Two Palisades Honorary Mayors Receive Accolades

Eugene Levy was selected for a star on the Hollywood Star of Fame.
Photo: Caitlin Crone

By BERNICE FOX

It has been a good week for two Pacific Palisades Honorary Mayors, Billy Crystal and Eugene Levy.

A few days ago, it was announced that Crystal is one of five entertainers who will receive a Kennedy Center Honor on December 3.

Now, current honorary mayor Levy is among celebrities who will be honored with stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Levy is one of the nine selected in the television category.

Although Levy is known for the American Pie movies and several films by Palisadian Christopher Guest, it’s Schitt’s Creek, and the early SCTV sketch show that landed him in the television category.

Radio personality Ellen K is chair of the selection committee made up of Walk-of-Famers like herself. She said they hand-pick “a group of honorees each year that represent various genres of the entertainment world.

“The Committee did an amazing job choosing these very talented people. We can’t wait to see each honoree’s reaction as they realize that they are becoming a part of Hollywood’s history with the unveiling of their star on the world’s most famous walkway!” K said.

In addition to television, additional honorees come from the categories of Motion Pictures, Recording Live Theatre/Live Performance, Radio and Sports Entertainment.

Former Palisadian Kevin Fiege is getting his star in the motion picture category. As president of Marvel Studios, he’s been in charge of all of those recent films based on Marvel’s comic book heroes.

Dates have not been scheduled for the ceremonies. The stars have two years from the date of selection to schedule their ceremony before it expires.

Upcoming star ceremonies are usually announced on the official website (www.walkoffame.com) 10 days prior to dedication.

 

Posted in Film/Television | Leave a comment

Mosquitos Attracted to Certain Scents

Photo: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

People in Southern California do not have to worry so much about mosquitos, but the rest of the nation spends a great deal of the summer trying to detour the insects and its bites.

On an annual visit to the Midwest to visit family, this editor discovered if she were by herself outside, she would get the occasional mosquito. But if she were standing next to her husband, insects would totally ignore her and swarm the poor man. Likewise, she discovered that another mosquito repellent, even better than DEET was to stand next to her daughter.

It seems the little buggers enjoyed some flesh more than other. I wondered if it might have to do with blood type. I’m an O, the rest of the family is A.

Scientists have put forth some theories to explain why mosquitoes swarm to some more than others, including one idea that differences in blood type must be to blame.

In a paper published on October 2022 in the journal Cell, researchers suggest that it is not blood type, but certain body odors.

A story in the Associated Press (“Could Your Personal Smell Make You’re a Mosquito Magnet? Maybe”) wrote that “A new study finds that some people really are ‘mosquito magnets’ and probably has to do with the way they smell.”

Researchers found that the people mosquitos like the best, produce high levels of carboxylic acid, on their skin. “Mosquito magnets had high levels of certain acids on their skin,” researchers said. “These molecules are part of the skin’s natural moisturizing layer and people produce them in different amounts.”

Researchers asked 64 volunteers to wear nylon stockings around their forearms to pick up the skin smells. The stockings were then placed in separate traps at the end of a long tube. Mosquitos were released next to the stockings.

“It became obvious right away,” one researcher said.

Researchers discovered that the biggest mosquito magnet was around 100 times more attractive to the mosquitos than the last place finisher.

In an NPR talk, a researcher, Leslie Vosshall, a professor at Howard Hughes Medical Institute at Rockefeller Center was asked if it made a difference if we slathered ourselves with creams or sunscreens.

“None of the makes any difference,” the researcher said. “The mosquitoes are really cuing into the natural fatty acids on the skin, and you can’t strip them off, and you can’t cover them up with perfume or anything.”

According to Scientific American October 22 article (“Some People Really Are Mosquito Magnets, and They’re Stuck that Way”) said certain compounds in our skin determine how much we attract mosquitoes, and those compounds don’t change much over time.

“Carboxylic acids are commonplace organic compounds. Humans produce them in our sebum, which is the oily layer that coats our skin; there, the acids help to keep our skin moisturized and protected,” Vosshall said, and noted that humans release carboxylic acids at much higher levels than most animals, though the amount varies from person to person.

