Countdown to 2000: 1980s Lifestyles
Andrew Glazer
In the 1980s, million-dollar homes sprouted around Newport Beach as
quickly as dune grass.
It was the era of “women in gold lame’ bathing suits, big diamond
jewelry, high heels and cocktails. Lots and lots of cocktails,” said B.W.
Cook, editor of the Balboa Bay Club’s Bay Window Magazine.
Land developers, construction companies, car dealers, bankers and other
businesses swarmed the area, saturating Newport Beach with new wealth.
In the 1980s, Newport Beach attracted more tourists than ever. The number
of major hotels in the city doubled from three to six from 1980 to 1988.
The Fun Zone -- which was fading in popularity in the 1970s as a result
of the rising popularity of Disneyland and Knott’s Berry Farm -- was
remodeled, adding new shops and eateries to the carousel and Ferris
wheel.
Mom and pop dry-cleaning and dime stores were replaced by souvenir
vendors prospecting for tourist gold.
With the wealth and tourist dollars came a new breed of downscale but
chic and expensive restaurant. Golf shirts and shorts replaced blazers
and slacks at choice tables. Funky nouvelle California cuisine and sushi
shoved traditional French food off the menus.
Teenagers, also with leisure time and cars, cruised along Balboa
Boulevard creating enormous traffic jams, very much like Bal Week several
decades earlier. And police kept the cars moving, issuing citations much
like they did during the Spring Break celebrations of the 1960s.
Sources:
B.W. Cook; Gay Wassall-Kelly; “Newport Beach, The First Century
1888-1988,” James P. Felton, 1981.
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