We should always not permit the story and marvel of Tommy Hawkins to go up in flames with out a correct recounting. Nor in order that of his spouse of 39 years, Layla.
The inferno that raged throughout the Palisades on Jan. 7 took hundreds of houses and a number of other lives. It worn out wealth, hope, recollections and futures. It ravaged Las Flores Canyon in Malibu, the place Tommy and Layla had lived for 32 years, in a home with mountain and ocean views.
There had been a number of fires headed their method through the years, some coming shut, some even inflicting some harm. However this time, with Tommy now not there and Layla left alone with so a few years of memorabilia and artwork and music and awards and plaques and trophies and household scrapbooks, the inferno allowed no exceptions, paid no consideration to legends of the legend it was consuming.
‘The Hawk’
Tommy Hawkins throughout his time with the Cincinnati Royals in 1963.
(NBA Pictures / NBAE by way of Getty Photos)
When he died in August of 2017, at age 80, it was duly famous round Los Angeles, however no person lowered the flags to half-staff at Metropolis Corridor in Malibu. He had been a star, a longtime athletic and media presence, however his technology had drifted out of the limelight or preceded him in loss of life.
He grew to become “The Hawk” out of Parker Excessive in Chicago. He had been one in every of 25 black youngsters despatched out of the Chicago tasks to Parker, now Robeson Excessive, to begin to combine the college. He would develop to six ft 5, like to play basketball and take inspiration from Jackie Robinson breaking the colour barrier with the Dodgers. His mom had proven him the tales about that and informed him that, if Robinson can do it, so might he.
He grew to become a high-leaping prep basketball star. His specialty was rebounding. He might decide teacups off the highest of the backboard.
In 1955, he and his mom sat down and narrowed the listing of schools he would go to to 10, each desirous to have him put on their basketball jersey. His first journey was to South Bend, Ind., and Notre Dame. After he walked across the campus lakes and sat within the shade of giant previous timber, he referred to as his mom and informed her to cancel the opposite 9 journeys.
For 3 years (freshmen weren’t eligible), he packed the previous fieldhouse with the creaky bleacher seats and the dust ground. He was an All-American. Notre Dame, a soccer faculty, began to get seen for basketball. He scored lots, however he rebounded extra. He handled every shot like a long-lost brother. When he completed, he had taken down 1,318 rebounds. That’s nonetheless the college file, standing now for 66 years.
He claimed he by no means had a racial incident at Notre Dame, maybe forgetting the time he went with a number of different college students to a pizza place in South Bend and was refused service. His pals walked out with him. Soccer star Paul Hornung, already a golden boy on the faculty, heard about it, got here to Hawkins’ room, knocked on the door and informed Hawkins they had been going out for a pizza. Hornung took him to the identical place that had refused Hawkins service, stared down the proprietor, and so they sat down as their pizza was served.
Lakers ahead Tommy Hawkins shoots over Boston Celtics nice Invoice Russell through the NBA Finals in April 1968.
(Related Press)
The professionals drafted him third total and he went off to play for the Minneapolis Lakers, who rapidly grew to become the Los Angeles Lakers. Again then, the NBA in Los Angeles was much less of an enormous deal than, say UCLA basketball and USC soccer. However the Lakers tried onerous. Quickly, there have been the likes of Tommy Hawkins and Elgin Baylor, driving in a convertible within the downtown streets of L.A., encouraging folks by way of megaphone to return and see them play on the Sports activities Area. Strive picturing Kobe and Shaq doing that.
Hawkins was traded to the Cincinnati Royals and performed there from 1962 to 1966, then traded again to the Lakers for his ultimate three seasons within the NBA, ending in 1969.
As rapidly as he had turn out to be a Laker, he grew to become a media determine of word within the L.A. space. He was the primary black basketball announcer for NBC, did a number of native TV, had his personal radio present the place he performed jazz and talked about it, grew to become the grasp of ceremonies for main occasions such because the Picket Award dinner and the annual USC-Notre Dame soccer recreation luncheon. Ultimately, he spent 18 years because the director of communications for the Dodgers and counted as shut pals Peter O’Malley and Tommy Lasorda.
A day that can by no means be forgotten
Layla and Tommy Hawkins in an undated household picture.
(Courtesy of the Hawkins household)
Layla Hawkins woke that Jan. 7 with the identical dread she had had earlier than. Windy days, scary fires close by, radio and TV sending warnings. However she had been spared earlier than.
That morning, 5 members of an actual property firm had come to take footage for her itemizing. She had needed to maintain the home for her daughter, however her daughter, with recollections of previous fireplace shut calls, needed nothing to do with it. Layla talked to pals, advisors she trusted, and Peter O’Malley and his affiliate, Brent Shyer, helped with the steps to get able to promote.