Posted in Health | 2 Comments

Mary Katharine Goddard – American Revolution Patriot Printer

By JEFF RIDGWAY

Is it true that there is a woman’s name on the Declaration of Independence?

Yes, at the bottom of the document it reads: “Baltimore, in Maryland: Printed by Mary Katharine Goddard.”

Goddard’s is the only woman’s name that appears anywhere on an official copy of the Declaration of Independence.

Born in 1738 in colonial Connecticut, she grew up as an inquisitive youth, as the roiling colonies prepared for Revolution.

As a young woman, she helped her flighty brother, William, a printer, out with various projects and publishing efforts.

Goddard learned the craft of a printer: composing pages, setting type, and operating the press at the Providence Gazette.  She loved the work, and the chance to do her own work.

She understood the importance of her role too, as colonial America printers were the primary source of information for what was occurring nearby and around the colonies.

When William went to Philadelphia to set up the Pennsylvania Chronicle, and then to Baltimore Maryland where he had begun the Maryland Journal, she followed.

In April 1775, the beginning of the Revolutionary War started with the famous fights at Lexington and Concord. The Maryland Journal was one of the first papers to report this news to the readership of Baltimore and the surrounding regions.

On a personal level, things were not going well for her brother William, and Goddard was carrying the load of the printing business. Just shy of her 37th birthday, she decided she deserved full credit for her work.

She changed the newspaper’s ownership information to: Published by M.K. Goddard. Daring for a woman, but discretion in a man’s world had her use her initials rather than her full name.

During her ownership, she editorialized about British brutality, reprinted Thomas Paine’s Common Sense and published extra editions about Congress’ call to arms and the Battle of Bunker Hill. She was called one of the most prominent publishers during the nation’s revolutionary era.

After the Continental Congress approved a plan for a continental postal system to replace the one operated by the British, Goodard was named the first postmaster of Baltimore, and was the first woman postmaster in the thirteen colonies.

But colonies were not yet a new nation, until the Continental Congress acted.  And then it did. On July 4, 1776, a hand-written version of a Declaration of Independence (a message to the world), was approved and announced the intention of Americans to be free and self-governing by casting off the bonds of Great Britain.

This was an exhilarating and dangerous action by colonists because the British considered it treason.

The Declaration was voted upon and signed by the delegates. Each man knew he might be placing his life in jeopardy.  Copies of the Declaration, called Broadsheets, were hastily printed and distributed throughout the colonies. But to be safe, no names of delegates were printed upon the sheets; an understandable act of discretion, as they could be arrested and hung.

The war continued, and the Congressional Congress fled its home in Philadelphia for Baltimore, setting up just a few blocks from Goddard’s printing shop.

Fortunate for her, because as postmistress and printer she was responsible for the delegates’ mail and for printing congressional documents – as well as running the Maryland Journal, which became an important source of information and a voice of American liberty.

Then the Continental Congress made a truly daring decision – to print a new version of the Declaration, that included the names of the signers. This was to shore up patriotic fervor in the public as well as be an official document to announce American Independence to the world.  And Goddard was tasked with printing the official document.

She carefully designed the layout and set it on the press.

It stands as one of the most beautiful, printed Declaration copies.

Under the signed names, from John Hancock and his outsized larger signature (supposedly so the King George ‘could read it from across the room’) to the smaller fifty-plus signatures shown organized under each of the thirteen colonies, is Goddard’s name.

As was custom with printers at the time, she added her name at the bottom.  She knew she was taking a risk, placing her very life at risk.  But she was a patriot and wanted to show it.

(Editor’s note: For more on the subject, bookseller Jeff Ridgway recommends Her Name Was Mary Katharine – The Only Woman Whose Name Is on The Declaration of Independence. New York, NY.  Little, Brown & Co. 2022. For other book recommendations, stop by his store Collections, Antiques . . ..and Books! at 15326 Antioch St.)

Detail of a copy of the Declaration printed by Goddard New York Public LIbrary

Posted in History, Holidays | 1 Comment

Parade Program in Mailboxes: Here’s “The Rest of the Story”

The cover of the PAPA parade tab was painted by local artist Katie O’Neill.

