On a brisk February night in 2006, round 100 individuals gathered within the venerable Koreatown watering gap HMS Bounty to pay their final respects to Los Angeles’ historic Ambassador Lodge. Regardless of one of the best efforts of the Los Angeles Conservancy, the Ambassador had been torn down — and among the many audio system decrying the destiny of the legendary establishment that night was Diane Keaton.
Keaton, who died Saturday at 79, is after all identified the world over for her on-screen credit, from “Annie Corridor” to “The Godfather,” “Father of the Bride” and a lot extra. However in Los Angeles, she was additionally identified for her passionate work in making an attempt to protect town’s historical past. Keaton spent almost twenty years on the board of the L.A. Conservancy, and lent her voice to the org in numerous campaigns to save lots of among the metropolis’s historic and culturally vital houses and buildings.
“The extra I acquired to know her, the extra I understood the place that keenness got here from,” mentioned former L.A. Conservancy president Linda Dishman, who retired after 31 years with the org in 2023. “Loads of that got here from her household and rising up in Los Angeles. Actually having a connection to the tales and locations that make L.A. town that it’s. She had a really real ardour for historic preservation, not just for the buildings or the cultural landscapes, however for what they imply to individuals and what they’d imply sooner or later. She undoubtedly acquired the connection with how we’re doing this for future generations.”
Keaton first grew to become concerned via her curiosity in historic houses — one in all which, constructed by famed architect Lloyd Wright, she referred to as her personal. Her affiliation with the group began when she was curious in regards to the Spanish home owned by one of many Conservancy board members — however quickly she acquired deeply concerned with the org, talking at one in all its advantages after which becoming a member of its board.
“She was simply charming, and it was nice being along with her, as a result of we shared a ardour for historic locations,” Dishman mentioned. “Homes have been her first curiosity, and she or he purchased historic homes and restored them, just like the Lloyd Wright. However she very a lot cared about the entire architectural landscaoem and so the combat that she most likely was most engaged with, as a result of it took so lengthy, was the Ambassador Lodge.”
Designed by architect Myron Hunt, the Ambassador Lodge opened in 1921 — again when that portion of mid-Wilshire was the outskirts of city — and shortly grew to become the glamorous playground of the wealthy and well-known. Later, architect Paul Williams added his personal contact, together with a well-known espresso store, after which the Cocoanut Grove nightclub actually put it on the map. The lodge noticed each president go to from Hoover to Nixon — however then was the scene of Robert F. Kennedy’s assassination in 1968. The lodge declined from there, and eventually shut down in 1989. After that, it grew to become a daily location for movie and TV shoots; the LA Unified Faculty District purchased the location in 2001, and after a prolonged combat with the Conservancy, which hoped to see the prevailing construction be tailored into the college, LAUSD was allowed to tear it down in 2005. (The Robert F. Kennedy Neighborhood Faculties now sit on the property.)
“The Ambassador informed so many tales in regards to the historical past of Hollywood in Los Angeles that she she simply was extraordinarily captivated with,” Dishman mentioned. “Not solely about its historical past, however about what it may develop into — as a result of that was a big a part of the Conservancy’s work. Making an attempt to indicate the college district that the constructing may develop into a very nice studying facility. She actually thought this is able to be a fantastic resolution.”
On the 2006 wake, Keaton expressed her disappointment (watch it here): “I wished to hitch in with everybody from the Conservancy and specific my heartfelt remorse that our effort to save lots of the Ambassador Lodge was misplaced on a confused public who may do nothing greater than shrug their shoulders in apathy,” she mentioned. “Wanting on the shadow of our as soon as wonderful Ambassador Lodge, like dropping a lover, I felt that acquainted pounding heartbeat racing via my physique, and I felt the loneliness of her final stand. I heard an echo, an echo, and possibly it was the echo of the ambassador calling me. It was virtually as if she was saying to me, she was saying, ‘goodbye, Diane, Preserve me in your coronary heart, and subsequent time, strive tougher.’”
On the Conservancy, Keaton did proceed to work laborious: Dishman famous that the star was endlessly permitting the org to make use of her title to get its foot within the door. “That is LA and typically it may be laborious to get a gathering with an elected official, however I say I’m calling as a substitute of a gathering, ‘Diane Keaton wish to meet together with your boss’ or no matter, and other people would at all times say sure. Even when they didn’t agree with us. All people wished to fulfill with Diane, and even on the finish of the assembly, they won’t have modified their place. I believe she opened the door, and it may not have saved the Ambassador, however hopefully it modified how they view preservation on one other situation. She was very open with me about ‘use my title. If you’d like a gathering, you name and get it, and I’ll be there.’ She was keen to go the additional mile and never simply do the simple stuff.
“She had a method of chatting with individuals about preservation,” Dishman added. “She wasn’t pompous. She simply was very direct, and had a lot ardour that everyone wished to come back alongside along with her.”
Amongst different initiatives, Keaton additionally celebrated the preservation and restoration of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Ennis House, which she liked had some similarities to her Lloyd Wright home.
‘She at all times got here to our advantages,” Dishman mentioned. “She liked success tales, like this constructing was threatened and it will get saved. She liked the Preservation Awards. She additionally acquired concerned with the Nationwide Belief for Historic Preservation. She was on their board for 3 years. Simply seeing, like at an airport in New Orleans, how individuals responded to her, was actually a testomony to who she was and the way individuals liked her.”
A number of years after the Ambassador wake, a fired-up Keaton wrote extra about it — and the teachings she realized from that disappointment — in a Los Angeles Times editorial: “We’ve handled previous buildings like we as soon as handled plastic buying luggage — we haven’t reused them, and after we’ve completed with them, we’ve tossed them out. This has to cease. Preservation should stand alongside conservation as an equal power within the sustainability sport. Extra older and historic buildings need to be shielded from demolition, not solely as a result of it impacts our pocketbooks however extra essential as a result of it threatens our surroundings. Let’s face it, our free experience on the expense of the planet is over… Once we tear down a constructing, we’re wiping out classes for the longer term. If we consider it that method, we’ll start to grasp the emotional affect of losing the vitality and sources used to construct it within the first place.”

















































