The Borneo Post

Chateau Marmont turns to ‘handselect­ed’ members

- By Andrew Marszal

LOS ANGELES: For nearly a century Chateau Marmont has been an adopted home and playground for Hollywood’s elite, discreetly hosting sophistica­ted Golden Age icons and raucous Brat Pack celebritie­s.

Etched into Tinseltown folklore, it is where James Dean crashed director Nicholas Ray’s bungalow to bag the lead in “Rebel Without a Cause,” Jean Harlow and Clark Gable allegedly conducted a torrid affair, and comedy legend John Belushi died of a tragic drug overdose.

More recently, the imposing Gothic hotel perched above the famous Sunset Strip has become a hub for swanky showbiz parties, from Leonardo DiCaprio’s 21st birthday bash to Beyonce and Jay-Z’s secret Oscars afterparti­es.

The hotel is so synonymous with Hollywood glamour that it has its own film credits, appearing in movies from 2018’s “A Star is Born” remake to the musical “La La Land” and Sofia Coppola’s “Somewhere.”

But the storied institutio­n that prides itself on being highly selective about who it admits — and then keeping their secrets closely guarded — is about to get a whole lot more private and discerning, its owner told AFP.

Later this year, it will become a member-owned hotel, offering dedicated domestic staff, private dining and long-term personal belongings storage to an invitation-only, financial-stakeownin­g inner sanctum.

“I’d compare it to a superyacht... you can only deliver that kind of service

— and have people on deck — if they’re almost hand-selected,” said Andre Balazs, the Bostonborn hotelier who once dated Uma Thurman.

No details are yet available on the costs of membership.

But Balazs had been mulling the transition for years, with that process now accelerate­d by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Common sense, and even a modicum of understand­ing of health, requires that you surround yourself with less people,” he said.

“In this time, it allows you to be safer, and curate a more interestin­g crowd.”

‘Symbolic of Hollywood’

The concept of membersonl­y institutio­ns offering accommodat­ion is well establishe­d in cities like London, but newer to Los Angeles, where Soho House launched its buzzy West Hollywood outpost just a decade ago.

At Chateau Marmont, shielded-off private quarters will serve an “essentiall­y nomadic” wealthy and creative elite tired of traditiona­l luxury hotels, Balazs said.

But Balazs insists media reports that “the Chateau” is set to ape “exclusiona­ry clubs” like White’s in London, are wide of the mark.

Those reports triggered a backlash in Los Angeles among stargazers fearful they will no longer be able to dine across from their favorite celebritie­s.

“There will always be a public component” to Chateau Marmont, Balazs told AFP, including “probably the restaurant... and then maybe some public aspect to the rooms as well.”

“Something that’s become as, if not more, symbolic of Hollywood than the Hollywood sign itself... making that inaccessib­le is not the right thing to do,” he added.

Yet as a Los Angeles Times op-ed recently pointed out, Chateau Marmot has “long been a VIP club that only pretends to be open to the public,” catering largely to a closely guarded list of repeat guests.

Shawn Levy, author of “The Castle on Sunset,” also noted that “an infusion of initiation fees and membership dues would be a godsend, as the Chateau, like most hotels, has withered during the pandemic.”

The vast majority of hotel staff were laid off in March.

“We’ve seriously had to downsize, obviously,” said Balazs, who donated US$100,000 to a staff fundraiser.

‘Shenanigan­s’

The new, member-owned model is a return to Chateau Marmont’s original roots. It was constructe­d as a high-end apartment building in 1929, modeled after the Chateau d’Amboise in the Loire Valley.

Balazs intends to roll out the scheme to cities such as London and New York — where he already owns hotels — and rural outposts including, ironically, “a spectacula­r chateau in the south of France.”

But the hotelier, 63, insists it is mere coincidenc­e that he is starting the experiment at the legendary Marmont — his first hotel, purchased in 1990, long after many of its fabled Hollywood “shenanigan­s.”

“We don’t traffic in glamour,” said Balazs.

“We traffic in service to our guests — discretion and service and safety, privacy.

“That’s what we make our money on.” —

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 ?? AFP photo ?? View of Chateau Marmont on Sunset Strip in West Hollywood, California. —
AFP photo View of Chateau Marmont on Sunset Strip in West Hollywood, California. —
 ??  ?? View of the entrance of the lobby from the restaurant in Chateau Marmont on Sunset Strip in West Hollywood, California.
View of the entrance of the lobby from the restaurant in Chateau Marmont on Sunset Strip in West Hollywood, California.

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