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P.J.'s (nightclub)

Starwood
TheStarwood WestHollywood logo.jpg
TheStarwood WestHollywood 1979.jpg
The Starwood entrance in early 1979.
Former names P.J.'s (1961-1973)
Address 8151 Santa Monica Blvd
West Hollywood, CA 90046
United States
Coordinates 34°05′28″N 118°22′00″W / 34.091028°N 118.366643°W / 34.091028; -118.366643Coordinates: 34°05′28″N 118°22′00″W / 34.091028°N 118.366643°W / 34.091028; -118.366643
Owner Eddie Nash
Type Nightclub, music venue
Genre(s) Entertainment
Capacity 800 (500 seated)
400 standing at the Rock Room
Opened 1973
Closed June 13, 1981
Years active 8

The Starwood was a popular nightclub and music venue in West Hollywood, California from early 1973 to 1981. Many punk bands and heavy metal bands started their careers playing at the club. The Starwood was located on the northwest corner of Santa Monica Blvd. and North Crescent Heights Blvd.

The Starwood was preceded by P.J.'s, a fashionable jazz and pop music nightclub during the 1960s, which attracted a large number of film and TV personalities, and some old school jazz musicians. Established in February 1961 by Paul Raffles, Chuck Murano, Bill Daugherty, and Elmer Valentine, it hosted such acts as the Bobby Fuller Four, the Standells,Rufus Thomas, Trini Lopez, and Kool & the Gang, all of whom recorded live albums there. Other notable performers at the venue were the Flying Burrito Brothers, and Tim Buckley. The club was managed by Valentine, before he left to found the Whisky a Go Go.

In late 1971, P.J.'s had been bought by alleged organized crime figures Eddie Nash and Dominic Lucci, together with Hal Glickman. After received a light renovation, the club was reopened to the public in January 1972.

In 1973, after Nash bought out Lucci's and Glickman's ownership interests in the P.J.'s club, it became the Starwood, which was managed by Gary Fontenot until the club closed its doors on June 13, 1981, shut down by the Los Angeles County authorities after too many citations for underage drinking and noise abatement issues, among others. In May 1982, before it was demolished, it caught fire, though not burning totally. This occurred while unexplained fires befell other Nash-owned properties at the time. Subsequently the structure was torn down, and a mini-mall was built on the site.


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