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Singer Ricky Nelson ("Ozzie & Harriet") was going here when he decided to try his luck as a rock & roll singer - to impress a girl he was dating. (Some sources also list Marilyn Monroe as a Hollywood High student, but that seems to a mistake.)
"The Hollywood
Reporter," one of Tinseltown's leading trade papers, began operations
at 1606 Highland, also across the street from Hollywood High School. One
afternoon in 1936, the newspaper's owner, Billy Wilkerson, walked to the
corner Top Hat malt shop to get one of the twenty Cokes he drank each day.
There, he spotted a cute 15-year-old girl sipping a Coke at the soda fountain's
U-shaped counter. She was Judy Turner, a student at Hollywood High, who
had just skipped her typing class to run across the street to the café.
Lana Turner, soon nicknamed "The Sweater Girl," went on to star in a host of films with Hollywood's leading men, including "Love Finds Andy Hardy" (1938) with fellow Hollywood High alumnus Mickey Rooney; opposite John Garfield in the original "Postman Always Rings Twice" (1946), Kirk Douglas in "The Bad & The Beautiful" (1952), Clark Gable in "Honky Tonk" (1941), John Wayne in "The Sea Chase " (1955), and Spencer Tracy in "Cass Timberlane" (1947). In 1957 she got an Oscar nomination for "Peyton Place." There is a small Alumni Museum at Hollywood High. It's located in the library, and contains photos of the stars who attended classes here, as well as donated school memorabilia such as letterman jackets, awards, banners, yearbooks, programs, and the like. (The museum has irregular hours, so call ahead if you want to visit the museum, and ask to see the Assistant Principal in charge of counseling.) Built in 1910, the high school opened just as the formerly quiet hamlet of Hollywood was first being overrun by movie producers. By the 20's, it became the school of choice for the children of movie stars. But as the neighborhood grew more seedy with the passing years, and with a change in school district boundaries, most of the well-to-do Hollywood parents stopped sending their children to Hollywood High, opting instead for schools like Beverly Hills High and Santa Monica High. Today, the school caters to a broad ethnic mix of students, speaking dozens of different languages. (Note: if you watch
the annual Hollywood Christmas
Parade, you'll notice that the first unit to march down the Boulevard
each year is usually the Hollywood High marching band.)
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