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Pickfair
Sets Early Beverly Hills Benchmark Pre
and post-nuptial celebrations were held at what soon became known as Pickfair,
a 42-room refurbished hunting lodge that Fairbanks, 36, presented to his bride,
26, as a wedding gift. It was the first celebrity mansion in a budding community
of 672 residents known as Beverly Hills. Neighbors would soon include Charlie
Chaplin, John Barrymore and Rudolph Valentino.
Pickfair,
an obvious combination of both last names coined by a newspaper reporter, became
the entertainment center for the fledgling movie-making community of Hollywood.
With a giant swimming pool replete with sandy beach, lagoons for boating and stables
with 20 acres for riding, there was no shortage of recreation. Pickfair
not only drew movie stars, it attracted celebrities and royalty from all over
the world. Albert Einstein, Jack Dempsey, Amelia Earhart, Charles Lindberg, Lord
and Lady Mountbatten, the Crown Prince of Japan were among the luminaries who
visited.
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"Pickfair"
Beverly Hills |
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| | The
golden age of Pickfair was sweet but short-lived. By 1928, this idyllic hideaway
was the scene of growing strife between Hollywood's leading couple. Mary's mother
died, and she was devastated by the loss, since her mother had been central to
her acting career which began in her childhood. At the same time, while she had
always played the role of an innocent child with beautiful flowing blond curls--even
as an adult--she desperately sought to create a new identity and persona.
In an act of "personal liberation" that was viewed by her fans and her
husband as lunacy, she went to a salon in New York City and had her life-long
tresses shorn. With less than five years remaining in her movie career, she sought
out roles in which she played an adult.
One of her first choices was to star with Fairbanks in their only film together,
"The Taming of the Shrew," released in 1929 just as the financial markets
crashed at the onset of the Great Depression. Their relationship was already stressed
because she suspected Fairbanks of infidelity; he was put off by her unwillingness
to travel with him, her unpredictable mood swings and what many believe was a
problem with alcohol. The movie was a flop, which strained the marriage even more.
|  Mary
Pickford & Douglas Fairbanks about 1924 | Trouble
in Paradise By
1932, Fairbanks' travels abroad without Pickford became more frequent, and it
was obvious he was using his absence as an opportunity to cultivate other relationships.
Still, their bond was strong, and reconciliation followed reconciliation. That
year, the couple decided to make a substantial addition to Pickfair in order to
accommodate a large influx of visitors anticipated during the 1932 Olympic Games
being held in Los Angeles. After the games, Fairbanks left for an extended hunting
trip that took him to Nepal in pursuit of Giant Panda.
It is here that we circle back to Old Town Auburn. Part of the expansion at Pickfair
probably included turning the basement into an extra space for entertaining, though
it was not complete for lack of one key element: an authentic western bar, the
acquisition of which seems inconsistent with the lifestyle at Pickfair. |
| Douglas
Fairbanks drank infrequently because of a promise made to his mother who suffered
through a marriage with an alcoholic husband who ultimately deserted the family.
Fairbanks agreed not to drink until he reached the age of 40. And, in fact, there
was little alcohol ever served at Pickfair.
One visitor to the estate observed, "We'd go there all dressed up and sit
down at this huge table with the lovely dinner and servants falling all over themselves
serving you, and not ever get one lousy drop of wine." The only serious drinking
to occur was done surreptitiously by Mary, who is said to have hidden spirits
in cologne bottles in her dressing room.
A Centerpiece for a Collection The
drive to acquire a period bar stemmed from Fairbanks' appreciation of western
art. He was an avid collector of paintings by Frederic S. Remington and Charles
M. Russell, and sought to create the proper environment for displaying them. An
earlier quest to acquire a bar in Arizona met with failure.
It was Mary who realized her husband's dream by hiring two pioneers to scour California
in search of a western bar for the basement of Pickfair. Their search ended at
the Union Saloon in Old Town Auburn. The sumptuous bar was constructed of mahogany,
about 16 feet in length, with three raised panels and four round columns with
capitals. A brass rail ran across the top, and another served as a foot rail.
The back bar was a symmetrical triumph, with a large mirror book ended by cabinets
with double doors of beveled and art glass. Four fluted columns with intricate
carved capitals supported the crown molding that completed the assemblage. To
ensure no one missed the western theme, a set of giant horns from a Texas long-horn
steer were mounted above the mirror. The
bar was disassembled, crated and shipped to Pickfair where it was installed in
the basement. According to a report in the December 31, 1932 edition of the Placer
Herald, Mary gave the much-traveled bar, which was said to have been originally
shipped around Cape Horn, to Douglas as a Christmas gift that year. | The
Western Bar at "Pickfair"
about 1932 |
| The
basement was designed to hold Fairbanks' collection of antiques, books and other
items, including a carbine rifle owned by Yginio Salazar, a Mexican gunfighter
and part of Billy the Kid's gang. My personal interest in the story behind
the Western Bar, was piqued by a visit from a member of the Auburn Historical
Society while I was working on the renovation of the interior of the old Union
Saloon. I was told the story about Mary Pickford purchasing the original bar,
and within a few days, I was on the hunt to try and determine the authenticity
of the tale. |
| Tracking
Down the Real Deal An
Internet search led me to a reference in a new book of Mary Pickford photo stills
titled "Mary Pickford Rediscovered." The forward to the book was written
by Robert Cushman, photography curator of the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and
Sciences, who described meeting with Mary Pickford's husband, Buddy Rogers, sometime
after her death in 1979. Cushman was invited to Pickfair to view a collection
of Mary's personal photographs stored in a basement room adjacent to the "Western
Bar." (Interestingly, Douglas Fairbanks was elected the Academy's first president
in 1928, and Mary Pickford won the first Academy Award for an actress in a leading
role in a talking picture in 1929 for her performance in "Coquette.") |
Cecil Saunders Installs
the PickFair Bar | | After
reading this, I contacted Mr. Cushman and he was gracious enough to search the
Academy's photo archives and produced two photos of the Western Bar. Remarkably,
the Academy photographed the entire house and all of its contents shortly after
Mary passed away in 1979. With
the photographs as a guide, Master Bar Builder Cecil Saunders of Grass Valley,
California, crafted a replica of the Western Bar about two-thirds the size of
the original to serve as a tasting bar for Carpe Vino. Saunders has been building
bars for 40 years, including the bar in the tasting room of Indian Springs Vineyard
in Nevada City, California. | | The
interior of Carpe Vino has been renovated in sensitivity to the original structure,
though we had no definitive record to guide our work. The plaster ceiling was
removed, revealing 25-foot, full-dimension, Douglas fir beams studded with hundreds
of hand-forged, squared-headed nails. We also exposed the original brick walls
and the Douglas fir strip flooring, badly worn by the footsteps of tipplers starting
150 years ago. |
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| The
Pickfair Bar, Ca 2002 - Carpe Vino | | The
centerpiece, however, is our gorgeous 12-foot wide Mary Pickford bar, about two-thirds
the size of the original. The bar top is mahogany and the rest is constructed
of alder, finished in a deep, rich color. Most of the original architectural features
have been retained, though we did not spec brass or art glass windows because
of the prohibitive cost. My
personal preference would have been to try and find the original bar, but there
is no trace of it to be found. Pickfair was purchased in 1988 by wannabe movie
actress Pia Zadora and her billionaire husband, Meshulam Riklis. Supposedly, the
building was severely damaged by termites, but one wonders how badly Pia wanted
to have a modern Italianate style home constructed on the site. Pickfair was razed
in 1993, and there is no evidence of what happened to the original Western Bar. The
Final Curtain It
was a bitter ending for the Pickford/Fairbanks union as well. The couple split
in 1933, with their divorce coming on March 1, 1936. Two months later, Fairbanks
married Sylvia Hawkes, 20 years his junior. He died suddenly of heart failure
on December 12, 1939 at the age of just 56, still in excellent trim.
Mary Pickford married her former leading man and orchestra leader, Buddy Rogers,
in 1937. Rogers starred with her in 1927 in "My Best Girl," and gave
Mary her first on-screen kiss. The two apparently had a strong attachment and
even a long-term affair according to several Pickford biographies. Pickfair
remained Mary Pickford's home until her death. From 1965 onward, she seldom left
the estate, and for the most part preferred to remain in her bedroom, the same
room she shared with Douglas Fairbanks during their idyllic years together. |
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