Because the winds howled and pals referred to as her with updates on the hearth, the actual property folks completed, packed up and headed out. Layla discovered later that the wind had kicked up so quick that, with fireplace closing in, they barely made it all the way down to Sundown and into Santa Monica, the place their workplace was situated.
By late afternoon, she was getting frenzied calls from her good friend, Susie, who was two canyons away in Topanga. The message was now not a suggestion. It was a requirement. Get out.
She rapidly sprayed down shrubbery she might attain, noticed a neighbor on his roof doing the identical, then grabbed her purse, and opened the door and gates so the hearth division would have entry. She was a fireplace veteran, in spite of everything.
She was transferring all too slowly, she remembers. She had a latest knee alternative and it slowed her down, virtually tragically.
“The fire came out of nowhere,” she says. “It came at me. It was like one of those 3-D movies. I can’t explain it.
“I was talking to Tommy all the way. Nearly 40 years of marriage, he was always there. I told him, don’t let me die like this. The fire was suddenly right there. It was like somebody dropped an atomic bomb.”
She made it all the way down to Mulholland Drive, nonetheless attempting to look again in direction of her home.
“I knew nothing could survive this,” she says.
Returning residence
A ceramic starfish that Layla and Tommy Hawkins used to put love notes to one another was one of many few issues that was recoverable after the Palisades fireplace destroyed their Malibu residence in January 2025.
(Courtesy of the Hawkins household.)
Layla didn’t need pals or neighbors to ship her footage of the rubble. She would return, however not instantly. It was weeks.
“I drove up there by myself,” she says. “My house was fourth one on the left. I had to count to make sure. Everything looked like the pictures you see of Gaza. I talked to Tommy again. I told him I was glad he was not there to see this.”
She knew she was in the correct place. Standing tall, rim straight and web nonetheless in place, was Tommy Hawkins’ basketball hoop. You can have kicked apart among the particles, taken a shot and listened for the swish. It could nonetheless be there.
What wasn’t there was past painful.
There had been so many trophies and plaques, an enormous and invaluable artwork assortment, marriage ceremony footage, one of many higher collections of jazz music within the metropolis and invaluable pc information. He had began writing his second guide, and after he died, O’Malley and Shryer had been working with Layla on how one can end it and get it revealed.
Nevertheless it was gone, together with virtually every part else.
She discovered a starfish-shaped figurine. It was ceramic and had survived. It was initially for placing in cash and unfastened cash.
“We used it to leave love notes to each other,” she says.
She says they had been each avid readers. The home had been full of books.
“Tommy used to joke,” she says, “that if anything ever happened to the Library of Congress, we could just fill it up again with our collection.”
Her return ended when she realized she had bloody arms from sifting via all of the particles. She returned to her automobile, having felt the symbolism of Tommy’s surviving basketball hoop, and having salvaged a ceramic figurine and a barely scorched steel figurine of a trumpet participant.
The gadgets and possessions of her life, virtually all of them, had been gone.
Life now
Tommy Hawkins’ basketball hoop was among the many few issues left standing at his residence after the Palisades fireplace.
(Courtesy of the Hawkins household)
“I go to the FEMA offices every day,” Layla says.
She was so near not needing to.
Her home was to go available on the market for $3.5 million. Within the Los Angeles actual property market, together with her ocean view and Malibu deal with, the worth appeared cheap and a fast sale probably. The insurance coverage she had will now cowl solely $600,000, and her remaining mortgage is $250,000. No person can actually say now what the land is price, nor whether or not folks will lastly draw back from constructing in an space the place winds and fireplace are at all times a risk. Pals have tried to rally round her, together with organising a GoFundMe account.
She is 22 years youthful than Hawkins when he died in 2017. She is Persian. She left Iran when her household, a part of the Shah of Iran’s administration, was on the dropping aspect of the Iranian Revolution of 1979. When Ayatollah Khomeini took energy, her household went from rich to endangered.
She got here to america, graduated from Louisiana State with a level in mechanical engineering and ultimately moved to Los Angeles, discovering work in numerous picture businesses and movie firms in Santa Monica.
That’s the place she met Hawkins.
“It truly was love at first sight,” she says.
She says that at one level, Hawkins outlined his emotions towards her by sitting down at his desk and typing one sentence on a sheet of paper. He handed it to her and it learn: “It’s more than a feeling. It’s a force.”
That sheet of paper was maybe her most treasured possession.
It burned on Jan. 7.