When I was a child, I would often spend days helping my aunt at the farm. The family had four boys, so an extra girl for the garden/canning was helpful. At noon, my uncle and cousins would come in from the field and while we had lunch, the radio would go on and we would listen to Paul Harvey tell a story. Harvey would always draw us in with “Here’s the Rest of the Story.”

When Bill Bruns was editor of the Palisadian-Post, he oversaw special monthly issues that provided important income at the weekly newspaper. Regular advertising income always declined during the summer as people went on vacation, but the Post could always count on its Fourth of July parade program.

“That issue was a big money maker for us,” Bruns said. “It really saved our bottom line every summer.” Generally, before expenses a decade or so ago, advertising revenue totaled more than $30,000.

The Palisades Americanism Parade Association (PABA) organizing committee was happy to have someone do all the leg work, securing advertisers, interviewing and writing stories, supplying the photos and printing and mailing the issue.

After the Post was sold to a local resident in 2012, PAPA President Daphne Gronich was trying to raise funds for the parade in 2014. She wondered if the new owner, Alan Smolinisky, would consider donating some of the parade program advertising dollars to PAPA.

This naïve editor said, “I’m sure he’d consider it.”

Gronich met with Smolinisky, and he told her “No.”

Scott Wagenseller, the CEO of Gates Security and a PAPA board member, said, “We could publish it ourselves,” meaning PAPA and the American Legion. At the time I was producing a monthly paper for Ronald Reagan Post 283 and Scott was the commander. I remember telling him, “Do you know how much work it would be for one person?”

Undeterred, the plan went ahead that PAPA would publish its own parade program (with yours truly as editor) and any money after expenses would be retained by PAPA.

Kendy Veazie, a prior advertising employee at the Post, who had been let go by Smolinisky, was hired to sell ads.

It was not easy. The Post threatened Veazie with a lawsuit. This editor was tasked with writing stories and doing the layout, while also hiring reporters who had been terminated at the Post. Somehow the program materialized, and a small profit went to PAPA that year.

PAPA has continued to produce its own program every year, even as the Post publishes its own 4th of July edition. The money advertisers spend at the Post goes directly to the Post. That periodical is mailed only to subscribers.

In contrast, the money advertisers spend on the PAPA publication (after expenses) is retained by the nonprofit, supplying needed funds for the following year. Also, the PAPA parade edition is mailed to every household in Pacific Palisades.

Today and tomorrow, look for the parade program in your mailbox. Extra copies will be available (for free) at Collections Antiques. . .And Books, at 15326 Antioch. The entire parade program, plus bonus pages, will be available on Palisades4th.org.

Posted in Holidays | 3 Comments

Access Books Supported by Palisades Rotary

Rotarian Hagop Tchakerian presented a $5,000 check to Access Book’s Claudia Magna.

When Claudia Magana first volunteered with Access Books more than 20 years ago, she never envisioned that in the future, she would accept a $5,000 check from the Palisades Rotary for the nonprofit.

That check was presented at a June 20 Rotary luncheon at Modo Mio.

“I believe in the program,” said Magana, who is an elementary school librarian at Farmingdale, in East Los Angeles. “I see what it can do.”

Since Access Books was established in 1999 by Rebecca Constantino, more than 335 libraries have been refurbished and more than 2 million books have been donated to schools.

Constantino in a 2018 Voyage LA Story (“Meet Rebecca Constantino of Access Books”), wrote that Constantino was doing research when she came upon a librarian in an affluent school stacking boxes of almost new boxes in the hallway.

“I asked the librarian what she was doing with the books,” says Constantino, “She said, ‘Well, we just don’t have room. I’m throwing them away.’ I said, ‘Really? Can I have them?’ She said, ‘Sure.’”

So, Constantino packed up all the books and drove them to an elementary school in Compton, where a school library couldn’t afford new books. It was the start of the nonprofit.

Access books volunteers believe that literacy is the highest predictor of success. But unfortunately, for more than 30 years, California has remained in last place in the nation for school library funding.

“For children living in poverty, the best predictor of reading achievement is the quality of the school library,” Magana said.

If there aren’t good school libraries, what about public libraries? For many kids living in underserved areas, there is an issue of getting them to the public library, the areas are not always safe, there isn’t always transportation and the libraries have limited hours, meaning kids with working parents can’t access the library while its open.

