Skip to content
Main Street Plaza

A Community for Anyone Interested in Mormonism.

Main Street Plaza

A Community for Anyone Interested in Mormonism.

Why I’d Pick the Madonna Inn over Temple Marriage

@Monya_PostMo, July 18, 2022July 18, 2022

Halfway between San Francisco and Los Angeles, a set of buildings celebrate over-the-top kitsch. Alex and Phyllis Madonna opened their eponymous hotel in 1958. The architecture avoids straight lines. Pepto Bismol pink bathes the common rooms; gilded, oversized cherubs perch over bannisters. The hotel’s signature pink cloud cocktail features strawberry-flavored vodka and mounds of whip cream.

The Madonnas chose to make every room different. The Austrian Suite (#160) has shiny damask wallpaper and round rococo tables. California Poppy (#172) has flowery walls with scalloped door frames painted bright orange. The floor, ceiling and walls of the Caveman Room (#137) are made of stone. Its rock shower offers a luxurious waterfall.  

My husband and I spent the Fourth of July weekend there. Yes, it was silly, but the getaway left me awash in gratitude. I am grateful the life I am leading is not the life I was raised for.

While on a business trip earlier this year, I toured the Washington DC temple, which happened to be open to nonmembers temporarily after a renovation. Decades before, this was the first temple I entered as a faithful, active member. It was the summer after I’d turned twelve, old enough to perform baptisms for the dead. Under the diligent direction of adult leaders, my youth group washed cars and held bake sales to earn funds for the 11-hour road trip from my hometown in northern Alabama. I’d never even held hands with a boy, but I fretted over my interview with the bishop to confirm my worthiness.

It was strange to come to this temple again with no one’s direction or permission but my own. I must have been greeted every 200 hundred feet. At each turn in the path, someone stood positioned to smile and point directions.

I had forgotten that energetic Mormon cheer, the random dad jokes intended not to make you laugh but to show you’ve been noticed. The Mormon gaze can make you feel like you’re the most important person in the world. It also lets you know you’re a disappointment when you step off the path. When I reached the temple’s open oversized doors, a smiling young woman actually placed the disposable clean-shoe booties on my feet.  

What I was most eager to see were the rooms I’d never been able to enter as a youth, the sealing rooms where marriages are performed. Tidy rows of upright upholstered chairs stood a few feet back from an altar, where the couple kneels. It looks a bit like a foreshortened coffin ringed by a plush skirt.  It’s all off-whites and pastels, a picture of austere elegance.

The DC temple contains ten of these rooms. I asked the guide guarding the door how different the other rooms were and if couples visited ahead of time to pick their favorite.  They’re all the same, he told me. You don’t get to choose. It was the answer I’d expected.

I learned as a Mormon that the purpose of our earthly existence is to gain a body and to show we’ve learned to make good choices. But those choices are pre-set and pre-defined: baptism, marriage, obedience to the Church. In so many ways, the ideal Mormon marriage is less about love than conformity. 

Alex Madonna thought giving guests a choice would lift their spirits. The ‘celestial room’ of Just Heaven (#184) features a stairway to a private viewing tower. The ceiling of Gypsy Rock (#142) is bright yellow, pink, green and blue. The walls are granite boulders excavated nearby. They made the thick gray carpet feel softer.  “I try to give people a decent place to stay where they receive more than they are entitled to,” Madonna told the New York Times in 1982.  We arrived expecting the campy glitz, ready to play along in the game.

In the DC temple, I looked into that generic, interchangeable sealing room and felt I’d escaped a cage. The prophets say that any man and woman can make a marriage work, so long as both are sufficiently righteous, but even Mormons believe that a wedding is when you bind yourself to a special person, someone who fits you especially well. Only it’s most important to fit the Mormon mold. When I imagined the life where I would have knelt at that altar, I felt lonely. I think I was missing myself.

In that light, the gilded cherubs and stone sinks and stained glass of the Madonna Inn embody something much more profound than a profitable celebration of silliness. These rooms of exuberance and individuality make room for joy. To me, that says much more about the purpose of life than the Mormon temple’s elegant pastels.

