Year: 2014

  • The “Good Luck Charlie” House

    Good Luck Charlie House (8 of 10)

    During the lengthy process of researching the Melissa & Joey house (which many viewers seem to think has been used on another series – you can read my blog on it here), I came across a post on Julia Sweeten’s fabulous website, Hooked on Houses, about the residence where the Duncan family – dad Bob (Eric Allan Kramer), who is an exterminator, mom Amy (Leigh Ann Baker) and their kids, Teddy (Bridgit Mendler), Gabe (Bradley Steven Perry), PJ (Jason Dolley), Charlie (Mia Talerico) and Toby (Logan Moreau/Jake Cinoa) –  lived on the now-defunct Disney series Good Luck Charlie.  In the article, Julia mentioned that she had not been able to track down the property’s real life address, but that if anyone knew of its location to let her know.  Well, Julia, challenge accepted!

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    Upon first glance, I had a feeling that the Duncan house was located in the Pasadena area.  A commenter on Julia’s article confirmed my hunch and another commenter clued me into the fact that while an address number of “358” was visible above the home’s front door in some of the series’ establishing shots, a different address number of “501” was shown painted on the curb in others.  I was fairly certain that the “358” had been faked for the filming and that the residence’s actual address was most likely “501.”  From there, finding the house was a snap!

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    The Duncan residence actually sits at 501 Palmetto Drive in Pasadena’s South Arroyo neighborhood.

    Good Luck Charlie House (6 of 10)

    Good Luck Charlie House (4 of 10)

    The four bedroom, four bath, 5,045-square-foot Craftsman was originally built in 1903 and sits on 0.26 acres of land.  The picturesque two-story abode (LOVE the double bay windows!) was last sold in April 1981 for $209,500.  According to Zillow, it’s worth about $2.3 million today.  Not a bad return on an investment!

    Good Luck Charlie House (3 of 10)

    Good Luck Charlie House (7 of 10)

    The Duncan house, which was said to be located at 358 Edgewood Drive in Denver, Colorado on the series, looks much the same in person as it did onscreen, minus the mailbox and tire swing – and Bob’s exterminator truck.

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    The brightly-colored interior of the Duncan home was just a set that existed on a soundstage at Los Angeles Center Studios, where the series was lensed.

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    It is quite a point of contention among Good Luck Charlie fans that the layout of the interior did not at all match the home’s exterior, especially the front door which was drastically different in design and shape from the door shown in establishing shots.

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    Good Luck Charlie House (5 of 10)

    The house was also briefly featured, covered in snow (digitally, I believe), in the series’ 2011 made-for-TV movie, Good Luck Charlie, It’s Christmas.

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    While another Hooked on Houses commenter stated that they thought the Duncan house was used in the 1996 movie Space Jam, that information is incorrect.  The Space Jam residence is located at 1002 Highland Avenue in South Pasadena, right next door to the home from Liar Liar (which I blogged about here).

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    For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

    Good Luck Charlie House (9 of 10)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Good Luck Charlie house is located at 501 Palmetto Drive in Pasadena.

  • Azul Tapas Lounge from “Hidden Away”

    Azul Tapas Lounge Hidden Away filming (11 of 14)

    Last February, a film crew descended upon Palm Springs for 12 days to shoot the Lifetime Original Movie Hidden Away.  Sadly, I never got to witness any of the filming, but I read numerous newspaper articles about the production and stalked a few of the locations mentioned, including Azul Tapas Lounge.  Because we do not get the Lifetime channel, I was not able to watch the thriller (and I use that word loosely) until recently after it became available for download on iTunes.  Regrettably, I can’t say that Hidden Away was any good.  It was a bit painful to watch, truth be told.  Film critic Jackie K. Cooper had this to say in his review of the flick for the Huffington Post, “What do you do when it is Saturday night and there is no Sharknado on to scoff at?  Well you find something almost as idiotic and that is the Lifetime Original Movie Hidden Away.  Yes, this is a movie so ridiculous that it will make you laugh in spite of yourself.”  That’s a pretty spot-on analysis.  I did absolutely LOVE seeing my new hometown onscreen, though, and figured its locations were still blog-worthy, regardless.

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    Azul Tapas Lounge, one of downtown Palm Spring’s most popular restaurants, is located inside of the General Telephone Building, which was originally constructed for the California Water & Telephone company in 1934.  The two-story Spanish Eclectic structure, which is a designated Palm Springs Historical Site, operated as a telephone switching center until 1984.  Today, both floors comprise Azul, a tapas restaurant that also serves American fare such as burgers, wraps and pizza.   There are even six different grilled cheese sandwich selections on the menu, as well as a build-your-own grilled cheese option with over forty different add-ons (think poblano peppers, basil pesto, and bacon) !  Um, count me in!