A Compton School library was recently rebuilt, complete with colorful murals on the walls. “It was built from scratch,” Magana said. Some of the books found in that library as it was being redone had been there since the school was founded.

“About 90 cents of every dollar donated to Access goes directly for the purchase of books and special programs,” Magana said, adding that volunteers like herself make sure the money goes directly for the students.

When a library is rebuilt, members of the community are involved and teachers and administrators are asked to participate, too. Those students working are generally given a book.

Former Lutheran Pastor Dick Meyer remembers when the Rotary helped build a library at Weigand Elementary (near Watts Tower) in 2018. “A little girl was hugging a book that had been given to her,” Meyer said. “She told me I’ll take good care of it before I return it.” He said, “I told her she got to keep it. She said, ‘I’ve never had a book before.’”

“Gently-used children’s books are always welcomed,” Magana said and noted that those books will go to children who cannot afford to buy books or go to kids who have never been to a bookstore.

Magana said they do accept donations and they should be books that are appropriate for children in grades K-5. Books should be in good condition, and they do not accept encyclopedias, reference books or high school or adult books – and no library discards.

Magana said that after the Compton School library was completed, one student said, “This is the coolest place in the school.”

(Visit: accessbooks.net or you can call Magana (909) 488-1788.)

Volunteers are paired with the community to transform a library.
Photo: Axis Photography

Posted in Books, Community | Leave a comment

All-Star Baseball Excitement this Weekend

The U12 Pali Baseball players hope to win the tournament at the Field of Dreams this weekend.

There’s no need to make a trip Dodger Stadium or to Anaheim this weekend for baseball. Some of the most exciting games in the area will take place in Pacific Palisades at the Field of Dreams at the Recreation Center, 851 Alma Real.

The Pacific Palisades Baseball Association is hosting a Pony Sanctioned Tournament that starts today, Thursday, June 29, and goes through Sunday.

The Palisades U10 and U12 All-Stars will be playing with the hopes of advancing to regionals that will be held in Camarillo starting July 6.

The U10 team will play today, June 29, at 5 p.m. against Santa Monica and on Friday at 7:30 p.m. against Toluca White. It is a five-team bracket and depending how the Palisades do, they will play another game on Saturday and Sunday.

The U12 team will also play today at 5 p.m. against Santa Monica, with their second game scheduled for Saturday at 8:30 a.m. against Oxnard. The five-team bracket also includes Ventura and Agoura.

Teams who win at Region, then advance to Super Region, and then Zone, before reaching the International World Series held in Texas on July 21.

No need to worry about food at the baseball fields because the Bat and Grill will be open for hotdogs and other snacks today, and Friday, from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. On Saturday and Sunday, the Grill will be open all day and will include some special menu items.

Let’s all support our local youth!

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Denise Crosby Selected as Grand Marshal

Denise Crosby played Lt. Tasha Yar in “Star Trek.”
Photo: Courtesy of Paramount Studios

As the character Faye Richardson in Suits, Denise Crosby says “That’s the problem with this place. You’re a bunch of wild dogs running around, defecating all over legal standards you swore to uphold. You can bet your ass I’m gonna put a leash on every one of you.”

Wow! Now that’s the kind of person we need running Pacific Palisades.

Except, that was only a role Crosby was playing, and that character is nothing like the charming and delightful actress that this editor spoke to by phone on June 9.

Crosby said she was thrilled that she had been asked to be the Grand Marshal for the 4th of July Parade.

“I was totally surprised – it came out of the blue,” she said, and added “I have been enjoying and reveling in this parade for 30 years.

“I feel proud to be part of this beautiful place that we’re privileged to live in,” Crosby said.

It will be the first time she will ride in the Palisades parade. Her son Augie, now a professional baseball player, rode in the parade with the Pacific Palisades Baseball Association after his Red Pony team won the World Series. She watched her son march with Gerry Blank Karate Kids several times prior to that.

Crosby does have parade experience: her first was the Hollywood 1987 Christmas Parade. The cast of Star Trek: The Next Generation rode on a float and “Jimmy Stewart was the grand marshal that year,” she said.

“I grew up in Hollywood and it was the parade I went to as a child, on the corner of Hollywood and Vine,” Crosby said. “It seemed magical.” And now she was part of that magic.

