Biltmore Hotel Rendezvous, Los Angeles 1937 Menu Art
Biltmore Hotel Rendezvous, Los Angeles 1937 Lunch Menu

Biltmore Hotel Rendezvous, Los Angeles 1937

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Product Description

This exquisite menu cover was for luncheon service at the Biltmore Hotel In Los Angeles, California, in 1937.

Lunch wasn’t a quick sandwich – it was a full three course meal accompanied by a pianist – advertised as ‘Maurice and his continental music.’

Wines were described as ‘liquid sunshine’ and the most expensive cocktail (a vodka martini – very dry) cost 35c. Cordials and liqueurs were also on offer.

The Hollywood film industry was still in its infancy when the Biltmore Hotel opened in downtown Los Angeles in 1923. Built by hotels magnate John McEntee Bowman, he said the opulent and lavishly decorated property was ‘a statement to the rest of the world that Los Angeles had arrived as an American metropolis.’

It was the most expensive hotel of its era – it cost ten million dollars to build – and its architecture was inspired by the Spanish and French Renaissances. The interior frescoes were the work of Giovanni Battista Smeraldi, who also worked on the Vatican and The White House. There were 1,000 rooms, each with their own bathroom – an unheard-of luxury at the time.

Scores of celebrities patronized the Biltmore and in 1927 the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences decided after a meeting in the hotel’s Crystal Ballroom to launch an awards ceremony called The Oscars. Legend has it that Metro Goldwyn Meyer’s famous set designer Cedric Gibbons sketched the design of the Oscar statuette on one of the hotel’s napkins.

The Oscars ceremony was held here on several occasions and Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy, Jimmy Stewart, Garry Cooper, Bette Davis, Joan Fontaine, Ginger Rogers and Claudette Colbert were all presented with Oscars at the Biltmore.

The hotel has been used as a backdrop in films such as Ocean’s 11 (1960), The Sting (1973), Chinatown (1974) and Bugsy (1991) as well as the television Mad Men series.

The Beaux Arts-inspired hotel still welcomes guests today and is called the Millennium Biltmore Hotel.

Gallery quality Giclée print on natural white, matte, 100% cotton rag, acid and lignin free archival paper using Epson Ultrachrome HD archival inks. Custom printed with border for matting and framing.

Each order includes a print of the interior menu.

All printed in USA.


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