Che Peña, with his wife, Nancilee. Stan Lee Share on Facebook Share on X Google Preferred Share to Flipboard Show additional share options Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share on Tumblr Share on Whats App Send an Email Print the Article Post a Comment Che Peña has been feeding the entertainment community for more than three decades. He started out at The Ivy during its paparazzi-heavy 1990s era, spending a decade at work as a busboy, runner and bartender. Then he went east to Pace, the in-the-know Laurel Canyon industry hang that's long been a second home to stars and suits. He started there as a server, rose to maître d' and finally became something of its mascot as the convivial general manager. Now, for the first time, he's got his own place. After leaving Pace, Peña has opened Studio City's 2-month-old Unidos, just steps from the Radford lot and the Art Directors Guild. Its neighbors include smash burger phenom Heavy Handed and third-wave coffee spot Yala. Related Stories Lifestyle Hollywood's Golden-Era Hotspots Get a Modern Close-Up Lifestyle What Your L.A. Coffee Shop Says About You One of several paella dishes on the menu. Stan Lee Unidos (11830 Ventura Blvd.) is a tapas restaurant pulling in culinary strands found from Madrid to Marbella, Barcelona to the Basque region - all through a Californian lens. In practice, this means a pan con tomate on L.A.-style artisanal sourdough bread, a Cobb salad featuring crispy jamon serrano, and a squid-ink paella with lobster. The low-lit, snug space is tiny, intentionally so, in keeping with the small-scale bars across Spain, where pintxos are meant to be eaten in boisterous, crowded rooms among neighbors. "My wife and I live here in Studio City," Peña explains. "I wanted something for locals." He adds that the point of connection to The Ivy and Pace is an emphasis on coziness. "People want to experience warmth: in the service, the space, the food," he says. "That's what Unidos is." The dining room at Unidos. Stan Lee This story appeared in the Nov. 19 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe. THR Newsletters Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day Subscribe Sign Up Cars Hollywood's Favorite Used Car Salesman Roman Polanski Hollywood Flashback: When Vidal Sassoon and Mia Farrow Created a Buzz Theater 'All My Sons' Theater Review: Bryan Cranston and Marianne Jean-Baptiste Lead an Emotionally Pulverizing Arthur Miller Revival streaming Sling TV Drops Its One-Day Streaming Pass to Just $1 for Black Friday Wicked: For Good 'Wicked: For Good' Takes New York, 'Wake Up Dead Man' Debuts and This Week's Best Events shopping Your Winter Wardrobe, Elevated: Nordstrom's Must-Have Women's Sweaters, Coats and Boots Cars Hollywood's Favorite Used Car Salesman Roman Polanski Hollywood Flashback: When Vidal Sassoon and Mia Farrow Created a Buzz Theater 'All My Sons' Theater Review: Bryan Cranston and Marianne Jean-Baptiste Lead an Emotionally Pulverizing Arthur Miller Revival streaming Sling TV Drops Its One-Day Streaming Pass to Just $1 for Black Friday Wicked: For Good 'Wicked: For Good' Takes New York, 'Wake Up Dead Man' Debuts and This Week's Best Events shopping Your Winter Wardrobe, Elevated: Nordstrom's Must-Have Women's Sweaters, Coats and Boots