    Azul Tapas Lounge Hidden Away filming (12 of 14)

    Azul Tapas Lounge Hidden Away filming (9 of 14)

    Azul’s crowning element, though, is its humongous outdoor patio, which is centered around a large bar and features glider-booths, aka covered, bench-style swings (LOVE!).

    Azul Tapas Lounge Hidden Away filming (5 of 14)

    Azul Tapas Lounge Hidden Away filming (6 of 14)

    Azul has become something of a celebrity hot spot – well, for Palm Springs, anyway.  Bo Derek, Cloris Leachman and Jane Russell have all dined there in the past and, according to Fab Magazine, Carol Channing even threw her 90th birthday party at the eatery.  Hidden Away’s unit production manager Brian Nolan is also a fan of the restaurant, having hung out there during various trips to the desert, which is how it came to be used in the movie.  In a 2013 Palm Springs Life article, Nolan is quoted as saying,, “I knew for this movie we needed a location like this and we needed a cool restaurant, cool patio, coffee kind of scenario.  I called George [Kessinger, Azul’s owner] and he was completely open to it and very excited to have us.”

    Azul Tapas Lounge Hidden Away filming (10 of 14)

    Azul Tapas Lounge Hidden Away filming (7 of 14)

    Azul was used three times, as three different restaurants, in Hidden Away.  The interior first popped up as the fictional Blasini’s, in the scene in which Brett (Sean Patrick Flanery) proposed to his girlfriend, Alexandra (Emmanuelle Vaugier).  Unbeknownst to Brett is the fact that Alexandra is actually named Stephanie and that she faked her death, as well as the death of her daughter, Rachel (Allie Gonino), ten years prior in order to escape her abusive husband, Andrew (Ivan Sergei).

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    Azul’s interior was dressed with twinkle lights and large bamboo plants for the shoot and, in person, looks quite a bit different than it did onscreen.

    Azul Tapas Lounge Hidden Away filming (2 of 14)

    Azul Tapas Lounge Hidden Away filming (4 of 14)

    For the exterior of Blasini’s, producers used an establishing shot of LG’s Prime Steakhouse, located at 255 South Palm Canyon Drive.   Unfortunately, I do not have any photographs of LG’s, so please excuse the Google Street View image below.

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    The exterior of Azul was used for some filming, as well.  It popped up as the outside of the upscale eatery where Andrew first confronted Stephanie/Alexandra after tracking her down in Palm Springs.

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    Interior filming for that scene took place at Tinto restaurant, which is located inside of The Saguaro Palm Springs Hotel.  Confused yet?  There’s more.  The exterior of The Saguaro appeared in Hidden Away, as wellI’ll save that information for a future post, though.

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    Azul’s patio area later masqueraded as a coffee shop towards the end of Hidden Away, in the scene in which Alexandra told her best friend, Lynn (Law & Order’s Elisabeth Rohm), that she had faked her death and that her abusive ex-husband was now stalking her.  Andrew is not-surprisingly watching the two women from across the street, while playing with a cigarette lighter and contemplating how to do away with Lynn.  Like I said, it’s not a great movie.  Unless you’re familiar with Palm Springs and want to see the city onscreen, I definitely wouldn’t recommend it.

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    For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

    Azul Tapas Lounge Hidden Away filming (14 of 14)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Azul Tapas Lounge, from Hidden Away, is located at 369 North Palm Canyon Drive in downtown Palm Springs.

  • Dutton’s Brentwood Bookstore from “The Wonder Years”

    UPDATE – The Wonder Years is coming to DVD for the first time ever in October!  The 26-disc boxed set includes all six seasons of the show, plus a cast reunion segment, over 15 hours of bonus footage, a collectible metal locker, two production booklets packed with behind-the-scenes information, a replica yearbook, and Wonder Years magnets.  Sets can be pre-ordered here.

    Dutton's Books (2 of 7)

    I recently received an extensive list of The Wonder Years filming locations from a fellow stalker named Mallory who lives in Iowa.  Mallory is a huge fan of the series (she loved it so much that she put off watching the finale for ages as she couldn’t bear to see the show end – love that!) and over the years had managed to compile an index of over thirty locales featured on it.  One of the locations, the book shop from the Season 1 episode titled “Swingers,” I had been trying to track down for a while.  Said book shop turned out to be the historic Dutton’s Brentwood Bookstore, an L.A. institution that was shuttered in 2008.  I decided the place was still worthy of a stalk, though, and headed over there when I was in the area a couple of weeks ago.

