/ Jayne Mansfield luxuriating in the boudoir of her Pink Palace /
The Pink Palace – the legendarily kitsch, lurid and nouveau riche Mediterranean-style mansion on 10100 Sunset Boulevard belonging to Hollywood’s platinum blonde sex-kitten-gone-berserk par excellence Jayne Mansfield (1933 – 1967) from 1957 until her death – was razed in November 2002. In my dreams, the Pink Palace would have been preserved exactly as Jayne left it and open to the public as a museum, like Elvis’ Graceland. (I’m sorry, but in low-brow trash culture terms Mansfield is every bit Presley’s equal!). Incredibly, though – five decades after Mansfield’s tragic premature death in a car crash en route to New Orleans – treasures from her long-demolished Pink Palace occasionally re-surface in the present day! For me, these are sacred holy relics!
The Pink Palace – the legendarily kitsch, lurid and nouveau riche Mediterranean-style mansion on 10100 Sunset Boulevard belonging to Hollywood’s platinum blonde sex-kitten-gone-berserk par excellence Jayne Mansfield (1933 – 1967) from 1957 until her death – was razed in November 2002. In my dreams, the Pink Palace would have been preserved exactly as Jayne left it and open to the public as a museum, like Elvis’ Graceland. (I’m sorry, but in low-brow trash culture terms Mansfield is every bit Presley’s equal!). Incredibly, though – five decades after Mansfield’s tragic premature death in a car crash en route to New Orleans – treasures from her long-demolished Pink Palace occasionally re-surface in the present day! For me, these are sacred holy relics!
Now this is what I call “art”! When
I saw this listed online as part of Engelbert Humperdinck’s auction in autumn
2017, I felt like setting up an urgent crowdfunding page just so I could bid on this
spectacular genuine vintage bust as seen
in The Wild, Wild World of Jayne Mansfield (1968)! (The online
auction happened in April 2017, but I didn’t find out about it until later). The bust used to be prominently displayed in the Pink Palace. Humperdinck
(who, of course, bought the Pink Palace following Jayne’s death) must have kept
it in storage for decades before auctioning it off. Weird: why wouldn’t
one of Jayne’s five children have this gorgeous object? Imagine how great this would look on my
mantelpiece (if I had a mantelpiece). Read the full details here – and note the
status “Lot closed – unsold”. Where is it now? Some hip entrepreneur should
make a mould of this bust and sell replicas commercially, like those plaster-of-Paris
Elvis Presley busts that were ubiquitous in the seventies and eighties. (I had
one when I was a university student! Eventually it got smashed – I don’t like
to talk about it!).
/ Glimpses of the bust in situ at the Pink Palace. Mansfield seems to have kept it the bedroom /
Then came this announcement from the Burlesque Hall of Fame's Facebook page on Valentine’s Day 2018:
“A special Valentine’s Day reveal: Jayne Mansfield’s heart-shaped settee, refurbished for our upcoming Exotic World exhibit!
We acquired this piece in the 1990s, shortly before Mansfield’s iconic mansion, the Pink Palace, was razed. The heart shape and colour was a theme of the mansion, which also featured a heart-shaped pool and bathtub.”
The historical significance of this cannot
be overstated! Seeing this put me in a state of religious awe - a genuine artifact from Jayne
Mansfield’s Pink Palace! Jayne, Mickey and her
Chihuahuas once frolicked and cavorted on this pink settee! (When I visited the
Burlesque Hall of Fame last April when I was in town for Viva Las Vegas Rockabilly Weekender 2017, this was most definitely not on display then!
Now I have to return to pay homage!).
Let’s hope further riches are exhumed! Maybe we could re-assemble the Pink Palace piece-by-piece!
/ Bath time at the Pink Palace /
Kitsch par excellence! But...
ReplyDeleteJust imagine having to live with that bathroom... Jx