Retro Palm Springs swings to a Frank Sinatra soundtrack and lounges poolside beneath moonlit palms, a place where movie stars retreat to soak up sunshine while dodging paparazzi.
Then there's the hip new Palm Springs of more recent years, where millennial meets midcentury modern, inspired by — but not slavishly indebted to — the swanky days of yore.
Two Palm Springs hotels, one new from the ground up, the other a fabled 1950s property redecorated — twice — by celebrity designer Jonathan Adler, demonstrate these two sides of the desert getaway's mystique.
Parker Palm Springs
At the southern edge of town, the Parker Palm Springs, long one of the town's most exclusive addresses, began life as a Holiday Inn in the late 1950s. It was owned for years by Gene Autry, then had a run as a Givenchy property before Merv Griffin bought it. In 2004, it was taken over by New York hotelier Jack Parker and underwent a $27 million renovation.
Adler did the original Parker do-over, and he was retained again for an extensive update in late 2015. His makeover of 13 acres of grounds, lobby, spa, restaurants and guest rooms is mostly done now, with some finishing touches coming early in 2017.
Drive up to the tucked-away hotel and you are greeted by two guys in polos and Ray-Bans, like some Secret Service detail on a presidential golf outing. No sign, just a giant whitewashed cinder-block screen with a small opening cut on one side.
Behind that, a sure clue that you are entering Adlerland are matching supertall blaze-orange doors with gold handles, hung with pink wreaths.
Happy Chic meets Gay Exuberance in the Parker lobby: Life-size suits of armor flank the bathrooms, pink Warholesque lip prints parade up a staircase and a chartreuse sectional sits near a zebra rug on dark-stained floors. A circular fireplace with white enamel chimney looks like a spot where Illya Kuryakin, the spy character from the 1960s TV show "The Man From U.N.C.L.E.," would hang out in wraparound shades and a black turtleneck.