Charles Phoenix: Celebrating that SoCal style
Charles Phoenix, humorist, author, food-crafter and gleeful guide to pop culture at its kitschiest and most off-beat, will serve up his one-of-a-kind look at mid-20th century building design in âCharles Phoenix: Architecture in LA!â on Sunday at Art Center College of Designâs Ahmanson Auditorium in Pasadena.
The show, presented in Phoenixâs signature, âhisto-tainment,â retro slide-show style, is part of an architecture-themed lecture series hosted by Friends of the Gamble House, the support organization for the 1908 Arts and Crafts-style Gamble House in Pasadena, designed by Charles and Henry Greene.
âIâm going to be spotlighting the underrated, the undiscovered, the underappreciated,â Phoenix said. âSome of the smaller scale, far less famous gems and jewels. Basically these are structures that I feel are very important in the scheme of our cultural fabric. We also want to talk about preserving these buildings because people in the future deserve to experience them.
âI mean, to varying degrees,â he said, with no detectable irony, âsome of these buildings are the Taj Mahals of their day.â
The show is also about themed environments, he added. âItâs our social architecture, itâs our eating architecture, itâs our driving architecture. I mean, Iâm really pointing out what I think the âthere thereâ is in Southern California that hasnât yet been pointed out as much as it deserves to be.â
One iconic structure that Phoenix will highlight is the worldâs oldest surviving McDonaldâs located in Downey, Calif. It sports looping, 30-foot âgolden archesâ and a 60-foot neon sign topped by the chainâs original mascot, âSpeedeeâ the chef, replaced in the 1960s by Ronald McDonald. Phoenix calls it âone of the most important buildings on earth.â
Itâs âworld class,â he said. âYou could bring the Queen of England there. In the realm of international pop culture, let alone just American pop culture, that MacDonaldâs is an icon of commerce and culture of the extreme highest order.â
âI take this very seriously,â Phoenix said about his unique, fact-based entertainment niche, âalthough it is kind of blossoming around the edges with humor at every turn. At my roots, I am studying and commentating on and serving up classic and kitschy American life and style â past, present and future.â
At least one building in the show dates back to the 1920s, but Phoenix will be concentrating primarily on âpost-World War II, pop cultural Southern California styleâ in residential and commercial architecture, he said. That includes the regionâs birth of Googie-style architecture (spaceagecity.com/googie) â think Space Age, the âJetsons,â steep slopes, jutting angles, sweeping curves â and the mid-20th-century coffee-shop designs of ArmĂŠt & Davis.
âWeâll look at the greatest example of their work: Pannâs by LAX,â Phoenix said, âa coffee shop built in 1958. One of the reasons why itâs so great, besides the fact that the original owner is still there on a regular basis and sheâs about to turn 97, is that itâs the genuine article. This place is an absolute kind of living museum.â
While Phoenix may be âa departureâ for the Gamble Houseâs lecture series, said Merrily Gumpel, Chair of the Friends of Gamble House, âhe certainly qualifies. We wanted this series to be focused on the whimsical architecture in Southern California â more specifically in the Los Angeles area â and heâs the pinnacle of that idea,â she said. âWe thought he would be very fun, and we wanted fun.â
(The series continues Feb. 11 with Victoria Kastner on âThe Hearst Ranch: Family, Land and Legacyâ; Doug Keisterâs âStorybook Style: Whimsy in L.A,â March 25; and Susan Morgan on âEsther McCoy: Piecing Together Los Angeles,â April 29.)
Phoenix has shared his encyclopedic knowledge of vintage Americana â and food â on the Queen Latifah show, âLate Night with Conan OâBrien,â âThe Martha Stewart Show,â A&Eâs âStorage Warsâ and assorted news shows. He is a frequent commentator on National Public Radio, and heâll soon guest in a cooking episode of the Internet series, âThe Garage Show With Jeff Sutphen.â (thegarageshow
withjeff.com)
âI guess Iâve become very show-and-telly about my interests and about what I think deserves to come up to the surface and be bubbled over about,â Phoenix said. âWith the food, itâs the food lover and the craft lover coming out.â
Among the culinary specialities showcased in the âtest kitchenâ section of Phoenixâs website (charlesphoenix.com): Seven Layer Soda Pop Rocks Cake, the Astro Weenie Party Tree (toothpick kebabs on a foil-wrapped foam cone), and the Cherpumple: three layers of pie (cherry, pumpkin and apple) inside a three-layer cake. For Halloween, Phoenix served up a rodent-shaped meatloaf slathered with catsup.
âI was very proud of my Halloween meatloaf rat,â Phoenix deadpanned.
Born in Ontario, Calif., âto a used car dealer dad and a housewife mother,â Phoenix worked as a fashion designer in his 20s, then segued into buying and selling cars â until a casual rummage through a thrift shop produced a strangerâs discarded box of vacation slides labeled âA Trip Across the U.S. 1957.â
Hundreds of thousands of âfoundâ slides later, Phoenix has made a career out of showing other peopleâs slides from the 1950s, â60s and â70s. âTheyâre not just old slides,â he said. âAt a closer glance, and when curated, they are national treasures and they are cultural influences. I find them very interesting to study and thrilling to share.â
Wrapped in Phoenixâs idiosyncratic brand of humorous and factual commentary, these visual presentations encompass landmarks, roadside attractions, suburban pool parties, holidays, weddings, birthdays, cars, food, interior and exterior design â and people. It was âthe populated imageâ that intrigued him the most, Phoenix said.
For his Art Center performance, âthe bulk of the imagery is the world as I see it today,â he said. âIâm mostly sharing places that the audience can go to now, that are still there. In addition to vintage slides, the show will include ânew photography that Iâve either done myself or Iâve directed.â
The 12th annual âCharles Phoenix Retro Holiday Slide Showâ is next up, from Dec. 1 to Dec. 22 at venues throughout Southern California. âBasically, weâre blasting off all the holidays into the stratosphere, celebrating classic and kitschy American holiday life and style,â Phoenix said. âItâs my take on the holidays and other peopleâs vintage slides, itâs my test kitchen, my field trip, my Christmas time experiences, itâs story-telling, itâs inspirational,â and, he added in deliberately sonorous pitch-man mode, âit is an absolute guarantee to get you and your family and friends in the mood to celebrate like never before.â
Phoenix may also gear up his âDisneyland Tour of Downtown Los Angeles,â once again in early 2014, he said. An off-beat bus-and-walking tour, it features historic facts, true-life trivia and parallels that Phoenix draws between settings at his favorite theme park and Union Station, Chinatown, Olvera Street, the Bob Baker Marionette Theatre, the Bradbury Building, Walt Disney Concert Hall and other points of interest in the city, both well-known and obscure.
What: âCharles Phoenix: Architecture in LA!â
Where: Ahmanson Auditorium, Art Center College of Design, 1700 Lida St., Pasadena.
When: 4 p.m. Sunday.
Tickets: $30. $25 for Friends of Gamble House. Reservations recommended.
More info: (855) 249-1157, www.gamblehouse.org
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LYNNE HEFFLEY writes about theater and culture for Marquee.