Hotel Barclay from “Little Fires Everywhere”

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Not only do The Morning Show and Little Fires Everywhere share a leading lady, Reese Witherspoon, but the two new series also seem to be sharing locations!  Both made use of The Wolves, an insanely beautiful downtown Los Angeles bar that I blogged about in December, as well as Hotel Barclay, a historic and oft-filmed DTLA lodging that I covered way back in 2011.  Considering the latter’s recent screen cred, though, I figured it was worthy of a redo.

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Hotel Barclay, which is also referred to as the “Barclay Hotel,” began life in 1897 as the Van Nuys Hotel.

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Commissioned by businessman Isaac Newton Van Nuys, the Beaux Arts-style property was designed by the Morgan & Walls architecture firm.

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During its early days, the 6-story hotel was the epitome of luxury, boasting a light-filled lobby lined with stained glass windows, a Ladies’ Parlor, a 150-seat formal dining room, a casual grill, a bar, a billiard room, a cigar stand, a newsstand, a buffet, a barbershop, and 160 rooms, each with both a long-distance and local telephone, as well as electric service.  Per the Los Angeles Conservancy, the Barclay was, in fact, the first hotel in the city to provide those last two luxuries.

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In 1929, ownership changed hands, the fancy dining room was closed and the property re-dubbed Hotel Barclay.  The move kicked off a decline not only in the building’s exclusivity, but also its patronage.

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Though it fell into some disrepair in the years that followed, eventually becoming a residential hotel (you can read up on the more sordid parts of its history here), the Barclay’s original interior somehow remained intact and still, miraculously, looks much as it did on opening day over 120 years ago!

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During my 2011 stalk of the place, the manager invited me inside for a look at the lobby, which is where the interior photos in this post come from.  I was practically giddy walking around snapping pictures of all of the historic enclaves!  The hotel is like a time capsule come to life!

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The Barclay, which, again per the Los Angeles Conservancy, is the city’s oldest continuously operating hotel, was put on the market in 2016 for $40 million and eventually sold in 2018 for $21 million.  There are currently plans in the works to turn it into a luxury boutique lodging, though it does not appear as if that project has gotten off the ground yet.

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In the “Duo” episode of Little Fires Everywhere, Hotel Barclay stands in for the exterior of New York’s fictional Varick Hotel, where Elena Richardson (Witherspoon) stays while visiting Manhattan.

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Interiors were shot at The Mayfair Hotel, another historic DTLA lodging that has been completely revamped since my 2012 post on it, meaning I have to get back out there stat!

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On The Morning Show, the Barclay also portrays a New York locale – the Manhattan apartment building where Hannah Shoenfeld (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) lives, said to be at 103 Wooster Street in SoHo.  The site initially appears at the end of episode 7, “Open Waters,” in a scene that continues into episode 9, “Play the Queen,” in which Mitch Kessler (Steve Carrel) asks Hannah to come forward and say that the network bosses were complicit in his predatory behavior.

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The Barclay is also featured in The Morning Show’s Season 1 finale, “The Interview” in which (spoiler alert!) Claire Conway (Bel Powley) shows up to discover than Hannah has overdosed.

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In the episode, it is apparent that a façade containing a fake set of stairs and an elevator was added just beyond the hotel’s front doors for the shoot.

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In real life, the Barclay’s front doors open directly into the lobby, as you can see in the photo below.

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Only the exterior of the Barclay was utilized on The Morning Show.  I believe interior scenes involving Hannah’s apartment may have been shot at the Pan American Lofts, located at 253 South Broadway.  You can check out what a unit in that building looks like here.

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Hotel Barclay has quite an extensive film and television resume – so much so that it would be impossible for me to chronicle all of its appearances here.  A few of the more notable include . . .

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Way back in 1975, Det. Ken ‘Hutch’ Hutchinson (David Soul) and Det. Dave Starsky (Paul Michael Glaser) chased a suspect through the hotel in the pilot episode of Starsky & Hutch.

