The French Market’s Story

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The French Quarter's outdoor dining area
The French Quarter’s outdoor dining area

A presentation Wednesday evening by the firm that plans to redevelop the French Market Place at 7985 Santa Monica Blvd. is expected to formally open a public discussion over the West Hollywood fixture’s historical and architectural significance. The neighborhood meeting with Faring Capital representatives is scheduled to get underway at 6 p.m. in City Hall’s Community Conference Room, 8300 Santa Monica Blvd. at Sweetzer. Here’s a quick look at the property’s status and  history.

Current Status

The French Market Place is best known for the French Quarter restaurant, the primary tenant that opened for business there in 1973. The restaurant, once a West Hollywood institution, was forced to shut down last summer because of declining business.

Since then, Faring Capital acquired the property and an incubator for small, nonprofit organizations began operating from the building temporarily, providing affordable office space for “socially conscious businesses.”

Faring also bought a neighboring property at 7969 Santa Monica Blvd. that most recently hosted the Voyeur and then DBA nightclubs. It proposes to keep the DBA building in place and demolish the French Market building if its plans gain city approval.

The developer wants to construct a new four-story development with three levels of subterranean parking. Faring has said the mixed-use building will include 50,000 square feet of office space, 8,600 sq. ft. of restaurant space, 4,400 sq. ft. devoted for shops and a 3,200 sq. ft. space for a bar or nightclub.

The developer also is seeking to redevelop the site where The Factory is located between Robertson Boulevard and North La Peer Drive in West Hollywood. The firm proposes a mixed-use development at that location also, featuring a 250-room hotel, along with restaurant, bar and office space.

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The French Market’s Business History

The two-story French Market building was constructed as a grocery store in the 1930s, and possibly a few years earlier. Most public records show the two-story building’s construction date as 1936, while others are less specific.

Inside the French Market in busier times.
Inside the French Market in busier times.

The building was part of three grocery store chains in the ultra-competitive supermarket business over nearly a 40-year period. Initially it was owned by a small, Los Angeles-based chain, Fitzsimmons Stores Inc. The building continued to be used as a grocery store as successive companies took control. Fitzsimmons became Thriftimart, which eventually left the grocery market business and became a chain of drug stores.

At that point, Smart & Final took over Thriftimart’s grocery market operations, and the current French Market building became a Smart & Final. Along the way, the building underwent a major renovation in 1956.

In 1973, restaurant maestro Tom Simms bought the building and launched his French Market eatery. Simms’ restaurant in turn supplied a steady stream of customers for the small businesses that surrounded it on three sides, such as Dorothy’s Surrender gift shop and Baby Jane, a movie memorabilia shop that sold autographed photos, costumes and even “celebrity earthquake ruins.”

The French Market was the first of Simms’ many restaurants. He bought the Kettle Restaurant in Manhattan Beach in 1975. From there, Simms and his family created a series of successful California chain restaurants that include Mimi’s Café, the Lazy Dog Café, the Tin Roof Bistro and Simmzy’s.

Architecturally, the building was constructed with an art deco style. Today, a faux-mansard roof hides the original Streamline Modern façade, which can be seen more easily on the east side.

Artistically, the French Quarter restaurant featured original paintings by German-born artist Leo Meiersdorff, a jazz enthusiast who began creating jazz album covers and painted portraits of such musicians as Duke Ellington, Dizzie Gillespie and Paul Desmond. The Simms family discovered his artwork during a trip to New Orleans in 1975 and hired him to create panels for the French Quarter’s New Orleans neighborhood-style interior design.

In 2010, the French Market was acquired by Marc Ittah and the Ittah TR Trust. CityData.com lists the property’s total value (land and building) at the time of Attah’s purchase as being nearly $4.9 million.