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    The original Dutton’s Books & Prints was opened in 1961 by Bill and Thelma Dutton at 5146 Laurel Canyon Boulevard in North Hollywood.  All four of the couple’s children worked onsite, including eldest son Davis who took over operations of the store in the 1970s.  He opened a couple of sister shops shortly thereafter.  Doug, the youngest Dutton child, decided to establish his own branch of the family business and in 1984 purchased Brentwood Book Shop in the Barry Building, which had been around since the ‘60s.  He renamed the site Dutton’s Brentwood Bookstore and ran it independently of Davis’ outposts.  Dutton’s Brentwood was an immediate success and Doug eventually expanded, taking over several adjacent storefronts, all of which surrounded a courtyard where patrons were encouraged to lounge over a good tome.  In a 2008 Huffington Post article, author Tom Teicholz described the 5,000-square-foot space as such, “The whole place always had a ramshackle feel, with frayed carpets and crowded shelves.  Each area is its own empire, and one felt free to wander among them, and trusted to take a book from one area to the other without being accused of running off.”   The store even attracted its fare share of celebrities and such stars as Dustin Hoffman, Jamie Lee Curtis, Diane Keaton, Jennifer Garner, Ben Affleck, Meg Ryan, John Lithgow, Nora Ephron, Randy Newman, Maria Shriver, and Calista Flockhart could often be seen perusing the crowded aisles.

    Dutton's Books (3 of 7)

    Dutton's Books (5 of 7)

    In 2004, upon learning that the owner of the Barry Building was securing plans to tear down the property to make way for a new shopping center, Doug decided to open a sister store in Beverly Hills.  He figured that if the Brentwood site did end up closing, he would still have a place to operate.  Sadly though, the Beverly Hills store wound up hurting him financially and he closed it in 2006.  Shortly thereafter, Davis shuttered the original Dutton’s in North Hollywood due to declining sales.  Dutton’s Brentwood was soon suffering the same fate and that, coupled with the fact that Doug had never recovered fiscally from the Beverly Hills debacle, led to the decision to close the store.  On April 30th, 2008, Dutton’s Brentwood made its last sale.  In a cruel twist of fate, the Barry Building’s owner eventually withdrew his plans to tear down the property in 2013.  Had Doug not opened the Beverly Hills store, it is quite possible that the Brentwood outpost would still be in operation.  Today, the space houses Cisco Home, a sustainable furniture company.

    Dutton's Books (7 of 7)

    Dutton's Books (1 of 7)

    In the “Swingers” episode of The Wonder Years, Kevin Arnold (Fred Savage) and Paul Pfeiffer (Josh Saviano) headed to Dutton’s to pick up a copy of Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex: But Were Afraid to Ask, upon the recommendation of Kevin’s older brother, Wayne Arnold (Jason Hervey).  While the Dutton’s name was visible on the shop’s awning in the scene, because the façade of the Brentwood storefront did not match what was shown onscreen, I figured a different Dutton’s had been used in the filming.  As you can see below, the shop that appeared in The Wonder Years had an entrance door located on its right hand side.  Dutton’s (which you can see photographs of from the time that it was in operation here and here) did not.  None of the other Dutton’s locations seemed to match up either, though.  It wasn’t until Mallory mentioned that she thought a fake door had been added to the exterior for the shoot that things began to fall into place.

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    Dutton's Books (4 of 7)

    We now believe that a different book store was used for the interior filming and that a fake door was added to the exterior of Dutton’s so that it would match up to what was shown of that interior.

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    We still cannot figure out where interior filming took place, though.  As you can see in the scene capture below (which I flipped), there appear to be the words “Harmon Books” along with some sort of initial (possibly an “A”) painted on the door behind Kevin and Paul.  No amount of Google sleuthing has been able to unearth a Harmon Books in the L.A. area, though.  Does the store happen to look familiar to any of my fellow stalkers?

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    Thanks to the Dear Old Hollywood website, I learned that the Dutton’s space was also featured in the 1965 film Sylvia, as the spot where Alan Macklin (George Maharis) first tracked down Sylvia (Carroll Baker).  At the time, the shop was still operating as the Brentwood Book Shop.

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    Dutton’s North Hollywood location was the bookstore where Preston Meyers (Ethan Embry) worked in the original opening of Can’t Hardly Wait, which never made it to the screen.  That opening is only visible briefly in the movie’s trailer.

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    For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

    Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Mallory for finding this location!  Smile

    Dutton's Books (6 of 7)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Cisco Home, aka the former Dutton’s Brentwood Bookstore from the “Swingers” episode of The Wonder Years, is located at 11975 San Vicente Boulevard in Brentwood.

  • Opera on Ocean from “Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead”

    Don't Tell Mom Restaurant (3 of 11)

    A couple of weeks ago, a fellow stalker named Gina reminded me of a Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead location that I had yet to blog about – Opera on Ocean, the Santa Monica restaurant where slime-ball Gus (John Getz) took Sue Ellen Crandell (Christina Applegate) for a lunch date in the 1991 flick.  I had tracked the eatery down a while back, but because it had been shuttered years prior, I never ventured out to stalk it.  Then, when I was in Santa Monica last week, I randomly found myself in front of the building that once housed it and figured now was as good a time as any to do a post on the place.

