Little Fatty s team expands to Westchester with sandwich shop Skinny Dave s latimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from latimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
UpdatedWed, Apr 28, 2021 at 6:10 pm PT
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Openaire at The LINE Hotel in LA is among Los Angeles-area restaurants rolling out Mother’s Day menus for 2021. (Credit: Beth Saravo)
Baskin-Robbins has a new Floral Bouquet Cake on shop menus for Mother s Day. (Courtesy of Baskin-Robbins)
Gelson’s Markets has a slew of Mom s Day brunch-to-go options available for pre-order. (Courtesy of Gelson’s)
Redbird in Los Angeles has Scotch Eggs among prix-fixe menu choices for Mother s Day brunch & dinner. (Credit: Redbird)
Waldorf Astoria Beverly Hills has brunch options and make-at-home breakfast kit for a great mom s day. (Courtesy of Waldorf Astoria Beverly Hills)
NEW BOOK examines the life and work of architect Paul R. Williams. Cover photo is the Collins House located in Windsor Square.
As we celebrate the triumphs and struggles of African American History this month, there is perhaps no local example that highlights such achievements better than the residential designs of architect Paul R. Williams.
In his six-decade career, Williams worked on more than 3,000 projects that ranged from modest homes to extravagant mansions commissioned for the city’s elite. Renowned for his mastery of harmonious proportions and signature undulating lines, Williams’ residential designs were simultaneously graceful and relaxed.
Williams’ inspiring story is examined in a new book, “Master Architects of Southern California 1920-1940: Paul R. Williams,” published last month by Tailwater Press and Angel City Press. The 212-page book is the fourth in a series co-authored by local real estate agent Bret Parsons along with architect Marc Appleton. Stephen
LA LGBT Center Receives $100K Grant from Mark Taper Foundation for Intergenerational Culinary Arts Program wehoville.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wehoville.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Your homicidal sibling rivalry now has the perfect place to call home if you have $3.8 million to spare.
For the first time in 50 years, the Mediterranean estate Bette Davis and Joan Crawford’s characters called home in the 1962 psychological thriller
What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? is on the market. Located at 172 S. McCadden Place in the tony Hancock Park neighborhood, the home has four bedrooms (plus a study), three bathrooms, a pool, and a two-story guest house with a sauna and kitted-out apartment upstairs.
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Here’s the full listing from Ari Afshar with Compass realty, which sort of buries the 1928 home’s Hollywood bona fides: