We almost didn’t get to Acapulco at all.
As we drove north from Mazunte and Puerto Escondido toward Acapulco our journey was halted at a small town called Copala just short of our destination when we encountered a missing chunk of highway which had been undercut and washed away by heavy rain.
Uncertain whether or not the lone front-end loader would be able to clear the debris and create a passable way through the break, we consulted our trusty Gia Roji road atlas and decided to try to drive around the break on a network of dirt back roads.
Three hours later we were right back where we started from having discovered (the long, hard, dusty, bumpy way) that there was no way through using the back roads. Miraculously, the front-end loader had done the trick and traffic was moving slowly and carefully through the missing section of road. A couple of hours later we reached Acapulco.

Too much rain + not enough infrastructure = this as we TRY to get to Acapulco.
It was immediately obvious that there’s a reason phrases like “past-its-prime” and “back in the heyday” are trotted out when describing Acapulco. In the 1950s Acapulco was the first real Mexican resort destination and it became the much-publicized playground of Elizabeth Taylor and John Wayne and almost every other star of the era worth his or her salt.
Today, Acapulco has a weird rudderless feel with old and new, good and bad, slum and slick, tourism and terrorism (15 decapitated bodies were discovered in Acapulco as we post this) all mixed up in a haphazard way that gives the impression that no one’s at the helm. The main drag is teetering dangerously close to becoming a kind of Mexican Vegas strip (or, worse, an even lower-rent Cancun) with an increasing number of big resort hotels and chain restaurants and nearly constantly clogged traffic. There’s no apparent downtown or center. The beaches are nowhere near Mexico’s best.
Yet there’s still a whiff of what used to be. It’s fascinating and disconcerting at the same time.
A few investors and entrepreneurs are slowly working to breathe new life into Acapulco without discarding its still-marketable history and, increasingly, Acapulco is attracting Mexico’s hyper-hip jet set (it’s within easy long-weekend distance of Mexico City).
When we were in town we got a taste of some old cool, some new cool and some truly delicious (and historically correct) food.

Acapulco overview.
If you want a crash course in the who’s who of Acapulco’s star-studded past just wander around the Hall of Fame Saloon at Hotel Mirador. Ann Miller, John Wayne, Bridget Bardot, Eddie Fisher, Rock Hudson, Maureen O’Hara, Tito Puente, Susan Hayward, Harry Belafonte, Eartha Kitt, Elizabeth Taylor plus various princes, kings and queens…They all signed the walls with chalk and their inscriptions were later carved out and painted white.
Modern celebrities still trickle in to Hotel Mirador and more recent signatories include Pierce Brosnan, Gary Busey and Senator Tom Daschle (whose name appears to have been spelled wrong and corrected later–weird).

Just some of the autographs on the walls of the Hall of Fame Saloon at Hotel Mirador--part of Acapulco's star-studded past.
Why were all these A-listers at this particular hotel? The world’s coolest divers who still do their stuff into dramatic and tumultuous ravine below the hotel. Not to be a tease or anything, but these divers are so classic and death defying and sexy that we decided to dedicate our next post entirely to words, pictures and video about their amazing feats.

Iconic Hotel Mirador in Acapulco which, unfortunately, seems to be running on the fumes of its glittering past.
The Hotel Mirador is still regularly used as a location for movies and commercial shoots but that’s about as close to star-studded as the place gets these days. While we appreciate being put up at Hotel Mirador, it must be said that while the divers have retained their allure, relevance and sex appeal the hotel has become a damp, dirty, poorly-staffed shadow of what it was when Frank Sinatra had his own private suite there (if you’re a Frank Fan, ask for room #131).
It’s a shame that someone with vision (and cash) hasn’t snapped up this cliff side has- been and put some new polish on what could absolutely be a gem once again.
That’s exactly what happened with Hotel Boca Chica.

Hotel Boca Chica in its latest and greatest incarnation.
First opened in the 1950s (yep, we’re back to Acapulco’s heyday), the Boca Chica featured the city’s first sushi restaurant and provided the location for the opening shots of the movie Fun in Acapulco starring Elvis Presley. After struggling for years the hotel finally closed its doors in 1997.
After months of meticulous restoration, with the help of one of Mexico’s most famous ’50s era architects, the Boca Chica (which is part of Grupo Habita) re-opened in 2010 and now offers a thoroughly modern and completely hip version of its 1950s self at surprisingly reasonable rates. Read our full review of Hotel Boca Chica for iTraveliShop.

The open-air 50s-fueled lobby of the newly re-invented Hotel Boca Chica in Acapulco.

The starlet-ready pool at Hotel Boca Chica in Acapulco.

Serene and sheltered Playa Caletilla below Hotel Boca Chica.
While eating on a budget in Acapulco can be a challenge, the only challenge you’ll face if you’re splulrging is choosing which world-class restaurant to try.
Eduardo Wichtendahl, owner/chef of Restaurant Zibu and the son of Susanna Palazuelos (a top caterer and author of Mexico: The Beautiful Cookbook) was gracious enough to invite us to his restaurant. Eduardo is an accomplished chef himself and with Zibu this Acapulco native has blended food and history in tempting and surprising ways that preserve authentic and unsung aspects of Acapulco’s past while feeding the present.

A classic cocktail in a classic town.
“Elizabeth Taylor did not discover Acapulco,” Eduardo said over dinner. Then he took us to school, explaining how Acapulco originally came into prominence and power as a port that received spices and other exotic ingredients from the Pilippines and other Asian countries including Thailand.
These foods eventually made their way into the local cuisine and that historic melding is why Eduardo opened a “MexThai” restaurant. The fusion cuisine (Eduardo has lived and cooked in Thailand) at Zibu earned Eduardo a Mexican presidential award for innovation in 2008.
We can’t actually hand out any awards, but Eduardo’s octopus carpacio with cilantro and thinly sliced green apple, jicama soup (served cold, it reminded us of Indian raita), a desert of fried carrot strips over house made coconut ice cream, jaw-dropping views over Acapulco Bay and his charming commitment to honor the past 100 years of Acapulco’s history earned rave reviews from us.

Acapulco Bay at night.
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