The French Market’s Community History

This building is famed in gay circles as a gathering place for political and social activists. The restaurant’s support for the gay community during the AIDS crisis has not been forgotten by long-time residents. Members of the Municipal Elections Committee of Los Angeles (MECLA), a political action committee in the 1970s, met at the French Market to raise money that supported gay-friendly candidates. It also is where Jerry Brown in 1991 met with gay activists to solicit their support for his candidacy for president.

Veteran LGBTQ journalist Karen Ocamb notes that the French Quarter “was also the jumping off or come-back point for lots of LGBT political events and a refuge for those needing a break from AIDS protests.” She further reports that the restaurant was crucial in community support for Rob Roberts’ hunger strike on the grassy triangle nearby to urge Gov. Pete Wilson to sign the gay civil rights bill, AB 101.

The restaurant additionally is listed on West Hollywood’s website as a noteworthy place in LGBTQ history. Check out the “Stuart Timmons – City of West Hollywood LGBTQ History Mobile Tour” here.

The West Hollywood Preservation Alliance (WHPA) is urging residents to attend Wednesday night’s presentation by developers “…before yet another piece of history is demolished: the French Market and DBA are to be developed by the same company that intends to demolish the Factory,” the organization states on its Facebook page.

The French Market Place, though, is not yet designated as a historically significant site for the LGBTQ community under a new, Los Angeles-wide initiative that seeks to identify and document such places. Called “Curating the City: LGBTQ Historic Places in L.A.,” the initiative has a “microsite” (micro website) hosted on the Los Angeles Conservancy’s website, as well as the WHPA’s.

Likewise, the Conservancy doesn’t include the French Market on its watch lists of threatened sites with important histories, according to its website.

It’s not clear yet if or how the city’s survey of commercially historic places, which is just getting started, will affect Faring’s proposal to redevelop French Market. Many observers say it’s unlikely the survey will be completed before Faring Capital’s plans are fully vetted through all city regulatory departments and city council action.

History of 7969 Santa Monica Blvd.

This building was one of the most successful burlesque houses of all time. As the Pink Pussycat in the 1960s and 1970s, owners Harry and Alice Schiller transformed a striptease club into a Los Angeles landmark with classy performances where husbands were proud to take their wives for a night on the town. Frank Sinatra and other members of the so-called Rat Pack were regulars, and they in turn drew the Hollywood set.

Santa Monica Boulevard nightclub
People packing the sidewalk outside DBA. (Photo by Matt Baume)

“By day, the club was transformed into the College of Strip Tease,” The New York Times states in a 2009 article. “The Pink Pussycat was not the only American strip club to have an adult-education division, but it undoubtedly had the most distinguished faculty: Sally Marr, the noted striptease artist, was for many years its de facto chancellor, provost, dean and sole professor. (Ms. Marr’s son, the comic Lenny Bruce, sometimes appeared on the Pink Pussycat’s stage.)”

Comedian Bob Hope confirmed the club’s status when he quipped at the 1964 opening of the downtown Los Angeles Music Center, “L.A. needs culture and the Pink Pussycat can’t do it alone.” When Alice Schiller died in 2009, national news media including The New York Times, The Washington Post and Time magazine all ran glowing obituaries.

The Pink Pussycat helped cement West Hollywood’s reputation as a place where all sexually oriented lifestyles were not only tolerated but welcomed.

Most recently, the iconic building was home to the DBA nightclub, which closed in June 2015. Prior to DBA, the building housed a jazz club in the 1950s and a lesbian bar known as Peanuts in the 1970s. 1

 

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[…] with ironwork and high ceilings that created the feel of the French Quarter in New Orleans. This restaurant has a long history of serving as a community meeting place for political and social organizations that fought for gay […]

stuart jarvis
stuart jarvis
7 years ago

I was so sad to read this. when i lived in west Hollywood. in the 1980s i used to adore eating here. What is happening to santa monica blvd. i live in Uk now and was planning a trip back to santa monica blvd but fear there will be too many changes for me to deal with. i loved west Hollywood

John McQuilkin
7 years ago

Great article. Many pleasant meals both in the AM and PM at the French Market. The staff was always delightful. The Zucchini Sticks were awesome as was the French Onion Soup. I miss stopping offer at the French Market for a bite. The surrounding shops were perfect for finding unique gifts. I hope by some miracle the building can be spared from destruction. West Hollywood is barely recognizable anymore, it would be great if just some of the original character could remain.

