BY LEE PFEIFFER
In an interesting article for Vanity Fair, Cari Beauchamp explores a fascinating aspect of old Hollywood that most movie fans aren't aware of. It concerns the Hollywood Studio Club, a boarding house with style that was specifically designed to provide a safe haven for young women who had immigrated to Hollywood in the hope of finding stardom. From the earliest days of the motion picture industry, studio executives acted as sexual predators. They held all the cards in their hands. If a fresh, innocent beauty really wanted some good career breaks, they soon learned what the price was. In the silent era, Mary Pickford became the premiere champion of establishing a house where numerous young women could rent a shared room with the knowledge men would not be able to exploit them, at least in their living quarters. Pickford lobbied influential studio executives as well as notorious moralist Will Hays, the film industry czar who would impose draconian censorship standards on the entire industry that would last for decades, to support the concept. She got these powerful men to donate large sums of money to build a more upscale residence for the young women, which would become known as the Hollywood Studio Club. It was not without irony that much of the funding came from lecherous men who were known to sexually exploit women once they set foot outside of their "safe haven". Nevertheless, the concept lasted until the 1970s, by which time reticence to follow the strict rules inside the Club diminished the ranks of young women who were prospective boarders. The place closed in 1975 but left a lasting legacy as an early home to the likes of Marilyn Monroe, Rita Moreno, Nancy Kwan, Kim Novak, Barbara Rush, Barbara Eden and many other actresses who found solace within the walls of the Hollywood Studio Club.
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