Photo: Dan Erlanson

Top Image: Omar Bárcena, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Testimony temple marriage

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Mormon Alumni Association

A Seer Stone for Halloween

October 31, 2022October 31, 2022

A magic rock, a spooky house, and ghosts conjured up from the Latter-day Saints’ colorful past. My new mystery novel, Seer Stone, might be just be the perfect read this Halloween. Not to mention a fun Christmas gift, or even just a vehicle for confronting one’s own demons. Mormon or…

Read More

Perfection

March 28, 2007February 27, 2018

I am a former Mormon. Many of you know this. I wondered today how much of the Mo I still have in me. I like to think that I am completely over being Mo. No more anger, no more hallucinations…that sort of thing. But I don’t think I am.

Read More

Help? Do I belong here?

July 27, 2012

How do we help “new bloggers” find their voice? Are we really a community that does? I believe we are, or at least can be. Main Street Plaza is an Internet home for people who care about their thoughts and ideas, eventhough weoften disagree. Wedon’t have the same world view,but…

Read More

Comments (4)

  1. Donna Banta says:
    July 18, 2022 at 7:11 am

    Some years ago I walked through the Sacramento Temple before it opened. Our tour guide was a woman but we were flanked by a posse of 5 men–almost outnumbering the people in our group. We were told to “save our questions for the end” but when the end arrived, one of the men bore his testimony and then we were dismissed. 😉

  2. Marion Deeds says:
    July 18, 2022 at 8:22 am

    The Mormon cheer and friendliness is a form of love-bombing, isn’t it?

    (The Madonna Inn sounds wonderful!)

  3. chanson says:
    July 20, 2022 at 4:16 am

    It’s kind of sad, actually, that the temple — which is supposed to be Mormonism’s little piece of heaven — is designed like a generic hotel lobby at best. (Then they tease people with the promise that you’re actually allowed to discuss and ask questions about the temple while you’re in it, but usher you out before you get the chance, as in Donna’s example.)

    A place with a little originality like the Madonna Inn sounds so much more wonderful!

  4. Holly says:
    July 22, 2022 at 12:20 pm

    Funkiness, creativity, and variety are definitely preferable to (supposedly) elegant uniformity and sterility.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Mormon Alumni Association Books

Latest Comments:

  1. Donna Banta on A pox on the PoX policy, ten years onNovember 5, 2025

    If Oaks meant to imply anything by picking a counselor with a gay brother it was, "See, we can hate…

  2. @Monya_PostMo on A pox on the PoX policy, ten years onNovember 5, 2025

    See post and comments at Latter Gay Stories - heartbreaking! No loving God was involved in that policy https://www.facebook.com/search/top?q=latter%20gay%20stories

  3. chanson on A pox on the PoX policy, ten years onNovember 5, 2025

    I remember when the PoX was rolled out, and the tales of its horrible effects. So, now I guess same…

  4. @Monya_PostMo on A pox on the PoX policy, ten years onNovember 5, 2025

    Oaks reasoned that if preference wasn't built into the law, all of society could move toward homosexual marriage and could…

  5. MikeyB on on “American Trinity”November 4, 2025

    Awesome post! Really enjoyed reading it.

8: The Mormon Proposition Acceptance of Gays Add new tag Affirmation angry exmormon awards Book Reviews BYU comments Conformity Dallin H. Oaks DAMU disaffected mormon underground Dustin Lance Black Ex-Mormon Exclusion policy Excommunicated exmormon faith Family feminism Gay Gay Love Gay Marriage Gay Relationships General Conference Happiness Homosexual Homosexuality LDS LGBT LGBTQ Link Bomb missionaries Modesty Mormon Mormon Alumni Association Mormonism motherhood peace politics Polygamy priesthood ban Sunstone temple

Awards

William Law X-Mormon of the Year:

  • 2023: Adam Steed
  • 2022: David Archuleta
  • 2021: Jeff T. Green
  • 2020: Jacinda Ardern
  • 2019: David Nielsen
  • 2018: Sam Young
  • 2017: Savannah
  • 2016: Jeremy Runnells
  • 2015: John Dehlin
  • 2014: Kate Kelly
  • 2013: J. Seth Anderson and Michael Ferguson
  • 2012: David Tweede
  • 2011: Joanna Brooks
  • 2010: Monica Bielanko
  • 2009: Walter Kirn

Other Cool Sites!

WasMormon.org
©2025 Main Street Plaza | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes