Looking Back
Young Chang
The Rendezvous Ballroom helped bring an era of music and musical
legends to Newport Beach.
It was how big name celebrities cozied up to the city, how stars like
Stan Kenton and Nat King Cole became accessible to excited girls in
poodle skirts and guys with flat tops.
The ballroom burned down 35 years ago, succumbing to the second fire
to eat up its insides, but locals today still remember its presence on
the Balboa Peninsula.
The ballroom was built in 1928 by two developers named Harry Tudor and
Ray Burlingame in the 600 block of East Ocean Front. The cost back then
was $200,000, according to James Felton’s “Newport Beach, The First
Century, 1888-1988.”
The Balboa Pavilion was across from the Rendezvous and, until then,
the only cool place to groove and be seen. There was competition at first
between the two venues when it came to celebrities performing and drawing
crowds. But the Rendezvous eventually won, becoming the more popular
place for big bands.
Through the ‘30s and ‘40s, especially during Balboa’s annual Bal Week
(the equivalent of today’s Spring Break), the Rendezvous attracted
generations of trendy teens who were into partying and dancing to the
music of Johnny Mercer, Les Brown, Benny Goodman and other big-time
musicians.
But in 1935, just seven years after it was built, the ballroom burned
down because of what officials then traced to a cigarette that hadn’t
been put out. The blaze didn’t deter the fun though as builders
re-created the structure and the surfer generation crowded in after the
Big Band era passed.
Bill Grundy, a longtime Newport Beach resident, used to be a bouncer
and ticket taker there in the second half of the 1930s.
“All the local kids did that,” he said.
Grundy remembers in-house musicians who played at the ballroom
year-round. The roster included Bob Crosby, brother to Bing Crosby, and
Claude Thornhill.
“We had a lot of terrific musicians that were here,” he said. “And
then we had all the big ones that would come by on weekends such as Glenn
Miller and people like that.”
The place was a block-long, he added, and had hardwood floors that
made it great to dance.
“It required everyone to have a coat and tie, it was quite a big
deal,” Grundy said.
But in 1966, another fire consumed the Rendezvous and eventually
caused everything to cave in. The ballroom was never rebuilt.
According to Felton’s book, the last band to have played there that
Saturday was a group called The Cindermen.
* Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a historical
Look Back? Let us know. Contact Young Chang by fax at (949) 646-4170;
e-mail at [email protected]; or mail her at c/o Daily Pilot, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.