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The lobby is used extensively as Café 24 Heures, where Carol Connelly (Helen Hunt) works and where Melvin Udall (Jack Nicholson) regularly dines, in 1997’s As Good As It Gets.

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Frank Abagnale Jr. (Leonardo DiCaprio) gets kicked out of the place for writing bad checks at the beginning of Catch Me If You Can.

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Hotel Barclay is the Columbian lodging where John (Brad Pitt) and Jane (Angelina Jolie) meet in 2005’s Mr. and Mrs. Smith.

The lobby masks as the café where Tom (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) and his friends hang out in the 2009 drama (500) Days of Summer.

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Also in 2009, Detectives Flynn (Tony Denison) and Provenza (G.W. Bailey) dine in the hotel’s former restaurant, which sits vacant in real life, in the Season 5 episode of The Closer titled “Tapped Out.”

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Leonardo DiCaprio visits the Barclay once again as Cobb in 2011’s Inception.  This time it’s posing as a casino in Africa.  (One of the hotel’s 2nd floor rooms is also where Cobb was dunked into a bathtub in an earlier scene).

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Fellow stalker Anne informed me via a comment on my original post that a now-vacant anteroom at the lodging masked as Drake’s Magic Shop in the Season 3 episode of Castle titled “Poof, You’re Dead,” which aired in 2011.  The show’s production team must really love the Barclay!  The hotel was also featured in the episodes titled “Ghosts,” “Knockdown,” “Swan Song,” “Sleeper,” “XY,” and “The Blame Game.”

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NYPD detectives interview a bunch of clowns outside of the Barclay in the Season 7 episode of CSI: NY titled “To What End,” which also aired in 2011.

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In 2018, Hotel Barclay popped up as the supposed San Antonio, Texas-area Gunter Hotel in the Season 2 episode of Timeless titled “The King of the Delta Blues.”

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And it portrays the supposed Lahore hotel where Bravo Team captures a terrorist in the Season 2 episode of Seal Team titled “Never Out of the Fight,” which aired in 2019.

For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Hotel Barclay, aka the Varick Hotel from the “Duo” episode of Little Fires Everywhere, is located at 103 West 4th Street in downtown Los Angeles.

Le Petit Paris from “Little Fires Everywhere”

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Reese Witherspoon is deserving of a major ‘thank you’ from me!  Per the actress’ recent productions, I have been introduced to two fabulous downtown Los Angeles restaurants!  The first, The Wolves, popped up twice on her Apple TV+ series The Morning Show.  And now, via Little Fires Everywhere, I’ve discovered Le Petit Paris, a striking French brasserie situated on the ground floor of the El Dorado Lofts building.  I was actually tipped off about the eatery and the filming that took place there last year by a fellow stalker who works in the area.  Though I had never heard of the place, one look at Google images had me transfixed!  I was fairly certain I had never come across a more gorgeous space in my life.  So my mom and I headed out there for happy hour mid-January while in town for one of my dad’s pre-surgical doctor appointments.  We returned the following week for dinner after a long day at the hospital just prior to my dad’s surgery.  Neither time did it disappoint.

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The El Dorado Lofts building was originally constructed as the Hotel Stowell in 1913.  The 12-story, 264-room lodging, commissioned by financier Nathan Wilson Stowell, was designed in the Art Nouveau and Gothic Revival styles by architects Frederick Noonan and William Richards.  You can see what the exterior looked like in its early days here.

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Upscale and ornate, the hotel catered to wealthy businessmen called to the area for work, though some celebrities also checked in.  Charlie Chaplin even lived there for a time, though, surprisingly, per the Paradise Leased blog, he later described it as “a middle-rate place but new and comfortable.”  It sure looks like it was pretty fancy to me!  Constructed with all locally-sourced materials, the sweeping two-level lobby boasted a grand staircase, gold leaf columns, and a plethora of Batchelder tilework.

