Back in the late twenties KFI founder and California Packard Distributor Earle C. Anthony built a complex in the Silverlake area. It included a splendid main mansion and several bungalows for guests. Ir was designed by famed architect Bernard Maybeck and used as a hideaway for those in the movie and broadcasting industries who were friends of Anthony, as well as for entertaining by his wife Irene. Because of prohibition it even had a concealed elevator, the top of whose cage appeared to be part of the drawing room rug. Its purpose was to to take those "in the know" to a private wine cellar under the residence. Unverified reports say that the cellar originally also had an entrance to a clandestine exit tunnel, later filled in, for use in case of raids. The mansion also had an organ, similar to the one later included in the KFI/KECA studios on Vermont.
After Irene's death in the fifties Anthony sold the complex to a European nobleman. He ultimately donated the property to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart, who used it as a convent, with the elevaor still functional. Legend has it that the Tate/LaBianca murders (part of the Manson Family rampage) in the neighborhood had decimated the property's resale value, motivating the donation. As the order shrank a dispute arose over who had the right to ell the property - the surviving sisters or the Los Angeles diocese. Yesterday a Los Angeles judge ruled that it was the diocese, who already has a buyer - singer Katy Perry. The sisters, who don't care for the entertainer's music or diocese control of their funds, still disagree - but barring an appeal the case now appears settled.
KFI radio news has been covering current aspects of this story as it has been unfolding in the Los Angeles courts, but not the background and link to the station's founder.
http://www.fa-mag.com/news/pop-star...il&utm_term=0_1899ce8517-e1b6d7a741-228144833
After Irene's death in the fifties Anthony sold the complex to a European nobleman. He ultimately donated the property to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart, who used it as a convent, with the elevaor still functional. Legend has it that the Tate/LaBianca murders (part of the Manson Family rampage) in the neighborhood had decimated the property's resale value, motivating the donation. As the order shrank a dispute arose over who had the right to ell the property - the surviving sisters or the Los Angeles diocese. Yesterday a Los Angeles judge ruled that it was the diocese, who already has a buyer - singer Katy Perry. The sisters, who don't care for the entertainer's music or diocese control of their funds, still disagree - but barring an appeal the case now appears settled.
KFI radio news has been covering current aspects of this story as it has been unfolding in the Los Angeles courts, but not the background and link to the station's founder.
http://www.fa-mag.com/news/pop-star...il&utm_term=0_1899ce8517-e1b6d7a741-228144833