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    Opera on Ocean, which was originally called simply “Opera,” was opened on the ground floor of Santa Monica’s Paseo del Mar building in March 1988 by restaurateurs Jerry Singer and Doug Delfeld and real estate developer Gary Fowler.  Despite the musically-influenced name, no singing was done on the premises.  According to a Los Angeles Times article published the year the eatery was founded, the moniker was “a metaphor for all these different things coming together.”  The 130-seat space, which included an enclosed patio and an on-site take-out bakery, was designed in a Mediterranean style by Ruben Ojeda.  Sadly, Opera, which served a mix of Spanish, Italian and Moroccan fare, never took off and was soon in dire financial straits.  In 1989, the restaurant was taken over by new owners, who changed the name to “Opera on Ocean.”  The chef, menu and décor were also altered, but it didn’t make a difference on the bottom line and the establishment was shuttered in November 1990.

    Don't Tell Mom Restaurant (5 of 11)

    Don't Tell Mom Restaurant (7 of 11)

    The space was then remodeled and an outpost of the Il Fornaio chain opened there in 1995.  After over 17 years in operation, it, too, eventually closed in late November 2012.  Eight months later, a Del Frisco’s Grille opened at the site, following another major remodel/gutting of the interior and patio area.  The property looks quite a bit different today than it did in 1990 when Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead was filmed.

    Don't Tell Mom Restaurant (6 of 11)

    Don't Tell Mom Restaurant (11 of 11)

    In Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead, Gus takes Sue Ellen out for a welcome lunch at Opera shortly after she starts working at General Apparel West.  During the meal, “Swell” orders a Martini & Rossi on the rocks and the server asks if she wants it sweet or dry, to which she responds, “Um, oh, just a little bit of both.”  Winking smile  The exterior of Opera (as well as its signage) was shown in the scene and, thanks to Paseo del Mar’s beautiful architecture and prominent location directly across from the Santa Monica Pier, I recognized the building immediately during a re-watch of the flick back in 2009.  (At the time, I was in a bit of a Don’t-Tell-Mom-filming-locations-track-down obsession, having just found the Crandell house and Clown Dog from the movie.)

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    Because the space has been extensively remodeled twice since filming took place there back in 1990 and I can find no photographs of how it previously looked online, at first I was unsure if Opera’s actual interior had appeared in the lunch scene or if a different restaurant had been used.

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    But then I spotted the word “Opera” on Sue Ellen’s menu in the scene, so the eatery’s interior did, in fact, appear in the film.

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    As you can see in the images below and in this online tour of the former Il Fornaio space, after the first remodel the restaurant became absolutely unrecognizable from Don’t Tell Mom.

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    The Del Frisco’s redesign (photographs of which I got off the restaurant’s website) made the place even more unrecognizable.   Talk about a change!

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    For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.                 

    Don't Tell Mom Restaurant (2 of 11)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Del Frisco’s Grille, aka the former Opera on Ocean restaurant from Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead, is located at 1551 Ocean Avenue in Santa Monica.  You can visit Del Frisco’s official website here.

  • L.A., Here I Come!

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    I am heading to L.A. this morning and will therefore be taking the next few days off.  I have absolutely NO plans for my stay yet , which I could NOT be more excited about!   After the incredibly busy March that I had, I am looking forward to spending some time relaxing, shopping, hanging out with friends (including Miss Pinky Lovejoy, of the Thinking Pink blog), and, of course, stalking.  I will be back on Monday.  In the meantime, don’t forget to check out my latest Los Angeles magazine CityThink blog post on Thursday.

  • Auntie Em’s Kitchen from “L!fe Happens”

    Auntie Em's Kitchen Life Happens (3 of 12)

    I recently re-watched the 2011 romantic comedy L!fe Happens and I have to say that I enjoyed it much more the second time around.  One of the locations featured in it – Auntie Em’s Kitchen in Eagle Rock – I had actually recognized during my first viewing.  I used to drive by the place frequently when I lived in Pasadena, but, despite hearing rave reviews, never dropped in.  So I decided that it was high time I did so and headed on over there a couple of weeks ago for lunch.

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    Auntie Em’s owner, Theresa Wahl, was led to the food world in a rather circuitous way.  The former lead singer and guitarist for the all-female punk bank The Red Aunts, Theresa spent the better part of the ‘90s touring the U.S. and Europe.  During her travels, she discovered countless new recipes, as well as some modern twists on old favorites.  Upon returning to L.A., Wahl decided to put what she had learned to good use.  She retired from singing and focused her efforts on the culinary arts, opening up a catering company specializing in good old American comfort food.  Thanks to her music connections, she quickly landed jobs providing fare for bands and on music video and production sets.  Just a few of the famous names that Theresa has fed over the years include Jennifer Lopez, Christina Aguilera, Mariah Carey, Britney Spears, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Rihanna, Brandy, Sheryl Crow, Carmen Electra, Dr. Phil, Lionel Richie, Alec Baldwin, Elton John, Ellen DeGeneres, and Cindy Crawford.  She even provided the catering for Rose McGowan’s October 2013 wedding to Davey Detail.

