Los Angeles Times

A SIMPLER AGE

Virginia Davis, who is turning 108, has her memories and doesn’t need much else

- By Nita Lelyveld

Forgive Virginia Davis if shewants no fuss on Friday, even though it’s the day of her birth.

She’s never been one for birthday parties. Her last big one was her sweet 16.

“A whole bunch of us went to the moving pictures,” she says. Her mother served cake and ice cream.

Thatwas 92 years before Friday— when Davis turns108.

“I can’t believe it. I can’t believe it,” she says, then adds, “It doesn’t pay to live too long.”

Her husband died many years ago, her son more recently— in his 80s.

Her daughter Frances, 76, lives in Agoura Hills. Frances’ number is taped on the big- button phone beside the recliner in which Davis now spends her days.

It is a large chair, and in it, she looks very small. Herworld used to be wide. In recent years, it has closed in.

Outside on her Santa Monica street, cars zoom by. People walk past her window, talking loudly.

But Davis, whowas born in New Castle, Del., faces inward into her living roomand kitchen.

At the kitchen table, the caregiver who has been with her since she fell a fewyears ago hunches silently over her cellphone.

Ariver of memories flows through Davis’ mind— though some details glide by, uncatchabl­e, just out of reach.

She still remembers coming to Los Angeles “well over 70 years ago” on a bus — she and her husband, heading west, carrying just one suitcase between them.

She can summon up Yellow Cars and Red Cars and Grand Central Market eons before it went gourmet. She would walk over to the market to save the 5- cent trolley fare and pick up three bunches of beets for a dime.

She recalls working as a waitress, earning 25 cents an hour— and the Great Depression when 25 cents was more than some people had.

Milkshakes cost a nickel in those days, she says. They were large and filled you right up. When she and her husband were newin town, they would each get one for lunch and then take long walks trying to learn the city.

They never made much money. Hewas a laborer for the studios. Hehad to call in every day to see if therewas work for him.

Once he suggested they take the Red Car to see Hollywood. She told him she wasn’t interested. In down town L. A., she says, “in those days, I sawa lot of parades— and themovie stars were in them, so I saw them thatway.”

Which stars did she see? Names elude her. “They’re the ones from way, way back.”

One day, she joined friends on one of the gambling ships in Santa Monica Bay. When she and her husband came home, an earthquake rattled the walls.

“I thought Iwas being punished, because my mother was not a gambler,” she says.

Was it the Long Beach earthquake of1933? “Oh my.” She can’t say for sure.

Davis’ days don’t vary much, she says, 108th birthday or not.

She gets up around 8 a. m. She sits in her chair. She listens to the radio. She watches news shows.

“Old people just sit, you know, and go to sleep and sit,” she says.

She’ll have soup for dinner as always. She doesn’t expect birthday cake.

But she will enjoy a bowl of Neapolitan ice cream, as she does every night before bed.

‘ In those days, I saw a lot of parades— and the movie stars were in them, so I saw them that way.’ — VIRGINIA DAVIS, recalling life in Los Angeles decades ago

 ?? Anne Cusack
Los Angeles Times ?? VIRGINIA DAVIS of Santa Monica turns 108 on Friday. “I can’t believe it,” she says. The Delaware native came west “well over 70 years ago.”
Anne Cusack Los Angeles Times VIRGINIA DAVIS of Santa Monica turns 108 on Friday. “I can’t believe it,” she says. The Delaware native came west “well over 70 years ago.”
 ?? Anne Cusack Los Angeles Times ??
Anne Cusack Los Angeles Times

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