Push past the glitz and glamour to reveal Hollywood's seedy underbelly. Bernadette Chua finds the dark past of an entirely different LA.
Love it or hate it, Los Angeles has a unique allure. Beneath the haze of smog from its car-clogged highways, there is something charming about the City of Angels - and the 50 million visitors it attracted last year clearly agree.
For many Aussies, the California lifestyle is a glitzier version of our own and LA is our gateway to the US and the airlines, including Qantas, Virgin Australia, United Airlines and Delta, often slash airfares to as low as $800 return during sale season.
But beneath the glamour of Rodeo Drive - the Hollywood starlets and the fast and furious life of celebrities like the Kardashians in Calabasas - there is another side to La La Land. A secret side.
It is filled with clairvoyants, psychics, superstition, murder and mystery. The seedy underbelly that was so L.A. Confidential.
We're here to discover the other LA. When you start looking, it seems as if every building has a murky story. LA's history is tainted by gangs and mobsters, pimps, pushers and prostitutes. It's a city with a past and it's worth discovering.
I took my first trip to Los Angeles when I was 15. Scarred by the experience of hours spent in traffic, thugs hustling tourists outside the then Kodak Theatre and soggy egg rolls from PF Chang's - it was almost enough to put me off returning - despite the amazing time I had at Disneyland.
But the more times you return to LA, like a junkie looking for the next hit, the more you become addicted.
This time around, we are staying at the chic and modern Mondrian hotel on Sunset Boulevard in West Hollywood. It has a stunning rooftop pool where a DJ spins tunes in the evenings.
For eats, the Mondrian's restaurant, Ivory on Sunset, serves up a mean breakfast. Whether you're keeping to your Cali diet of egg-white omelettes and green smoothies or wanting the whole hog of pancakes with a side of extra crispy American bacon, the food is delightful.
The rooms are spacious but minimal with pops of colour in the blue lampshades and orange mirror-TVs - a quiet haven away from the hustle and bustle.
But like many of the places in Hollywood, the Mondrian comes with its own dark past. In 2007, rapper Pimp C was found dead in one of the suites, after an overdose of "purple drank", a toxic concoction of codeine and promethazine.
Just down the road from the hotel is the famous Viper Room where, back in the day, you would be rubbing shoulders with regulars Jennifer Aniston, Leonardo DiCaprio and Angelina Jolie at the whisky bar. It was home to punk and metal bands, and to this day holds great gigs - best enjoyed with a whisky sour.
But it's also the place where Joaquin Phoenix's big brother River died in the most clichéd way possible - a drug overdose on Sunset Boulevard.
The Hollywood Forever Cemetery is the final resting place for some of the biggest names in Tinseltown. The lush green landscape on Santa Monica Boulevard in the heart of Hollywood is on America's National Register of Historic Places. You'll find the graves of celebrities such as filmmaker Cecil B DeMille, guitarist Johnny Ramone and TV star Estelle Getty of The Golden Girls. One of the most impressive graves is philanthropist William A Clark Jr's Greek Revival-style catacomb. You'll walk over a 150-metre granite bridge to reach his resting place in the Clark family mausoleum - it sits on its own island and cost US$500,000 to build in the 1920s.
If you're in LA during the sweltering summer months, you can watch movies under the stars in the cemetery. It's popular with the locals, so grab your picnic basket, blanket and lawn chairs and join them. The movies are projected onto the side of one of the mausoleums.
Across the road from the flamboyant cemetery is the Dearly Departed Museum where you'll find bizarre artefacts like Mae West's false teeth, Karen Carpenter's bathroom sink and even a tile from the Ambassador Hotel, where Robert F Kennedy was shot. The trivia-loving guides share their Hollywood-insider knowledge and retell stories from friends and family of the deceased celebrities.
A tour of the underground tunnels of Downtown LA provides further insight into this city's amazing past. While the rest of the country was going dry in the 1900s, the city's service tunnels rocked with free-flowing booze, an 18-kilometre network of speakeasies designed to defeat prohibition.
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One of the most notable watering holes was the King Eddy Saloon. Located at 5th and Main, it was the place to go for music and martinis. Today, its basement remains part of the tunnel system and it's still open for business.
While the underground network is not officially open to the public, visitors can slip down behind the Hall of Records on Temple Street where an elevator will take you below the surface to passageways filled with amazing murals and street art.
On the edge of Miracle Mile, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art on Wilshire Boulevard (home to scenes from Pretty Woman and La La Land) is the largest along the West Coast. It has an amazing collection from artists such as Cézanne, Magritte and Rembrandt, but also sculptures from the pre-Columbian era, ancient Greece, Rome and Egypt. At the museum's entrance, stop for a photo amongst the dozens of vintage streetlights in the outdoor installation "Urban Light" by the late Chris Burden.
For something slightly quirky nearby, wander around the La Brea Tar Pits where tar still bubbles from the depths of the earth. Scientists have been able to unearth impressive fossils of sabre-toothed tigers, dire wolves, mastodons and dragonflys from the pits. You can view them in the adjacent museum.
Most holidays in LA might involve iconic activities like a hike up Runyon Canyon, a visit to the Getty Museum or a hot dog at the Staples Center while the Lakers shoot some hoops. But venture to some of LA's lesser-known sites and you'll get a glimpse of the city's beautiful dark past.