    Auntie Em's Kitchen Life Happens (1 of 12)

    Auntie Em's Kitchen Life Happens (9 of 12)

    In 2002, Theresa founded Auntie Em’s Kitchen, named in honor of the Auntie Em character from The Wizard of Oz.  Um, love it!  The place was an instant success and led to appearances for Theresa on the Food Network’s Throwdown with Bobby Flay and Sugar High.

    Auntie Em's Kitchen Life Happens (7 of 12)

    Auntie Em's Kitchen Life Happens (5 of 12)

    Auntie Em’s cheerful interior décor (which I somehow did not take any photographs of) is reminiscent of Monica and Rachel’s apartment on Friends – a bright mish-mash of colors and styles that merge together perfectly to create a warm, welcoming space.  The eatery also features a bakery (which, being diabetic, I, unfortunately, could not partake of) and a marketplace that sells gourmet foods and unique trinkets.  The place is pretty much the restaurant version of my favorite store, Lula Mae.  Of the fare, Wahl said in a January 2013 USA Today article, “We’re cooking up comfort food with attitude.  It’s just like Mom would make, if Mom had been a punk rocker with a baking habit. These are recipes that make me happy, and I love sharing them.”  All ingredients are fresh – she says, “If it can’t be found at the farmers’ market, it won’t be found on your plate” – and almost everything served is homemade on the premises.  What isn’t, is obtained from such high-regarded spots as La Brea Bakery and Strauss Family Creamery.  I opted for the Artisanal Cheese Plate for my lunch and it was fabulous!

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    Auntie Em's Kitchen Life Happens (11 of 12)

    In L!fe Happens, Auntie Em’s Kitchen is where Deena (Kate Bosworth) writes her book and where she allows Henri (Justin Kirk) to hang out with her, as long as he adheres to her conditions – “no talking, no touching, no disturbing my work flow.”  Only the exterior of the restaurant was used in the filming and, as you can see below, two large foliage pieces were installed at either end of the property during the shoot, most likely to block the view of the prying lenses of the paparazzi.

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    For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

    Auntie Em's Kitchen Life Happens (8 of 12)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Auntie Em’s Kitchen, from L!fe Happens, is located at 4616 Eagle Rock Boulevard in Eagle Rock.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here.

  • The Mystery of the “Melissa & Joey” House

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    In February, I received a challenge from a fellow stalker named Jill who wanted to know about the home belonging to Melissa Burke (Melissa Joan Hart) on the ABC Family sitcom Melissa & Joey.  The residence looked familiar to her and she was fairly certain that it had been used previously in another series.  She was not alone in that belief.  One quick Google search of “Melissa & Joey house, same as” led me to several message boards in which commenters queried about where they had seen the property before.  I had never actually watched an episode of Melissa & Joey, but was immediately intrigued, so I streamed the show on Netflix.  The Burke residence did not look at all familiar, though.  Thus began the mystery of the Melissa & Joey house.  And y’all know how much I love myself a good mystery!  Fellow stalker Geoff, of the 90210Locations website, did manage to track the dwelling down shortly after Jill posted her challenge and while I ran right out to stalk it, I have yet to figure out why the place looks so familiar to so many viewers.

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    Several of the message boards I came across featured commenters asking if the Melissa & Joey house was the same property used in Reba, Step by Step or Boy Meets World.  As you can see in the collage pictured below, though, the Melissa & Joey residence bears virtually no resemblance to the Reba or Boy Meets World house.  And while it does look similar to the Step by Step house, they are clearly not one and the same.

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    To me, the Melissa & Joey house is reminiscent of both the Mama’s Family and Old School homes, but, again, is obviously not either one.

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    So I will put it out there to my fellow stalkers.  Do any of you recognize the home from another production?

    Melissa & Joey House (5 of 9)

    Melissa & Joey is set in Toledo, Ohio, but the Burke residence can actually be found in Hancock Park.  Of the property, series’ executive producer Boy Young said, “Her house is a house here in Los Angeles that we selected because it’s architecturally believable from Toledo.  Our production designer basically surveyed architectural styles of Toledo and tried to find something here in L.A. that resembled that.”

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    In real life, the picturesque, two-story dwelling, which was originally built in 1914, features four bedrooms, three baths, 3,005 square feet of interior space, and a 0.22-acre plot of land.  It last sold in April 2008 for $1.795 million.

