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The Britons who made their mark on LA

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  • The Britons who made their mark on LA

    The Britons who made their mark on LA
    Expat James Aldous has become fascinated by the impact of British
    migrants on Los Angeles. Here, he rounds up some of the most
    important.

    Mulholland Drive in Los Angeles is named after William Mulholland, a
    British expat who helped to bring water to the city Photo: Richard
    Wong / Alamy

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/expat/expatlife/8751943/The-Britons-who-made-their-mark-on-LA.html
    11 Sep 2011


    Since arriving in Los Angeles a little over five months ago, I've been
    amazed at the wide array of diverse communities from differing
    cultures who call LA their home, adding vibrancy to this place often
    referred to as "culturally flat".

    Beyond the more obvious Chinatown and Koreatown, there is the Armenian
    community in Glendale, and the Russians in West Hollywood (the most
    concentrated single Russian-speaking region in the US outside of New
    York), all adding to a rich tapestry of culture and style that imbues
    this sprawling metropolis.

    Each community brings diverse cultures, customs and - in some cases -
    leave indelible marks of their contribution to this city. None more so
    than individuals arriving here from the UK, who have made significant
    additions, not just creatively in the entertainment industry in the
    studios of Hollywood and beyond, but contributions that have shaped
    the very fabric and physical manifestation of this city.

    William Mulholland (1855-1935)

    Many will be familiar with Mulholland Drive - the scenic road of
    twisting turns and hairpin bends that runs through the hills of
    Hollywood, Beverly Hills and beyond, providing breath-taking views of
    the city on a clear day. Mulholland's name was given to this road
    after his role in bringing much-needed water to the city along this
    pass in the form of The Los Angeles Aqueduct, completed in 1913.

    Born in Belfast, Northern Ireland, Mulholland arrived in Los Angeles
    in 1877 after a period with the British Merchant Navy. Settling here,
    his career never ventured far from water and on his way to find work
    on a ship, he took a job digging a well.

    >From there, he rose to become the head of the Los Angeles Department
    of Water and Power, where his work in acquiring water for the city was
    not without controversy. The water was sourced from the Owens Valley -
    both the lake and the river - creating anger amongst the farmers who
    depended on it, and triggering the "California Water Wars".

    His career ended abruptly in 1928 after the collapse of the St.
    Francis Dam, which killed hundreds and is often cited as the worst US
    civil engineering disaster of the 20th Century. Those that have seen
    the iconic Roman Polanski film Chinatown will recognize the
    familiarity of Mulholland's history in the character of Henry Mulray,
    which was based loosely upon him.

    Griffith J. Griffith (1850-1919)

    Born in Bettws, South Wales, Griffith settled in Los Angeles in 1882
    after living in Pennsylvania and San Francisco. After a career as the
    mining correspondent for a San Francisco newspaper, Griffith earned
    his money though employment by various mining companies, keen to
    acquire his knowledge of the industry.

    Shortly after arriving in Los Angeles he purchased 4,000 acres of the
    Rancho Los Feliz Mexican land grant, and later donated over 3,000
    acres to the city of Los Angeles for use as a public park in 1896. To
    honour the donation, the park took the name "Griffith Park". It is a
    space five times that of New York's Central Park, and where the
    Hollywood sign resides.

    His good name was tainted in 1903 when he shot his wife at the Arcadia
    Hotel in Santa Monica, leaving her alive but disfigured after the loss
    of an eye. A heavy drinker - and subject to paranoid delusions - the
    reason for his attempt on her life was due to his belief that his wife
    and the Pope were conspiring to poison him.

    After two years in prison, Griffith returned to Los Angeles and,
    attempting to make good again his name, offered money to build a
    theatre and hall of science within Griffith Park. Although initially
    rejected, the city eventually took the bulk of the $1.5 million estate
    bequeathed in his will, using it to build the Greek Theater (1929) and
    the Griffith Observatory (1935), which remain popular facilities to
    this day.

    John Parkinson (1861-1935)

    A celebrated architect who created the iconic Los Angeles City Hall
    and Central Station, Parkinson was born in Scorton, Lancashire and
    began his life as a builder in Bolton, before coming to North America
    at the age of 21. Settling in Los Angeles in 1894, he established his
    architectural practise in Downtown Los Angeles.

    Parkinson brought the first skyscraper to Los Angeles - the Braly
    Block at 408 South Spring Street, standing some 175 feet high and
    completed in 1904.

    However it was City Hall that dominated the Downtown landscape from
    its completion in 1928 (co-designed with Albert C. Martin and John C.
    Austin), until the law stipulating it should the tallest building in
    Los Angeles was changed in 1956, making way for the high risers that
    now occupy the area.

    David Hockney (1937 to present)

    Hockney's visuals are as typically LA as the Hollywood sign or Sunset
    Boulevard. The ability to capture the area's unique colours, the
    bright blissful blues of the sky and swimming pools especially, are
    what have helped define this enfant terrible of 1960s pop art culture.
    He sometimes refers to himself as an "English Los Angelino", saying of
    LA:

    `There's a quite sophisticated city out there, yet you can live
    privately in it.'

    Born and schooled in Bradford, he has lived in the Hollywood Hills
    since 1978. He now spends a lot of his time in Yorkshire, as he
    prepares for an exhibition at the Royal Academy, due to open in
    January 2012.

    Christopher Isherwood (1904- 1986)

    Isherwood, born in Cheshire and settling in Los Angeles in 1939,
    remarked in his diary that it was `perhaps the ugliest city on earth'
    and that he was `amazed at the size of the city and its lack of
    shape'.

    Isherwood came to love the place eventually through the interesting
    characters he met and socialized with there - Tennessee Williams,
    Bertholt Brecht, Charlie Chaplin and Greta Garbo amongst them. He
    would later say that he felt there was no point justifying the allure
    of the city to people: `either they understand it's the only place or
    they don't'.

    Although his observations of California don't feature in the early
    works for which he is most known, he did create some of his finest
    material here including A Single Man, a semi-autobiographical work.

    Aldous Huxley

    Similarly taking an immediate dislike to the city on first arrival,
    Huxley called Los Angeles the `city of dreadful joy', where `thought
    is barred' and `conversation is unknown', in his essay Los Angeles. A
    Rhapsody. He also talked of the strange religions and assembly-line
    movie making which permeated the city.

    However, he was amused by all the differences and interests, `There is
    everything in Los Angele...like Venice in 17th century - where East
    and West would meet and everything would happen here.'

    James Aldous, who works in communications, recently moved to Los
    Angeles. You can follow him on Twitter here.

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