Her second parade experience was the Pride Parade in Boston in 2013, the first parade held after the marathon bombing. There were 400,000 spectators, 20,000 parade marchers, 72 vehicles and 21 floats, and Crosby was Grand Marshal.

“It was supposed to be Patrick Stewart, but at the last minute he couldn’t make it, so I subbed in,” she said, and described the thousands of pairs of sneakers that had been assembled as a memorial by the runners at a location along the route. “There were strong waves of sentiment.”

Her history with Pacific Palisades goes back to when she was a child. “We always went to Will Rogers State Beach, and we always stopped at the Hot Dog Show and Wil Wright’s ice cream shop,” she said. “It was a little slice of heaven, here.”

As a teenager, she came to the Palisades because “I was a cheerleader for Hollywood High School and we loved to play the Palisades because the boys were so cute,” Crosby said. “They had the cutest boys in the league.”

After her first marriage to Geoffrey Edwards ended, she came to the Palisades to go hiking with friends. “I met my future husband [Ken Sylk, a playwright] in 1990 in what is now our living room,” Crosby said.

Eventually a hike turned into a romance and that turned into a marriage. “I was living in West Hollywood and my husband was living here,” Crosby said. “We thought maybe we should start over with our own place, somewhere new.  But my husband persevered about staying here. I’m so glad he did.”

They originally rented, but then the landlord decided to sell and gave them the first opportunity to buy. “We love it,” Crosby said. “The house is 100 years old and one of the original Palisades homes.”

Crosby has extensive credits in television and movies but might be best known for her role as Lt. Tasha Yar on Star Trek. She also played Romulan Commander Sela in subsequent episodes.

She has participated in Star Trek conventions held throughout the United States.

“God love the Trekkies,” Crosby said. “They are a loyal group and devoted to the characters and the show.”

She plans to attend a convention in New Jersey and a second in Raleigh this summer. At the beginning of 2024, she will join 14 other actors on Trekkie cruise to Aruba with 3,000 fans. “We do sketches and shows, and the fans love it,” she said. “I don’t know if this craze will ever go away.”

She made her film debut in 48 Hours, which was the start of an extensive career. Crosby has appeared in The Man Who Love Women, Skin Deep, Jackie Brown, Deep Impact, Miracle Mile and the Red Shoe Diaries.

She co-starred in Stephen King’s classic film Pet Sematary in 1989, with Fred Gwynne and Dale Midkiff. “I loved making the film,” she said and added that she appreciated working with King because it was “such a compelling story.” King wrote the screen play and had a cameo as a minister. He had said of all of his novels, this is the one that scared him the most.

Denise Crosby starred in “Pet Sematary” (1989).

For General Hospital fans, she appeared in a guest role as Carolyn Webber last winter. “I hadn’t done a soap since the beginning,” she said. Her first television role was in Days of Our Lives in 1980.

“We were shooting 105 pages a day,” Crosby said. “One day I had 40 pages. I just wanted to see if I could do it.”

One of her favorite television roles was in Key West with Jennifer Tilly and Fisher Stevens.

“I played the mayor,” she said. It was a comedy-drama, produced by Fox, and aired in 1993. Unfortunately, a change of top management at Fox, saw the “death” of the series. “I had such fun making that show.”

Constantly working, Crosby has appeared in numerous television series including Southland, Mad Men, NYPD Blue, The X-files, Lois and Clark, How to Get Away with Murder, The Magicians, NCIS and Creepshow.

She is the producer and host of the feature documentary Trekkies, released by Paramount Pictures.

She has no regrets about career choices, “I don’t reside in that place,” she said.

Interestingly, she auditioned five times for Ghost Busters. The role would eventually go to Sigourney Weaver, who was Bill Murray’s choice. If you wonder how Crosby would have been in the role. . . her screen test was just put on the new blue-ray version of Ghostbusters that was just released.

Now, she is supporting the writer’s strike. “They’ve got to do it. The contracts they are using don’t apply to the streaming.”

Crosby has been on the picket line several times, but said, “I worry about the ripple effect if this goes on.” All of the businesses and local people, which support filming, from cleaners to caterers to rentals, are suffering. “Streaming companies can sit this out for a long time.”

