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Fit to a T

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SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

At some point in the last 20 years club conversation degenerated into a shrillscream in a dance-choked room. After-hours liaisons were arranged by miming.

I’m happy to announce that patrons at W actually talk to each other. On a Wednesday night, when everyone else is home watching the last “Survivor” episode, the appealing redo of the Westwood Marquis is filled with interesting people engaged in spirited conversations. I know. I’m listening.

The guy next to me is watching his digital footage of the Democratic convention on a tiny Sony player surrounded by a couple of critical females. Over near the huge glass-and-wood Japanese folding screen two professor-types are peppering their witty repartee with snatches of foreign phrases. The restaurant, Mojo, is filled, and the bar seats are all occupied by lively hipsters.

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Strains of nuevo-Cuban music accompany but never overwhelm the infectious communicating. Outside in a garden lanai area, the end-of-the-sunset crowd enjoys food and drink at the Mojito bar while lounging around the pool in overstuffed chairs. In one of the Internet-equipped poolside cabanas, two earnest and slightly disheveled young men peck away at their laptop screenplay.

Clearly, W has landed in the right spot. The hotel is conveniently located for Westside digitypes, cyberheads, entertainmentindustry-professionals (yes, it’s starting to be one word), UCLA students and faculty--most anyone who formerly made Hollywood a destination for classy night crawling.

While Randy Gerber and Ian Schrager duke it out up on Sunset Boulevard, 39-year-old Barry Sternlicht is stealing some of their local glow. Five years ago Sternlicht, CEO of Starwood Hotels and Resorts, started creating his W hotels. There are now 10 in the United States, with Sydney and Hawaii locations in the works.

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Targeting Entertainment Industry Professionals

According to Teresa Holden, director of sales and marketing, Sternlicht is targeting all those entertainment industry professionals--a sweeping group that seems to encompass everyone from starving screenwriters to wealthy entrepreneurs.

“And this is a good place to come for those up-and-coming people in the entertainment industry who want to look better off than they really are,” Holden says. Presumably, John Travolta’s recent late-night visit was for a different reason.

General Manager Albert Charbonneau, who managed L’Orangerie for seven years, says Starwood Hotels even hired a former set designer--Dayna Lee--to put the L.A. stamp on W. The lobby and restaurant have a grand scale to them. The mirrors and long draped curtains are a bit Cecil B. DeMille yet soften the angular modern design. Ultrasuede stools and couches look appealing under low mood lighting broken up by high-intensity spots. Board games help to break that singles ice. Chess is a classy conversation starter, you betcha!

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At the backlighted stairway at the entrance, water cascades down the Frank Lloyd Wright-style steps, under glass, of course. Whether a tribute to Fallingwater or not, the overall effect is of walking on water, a comfortable place to be for those industry types, n’est ce pas?

Chef Jason Segal offers up nuevo-Latin cuisine and finds a way to include tequila in both an oyster shooter and an ice cream float. Menu items range from $5 to $55, with entrees in the mid-$20s. Draft beer is $5, wine is $8 to $12, but tequila is also the bar’s specialty. So many varieties. So little time. Cocktails are served by tall women-with-stories dressed in long black pleather pants and ‘50s-style black tunic/bustiers. Tattoos abound.

The hotel’s sound system self-adjusts to the crowd noise level. Classic jazz and soul provide the background on weeknights but when the place is crowded on weekends the music is mostly “drinking alternative”--louder, but still not deafening. So far, the weekend traffic and lines of limos haven’t caused a stir on the quiet residential street, and that’s the way the hotel likes it. Take note, greedy Hollywood valet services: parking at the W costs just $4 for three hours.

Another concession to sleepy Hilgard Avenue is that the outside pool bar closes at 10 weeknights and 11 p.m. on weekends. The precautions hardly seem necessary. The W crowd is composed of smartly dressed (no jeans or sneakers on weekends), amiable people who have arrived. Or want to appear so.

The W is a scrumptious, sleek, don’t-call-us-a-club addition to an awakening Westwood. The W stands for words--and you’ll hear more of them here than anywhere in L.A.

BE THERE

W, 930 Hilgard Ave., Westwood. Mojo restaurant open 6 a.m.-11 p.m., except Sundays, 6 a.m.-10 p.m. Bar open 11 a.m.-1:30 a.m. (310) 443-7820.

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