Your calls always answered within 5 rings.
Although I had a good experience with you my experience of American Airlines was diabolical. Check out flight no AA134 from LAX dep 5.25 (didn't depart until after midnight.
First time using DialAFlight and will definitely be using again for work and leisure! Excellent customer service and easy to use app and support.
Cody always goes above and beyond, fantastic customer service
We have been using DialAFlight since 2008 and would never use anybody else. We have recommended you to loads of friends and family. We have always dealt with Daryll who has always been professional, reliable and never had any issues
Thank you Harvey for all your help we had a great time away
Michelle was brilliant in planning our trip and asking us questions that we hadn't even thought about. She had a good knowledge of what we were looking to do and everything went exactly as planned!
Avis Car Hire changd their base 4 days before our return flight so delay in finding them BUT we got sorted
A really good service with a dedicated point of contact who was very helpful.
Nothing is ever a problem. If one person is not available to resolve a problem there’s always someone else willing to help
Travis in London was absolutely brilliant and great with all information and contacts
Olivia was incredibly helpful and patient as usual. I recommend DialAFlight to all my friends who now also agree that they provide an excellent service.
Excellent trip and very surprised with the car hire! When arriving at the Alamo pickup we actually were given the choice of vehicle 10/10 experience
Jason always gives us the best deal available flights and rental car. Once, our flight was delayed for about 48 hours, and one call to Jason sorted out all our problems from rebooking connecting flights to rebookng our rental car at no extra cost. I would never use any other company than DialAFlight
Great people to work with.
Always a pleasure dealing with the DialAFlight team - great deals and exceptional service every time. Wouldn’t travel with anyone else!
Jerry delivers as always. Have been booking with him for many years. Always excellent service .
Excellent as always!
All went brilliantly as usual with Chris at DialAFlight. Many thanks
Fraser Gillespie was very helpful and informative. I was very happy with the service and would recommend DialAFlight.
Robbie was incredibly helpful. He listened to exactly what I wanted for our trip and gave plenty of information about our destination before we committed to booking. He was always on the end of the phone if needed, and there were no issues whatsoever. I have already recommended him to friends and family because of how easy the booking process is
From the start of my booking till the day before we flew Noah was very helpful. He's the best agent we ever had
The flight from Dublin to Leeds was cancelled due to bad weather - no one's fault - and we were put up in a lovely hotel and were given a hot meal and breakfast. The hotel staff were great, the Aue Lingus staff were very unhelpful and caused a lot of unnecessary distress for a lot of people. We were given a voucher for a hot drink but the staff rebooking our flights and directions to the hotel were sadly lacking and service ethic
Flights were great although with the LAX flight to Atlanta being delayed we had to run to get the connecting flight to Manchester. But all was good.
The Thrifty car hire at LAX was dreadful. It took nearly three hours from arrival to driving out with a car.
Virgin Upper Class is not what it once was. For the price, I think I would now look at alternatives to the US...
Graham is excellent
Great work guys. If you could add my miles on my first flight that would be amazing!
Ash provides great service and is always willing to help with any questions or concerns. I always find DialAFlight makes booking a flight or holiday very easy and try to provide competitive prices.
We have used DialAFlight for many years. The service has always been excellent and the travel advisers really know their stuff.
This is a really wonderful travel agency. In this day and age everyone is used to booking online but do try them. Your life will be easier!
Not many people can boast that they've clambered over the Hollywood Sign. Off-limits to the general public, the nine white corrugated-steel letters stand a lofty 45ft high on Mount Lee, which overlooks the city of Los Angeles.
Like the Eiffel Tower in Paris, or Big Ben in London, the sign tells you where you are - except that, with American directness, it literally spells it out.
This year, the landmark is celebrating its 100th birthday, which is why I have special permission to visit it. I've already admired it from afar, reclining by the rooftop swimming pool of the swish Thompson Hollywood hotel. Now I'm at the security fence above the sign, where I am admitted by the genial chairman of the Hollywood Sign Trust, Jeff Zarrinnam.
Thankfully, I won't be accosted by a Los Angeles police helicopter and slapped with a fine of $10,000. Holding on to a rope for safety, we descend the steep and slippery slope until we reach the mighty H. From here, it's easy to stroll from letter to letter, admiring the sheer size and dazzling whiteness of the steel, which has recently received a birthday paint-job.
'Can I climb on it?' I ask. After a pause, Mr Zarrinnam agrees. As I mount the back of the second L, my head pops out and I gaze down on the LA sprawl.
Los Angeles, of which Hollywood is a district, has always been the city of the new. In the early 20th century, it became home to the new medium of cinema. Bright young things have come here ever since, to try out new personas on the screen, and adopt new faces, thanks to the skill of the make-up artists and surgeons.
Sometimes their dreams became nightmares. Spare a thought for the British stage actress, Peg Entwistle, who was so depressed by her failure to break into movies that, in 1932, she scaled the H of the Hollywood Sign and jumped.
Walt Disney Company and Warner Bros are also marking their centenaries. Now, for the first time, LA is starting to be old. The TURN TO NEXT PAGE blockbuster Barbie, starring Margot Robbie, is the most successful film in the history of Warner Bros.
