Never without a friend by his side
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Deepa Bharath
James L. Gray was a happy man who liked to make others happy.
He loved hanging out with his friends. He treated everyone alike
and there wasn’t anything he wouldn’t do for a pal.
Jim could tell a joke. His friends especially loved those jokes
that involved foreign accents. Jim could fake an Irish and even a
Japanese accent to perfection.
He lived in Southern California all his life. He was born in
Glendale. He served in the Navy during World War II. Jim continued as
a Navy reservist and briefly served during the Korean War as well.
He graduated from UC Berkeley and moved to Newport Beach in 1949
with his then wife, Dorothy.
A turning point in Jim’s life came when restaurateur John McIntosh
opened a restaurant called Reuben’s in Newport Beach in 1960. It
later came to be called the Reuben E. Lee and was located on Coast
Highway, where the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum now operates. It
was a local landmark and now, part of the city’s history.
McIntosh called on Jim to join his restaurant business and Jim
did. He took charge of the bar and entertainment and did a
spectacular job.
He brought in bands no one had even heard about and made them a
local sensation. He plucked talented musicians from obscurity and put
them in the restaurant’s piano bar.
The drinks in the bar were made to specific recipes formulated by
the man himself. It was his idea to serve popcorn at the bar. And
that was an instant hit.
Also popular was his special margarita. Jim would top off the
drink with an egg white to create that frothy look. It looked
beautiful with the white foam on top. Sure enough, the margarita was
a house special.
Jim was a cheerful, outgoing person with an insatiable appetite
for life. He enjoyed cars especially sports cars. He owned his share
of Porsches and Jaguars.
Jim loved sports. Fishing was his favorite pastime.
But golf was his passion. He was an original member of the Irvine
Coast Golf Club, which is now the Newport Beach Country Club. He was
also a member of the Newport Beach Athletic Club. A natural athlete,
Jim also enjoyed skiing and windsurfing.
He was a good friend. Jim was always ready to help -- be it
getting them a job or helping them during a time of crisis or giving
them much-needed encouragement.
“You’re going to wear silk shorts some day,” Jim once told a
friend whom he had helped get a job at Reuben E. Lee. “You’re going
to drive a car and you’ll stick a cigar out the window.”
Jim was married and divorced twice. He was married 20 years to
Dorothy and another 20 years to Anna. Both were at his memorial
service as was his ex-girlfriend and current girlfriend.
For the last two days of his life, an endless stream of visitors
poured through his doorstep.
Family surrounded him when he took his last breath and was holding
the hand of a dear friend.
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