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Madrid (Spain) 2004

Hotel of the stars has new role

The Castellana InterContinental Hotel in Madrid caters to the visiting business executive -- a business center open 24 hours, a well equipped gym to work off the day's stress also accessible round the clock, voicemail and dataport in every room, room service when you want it, and 13 meeting, conference and "celebration rooms."

The hotel's clients include such captains of industry as Jeffrey Immelt, President of General Electric. But the ghosts that inhabit its thickly carpeted halls are Hollywood movie stars of the caliber of Cary Grant, Ava Gardner, Charlton Heston, and Frank Sinatra, and Sophia Loren.

That's because in its previous incarnation, the present Castellana InterContinental was the Castellana Hilton, and a favorite home away from Hollywood for movie actors in Spain's movie-making heyday. By coincidence, the opening of the Hilton in 1953 -- the first of the chain to be established in Europe -- coincided with the Hollywood vogue for shooting films in Spain.

At any given time, scores of stars, writers and technicians would live at the Hilton for weeks at a time while filming. Sophia Loren, Cary Grant and Frank Sinatra stayed there during the making of the costume drama The Pride and the Passion. Sinatra's then wife, the glamorous Ava Gardner, came along to be with her husband.

Charlton Heston was there while appearing in El Cid. Yul Brinner was a Castellana resident while The Return of the Magnificent Seven was shooting. Clint Eastwood made some of the so-called "spaghetti Wasterns" that made him famous in the Spanish hinterland, and meanwhile stayed at the Castellana Hilton.

Mia Farow lived there in her early teens with her parents, film director John Farrow and actress Maureen O'Sullivan.

Old Madrid habitues of the Hilton recalled that the hotel no bar in those days, but it did have plenty to drink. Waiters served booze in the large entrance hall, which would sometimes be crowded with a dozen Hollywood top leading ladies and leading men, plus various hangers-on.
The hall activity must have been a gossip writer's dream. As various stars' biographers tell it, the consumption of alcohol after a day's filming could be prodigious, and the antics correspondingly colorful. According to a reliable report, on more than one occasion screen actor Robert Mitchum insisted on singing "Sonny" to the assembled group after consuming an entire bottle of Lepanto brandy.

Another Castellana regular remembers loud arguments between Sinatra and his hot tempered wife, Ava Gardner.

A decade ago, the hotel (by then no longer a Hilto) was sold to the InterContinental chain. The stars had long since moved on. The city, too, had changed. The InterContinental is part of the new Madrid's campaign to assert itself as a major economic force in the Europe of the 21st century.

In 2002, a top-to-bottom renovation restored the 307-room hotel to its former level of luxury and opulent comfort -- but with the addition of the modern amenities expected by today's business traveler. The result is a combination of class and style combined with technology and exclusive services in one of Madrid's most desirable areas.

 



  Patronato Municipal de Turismo
  Madrid,Municipality Department of Economy
  IBERIA Airline
  Feria de Madrid (IFEMA)
  Campo de Las Naciones, Madrid
  Mercamadrid
  Project Director
  Ted Macauley
  Senior Writer
Roland Flamini

 

 

 

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