Countdown to 2000: 1970s Personalities
Andrew Glazer
In the 1970s, Newport Beach changed from a casual vacation enclave for
the rich and famous to a convenient place for the newly rich to live.
The era of Hollywood star-filled yacht parties and nightclubs officially
ended when John Wayne, haggard cowboy star of more than 200 movies,
passed away on June 11, 1979.
Newport Beach flags flew at half-staff that day. Wayne, who was a
familiar fixture at local barbershops, bars and yacht clubs, would be
seen no longer.
Longtime Newport Beach resident George Grupe recalled seeing Wayne at
Richard’s Market one afternoon with his son, Ethan. Ethan was slowly
eating an ice cream cone, which began dripping down his arm. Wayne,
standing in the market, shouted impatiently to his son: “Well, are you
about ready?” The room began laughing and Wayne swaggered out, hiding his
own smile.
While real estate barons, bankers and businessmen began flocking to
Newport Beach to celebrate high culture, Jerry Roach, owner of the
Cuckoo’s Nest in Costa Mesa, did his best to smear it in the dirt.
Roach’s club, which Costa Mesa desperately fought to close, was the
epicenter of Orange County’s thriving punk rock scene. There were nights
when half of the club’s patrons were arrested for charges ranging from
curfew violations to drug charges to assault with a deadly weapon. And
Roach said he was having a blast the whole time.
“It was too fun for them,” said Roach, who now helps his two sons
organize raves, cleans chimneys and does whatever he can to avoid working
for “the man.”
Roach closed the club in the early ‘80s after the Costa Mesa City Council
passed a resolution prohibiting dancing there.
Sources:
Daily Pilot; “Newport Beach, The First Century 1888-1988,” James P.
Felton, 1981; interview with local historian George Grupe.
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