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Patronage declined during the Great Depression resulting in the building being sold in 1938.  It eventually became a low-budget residential hotel known as the El Dorado.  The place continued to deteriorate in the years that followed and by the 1980s, it sat abandoned and remained so for the next two decades.  The Gilmore and Associates development team finally stepped in, purchasing the building in 2000 and transforming the former hotel rooms into luxury condos, a project that was completed in 2010.  (You can check out images of two of the revamped units here and here.)  The once-grand lobby was made available as a possible restaurant space and it was then that David and Fanny Rolland set their sights on it.  (You can see what it looked like at the time here.)

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The husband and wife duo, who hail from France and previously founded two eateries in Cannes, began transforming the 8,000-square-foot space into a magical Parisian-inspired oasis.

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Le Petit Paris opened its doors in September 2015.

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To say that the 300-seat restaurant is striking would be a gross understatement.

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I mean, come on!

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With massive skylights, sparkling crystal chandeliers, two bars, a large patio, a fireplace, a towering split staircase, subtle pink and red accents, and a spectacular mosaic floor, Le Petit Paris is easily one of L.A.’s most gorgeous spots!

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I especially loved the painting of Leonardo DiCaprio as Jay Gatsby hung near the bar.

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Had to do it!

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The food at Le Petit Paris is as delicious as the place is beautiful!  Both the executive chef and the executive pastry chef hail from France and all of the menu items are homemade on the premises.  During our initial happy hour visit, I had a glass of champagne (natch!) and my mom ordered the carpaccio, which she was thoroughly obsessed with.  She talked about it for days afterward!  So on our second visit, in which we grabbed dinner in the dining room, she was seriously bummed to discover that the carpaccio was only available on the happy hour menu.  (She did love the French onion soup she wound up ordering, though.)  The following morning, when we arrived at the hospital, my dad asked how our dinner was.  When my mom expressed her extreme dismay at not being able to order her beloved carpaccio, my dad looked down at his hospital gown and many IVS, turned to her and said, “Yeah, I feel so sorry for you.”  We laughed about that one for days afterward.  Smile

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In Little Fires Everywhere, Elena Richardson (Reese Witherspoon) meets up with her former boyfriend, Jamie Caplan (Luke Bracey), at Le Petit Paris, which is said to be in New York, in the episode titled “Duo.”

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During our first visit, I asked the bartender about the filming of Little Fires Everywhere and he informed us that while he did not work at the restaurant at the time, ironically he was an extra in the scene that shot on the premises!  When he applied for a job at Le Petit Paris months later, he did not realize it was the same place.  It was only when he showed up for his interview that he made the connection.

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Sadly, Le Petit Paris is currently closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.  When the world gets back to normal (oh, what a fabulous day that will be!), I am very much looking forward to sipping a glass of bubbly in one of the restaurant’s plush chairs, soaking up the magical ambiance of the place.

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For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Le Petit Paris, from the “Duo” episode of Little Fires Everywhere, is located at 418 South Spring Street in downtown Los Angeles.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here.  Please be advised that the eatery is temporarily closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.  Check its website for any updates.

Hilton Checkers Hotel from “The West Wing”

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One of the best parts about finally watching The West Wing for the first time is all of the L.A. locales I’ve been able to identify and stalk (you can read about a few of them here, here, and here).  One spot that I recognized on sight was Hilton Checkers Los Angeles, which masked as a supposed Washington D.C.-area hotel in the Season 1 episode titled “Take This Sabbath Day.”  I’ve had the pleasure of staying at Checkers several times over the years (even once in the penthouse!), so it was not hard to ID it when it appeared onscreen.  Though I blogged about the lodging back in 2009, I figured it was worthy of a redo, so while staying at the Millennium Biltmore, which is across the street, back in December of last year, my mom and I headed over to Checkers for a cocktail and to do some stalking!  I was shocked when I walked in to discover that the place had been completely revamped and looked quite a bit different than it did during my last visit in late 2017.

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Initially opened as the Mayflower Hotel in 1927, the property was designed by architect Charles Whittlesey.

