Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

WARREN, Margaret Ogilvy

January 11, 1931 - January 6, 2021

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Margaret O. Warren passed away of natural causes on January 6, 2021. Margaret was the daughter of Robert Albert and Margaret Williamson Ogilvy and was born in Westfield, NJ. She graduated from Bethany College, WV where she met her future husband William R. Warren. Margaret and Bill Warren were married in 1953 and moved to California where they raised their three daughters. Margaret was a member of the Westside Guild of Children’s Hospital, Westside Guild of the Philharmon­ic and the Assistance League. She enjoyed entertaini­ng family and friends and playing tennis and bridge at the Riviera and Big Canyon Country Clubs. Margaret is survived by her loving husband of 67 years and children Anne Bretting (Gerald) and Erica Long (William), five grandchild­ren and two greatgrand­children. She will be terribly missed, but comfort can be found knowing that she has now been reunited with their daughter Christina Warren.

Due to Covid-19, a memorial service will not be held. In lieu of flowers, charitable donations in Margaret’s memory may be made to Habitat for Humanity, www.habitat.org, or Doctors Without Borders, www. doctorswit­houtborder­s.org.

As an only child growing up in an apartment with his cousins in Chicago, Marvin felt like the luckiest kid in the world. Later he moved to LA with his mother and stepfather, sleeping on a Murphy bed in a small apartment a block from Beverly Hills High School. When he lettered in football, graduated from USC, and started his career at the Wilmington Dry Goods in Delaware, the sky was the limit.

Marvin had a tireless work ethic, infinite ambition, and incredible business instincts. After he was transferre­d back to LA in the early 60’s, his entreprene­urial spirit took flight. First, he opened Parapherna­lia, pioneering fashion on sleepy Rodeo Drive, followed by a health food store that was ahead of its time. Then came Zeb’s Pants Emporium, and finally he opened Chanin’s, a state-of-the-art fashion jeans store in Westwood, and Champs Active Sportswear. Later he signed some of the first leases in the world premier Beverly Center.

Marvin knew he was truly lucky when he met the love of his life—Dottie Friedman (soon to become Dottie Chanin). They were an inseparabl­e pair. Endless love and devotion. They worked, traveled, and adventured together for 40 plus years. He opened the Hugo Boss store in the Las Vegas Forum Shops and turned it into a hub of activity. He nurtured and maintained friendship­s around the world. You just couldn’t say NO to Marvin. He treated his business relationsh­ips like friends and his friends like family.

With Marvin everything was possible, no wine glass empty, no table without ‘a pizza for the table’. His charisma legendary, his devotion to Dottie and his family endless.

He is survived by his wife (Dottie), his sons Tony (Cathy) and Rick (Tracy), daughters Elizabeth Rubin (Michael) and Tracey Friedman, grandchild­ren Jake, Gavin, David, Brett, Megan, Alex, Daisy and Max, and his great grandchild­ren Molly and Josie.

Marvin always said, ‘the harder I work, the luckier I get’ and it was true. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Covid Relief Fund. Attn. Arthur Ochoa, 8700 Beverly Blvd. Ste 2416, Los Angeles 90048.

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