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    Melissa & Joey House (9 of 9)

    Several message board commenters also stated their beliefs that the interior set – which exists inside of a soundstage at CBS Studio Center in Studio City – was recycled from another series, as well, although it does not look at all familiar to me.  So I will once again put it out there to my fellow stalkers – does anyone recognize the interior of the Melissa & Joey house from another production?

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    On a side-note – I am BEYOND excited to announce that I wrote a small article about the Double Indemnity house for the April 2014 issue of Los Angeles magazine, which is on newsstands now.ScreenShot538That’s me buying out the Palm Desert Barnes & Noble of every copy of the magazine that they had on Saturday.

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    For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

    Big THANK YOU to Jill for challenging me to find this location and to Geoff, from the 90210Locations website, for tracking it down!  Smile

    Melissa & Joey House (1 of 9)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Melissa & Joey house is located at 102 North Norton Avenue in the Hancock Park area of Los Angeles.

  • The Donna Martin Graduates Protest Site

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    As big of a Beverly Hills, 90210 fan as I am, it will probably come as a shock to learn that up until recently I had yet to stalk the spot where one of the show’s most iconic moments was filmed – Burbank City Hall, aka the Donna Martin Graduates protest site from the Season 3 episode titled “Something in the Air.”  So, since I was in the area recently stalking The Wonder Years houses (you can read those posts here and here), I decided that it was about time that I amended that fact.

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    Burbank City Hall, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, was designed by architects William Allen and W. George Lutzi.  Construction on the Moderne/Art Deco-style building began in 1941 and lasted until 1943.  The final cost of the project was $409,000.

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    Donna Martin Graduates Protest (17 of 21)

    The building’s most impressive feature is its tower, which stands at 77 feet.

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    Donna Martin Graduates Protest (16 of 21)

    The lobby area, which I, unfortunately, did not get to see, boasts twenty different kinds of marble, bass relief sculptures and a grand staircase.  The building also houses two large murals painted by Hugo Ballin.  In a 1996 Daily News article about the structure, Councilman Ted McConkey is quoted as saying, “Anyone walking into City Hall would recognize that it’s something unique.  It’s special because of the period in which it was built, because of the way it’s been maintained and because of all the murals at City Hall.  We get an inordinate number of requests to use City Hall from film companies.”   Love it!  You can check out a fabulous photograph of the lobby here.

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    Donna Martin Graduates Protest (8 of 21)

    In “Something in the Air,” Brandon Walsh (Jason Priestley) stages a Senior Class walk-out during final exams to protest the fact that Donna Martin (Tori Spelling), after showing up drunk to the prom, is not being allowed to graduate with her class.  (The Juniors also participate in the walk-out, in order to protest the dress code that the school board has implemented for the upcoming school year.)  The protestors – chanting the now legendary line “Donna Martin graduates!” – wind up at the steps of Burbank City Hall, which (I think) is supposed to be masquerading as the West Beverly Hills School District in the episode.

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    This guy had a little trouble with his “No scapegoats” sign.  Winking smile

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    During the rally, Mrs. Teasley (Denise Dowse) warns the students that they are all in danger of being flunked, which only serves to rile them up further.  With Brandon leading the charge, they head inside the building and into the school board meeting.

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    Once inside, Brandon, of course, makes a speech in Donna’s defense.  That speech never ceases to crack me up.  He says, “Donna Martin is the kind of girl that goes out of her way for people.  That’s why all these people here are going out of their way for her.”  Like, huh?  Did I miss something in all of my avid 90210 watching?  When did Donna ever go out of her way for anyone, let alone the entire Junior and Senior class?  It all ends well, though, as the board members wind up being moved by Brandon’s speech and vote to allow Donna to graduate.  Donna Martin graduates, indeed!

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    “Something in the Air” was not the first Beverly Hills, 90210 episode to be lensed at Burbank City Hall.  Although the exterior of Beverly Hills City Hall was used as an establishing shot . . .

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    . . . the interior of Burbank City Hall was where Jim Walsh (James Eckhouse) and Brandon attended a meeting about the Highpoint Center project in the Season 2 episode titled “The Pit and the Pendulum.”

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    Thanks to the Dear Old Hollywood website, I learned that Burbank City Hall stood in for a police station in the 1954 film Pushover.

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    In the Season 3 episode of The Rockford Files titled “Crack Back,” which aired in 1977, Burbank City Hall masqueraded as the courthouse where Beth Davenport (Gretchen Corbett) defended a professional football player who was on trial for murder.

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    In 1980’s American Gigolo, Burbank City Hall was where Julian (Richard Gere) was accosted by the press after being arrested.  Very little of the building is visible in the scene, though.

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    The building masqueraded as a courthouse once again in the 1993 made-for-TV movie A Place to Be Loved (aka Shattered Family).

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    The interior of Burbank City Hall stood in for the U.S. Naval Headquarters at Pearl Harbor in the ending scene of the 1995 movie Crimson Tide.