DeserTBoB
DeserTBoB
7 years ago

Fond memories of sitting at a window seat on a drizzly day in January, lazily eating my onion soup, ogling the far sidewalk to see which leatherboys were heading into the Nail across the street and to the west, where I DJd for awhile. Lots of my history down in WeHo was centered somehow around both Arthur J’s and the French Quarter. I also spun records at “Peanuts” next door (later, the “DBA”) the ham-fisted attempt by Alice Shiller to cash in on the gay bar biz. It was initially QUITE the failure, and Alice was….uh….strange to work for. Now,… Read more »

Ron
Ron
8 years ago

On re-reading the article above there are several inaccuracies. I don’t believe it was the first because I had been told the Arthur ‘s at SM and Highland was first. Tom Simms started Mimi’s cafe (based on the Louisiana Purchase) in the late seventies. I don’t remember Baby Janes there in the seventies and I’m not sure if Dorothy’s Surrender was there when I first walked in the place (I lived up the street) in 1975. I do remember the big old style cappuccino machine that wasn’t used very much taking lots of space on the counter to your right… Read more »

Ron
Ron
8 years ago

There was a large tiled LP for Louisiana Purchase embedded in the outside walkway just in front of the front doors. It was nicknamed by some as “The Purchase”.

Mark
Mark
8 years ago

Laurel Market occupied the space in the late 1960s until it closed in 1973. It was redeveloped at that time and re-opened as “The Louisiana Purchase.” Arthur Js was the original name of the restaurant. Rudy Vallee was there on opening day to help cut the ribbon.

Ron
Ron
8 years ago

I believe it was started by Arthur J Simms who also owned “Arthur J’s” at Santa Monica and Highland. Also, there used to be a plaque at the entrance of the French Market that stated this.

Rick Watts
Rick Watts
8 years ago

This further highlights the need to protect the French Market blg as historically ANC architecturally significant. As for DBA…I couldn’t care less. But every effort should be made to shift Faring’s project to the east and spare/rehabilitate the French Market.

Christopher
Christopher
8 years ago

In the early sixties, The Pink Pussycat capitalized on the then-current fascination with the Rat Pack. Strippers were billed there as Fran Sinatra, Samya Davis, Jr., Joy Bishop, and my favorite, Peeler Lawford. At the same time, just up the street Trini Lopez was singing at P.J.’s nightclub–now a Russian restaurant.

mike dunn
mike dunn
8 years ago

Thriftymart and Thrifty Drug Stores have never been connect and if fact were both in business at the same time for many years. Thriftymart’s last stores were bought by Smart & Final in the 1980’s. Thrifty Drug Stores became Rite-Aid. It’s my opinion the original market was a Safeway. It’s the same design as other old Safeway Stores like the one on Sunset Bl at Hyperion, the current site of the legendary Black Cat Bar which is near where I grew up and remember it as a Safeway. Others were on Montana at Echo Park behind the old Pioneer Market… Read more »

Brian
Brian
8 months ago
Reply to  mike dunn

That’s correct, Safeway bought 23 of the 40 Thriftimart stores in 1984 and the rest were sold or converted to Smart & Final which was owned by the same company. To explain: Fitzsimmons Stores Ltd. bought Thriftimart in 1947, Roberts Markets in 1949, and Smart & Final Iris in 1955. Fitzsimmons changed its name to Thiftimart Inc. in 1957. and Smart & Final Iris Co. n 1984 which straight away became a subsidiary of the French company Casino. Now Mexico’s Chedraui owns S&F. This location was Thriftimart till at least 1964 and by 1970 it had become “Laurel Market”.