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THE DAY ONE OF CHARLIE’S ANGELS KISSED SOME GUY—IN DOWNEY!
Legend: Some dude, maybe Bebek from Pius X High, got kissed by Jaclyn Smith while Charlie’s Angels was filming an episode in Downey.
Reality: I was a student at Pius in the late ’70s, and some time during that sentence—I think it was after I ran my friend’s car into the school cafeteria, true story—word came that the hottest show on TV, Charlie’s Angels, was filming just beyond the razor wire fence that surrounded our campus.
This started a steady exodus of students—mostly fellas—from campus to the Angels set. From those trips would filter back stories. One had it that my friend Dave Duck had played Frisbee with Farrah Fawcett.
There were reports of pictures taken and hugs given but the story that knocked everyone out was that one of the Angels, Jaclyn Smith—the classy one—had actually kissed someone, I forget who, I wanna say it was either Gilbert Garcia or Paul Bebek, but maybe it was Duck. I dunno.
Pius X is gone now. Charlie’s Angels has run its course as campy film franchise and Jackie Smith—the classy one—sells stuff for K-mart. So, the reality is this: never grow old. // SL
BLACK DAHLIA: LOCAL HONEY
Legend: The Black Dahlia lived, worked, and even earned her nickname in Long Beach.
Reality: Elizabeth Short came to Long Beach in the summer of 1946 with six months to live, visiting and sometimes living with a sweetheart named Lt. Gordon Fickling. She rotated through a series of local hotels, at one point settling for a few days at the Washington Hotel (now private apartments) at 53 Linden Ave., just doors down from a corner pharmacy and soda shop (now Flowers By Vickie) and a block and a half from the Lafayette Hotel.
In James Ellroy’s footnoted novel, she’s also working in a café on the first floor of the Lafayette—Lafayette building manager Sharon Hays says she’s heard the story. And her nickname comes down to one of two—or maybe both, since Dahlia-ism isn’t the clearest discipline—reporters who found that Paramount’s then-current film The Blue Dahlia (which won screenwriter Raymond Chandler an Academy nomination) had reminded people in Long Beach of the dark-haired girl often spotted walking up Linden.
Reporter and Times columnist Jack Smith wrote in 1975 (as recovered on L.A. Observed by Times archivist Carolyn Strickler) that he thought he’d put the name in print first—sourced from druggist Arnold Lander, who worked at the soda fountain, and who said he’d heard kids at the counter call her ‘the Black Dahlia.’
But L.A. Herald-Express reporter Bevo Means said he’d heard a Long Beach policeman call her ‘the Black Dahlia’ at a Long Beach bar about the same time, which he reported in his own articles. Smith eventually passed the credit to Means, but the original honor still belongs to the City of Long Beach, which gave her the nickname that made her famous. // CZ
THIS ARTICLE ISN'T OVER!
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Tags: bill hunter, charlie's angels, igor's alley, jfk curse, midget town, nu pike mummy, son of sam, the black dahlia, the traffic circle
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