Chapter 8 ~ The Jolson Story
“Meet me at Hollywood and Vine,” a catch phrase made popular during the radio era, was widely used by locals and tourists during the brief time that Beth Short was in Hollywood. Linda Rohr, a roommate at the Chancellor said, “She loved to prowl the Boulevard.” She frequented Tom Breneman’s on Vine, where the waiters knew her and she went to the Frolic Room and the Italian Kitchen in the Pantages Building, next to the theater.
Beth was a regular at the CBS radio studios on Sunset near Vine. John Egger, the head usher at CBS said he saw her there, “at least twenty times.” Ann Toth said Beth used to go to NBC at Sunset and Vine “all the time.”
According to William Fowler, the doorman at the Pantages Theatre at Hollywood and Vine, Beth walked by often.
“The Jolson Story” was playing at the Pantages and Beth would walk by and say hello occasionally. William described her as a, “Very attractive girl, the way she dressed.” He said she had, “Very dark black hair. Looked like it was dyed black and rather full.”
“I was working as doorman, but I was in front of the box office. I had a mike in my hand. I believe it was a Friday night. She walked [by] and there was a kind of a lull, everything quieted down. I believe the stores had just closed and she stated, ‘You have quite a crowd, haven’t you?’ and I said, ‘Yes, we have quite a crowd’ and she says, ‘A pretty good picture?’ and I had seen it about thirty times and I said, ‘Yes, it’s a good picture.’ That was the last I ever saw of her.”
He remembered seeing her about five or six times in all. “It was some time around the first of December. Christmas shopping, Christmas rush. I don’t believe I saw her after that.”
Before long, Beth was in San Diego, watching “The Jolson Story” at the Aztec Theatre.