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    For the exterior of the U.S. Naval Headquarters, a different building was used – Memorial Hall at Chapman University in the City of Orange.

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    The IMDB website states that Burbank City Hall was also utilized in the 1961 film The Choppers, the Season 2 episode of Police Woman titled “Generation of Evil,” the Season 2 episode of S.W.A.T. titled “Courthouse,” and the Season 1 episode of Matt Houston titled “The Showgirl Murders,” but, unfortunately, I could not find copies of any of those productions to verify that information.

    Donna Martin Graduates Protest (13 of 21)

    Donna Martin Graduates Protest (21 of 21)

    On a Donna Martin Graduates side-note – Even though we don’t have kids, during the holidays the GC and I participate in a bit of Elf on the Shelf fun by trading off hiding our elf (named Max) every night for each other.  This year, Max decided to hold a walk-out – with some nutcrackers, a couple of Santas, and my 90210 dolls – in honor of my favorite television show.  While I thought it was genius, the GC did not share in my enthusiasm.  Winking smile

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    For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

    Donna Martin Graduates Protest (6 of 21)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Donna Martin Graduates protest from the “Something in the Air” episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 was filmed at Burbank City Hall, which is located at 275 East Olive Avenue in Burbank.

  • Michael’s House from “The Wonder Years”

    UPDATE – The Wonder Years is coming to DVD for the first time ever in October!  The 26-disc boxed set includes all six seasons of the show, plus a cast reunion segment, over 15 hours of bonus footage, a collectible metal locker, two production booklets packed with behind-the-scenes information, a replica yearbook, and Wonder Years magnets.  Sets can be pre-ordered here.

    Wonder Years House (2 of 2)

    Fellow stalker Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, recently challenged me to find the old Victorian that Karen Arnold (Olivia d’Abo) and her boyfriend, Michael (who was played by none other than Friends’ David Schwimmer), moved into in the Season 4 episode of The Wonder Years titled “The House That Jack Built.”  At the time, I had yet to hit that episode in my binge-watching of the series, so I scanned ahead and was pleasantly surprised to recognize the residence immediately.  As it turns out, the home is located in South Pasadena and is one that I know quite well, due to the fact that it sat abandoned and run-down for over a decade before being fixed up.  (Y’all know how much I love me some abandoned properties!)  When I lived in Pasadena,  I practically drove by the place on a daily basis, while on my way to and from the Harbor Freeway, and always wondered why such a beautiful dwelling had been left to deteriorate.  I had even watched a music video being shot on the premises many moons ago (more on that later).  For whatever reason, though, I had never blogged about the home, so I figured it was about time that I do so.

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    In real life, the property, which is a South Pasadena Local City Landmark, is known as the Riggins House and it was originally built in 1885.  Yep, it’s currently 129 years old!  The five-bedroom, two-bath, 2,778-square-foot Queen Anne-style Victorian, which sits on 0.33 acres of land, was last sold in June 2005 for $1.2 million.

    Michael's House The Wonder Years (3 of 14)

    Michael's House The Wonder Years (6 of 14)

    I never did learn the story behind the residence or why it was left in disarray for so many years.  I think it has something to do with the 710 Freeway Project, though.  (In the 1960s, the state of California purchased 500-plus homes – many quite large, beautiful and historic – in what is now known as the 710 Corridor with the intention of tearing them down to build a connector road between the 210 and 710 freeways.  While some of the houses were leased out, many were left vacant from that point onward.  Thankfully, the freeway extension project was squashed last October and the homes are now finally, finally being returned to private ownership.)  Oddly enough, I preferred the look of the place in its run-down state, most likely because it reminded me of the “Thriller” house.  Unfortunately though, I do not have any photographs of it from that time period.

    Michael's House The Wonder Years (8 of 14)

    Michael's House The Wonder Years (9 of 14)

    According to An Architectural Guidebook to Los Angeles, Professor Thaddeus Lowe, who was best known for founding the Mount Lowe Railway and Citizen’s Bank of Los Angeles, lived in the Riggins House while his own (much larger – we’re talking 24,000 square feet!) house was being built a couple of blocks away at 995 South Orange Grove Boulevard.  That residence, which was once one of the largest homes in the entire nation, was sadly demolished between 1927 and 1928.

    Michael's House The Wonder Years (10 of 14)

    Michael's House The Wonder Years (11 of 14)

    In The Wonder Years “The House That Jack Built” episode, Karen decides to leave her college dorm in order to move into a large home with a “roommate,” whom she fails to tell her parents is actually her new boyfriend.  Both the exterior of the Riggins House . . .

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    . . . and the interior were shown in the episode.

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    The residence subsequently showed up in several Season 5 episodes of The Wonder Years, including “Dinner Out;”

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    “Stormy Weather;”

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    and “The Wedding.”

