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The Coffee House Positano was a cafe on the southern border of Malibu, California. It was opened in 1957 by Mike Dutton, a radio pioneer, and his wife, Lorees, an aspiring writer. Located on the cliff side of the Pacific Coast Highway on a 140-acre, undeveloped piece of land, (19543 Pacific Coast Highway). Positano quickly became a success even though there was no sign on the highway to indicate where it was located and the Duttons never advertised its existence. People learned of it strictly by word of mouth. Positano was fundamentally different from the some forty other coffee houses that could be found in the greater Los Angeles area. These places tended to appeal to a young crowd and were generally focused on folk music. particularly folk rock. While Positano offered some of the same things as other coffee houses – exotic coffees, deserts, sandwiches, chess games, a bookstore, poetry readings, and a place to hang out, the Duttons offered an amazing array of other activities – from avant garde theater performances like Picasso’s one-act play, Desire Trapped by the Tail, to a regularly scheduled evenings of political debate with speakers who ranged from communists to John Birchers. Writers, university professors and politicians often spoke about a vast array of topics—like anthropologist Count Taylor on the rise of black identity in the US—or authors such as John Howard Lawson, Lawrence Lipton and Anais Nin, who would read from their new works. Paintings were always on display and for sale. On the days when Positano was closed, various classes like life drawing were taught by artists such as Keith Finch. The jazz and folk music at Positano was spontaneous and free. People simply appeared, play their music and left. For two seasons, Playhouse Positano operated as an open- air theater.
Industry | coffee house |
---|---|
Founded | 1957 |
Founder | Mike and Lorees Dutton |
Defunct | 1962 |
Headquarters | Malibu |
The almost immediate popularity of Positano caused the Duttons to create a membership. People could visit only three times before joining. When Positano closed in 1962, the membership totaled over 2500 people. People in the entertainment business particularly those living in the Malibu area frequented the place – David and Gloria Stone Martin, John Howard Larson, and John Houseman to name a few. Some people from the European exile community like Aldous Huxley and Christopher Isherwood also visited. Many of the so-called beat poets, like Allen Ginsberg and Gregory Corso, came down from San Francisco to visit. The policy of the Duttons was to “ignore” any celebrity who showed up so that they could enjoy themselves without being hassled by their admirers.
Soon after Positano closed, Jerry Ziegman, a scriptwriter for the television series Peyton Place, became the resident manager of the property, representing Manocherian Brothers, and established an art community which lasted until 1993 when the buildings were burned down.
Anthropologist Jay Ruby has published an enhanced book, Coffee House Positano: Bohemian Oasis in Malibu - 1957-1962.
Special Collections at UCLA are in the process of archiving Lorees Yerby Dutton's and Jerry Ziegman's papers.
References
edit- "In search of Budwood..." Malibu Times. 2010-11-10. Archived from the original on 2015-09-01. Retrieved 2014-01-22.
Located a mile and change north of Topanga Canyon Road on a 130-acre property at 19543 Pacific Coast Highway, Coffee House Positano was the love child of the Duttons-Mike Dutton, a pioneer radio writer/producer, and Lorees Yerby, an aspiring San Francisco-born writer. Yerby was on her way to Positano, Italy, when she met Dutton. They married in New York, had two children and moved to Malibu, where they opened Positano in 1957.
- "California Librarian". 20. California Library Association. 1959: 256.
This started with the appearance of crowds at the home of the theatrical Duttons, high above Malibu. This intended homey coffee-evening habit has become Coffee-House Positano, complete with an outdoor stage, author's nights, book store, poetry readings, waiting list, and paintings everywhere. This place does not advertise, and in fact ...
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- Ruby, Jay (2014). "Studying Sideways in Malibu". Anthropology Now. 6 (2). Anthropology Now Paradigm Publishers: 78–84. doi:10.1080/19492901.2014.11728436. JSTOR 10.5816/anthropologynow.6.2.0078. S2CID 189311438.
- Reports of the President and the Treasurer. John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. 1976. p. 124.
Yerby, Lorees. Appointed for play writing. Born January 9, 1930, San Francisco. Founder and Director, Coffee House Positano, Malibu, California, [...]
- Coffee House Positano: A Bohemian Oasis in Malibu – 1957-1962. University of Colorado Press. 2014. p. 201. Archived from the original on 2014-10-16. Retrieved 2014-10-16.
- The Property: Malibu's Other Colony. Center for Visual Communication. 2014. p. 320. Archived from the original on 2018-08-28. Retrieved 2020-07-25.