Rick Calamaro: A Nightlife Visionary Remembered

Categories: Goodbye

Rick Calamaro
From Calamaro's Facebook by Sherrie Rose.
After being found dead in his L.A. apartment Sunday, Rick Calamaro is being remembered as Charlie Sheen's ex-assistant in media reports. But Calamaro meant much more to L.A.'s nightlife scene.

His death is suspected to be drug related and followed, we've learned, a month holed up inside his apartment. (When he was discovered, drugs and alcohol were found near his body.) It's another ironic Hollywood tragedy; the guy who knew everybody passed away alone.

But his legacy is that of a nightlife visionary who shaped the club scene in the early '90s and continued to do so recently. Singled out for having the "toughest door in town" by the Los Angeles Times when he manned Holly's on Wilcox Avenue, Calamaro's gift for luring celebrities, gorgeous gals and well-to-do hipsters started way before the paparazzi-obsessed Paris Hilton years.

Over nearly two decades, his club nights and venues honed a winning formula: effortlessly cool patrons mixed with a sort of retro rock 'n' roll vibe that wasn't Euro-flashy or bottle service trashy. It was a mix many try to re-create and only a select few have pulled off, like Calamaro's childhood pal and former partner Josh Richman.

Calamaro and Richman's Grande Ville at 7969 (formerly Peanuts, currently Voyeur) has gone down as one of our city's most legendary weekly ragers, an erotic evening with saucy burlesque-style strippers, a host of great DJs -- even AM, for which it was one of his first gigs -- and familiar showbiz faces letting their inner freaks out. It reigned as Hollywood's hedonistic hub for six years, always pushing the boundaries. Grande Ville set the bar for bawdy bashes and big name attendees thanks to Calamaro and Richman's wide-spanning friendships.

Calamaro & Richman.jpg
With Richman. From Calamaro's Facebook.
His life was that, essentially, of a professional partier, from his time living with his mom at the Playboy Mansion (she was a good friend of Hugh Hefner's) to later residing at the Pickfair Mansion with his friend Jim Buss and Lakers' owner Jerry Buss. "He was the first to host the public at previously private locales including Hef's during its theme night heyday, and On the Rox above The Roxy," says Richman. (And he sometimes did so in the company of Heidi Fleiss.)

Later, Ivar, Nacional and the adjoining restaurant Paladar were party havens in Hollywood thanks to Calamaro's gift for creating atmosphere and drawing A-listers. You didn't necessarily have to be famous to get into his clubs, but you did have to be fabulous and friendly. Sometimes the velvet ropes got vicious, but one tended to forget the long wait once inside, glad that the douchey dudes had been denied.


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guest
guest

Does anyone know if there is a funeral and/or memorial service planned?

Peggy McIntaggart
Peggy McIntaggart

Rick had a big heart and helped the people he could, he had a disease that took him down, if more people would support and help people that need it and utilize this example of him dying by the drug then more people would step up to the plate and show more compassion, the demons won...thats the only WINNER...they do there dance when you are under any influence, why don't people point the finger when people medicate there minds and soul...we have choices in life..we were born with a heart, and soul, its up to us to take care of our bodies, mind and soul and treat it as a Temple...Who knows the truth for sure exactly what took him down...so please this is a human being we are talking about, respect that he is now on his journey to Resting In Peace...If more people loved sincerely your own path will be lit..Live by the Heart, not by the sword..we will miss you Rick and thank you for all you did to help a dream come true by assisting getting my Sister Inlaw here with her kids to go to Two and A Half Men and to meet Charlie before she died...it brought you joy to see the joy in there hearts and I will never forget how happy it made you...you were a great guy and I loved sharing with your heart... Peggy McIntaggart

jay
jay

In your world, "luring celebrities, gorgeous gals and well-to-do hipsters" is fine, but anything "Euro-flashy or bottle service trashy" is not. The whole "velvet rope" mentality -- in which a 400-pound idiot decides who is "hip" and who is not -- is just another type of class warfare. Not the GOP "class warfare" that pits liberals vs. conservatives, but a more obsequious form that seeks to differentiate who is "cool" from who is "uncool."  I certainly understand wanting to keep gangbangers, addicts and other undesirables from a place of business, but to have the likes of Josh Richman and Rick Calamaro decide who fits in a club and who does not seems to be the heights of hypocrisy, considering their own lifestyle and habits (pun intended?)  Anyway, because I am a man, the death of any man is upsetting. But I can't feel too badly about the end of another "velvet rope" jerk who decides that wearing high-end branded designer gear is more important than the poor poet who can only afford thrift store jeans and an Arrow shirt. . . . .

Nick Colachis
Nick Colachis

Dear Jay, please don't believe everything you read. Rick was a gentleman and a giver; his doorman, like most doorman, ran their own show and thought they were the 'owners'. Not Rick, when Rick was at the door, it was nothing like you described; he cared about the people in line. he cared that you were waiting. he cared that if you did not get in it could ruin your night.  he did not care what you were wearing.  

Glamorous superstar
Glamorous superstar

 I'm not trashing Calamaro specifically. Never met the guy. I'm simply pointing out the nature of the beast that is the contrived "glamourous" party lifestyle of people caught up in the scene Calamaro was a part of. "Fake it until you make it" (and walk all over anybody who can't help you "make it") is a way of life for so many in that scene. Just because some may manipulate media and social media to lead others to believe they've made it doesn't mean they actually have. If Rick Calamaro had truly "made it", he would have never died the way he did.

Hotel
Hotel

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Misstery Singer
Misstery Singer

I met Rick doing promo calls for 1 of his clubs. Very nice guy. RIP Rick

Tbicklex3
Tbicklex3

He thought he was the shit.. until he came out to silver lake one night.. and we beat his and his faggy friends asses back out west of vermont.. Next day he called and apologized.. RIP Rick.

Jason Ross
Jason Ross

A cautionary tale unfortunately. This is simply what drugs do. And only after every last thing has been stripped away.  And to die alone this way is very sad. Rip.

Michelle Henderson
Michelle Henderson

Well, I disagree. The best part of the mid 90's included Rick and his clubs. It's easy to trash someone that can't defend themselves especially under a fake name. We all have our demons and our opinions

Ahsan Habib
Ahsan Habib

  just as Joe responded I am impressed that a stay at home mom able to make $5087 in one month on the internet. did you read this site link http://morepay7.com

Glamorous superstar
Glamorous superstar

 Hollywood "insiders" will tell you that perception becomes reality. Thus the inclination to paint a picture of glamour and greatness in hopes that people will see you and treat you as being glamorous and great. That's all fine and well. BUT, manipulating media and social media doesn't actually change reality. Forget all of the anecdotal details, this was a guy who was a ~50 year-old drugging himself out of his mind. No, none of us could get into any of his parties. There's no question. The question is: Why would any of us WANT to get into those parties? Use your brain, folks. The type of "lifestyle" the Rick Calamaro's of the world are so quick to broadcast that they live and that we can not is all a big facade. And most like him will tell you as much. It's all pretty sick.

Leola
Leola

my co-worker's sister made $14187 past week. she gets paid on the computer and moved in a $426000 condo. All she did was get fortunate and follow the clues explained on this website lazycash42.c()m

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