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Built on a lot measuring a scant 60 by 160 feet, the skinny lodging towers over the street below at 12 stories, which was the city’s height limit at the time.

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The Mission Revival-style façade boasts amazingly intricate Spanish Moorish ornamentation with a nautical theme.  Sadly, the bas-relief sculptures of the Mayflower and the Santa Maria that once flanked the hotel’s front doors have since been removed.

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The Los Angeles Conservancy describes the building’s original interior as “Pilgrim Revival.”  With restaurants named Mayflower Tavern and Ye Bull Pen Inn (you can check out what the latter looked like here), The Mayflower certainly had a different aesthetic than it does now.  At some point, Chart Room, another bar with a maritime slant, opened on the premises.  You can see the exterior of it here.  It’s quite a leap from the hotel’s current state!

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The Mayflower shut its doors in 1985 at which point it was purchased by a group of developers who began a massive $49-million, 4-year renovation.  Two floors were added to the top of the structure to house the property’s mechanical appliances as well as a new gym and spa.  (You can see those two rather boxy floor additions in this side image of the hotel.)  The lobby area was also revamped to include a new bar, a new restaurant and a library lounge.  Rooms and suites were expanded considerably, bringing down the total units from 348 to 188.  The site re-opened as Checkers in December 1989.  The Hilton eventually took over the property in 2002 and it became known as Hilton Checkers.  The AAA Four Diamond lodging boasted a very upscale European interior, with ornate mirrors, plush seating and dark wood tables scattered throughout, as you can see in the pictures below, which were taken during a 2009 stay.

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I loved the look of the place, but in 2019 management embarked upon yet another massive renovation.

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Several lobby walls were removed in order to open up the bar (now named 1927 Bar+Kitchen) and library.  The bar circa 2009 is pictured below.

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And there it is today.

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Yes, the interior is sleeker, brighter and airier, but I think it has lost quite a bit of its charm.

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Per aerial views and this image, the rooftop pool, one of my favorite aspects of the hotel, also appears to have been filled in (the photo below is from 2009).

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Though the hot tub remains.

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I still consider the place one of downtown L.A.’s top lodgings, despite the changes.  As my mom and I discovered, 1927 Bar+Kitchen serves up some fabulous fare and libations, the onsite Zagat-rated restaurant, Checkers Downtown, remains one of the area’s top eateries, and the hotel is within walking distance to pretty much every local attraction.

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In the “Take this Sabbath Day” episode of The West Wing, which aired in 2000, Checkers masks as the D.C. hotel where Joey Lucas (Marlee Matlin) stays while in town.  It is in the lobby bar that Josh Lyman (Bradley Whitford) apologizes to Joey on behalf of the president.

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The West Wing was not Checkers’ first rodeo.

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The hotel served as the outside of San Francisco’s Bix restaurant in the 1992 thriller Final Analysis.

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In the Season 1 episode of Shark titled “Fashion Police,” which aired in 2006, Sebastian Stark (James Woods) dines with the mayor in Checkers Downtown . . .

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. . . and later crashes a party on the rooftop deck.

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Checkers appears as the exterior of The Algonquin Hotel in the Season 7 episode of Mad Men titled “Field Trip,” which aired in 2014.

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It pops up as the New Amsterdam Hotel, where Vikram Singh (Sunkrish Bala) hacks into the mainframe of the attorney general’s office, in the Season 8 episode of Castle titled “XX,” which aired in 2015.

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Irvin Irving (Lance Reddick) and Jun Park (Linda Park) also dine on Checkers’ rooftop patio in the Season 3 episode of Bosch titled “Right Play,” which aired in 2017.

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 For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Hilton Checkers Los Angeles, from the “Take This Sabbath Day” episode of The West Wing, is located at 535 South Grand Avenue in downtown Los Angeles.  You can visit the hotel’s official website here.  Please be advised that the hotel is temporarily closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.  Check the website for any updates.