a Texas car hop with the literacy of a character in a comic strip it will make an international courtesan In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner a he-man hero with shining eyes and brilliant smile reeking of sexual charm out of some overgrown kid who was meant to go to work with a lunchbox. Out of a Texas car hop with the literacy of a character in a comic strip it will make an international courtesan In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner a he-man hero with shining eyes and brilliant smile reeking of sexual charm out of some overgrown kid who was meant to go to work with a lunchbox. Out of a Texas car hop with the literacy of a character in a comic strip it will make an international courtesan In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner the three green filing cases In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner the customers’ chair across from me In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner the customers’ chair across from me In 1994, Los Angeles named the intersection of Hollywood and Cahuenga (near one of Philip Marlowe's fictional private investigator offices) Raymond Chandler Square.; Credit: Gustavo Turner