Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery
Details | |
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Location | Hollywood Hills, Los Angeles, CA |
Country | United States |
Coordinates | 34°09′08″N 118°19′09″W / 34.15210°N 118.31907°W |
Style | Jewish |
Owned by | Sinai Temple of Los Angeles |
Website | Mount Sinai Memorial Parks and Mortuaries |
Mount Sinai Memorial Parks and Mortuaries is the largest Jewish cemetery organization in California. The cemeteries are the final resting place for many Jews in the entertainment industry.
History
Mount Sinai Memorial Parks and Mortuaries, owned by Sinai Temple of Los Angeles, refers to two Jewish cemeteries in the Los Angeles, California metropolitan area. The original cemetery property is located at 5950 Forest Lawn Drive in the Hollywood Hills of Los Angeles. The cemetery was originally established in 1953 by the neighboring Forest Lawn-Hollywood Hills Cemetery. In 1959, it became an exclusively Jewish cemetery, and in 1967 it was acquired by Sinai Temple, the oldest and largest Conservative synagogue in Los Angeles,[1][2] which dedicated its mortuary and cemetery resources to all members of the Jewish community in and around the city. Numerous stars and celebrities from the entertainment industry are interred in the park which is located down the street from Warner Bros.studios.
Artwork
Throughout the different sections of Mount Sinai Hollywood Hills, one encounters various forms of artwork including mosaics, sculpture, fountains and carvings. The most noticeable is the Heritage Mosaic, which, at 45 feet × 30 feet, depicts a panorama of the Jewish experience in America and is made up of more than 2.5 million pieces of hand-cut Venetian glass. The park also features a memorial monument dedicated to the six million Jews who perished in the Holocaust by renowned Jewish artist, Bernard Zakheim. The six three-dimensional figures, all rendered in burnt and tortured wood, represent six heroic Jewish figures. Rising from the stones of the memorial is a flame that symbolizes the eternal spirit of the six million and the rebirth of Israel from the ashes of the Holocaust.[3]
Expansion to Simi Valley, California
In 1997, faced with dwindling space at the original Hollywood Hills location and recognizing the need for Jewish burial properties for future generations, Mount Sinai Memorial Parks expanded by opening a second memorial park at 6150 Mount Sinai Drive in Simi Valley.[1][2] Mount Sinai Simi Valley sits on 150 acres of land in the Santa Susana Pass which ensures that there will be available burial space to accommodate the needs for the Los Angeles Jewish community for the next 250 years.[4] A notable section within Mount Sinai Simi Valley is the Caves of Abraham, which is a series of graves that though they appear to be built above ground are actually built directly in to the hillside. The section received the approval from the Chief Rabbinate of Israel for meeting standards of acceptability according to Jewish practice and it is the only place outside of Israel where a person can receive a genuine cave burial.[5]
Notable interments
- Irwin Allen (1916–1991), director, producer, writer
- Art Aragon (1927–2008), boxer
- Danny Arnold (1925–1995), film actor/editor/writer
- Eleanor Audley (1905–1991), actress, voice-over artist
- Frances Bay (1919–2011), actress
- Herschel Bernardi (1923–1986), actor
- Sara Berner (1912–1969), actress, voice-over artist
- Georgia Brown (1933–1992), actress and singer
- Charlie Cantor (1898–1966), American radio and television actor
- Sid Caesar (1922–2014), American actor and comedian
- Virginia Christine (1920–1996), actress, voice artist
- Lee J. Cobb (1911–1976), actor
- Ruth Cohen (1930–2008), actress (Seinfeld)
