Meeting Peter Green, Great-Nephew of Peter the Hermit
Peter Green (l) and his son-in-law, Jeff Smith/Hope Anderson ProductionsOne of the pleasant ancillaries of my documentary research into Beachwood Canyon's history was meeting Peg Entwistle's brother Milt and niece Lauretta Slike. Together they filled in the many gaps in her biography, separating fact from fiction through family photographs, memorabilia and--most of all--Milt's memories. Because of her family, the mythical Peg Entwistle fell away, leaving a real person who seemed strikingly contemporary in her ambitions and struggles.
Last Saturday I had another such experience in meeting Peter Green, a St. Louis-based writer and architect whose great-uncle was Peter Howard, a.k.a. Peter the Hermit. (More on PTH can be found by searching under his name on this blog.) Although Peter Green met Peter the Hermit only once--an experience he recounts in a response to one of my pieces--he remembered the location of his great-uncle's last home. The rented rooms where the Hermit lived his impoverished final years were in a house that still stands at 2151 Ivar Avenue, in the Hollywood Dell.
One thing I had missed about Peter the Hermit--until Peter Green began imitating his accent--was that, though a Chicago native, he was born in County Limerick, Ireland. His decision to imitate a Biblical character no doubt owed much to an Irish Catholic religiosity which, according to Peter the Hermit's obituary, dominated his later years. As his landlady, a Mrs. Pippins, recalled, "All he did, all day long, was talk religion, pray and read the Bible aloud to himself."
Peter the Hermit died a few months before his 91st birthday, having outlived the Silents and Talkies that provided much of his income during his early decades in Hollywood, as well as his 50-year impersonator's gig. If there was an upside to his no longer being able to ply the Hollywood tourist trade, it was that Peter's last years took place in the late 1960's, a particularly seedy time on Hollywood Boulevard. The summer after his death brought the Tate-LaBianca murders, the murders of two UCLA students in a Black Panther power struggle, and a growing atmosphere of fear and distrust across Los Angeles. By then, one imagines, Peter the Hermit was wandering the boulevards of a far better place.
Related posts:
http://underthehollywoodsign.wordpress.com/2009/05/22/peter-the-hermit-the-original-hollywood-character/
http://underthehollywoodsign.wordpress.com/2009/08/08/peter-the-hermit-resurfaces-in-england/
http://underthehollywoodsign.wordpress.com/2010/11/09/peter-the-hermit-sage-of-the-hollywood-dell/
http://underthehollywoodsign.wordpress.com/2010/12/19/peter-the-hermits-laurel-canyon-phase-1933/
http://underthehollywoodsign.wordpress.com/2010/12/22/peter-the-hermit-in-laurel-canyon-part-ii-media-coverage/
http://underthehollywoodsign.wordpress.com/2011/03/15/peter-the-hermit-hollywood-star/