St. Charles Borromeo Church (North Hollywood)

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St. Charles Borromeo, 2008
St. Charles Borromeo, 2008

St. Charles Borromeo Church is a Catholic church and elementary school located at Moorpark and Lankershim in North Hollywood, Los Angeles, California. It is one of the oldest parishes in the San Fernando Valley dating back to 1921. It has long been a parish with celebrity members and was the site of funerals for Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour, and Robert Urich.

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[edit] History

St. Charles Borromeo Parish Hall (Old Church)
St. Charles Borromeo Parish Hall (Old Church)

The parish was founded in 1921 with the purchase of an existing Methodist church structure at Weddington and Bakman.[1][2] The parish was known as Immaculate Conception Church until 1925 when it was renamed Saint Charles Borromeo.[1][2] Before the parish was established, Catholics in the central San Fernando Valley shared a priest with St. Robert Bellarmine (then known as Holy Trinity).[2] By 1936, the parish had outgrown the space on Weddington, and a parishioner named Goykes donated land on Moorpark.[1] A new church was built on Moorpark in 1937 -- the structure that is now the parish hall. The church had a seating capacity of 600 and was styled after the San Carlos Mission in Carmel, California.[1]

In 1939, St. Charles Borromeo School opened in four portable bungalows and operated by five Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. A new permanent school opened in 1947 in a building with 14 classrooms, a cafeteria, library, music room, and auditorium.[1]

The parish continued to grow in the years after World War II, and in 1957, ground was broken for the current church. The new church opened at Thanksgiving 1959 with a blessing from James Francis Cardinal McIntyre.[1]

‎Stained Glass Window to right of the altar at St. Charles Borromeo
‎Stained Glass Window to right of the altar at St. Charles Borromeo

St. Charles Borromeo served a wide swath of the San Fernando Valley for many years, but with the population growth in the Valley, additional parishes were carved out of the territy previously encompassed by St. Charles Borromeo. Modern parishes that were carved out of St. Charles Borromeo include Our Lady of the Holy Rosary in Sun Valley (1937), St. Francis de Sales in Sherman Oaks (1938), St. Finbar in Burbank (1938) and St. Patrick in North Hollywood (1948).[1]

The Rev. Msgr. Harry C. Meade was the pastor at St. Charles Borromeo for more than a quarter century starting in 1936.[1]

[edit] St. Charles Borromeo Choir

The St. Charles Borromeo Choir has enjoyed a long reputation as one of Southern California's finest parish choral groups. Prior to 1949, the choir director was Roger Wagner who later formed the Roger Wagner Chorale. In 1949, Paul Salamunovich became director of the choir.[1][3] Volunteer singers from Santa Barbara to San Pedro drove to North Hollywood to sing for Salamunovich as part of the St. Charles Choir.[3] The St. Charles Boys Choir under Salamunovich appeared with Dinah Shore on the "Chevy Show" and also formed the Disneyland Boys Choir, with which Salamunovich recorded in 1965 the "It's a Small World" album of folk songs still sold at Disney theme parks.[3] Salamunovich also became the leader of the Los Angeles Master Chorale. Salamunovich also conducted choirs for dozens Hollywood films, including "Air Force One", "My Best Friend's Wedding," "First Knight," "Waterworld", "The Devil's Advocate" and "xXx". Yet, Salamunovich has continued since 1949 to direct the choir at the 10:00 a.m. Mass. He has done so for over 58 years.[4][5][6]

[edit] Controversy over proposed renovations

Altar at St. Charles Borromeo
Altar at St. Charles Borromeo

In 2002 and 2003, controversy followed after well-known consultant, Richard Vosko, was brought in to speak to the congregation about renovations to the church's interior.[7] Vosko's renovations in Detroit, San Antonio, and New Orleans had spawned controversy, and a book called "Ugly as Sin" had recently been published criticizing Vosko's work.[7] Concerns over modernization of St. Charles Borromeo's interior space led to the formation of the St. Charles Borromeo Preservation Guild. Guild supporters held protests with dozens of protesters falling to their knees outside the church and reciting the rosary asking the Virgin Mary to interceded to prevent modernization.[7] Among other things, the protesters sought to return the Blessed Sacrament to the tabernacle behind the altar and to preserve the private confessionals, the interior's "dark beauty," kneelers, the large, dramatic wooden crucifix and the baldacchino hanging above the cross.[7] The traditional look and feel of St. Charles had become a refuge for traditional Catholics who rejected the secular look of modern Catholic churches.[7] Pastor Robert Gallagher responded angrily to the protests. In the church bulletin, he claimed that most of the protesters were not parishioners and said it was insulting to suggest that it was the traditional trappings that attracted parishioners.[8] The protests drew widespread media attention, including two feature articles in the Los Angeles Times in April 2002 and June 2003.[7][8]

[edit] Connection to Cardinal Mahony

Cardinal Mahony graduated from St. Charles School
Cardinal Mahony graduated from St. Charles School

St. Charles also has long ties with Cardinal Roger Mahony, the Archbishop of the Los Angeles Archdiocese since 1985. Cardinal Mahony's parents were married at the original church on Weddington Street, and he went to grammar school at St. Charles Borromeo grammar school, graduating in 1950.[6] When the Cardinal's mother, Loretta Mahony died in 1995, Mahony celebrated her funeral Mass at St. Charles Borromeo.[9] Mahony also celebrated the parish's 75 anniversary Mass in November 1996.[10] In 2000, Mahony attended the 50th reunion of the eighth-grade class of 1950. Sister Jean Dolores, who taught the Cardinal, attended the reunion, recalling that in those days, she taught 75 eighth graders in one class. The school had 900 students in the years following World War II, making it the largerst parochial school west of the Mississippi.[11] Mahony recalled Sister Jean Dolores as a strict disciplinarian and as a mentor. She came to Fresno when Mahony was appointed a bishop in 1975 and was in Los Angeles in 1985 when he was named archbishop. She also traveled to Rome to be with Mahony when he became a cardinal.[11] Sister Jean Dolores described the parish as "like a ripple in a pond" -- "It just keeps going and going. That's what life is all about."[11]

[edit] Hollywood connections

Many celebrities have lived in the Toluca Lake, North Hollywood, and Studio City communities served by St. Charles Borromeo.[6]

St. Charles Borromeo was the home parish of Bob Hope, who lived a short distance from the church on Moorpark.[6] In 1969, Bing Crosby attended the wedding of Bob Hope's daughter, Linda, at St. Charles.[6] In July 2003, Bob Hope died at age 100. His funeral at St. Charles was a small, private afffair, followed later by a public memorial attended by numerous celebrities, including President Gerald R. Ford, Betty Ford, Nancy Reagan, Sen. Diane Feinstein, former California governor Pete Wilson, retired Gen. William Westmoreland, Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Lee Iacocca, Mickey Rooney, Phyllis Diller, Raquel Welch, Sid Caesar, Kelsey Grammar, Tom Selleck, Ed McMahon, Barbara Eden, Loni Anderson,Shecky Greene, Jack Carter, Connie Stevens, Joey Heatherton, and fellow golfers Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer.[6][12]

Bob Hope
Bob Hope

The memorial mass for Hope was given by Cardinal Roger Mahony.[6]

Television actress Tracey Gold, who starred in ABC's "Growing Pains," was married at St. Charles in October 1994. Her TV parents, Alan Thicke and Joanna Kerns, attended the ceremony.[6]

The funeral for Bob Hope's friend and co-star, Dorothy Lamour, was also held at St. Charles, in September 1996.[6]

On April 19, 2002, the church was the site of the memorial service for actor Robert Urich, best known to TV viewers as private eye 'Dan Tana' on the TV show "Vega$". Celebrities in attendance at the service included Tom Selleck, Tony Danza, "Love Boat" captain Gavin MacLeod and Olympian Bruce Jenner.[6][13]

Other celebrities who have been members at St. Charles include Ann Blyth ("Mildred Pierce") actor Eric Estrada ('Ponch" on TV's "CHiPS"), "Jeopardy!" quizmaster Alex Trebek, Frankie Avalon, Bob Gunton (Warden Norton in "The Shawshank Redemption"), Los Angeles district attorney Steve Cooley, and KABC news anchors Laura Diaz and Harold Greene.[6]

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i (1971) St. Charles Golden Jubilee 1921-1971. St. Charles Borromeo Church (softcover book published for parish's 50th anniversary. 
  2. ^ a b c "Church to Mark 50th Anniversary on Sunday", Los Angeles Times, 1971-02-13. 
  3. ^ a b c John Henken. "Salamunovich's 40-Year Love Affair With Choral Music", Los Angeles Times, 1989-11-04. 
  4. ^ Biography of Paul Salamunovich. imdb.com.
  5. ^ Paul Salamunovich. Angeles Chorale.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k St. Charles Borromeo Church. Seeing Stars: The Ultimate Guide to Celebrities and Hollywood. Retrieved on 2008-04-08.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Patricia Ward Biederman. "Church Protesters Standing on Tradition: Group opposes modernization of St. Charles parish in North Hollywood, but pastor says there's no set agenda for changes", Los Angeles Times, 2002-04-01. 
  8. ^ a b Patricia Ward Beiderman. "Congregation Divided Over Design - but Not the Divine; Some parishoners at a Catholic church in North Hollywood fear that remodeling plans could be too extreme for their taste.", Los Angeles Times, 2003-06-07. 
  9. ^ John Dart. "A Final Blessing Cardinal Mahony Lays His Mother to Rest in Her Longtime Parish", Los Angeles Times, 1995-05-04. 
  10. ^ Steve Padilla. "Valley Newswatch", Los Angeles Times, 1996-11-24. 
  11. ^ a b c K. Connie Kang. "Archbishop Salutes a Mentor at Class Reunion: At a 50th anniversary gathering of his eighth-grade class, Cardinal Roger Mahony thanks the nun who was his teacher", Los Angeles Times, 2000-09-10. 
  12. ^ James Nash. "Hope Takes One Last Bow Friends Pay Final Respects to Famed Entertainer", Daily News, 2003-08-28. Retrieved on 2008-04-07. 
  13. ^ "Actor Robert Urich dead at 55: Star of 'Spenser: For Hire,' 'Vega$' and many more shows", cnn.com, 2002=04-16. Retrieved on 2008-04-08. 

[edit] References