- Stanley Cortez (1908–1997), cinematographer
- Harry Crane (1914-1999), American comedy writer
- Warren Cowan (1921–2008), publicist
- Mack David (1912–1993), composer
- "Mama" Cass Elliot (1941–1974), singer
- Ziggy Elman (1911–1968), big-band musician and composer
- Fritz Feld (1900–1993), actor
- Norman Fell (1924–1998), actor
- Totie Fields (1930–1978), comedian
- Helen Forrest (1917–1999), singer
- Bonnie Franklin (1944–2013), actress
- Karl Freund (1890–1969), cinematographer
- Bruce Geller (1930–1978), producer
- Sol Gorss (born Saul Gorss) (1908–1966), actor
- Billy Halop (1920–1976), actor
- Larry Harmon (1925–2008), actor and comedian (aka Bozo the Clown)
- Nat Hiken (1914–1968), award-winning writer, director, producer
- Gregg Hoffman (1963–2005), producer
- Peter Hurkos (1911–1988), psychic
- Eddie Kane (1889–1969), actor
- Leonard Katzman (1927–1996), film and TV writer, producer, and director
- Jack Klugman (1922–2012), stage, film, and TV actor
- Suzanne Krull (1966–2013), actress
- John Larch (1914–2005), actor
- Sydney Lassick (1922–2003), actor
- Pinky Lee (1907–1993), actor and comedian
- Robert Q. Lewis (1920–1991), television personality, actor, and game show host
- Bruce Malmuth (1934–2005), director
- Ross Martin (1920–1981), actor
- Laurence Merrick (1926–1977), director and author
- Irving Mills (1894–1985), composer
- Marvin Minoff (1931–2009), film and television producer, executive producer of The Nixon Interviews
- Bill Novey (1948–1991), Special Effects Master/Head of Special Effects at Walt Disney Imagineering/co-founder of Art & Technology, Inc.
- Daniel Pearl (1963–2002), journalist
- Ted Post (1918–2013), film director
- Martin Ragaway (1923–1989), motion picture and television writer
- Mark Robson (1913–1978), director
- David Rose (1910–1990), composer
- Milton Rosen (1922–2000), prolific composer
- Steven Rothenberg (1958–2009), film studio executive (Lions Gate, Artisan Entertainment)[6]
- Mo Rothman (1919–2011), studio executive who persuaded Charlie Chaplin to return to the United States in 1972.[6]
- Tibor Rubin (1929–2015), Medal of Honor recipient
- Walter Scharf (1910–2003), composer
- Al Sherman (1897–1973), songwriter
- Phil Silvers (1912–1985), actor and comedian
- Sidney Skolsky (1905–1983), Hollywood reporter
- Hillel Slovak (1962–1988), guitarist for Red Hot Chili Peppers
- Howard Smit (1911–2009), film make-up artist who led efforts to establish the Academy Award for Best Makeup[7]
- Milton Sperling (1912–1988), American film producer and screenwriter
- Harold J. Stone (1913–2005), actor
- Iwao Takamoto (1925–2007), animator
- Brandon Tartikoff (1949–1997), television executive
- Irving Taylor (1914–1983), songwriter
- Mel Taylor (1933–1996), musician
- Dick Tufeld (1926-2012), actor, announcer, narrator
- Bobby Van (1928–1980), actor and dancer
- Jesse White (1917–1997), actor
- Harry Wilson (1897–1978), actor
References
- 1 2 Ruth Stroud, "Westward Expansion", Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles, March 20, 1997.
- 1 2 Tracy Valeri, "Mount Sinai Park Dedication Set", Los Angeles Daily News, March 15, 1997.
- ↑ photo and additional information
- ↑ Aaron Sanderford, "Putting Jewish Burial Concerns to Rest", Los Angeles Times
- ↑ Roberta Freeman, ""Digging Jewish cemetery to Revive Practice", [Simi Valley Star], June 20, 2001.
- 1 2 DiOrio, Carl. "Steve Rothenberg dies at 50".
- ↑ Barnes, Mike (2009-08-04). "Makeup artist Howard J. Smit dies". Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on November 3, 2012. Retrieved 2009-08-12.
External links
- Mount Sinai Memorial Parks and Mortuaries official website
- U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Mount Sinai Memorial Park
Coordinates: 34°09′00″N 118°18′54″W / 34.15000°N 118.31500°W