In addition to a more equitable sharing of the enormous profits that streaming companies are making, Crosby also worries about AI (artificial intelligence).

AI could be used to replace creative people. Management could “plug in the name of characters, stipulate there has to be a car chase, and the timing and there would be a script,” Crosby said, noting that actors have also overwhelmingly voted to strike if an agreement is not made with studios, streamers and production companies by June 30.

When Crosby left Star Trek by choice, her character said, “Death is that state in which one exists only in the memory of others. Which is why it is not an end. No goodbyes. Just good memories.”

Just like the characters she plays, Crosby is insightful. When asked if she had any career regrets, she said, “I’m where I should be.”

Denise Crosby plays Faye Richardson on “Suits.”
Photo: USA Network

 

Posted in Film/Television, Holidays | 1 Comment

Overdoses Occurring Too Regularly

 

(Editor’s note: when Los Angeles City Councilmember Traci Park spoke to the Pacific Palisades Community Council on June 22, she said “I am concerned about the overdoses.” She said that drugs that are out in the community, such as those laced with xylazine “tranq dope” do not respond to Narcan, and “we’re evaluating what we’re going to do.” Subsequently, CTN  received the following letter and video from Palisades resident John Alle on June 23, who also owns a business in Santa Monica. Paramedics are trying to revive the victim along Ocean Avenue in Santa Monica by pumping air into the victim.)

My security team notified me of problems at my property and at the same time of my arrival ANOTHER OVERDOSE occurred on Ocean Avenue at Palisades Park in Santa Monica, directly across from the Shore Hotel and Blue Plate Oysterette Restaurant.

The sad irony is that in a few hours the LA County Board of Health and the Venice Family Clinic are scheduled to DISTRIBUTE FREE NEEDLES, synthetic opioids and Narcan (Naloxone) to any and all who show up in the exact same spot, in addition to Santa Monica’s Reed Park and Tongva Park.

Santa Monica City Manager David White, signed and published a Joint Proclamation last Friday praising the benefits of this Needle Distribution project that was kept hidden from the public until it was exposed to the public last year.

City Manager David White was a 2nd or 3rd choice pick by the Santa Monica Mayor and City Council, and joined the City in October 2021 after serving as deputy city manager in Berkeley where he championed reimagining public safety.

John Alle

thesantamonicacoalition.org

This particular victim was a white/Caucasian male, Justin Schroeder, July 14, 1991 to June 23, 2023. He was 31. The place of death was listed as the park, and the cause of death was “deferred.”

 

 

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The Mounting Toll of Those Dying on the Streets

Those living on the streets often have addiction and/or mental illness that needs to be treated.

(Editor’s note: the people and the names of those people who are dying on the streets should be remembered. The County of Los Angeles Medical Examiner lists the case numbers, the names, the individual’s date of birth and the place of death.  It does not give the cause of death. https://mec.lacounty.gov/case-search/

CTN lists below the deceased who were found in public places. There was no way to determine if those found in residences, as opposed to private residences, may have also overdosed. As Palisades resident and Santa Monica businessman John Alle told CTN, “We need to humanize every death. Every person has a soul.” )

The LA County Medical Examiner reports:

June 23, 2023

Singapore Huynh, 42, October 26, 1980 to June 23, 2023. Place of death, street.

Justin Schroeder, 31, July 14, 1991 to June 23, 2023. Place of death, park.

Dominic Garcia, 38, June 12, 1985 to June 23, 2023. Place of death, alley.

Thomas Paul, 36, May 24, 1987 to June 23, 2023. Place of death, public restroom.

June 24, 2023

Morgan Scott, 57, April 29, 1966 to June 24, 2023. Place of death, sidewalk.

William Heddy, 51, August 31, 1971 to June 24, 2023. Place of death, sidewalk.

June 25, 2023

Ricardo Regalado-Hernandez, 31, June 29,1991 to June 25, 2023. Place of death, parking lot.

Cynthia Espino, 42, November 2, 1980 to June 25, 2023. Place of death, parking lot.

June 26, 2023

Karin Baker, 63, December 18, 1959 to June 26, 2023. Place of death, sidewalk.

Tyree Martin, 45, April 28, 1978 to June 26, 2023. Place of death, park.

