With twinkling chandeliers dripping from the ceiling and stylish leather couches big enough to accommodate your entire crew, our Westwood location in Los Angeles offers a sophisticated scene and whimsical feel, along with craveable American cuisine and a one-of-a-kind cocktail list.
With variations... gin, rum or vodka, juiced to order, lime, house sour, shaken, passion fruit juice. Prosecco $2 supplement. Inspired from Harry "Sugie" Sugarman's Golden Age of Hollywood hotspot Tropics Supper Club, this is a fresh take on a classic sour. "Sugie" who was manager of Grauman's Chinese Theater, opened his Tropics Supper Club in 1934, the same year Victor Jules Bergeron Jr., aka "Trader Vic", opened in San Francisco Hinky Dink's, the nucleus that became the worldwide Trader Vic phenomenon. This Pre-Polynesian powerhouse catered to the who's who of the motion picture industry. Its interior decor featured bamboo and tropical foliage with a dance floor located in the "Rain Room" which had a glass roof upon which tropical showers fell several times each night. The old school cocktail list was rum heavy with celebrity named cocktails and famously vague descriptions
$13.00
The Coconut Grove
Fresh coconut water, homemade coco lopez, grilled pineapple, Bacardi 8 Year Rum and El Dorado 8 Year Demerara Rums, excessively garnished. The Ambassador Hotel on Wilshire Blvd served alcohol during Prohibition and was the watering hole of choice for Charlie Chaplin, Howard Hughes, Gloria Swanson, Joan Crawford, Carole Lombard (Joan and Carole were frequent Charleston competitors on Friday nights) and Rudolph Valentino. John Wayne, Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant, Ginger Rogers, Bob Hope and Henry Fonda frequented the hotel's Cocoanut Grove nightclub where they were entertained by everyone from Frank Sinatra to Barbra Streisand, Judy Garland, Lena Horne, Sammy Davis Jr and Liza Minnelli
$16.00
Booth 50
Evan Williams Bourbon, hand squeezed california grapefruit, wildflower honey, yuzu. Our twist on the Brown Derby Cocktail, named after owner Wilson Mizner's booth number where he sat almost every day at the original Wilshire Blvd location. Synonymous with The Golden Age of Hollywood, The Brown Derby has been immortalized on film from Lucille Ball's legendary pie fiasco with William Holden to the Willie the Giant scene with Mickey Mouse. Wilson was the brother of Addison Mizner who created Mizner Park and put an immortal mark on south Florida architecture. Wilson was a playwright, swindler and thanks to investor Jack L. Warner, a restaurateur to Hollywood's elite. Wilson is legendary for quotes such as "Failure has gone to his head", "Don't talk about yourself; it will be done when you leave" and "If you steal from one author it's plagiarism; if you steal from many it's research"