The Shakespeare Bridge - Los Angeles Times
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The Shakespeare Bridge

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People who might be tempted to think of L.A. as a not-all-that-literary city just don’t know it well enough; literary landmarks are everywhere.

Between Silver Lake and Los Feliz, for example, the useful -- and lovely -- Shakespeare Bridge connects Franklin Avenue to St. George Street. But it’s not just a bridge -- it’s also Los Angeles’ Cultural and Historical Monument No. 126.

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Pseudonymous blogger Floyd B. Bariscale (who took the photo above as part of his project profiling all of L.A.’s landmarks, one by one) writes of the Shakespeare Bridge:

Completed in 1926, it stands thirty-feet wide and 230-feet long. It features Gothic arches and, at either end, two pair of what Gebhard and Winter, in ‘Los Angeles: An Architectural Guide,’ call “aedicules.”

The ‘aedicules’ are the pretty pointy things; the gothic arches are here and here and here. As for its gothicness, the bridge appeared in the underrated 1991 film ‘Dead Again,’ a gothic thriller starring Kenneth Branagh and Emma Thompson. One (unsubstantiated) rumor also places it in ‘The Wizard of Oz’; surely it’s appeared in other films too.

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But this is about its literariness: It’s called the Shakespeare Bridge because ... well, that’s actually a mystery. It just IS the Shakespeare Bridge, without any slips of prolixity or crossing the plain highway of talk. (That’s from ‘The Merchant of Venice’; Shakespeare quotes make the Shakespeare Bridge that much more fun.)

Carolyn Kellogg

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