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    As I mentioned above, I once watched a music video being filmed at the Riggins House – the 2003 video for the Beyoncé/Missy Elliot/MC Lyte/Free compilation song “Fighting Temptation,” which was featured on the soundtrack for Beyoncé’s then most recent movie, The Fighting TemptationsIn a 2003 interview, Beyoncé stated that the Riggins House was chosen for filming because it reminded her of the Georgia-area residence where The Fighting Temptations was shot.

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    The interior of the Riggins House also appeared in the video.

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    You can watch “Fighting Temptation” by clicking below.

    As I also just learned, the Riggins House was utilized as the Pyramid Corners, Oklahoma residence of the Torkleson family in the short-lived series The Torkelsons, one of my favorite shows ever!  (Oh, Man in the Moon . . . ! )  In an odd twist, and for reasons I cannot even begin to fathom, imagery of the property was flipped in all establishing shots that appeared on the program, which ran from 1991 to 1992.

    For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

    Big THANK YOU to Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, for challenging me to find this location!  Smile

    Michael's House The Wonder Years (1 of 14)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Michael’s house from The Wonder Years is located at 919 Columbia Street in South Pasadena.

  • The Fake Fendi Apartment Building from “Sex and the City”

    Sex and the City Fake Fendi Apartment (1 of 16)

    My favorite moment from the two Sex and the City episodes that took place in Los Angeles (Season 3’s “Escape from New York” and “Sex and Another City”) was when Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker) and Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall) attempted to buy fake designer purses at a seedy apartment building somewhere in the Valley.  I, of course, was pretty intent on tracking down said apartment building and while I spent quite a bit of time trying to do so a few years back, I came up empty-handed.  Then, a  couple of weeks ago, after finding Lorenzo Lamas’ house from the “Sex and Another City” episode (which I blogged about here), I became inspired to have another go at it and, lo and behold, pinpointed the place!

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    In “Sex and Another City,” Samantha purchases a fake Fendi bag while visiting L.A. with the girls.  When Carrie sees the faux purse, she flips over it (and its $150-price tag) and Samantha tells here, “We could go get more.  I got the guy’s card.  He lives somewhere called ‘the Valley.’”  (Samantha says the words “the Valley” with a romantic undertone, so its obvious she was never an avid 90210 watcher. Winking smile)  The two then take a two-hour drive to the guy’s apartment building, which supposedly has an address number of 45386.

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    Only the backyard and rear portion of the apartment building were shown in the episode, which, coupled with the fact that I assumed the place actually was located “deep in the Valley,” made it rather difficult to find.

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    While re-watching the scene a couple of weeks ago, I was shocked to spot the unique building visible in the background behind Carrie and Samantha.  Somehow, I had failed to notice it during all of my previous viewings.  As it turns out, the building is one I am quite familiar with and have visited frequently over the years.

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    The building pictured in the background of the scene is located right across the street from Warner Bros. Studios and is known as Warner Bros. Studio Plaza or Building 160.  It is the spot where guests check in for the Warner Bros. VIP Tour, which I have taken more times than I can count.  How I never spotted the building on my earlier viewings of the fake Fendi scene is beyond me!

    Sex and the City Fake Fendi Apartment (12 of 16)

    Sex and the City Fake Fendi Apartment (13 of 16)

    Especially considering that I knew from one of those tours that the scene in which Carrie met with Matthew McConaughey (who played himself) in the “Escape from New York” episode was filmed INSIDE OF a Warner Bros. Studio Plaza office.  Duh!

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    Not to mention that a few other scenes from the two episodes were filmed at Warner Bros., including the scene in which Carrie attempted to smoke on a backlot stoop (which I wrote about for Los Angeles magazine here) and the two scenes in which Carrie drove to the studio for meetings about turning her column into a TV show (which were shot across the street from Building 160, in front of Gate 5).

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    Sex and the City Fake Fendi Apartment (16 of 16)

    In real life, the building is not seedy at all, nor is it located in a shady area.

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    Sex and the City Fake Fendi Apartment (2 of 16)

    While I really wanted to walk into the backyard to catch a glimpse of where filming had taken place, I somehow managed to restrain myself.

    Sex and the City Fake Fendi Apartment (6 of 16)

    Sex and the City Fake Fendi Apartment (14 of 16)

    I was thrilled to see, though, that the size and positioning of the building’s windows, the base of the exterior stairwell and the three gray poles to the side of it all matched up to what appeared onscreen.

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    The spot where the dogs were caged up in the scene is denoted with a pink arrow in the photograph below.

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    Sex and the City Fake Fendi Apartment (9 of 16)

    For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

    Sex and the City Fake Fendi Apartment (10 of 16)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The fake Fendi apartment building from the “Sex and Another City” episode of Sex and the City is located at 141 South Avon Street in Burbank.