Yet in its time, the movie studio has given us such classics as Public Enemy, Casablanca and Dirty Harry. These are all celebrated in a special 100th birthday exhibit, as part of the public studio tour.
When Casablanca was made in 1942, its leading man Humphrey Bogart lived in West Hollywood with his wife, Mayo Methot. They had tempestuous relationship ? so much so that the pair, both of whom were heavy drinkers, were known as 'the battling Bogarts'. Dorothy Parker quipped that their neighbours were 'lulled to sleep by the sounds of breaking china'.
There's no evidence of such strife rife when I explore the leafy backstreets where they lived, driven by fashion designer Mia Latter in her 1980s Mercedes, along with her chihuahua, Ginger.
A Brit by birth, Mia was always destined to be a Hollywood icon. Now she makes clothes for other icons, such as It girl Angelyne and rock star Troy Van Leeuwen. In our quest for old Hollywood, we are following the advice of the acclaimed film-maker Whit Stillman, who knows a thing or two about Tinseltown.
'One of the good things about LA is it's so spread out,' he says. 'It doesn't have the same premium on land as other cities. There's land to build on, so things are left as they were. Certain neighbourhoods really are the Hollywood from the pre-war era.'
The Bogarts' home has been replaced by a high-rise, though. So, instead, Mia and I seek out the address on North Hayworth Avenue where the Great Gatsby author, F. Scott Fitzgerald, after years of drinking, had a heart attack in 1940.
Whatever scenes it once witnessed, the soft-grey villa seems peaceful when we draw up in Mia's convertible - more West Hampstead than West Hollywood.
From here, we head to the Hollywood Forever Cemetery.
This turns out to be one of the world's most beautiful graveyards. Its lush lawns are dotted with tombs. Its paths are lined with swaying, giraffe-necked palms.
Deep within the mausoleum at its heart, we track down the vault of Rudolph Valentino, one of the first Hollywood heartthrobs. The fresh tributes include a passionate letter in French, declaring love for the actor. 'Impressive pulling power from beyond the grave,' observes Mia admiringly. 'That's one dishy corpse.'
Take in the graves of Burt Reynolds and Douglas Fairbanks Sr, too. There's also a touching monument to Toto, the cairn terrier who accompanies Dorothy in The Wizard Of Oz.
Such are the oases in a city that, though dedicated to beauty, is often strikingly un-beautiful. In some streets, you could be in the suburbs of Naples or Beirut.
'You can think it's sketchy, if you don't go to the right places,' admits Eric, my guide on a bike tour one morning. He takes me to the prettier places, like the picturesque Farmers Market (established 1934) in the La Brea district. Here I scoff a chocolate-covered honeycomb at Littlejohn's English Toffee House. Not so different from a Crunchie.
A trip to the Dodgers Stadium is worthwhile, but the rules of baseball are baffling. I'm surprised to see an advert promoting the pseudo-religion of Scientology. Doesn't everyone know it's for crazies?
It's easy to feel all at sea among the castellated mansions of Hollywood, with their roses and razorwire. One evening, I set out from my second LA hotel, the stylish Delphi, and escort Mia to a glamorous reception for the film-maker John Waters at the Academy Museum.
This is entitled Pope of Trash in tribute to Waters's penchant for making movies that have ranged from the eccentric (1988's Hairspray) to the downright disgusting, such as Pink Flamingos (1972).
Mia is resplendent in a burgundy trouser suit of her own making, embroidered with a cactus-and-horseshoe motif. I am wearing dusty trainers.
Among the crowd are two famous drag queens, Mia tells me, from TV.
There's also a country singer named Orville Peck, his face concealed behind a fringed mask.
At last, I see someone I recognise. It's the actress Jodie Foster. She looks terrific, if surprisingly small.
'What an amazing night!' declares Waters, 77, into the microphone. 'This is the victory of joyous bad taste.'
After a pause, he adds gleefully, 'And I didn't even have to die!'
Another highlight of my visit is the messy hotdog I grab later that night from Pink's, a fast-food joint founded in 1939.
The most venerable eatery in Hollywood, though, is the plush Musso & Frank Grill, which dates back to 1919. Raymond Chandler wrote The Big Sleep in one of its red booths. At the bar, the actor Steve McQueen tried to start a fight with the writer Charles Bukowski.
The proprietor, Mark Echeverria, tells me cheerfully he would never replace the fading wallpaper that lines the higher part of the walls in the older of the two dining rooms.
'It's got Humphrey Bogart's cigar smoke up there,' he laughs.
Outside, on Hollywood Boulevard, the street is paved with stars.
The Hollywood Walk of Fame, begun in 1960, now pays tribute to some 2,700 celebrities with its star shaped plaques. I spot the 1980s star Rob Lowe beside actor John Barrymore, who was a big name in the 1920s, starring in Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde.
In theory, anyone can have a star, as long as you're willing to fork out $75,000.
On the whole, of course, it's thought to be the job of your fans to foot the bill, rather than yours. Yet there is one man, as it happens, who is known to have bought his own star: a certain Donald Trump.
First published in the Daily Mail - November 2023
More articles below...
Not quite what you're looking for?
We can easily customise an offer to suit your exact requirements