The post office, where the group daily mailed their cartoons to publications, at that time was near the White House restaurant on South Coast Highway. When the post office moved to Forest Avenue, the group moved with it. They also frequented the Marine Room Tavern.
Frank Interlandi was a syndicated cartoonist for the Los Angeles Times. His work appeared in newspapers around the country and in Europe. Phil Interlandi was a cartoonist for Playboy and for the Laguna News Post.
“I am saddened that people only knew [my father] as a cartoonist,” Interlandi-Ferreira said. “He was a painter in his heart.”
Frank Interlandi was an abstract Impressionist whose works were exhibited at the Festival of Arts for four decades, as well as galleries in Laguna and Los Angeles, Interlandi-Ferreira said.
Arts Commission Chairwoman Pat Kollenda owns one of his paintings.
“It was the first piece of art I bought when we moved to Laguna, and I still love it,” Kollenda said.
Frank Interlandi moved to Laguna Beach shortly after his twin moved here in 1962.
“They were seldom separated after that,” Interlandi-Ferreira said.
Phillip Interlandi died in 2002. He was 78. The twins were born in 1924 in Chicago. Their parents were from Sicily.
They joined the U.S. Army in 1941, according to The Times. Frank Interlandi served as a medic at the Battle of the Bulge. Phil Interlandi was in the infantry and taken prisoner by the Germans.
After the war, Frank Interlandi attended the University of Iowa, where he earned a degree in fine arts and met his former wife, Mitzi, well-known in her own right in Laguna as a singer. They were married in 1955 and divorced in 1997.