Matthew Williams, 32, October 26, 1990 to June 26, 2023. Place of death, sidewalk.

Mark Luna, 41, December 24, 1981, June 27, 2023. Place of death, sidewalk.

Isaac Marshell, 27, July 13, 1995 to June 27, 2023, Place of death, street.

Lora Newton, 47, October 17, 1975 to June 27, 2023. Place of death, tunnel.

Posted in Homelessness | Leave a comment

Gracious, Enthusiastic and Vibrant, Sylvia Boyd Selected Parade Marshal

Sylvia Boyd was selected as the 2023 Parade Marshal.

Anyone who has ever met Sylvia Boyd is struck by her enthusiasm, her genuineness and her kindness. Her “can do” attitude is infectious. She is a positive life force.

This year, she was unanimously selected by parade organizers PAPA (Palisadian Americanism Parade Association) to be the town’s parade marshal.

The Marquez resident first volunteered to help with the Fourth of July Parade in 2005. The next year she was put in charge of the PAPA People. That position meant she found and organized parade volunteers, a position she has held through 2022.

Boyd receives this honor, not only for her time volunteering, but also for her dedication to this community.

“If you love the Palisades like I do, you do whatever you can to enhance where you live,” Boyd said. “I’m loyal to wherever I live and work.”

Boyd is a member of the Marquez Knolls Association. She has served as an elder at the Palisades Presbyterian Church and is now a deacon.

In 2016, she received a Pacific Palisades Community Council Sparkplug award for her Food for Thought Speaker series, in which she planned a free weekly lunch for the community and supplied speakers.

Born in Hollywood, Boyd was a child actress known as the Armenian Shirly Temple. Between 1941 and 1946, she was in eight films.

Sylvia Arslan, age 3, in 1937.
Photo: Calisphere

Boyd, aka Sylvia Arslan, played Bette Davis and Claude Raines child, Fanny, in “Mr. Skeffington” (1944).

She was in Moon Over Her Shoulder (1941), Sheriff of Cimarron (1945), the Great Stagecoach Robbery (1945) and Humoresque (1947).

She graduated from Van Nuys High School in 1950, attended Cal State Northridge a year before marrying her high school sweetheart Jon in 1951.

He enlisted as a Marine during the Korean War and Boyd went with him to Camp Pendleton.

She continued to act and was up for a part in Cecil De Mille’s The Ten Commandments, but then found out she was pregnant with her first child.

“So, I dropped out,” she said. “I have no regrets.”

It was then that Boyd joined a new company, Tupperware. For the next 46 years, she traveled the globe, with her husband beside her. They have been married 72 years.

“It was the most exciting life,” Boyd said. “Much more exciting than acting.”

Jon gave up his position with the Los Angeles Fire Department to move with his wife to her first assignment in Fort Wayne, Indiana. From there Boyd was reassigned to Westchester in L.A.

“We did $4.5 million worth of business our last year at that location,” she said.

In 1982, Jon was asked to be a regional vice president. He told top management, “My wife was the one who built the business” and turned them down, but suggested they give the job to his wife.  A year later she was offered the position overseeing six states (Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky, Tennessee, Indiana and Illinois) and the couple moved to Cincinnati.

Next Tupperware sent the Boyds to Australia for three years, before a six-month stint in Toronto. Then she got a call to go to India. The couple moved there in 1996.

She retired when she was 64, but the company had other plans and sent her to the Midwest for eight months.

In 2000, the company made her president of Tupperware in Canada.

Finally, Boyd made her retirement permanent and came back to the Palisades home the couple had purchased when they worked at Westchester.

“I love my home,” she said, “I love to have people up here.”

In her backyard, with its spectacular views, Boyd routinely has reunions with  former Tupperware employees and for several years hosted the after-parade picnic for PAPA.

The Boyds have two children, Lorna and Leslie, and two grandchildren (a third is deceased) and now two great grandchildren, ages 3 and 1. And, recently they added Roxy, a “loveable” foster terrier to their home.

About being selected as parade marshal, Boyd said, “I was very surprised and very honored.”

Lorna (left) with mom Sylvia Boyd as they recruited volunteers for the 2019 parade.                                   Photo: Bart Bartholomew

 

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