The Mail on Sunday

The coolest spot in the desert...

Live like a Hollywood star in California’s most stylish hangout, says Tracey Davies

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ANOTORIOUS Rat Pack hangout in the 1950s and 1960s, Palm Springs still draws the glamorous Hollywood set with its sleek, low- rise architectu­re, broad, palm-lined boulevards and slew of stylish hotels, motels and cocktail bars.

There are no direct flights from the UK, but it’s an easy two-hour drive from Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport. A lunchtime touchdown in LA means you’ll reach Palm Springs early evening.

Once you’ve parked up the convertibl­e Mustang and checked in to your retro hotel, there’s enough time for a cooling dip in the pool before venturing out for happy hour – a Palm Springs tradition.

While not a big city, Palm Springs is pretty spread out, so if you haven’t rented a car it’s worth downloadin­g a ride- sharing app such as Uber or Lyft, or making a note of the local cab number.

EVENING

KICK off the desert fun with a couple of old-school cocktails at the Tonga Hut (tongahut.com), a deliciousl­y kitsch ‘tiki bar’ – exotic drinking place – on North Palm Canyon Drive. Ask the bartender if you can take a peek in the Secret Room, a private area hidden behind a false wall and decked out like a 1940s tiki lounge with low-slung bamboo beams, carved tiki poles and vintage barrel lamps giving off a cosy, rouge-y glow.

After a couple of Mai Tai cocktails (made to Trader Vic’s original 1944 recipe), head over to El Mirasol (elmirasolr­estaurants.com), the Castaneda family’s new Mexican restaurant at Los Arboles Hotel, el, and feast on n butter-soft carne asada ( chargrille­d sliced beef), zingy fresh guacamole and saltrimmed margaritas on the e fairy-lit patio.

DAY ONE MORNING

JET-LAG is on our side when flying west, so make the most of an early rise and join the pastelswat­hed local sin their power walk to Koffi (kofficoffe­e.com), a cool local coffee joint where charming baristas holler out your soya mocha latte order like cabaret queens. It will set you up nicely for brunch at the Holiday House ( holi dayhouseps. com), a midcentury delight that’s decked out with original artworks by David Hockney, Herb Ritts and Roy Lichtenste­in and looks like a Slim Aarons fine-art tableau.

AFTERNOON

PALM SPRINGS has one of the finest collection­s of mid-century modern architectu­re in the world. If you’re into property, book a guided tour such as the MidMod Design Tour (midmoddesi­gntour.com), led by archi architect and interior design designer Lyle Boatman. Th The two-hour driving tou tour explores the city’s a affluent neighbourh hoods, s wings by E Elvis Presley’s pinkhued Honeymoon Hide away, stops outside Leo DiCapr rio’s desert love nest a and peeks through th t he gates of Twin Pal Palms, one of Frank Sina Sinatra’s many desert escapes escape famous for its piano-shaped piano-shap pool.

EVENING

FOR happy hour, head to the new Del Rey lounge bar at the historic Villa Royale hotel ( delreypalm springs.com). With wood panelling, cosy booths and Art Deco hints, it has a gentleman’s-club vibe.

Try a Shy Ricky with vodka, celery juice and ginger beer for $ 10 during happy hour ( 4pm to 6pm, and 10pm until closing time).

Then it’s back to Downtown for dinner at the Purple Palm (purple palmrestau­rant.com) at the Colony Palms, a classic Palm Springs hotel opened by LA mobster Al Wertheimer in 1936. Its stylish poolside restaurant has a distinctly Moroccan vibe, but chef Nick Tall’s food is very much SoCal ( Southern California­n) in style, with tuna ceviche ($17) and heirloom beets and burrata ($13).

DAY TWO MORNING

PALM SPRINGS boasts more than 350 days of sunshine a year and can see summer temperatur­es reach a blistering 110 Fahrenheit. When it gets that hot, make like a local and decamp to the mountains on the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway (pstramway.com), a rotating cable car that scales the cliffs of Chino Canyon up to Mount San Jacinto State Park. It takes ten minutes to traverse the two-and-a-halfmile route, which runs from arid desert to alpine terrain. In the cooler months, you may see several inches of snow.

Otherwise, air-con is your friend. Go shopping for mid-century treats in the Uptown Design District or head to the Palm Springs Art Museum (psmuseum.org), a contempora­ry collection establishe­d i n 1938 with works by Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth and Antony Gormley.

LUNCH

AFTER all that nature and art, it’s surely time for a prickly pear margarita. Pop on a panama or oversized shades and head over to El Jefe at the pastel-hued Saguaro Hotel ( t hesaguaro. com). This relaxed tequila bar and taqueria has a vintage-sports-bar vibe and knocks out serious fresh fruit margaritas and delicious fish tacos. Then spend the afternoon lazing by a beautiful palm-lined pool and listening to soft jazz.

EVENING

THE famous supper club scene has seen a revival in Palm Springs in recent years.

For an authentic Rat Pack experience, head to the legendary Purple Room in the Club Trinidad Hotel ( purpleroom­palmspring­s.com) where Sinatra and his pals Sammy Davis Jr and Dean Martin schmoozed in the 1960s.

On Friday and Saturday nights, it hosts a supper club with live entertainm­ent i ncluding class acts such as Carole Cook, a comic actress and one-time protegee of Lucille Ball, and The Judy Show!, Michael Holmes’s brilliant parody of Judy Garland.

It’s Palm Springs kitsch at its finest. Take a bow, my desert queen.

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 ??  ?? SUNSHINE CHIC: North Palm Canyon Drive, top. Above: Frank Sinatra’s Twin Palms home. Far left: Cocktails at El Jefe
SUNSHINE CHIC: North Palm Canyon Drive, top. Above: Frank Sinatra’s Twin Palms home. Far left: Cocktails at El Jefe
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