The Chandler Estate from “Invasion of the Body Snatchers”

Chandler Estate Invasion of the Body Snatchers (4 of 12)

The Chandlers are widely considered to be one of L.A.’s “first families.”  Patriarch Harry not only served as publisher of the Los Angeles Times for 27 years, but was largely responsible for developing the San Fernando Valley, the Hollywood Hills and Dana Point in the O.C., as well.  He was also instrumental in the construction of some of the city’s most famous structures including the Biltmore Hotel, the Hollywood Bowl, the California Institute of Technology and the Los Angeles Coliseum.  So when I found out that his Los Feliz estate had been used in the 1956 science fiction thriller Invasion of the Body Snatchers, I ran right out to stalk the place.

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The 8,891-square-foot, red-brick, Georgian-style manse was built from 1914 to 1916 and boasts 24 rooms, including eight bedrooms and four baths, a two-story entrance hall, a library, a solarium, a butler’s pantry, a pool, a detached four-car garage, and a one-bedroom guesthouse.  Sadly, outside of a long tree-lined driveway, little else of the place is visible to the public.  The views from the street out front are pretty darn spectacular, though.

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Chandler Estate Invasion of the Body Snatchers (6 of 12)

An aerial view of the Chandler estate is pictured below.  As you can see, it is quite impressive.  You can also check out some close-up and interior photographs of the pad here.

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After Harry Chandler passed away in 1944, his wife Marian continued to live at the mansion until her own death in 1952.  The Chandler family held onto the property for quite some time and in 1972 leased it at a rate of $1,000 a month to the Source Family (the cult that operated The Source Restaurant on Sunset Boulevard, which I blogged about here).  During their time there, the Source Family dubbed the estate “Mother House.”  The Chandler’s opted not to renew the group’s lease after the first year, so in 1973 the Family moved elsewhere.  In September 2008, the mansion was put on the market for $6,799,000.  There were no takers, though, and in January of the following year the price was dropped to $5.499 million.  The residence finally sold in October 2009 for $3,696,000.

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Chandler Estate Invasion of the Body Snatchers (8 of 12)

It is well-documented online that the Chandler estate served as the home of Jack Belicec (King Donovan) and his wife, Theodora (Carolyn Jones), in Invasion of the Body Snatchers.  Having scanned through the flick in preparation for this post, though, I cannot say with certainty that the reports are correct.  So little of the house can been seen in the movie that it is virtually impossible to confirm or deny the location.

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It has also been reported on several Invasion of the Body Snatchers websites and message boards that the Chandler estate was demolished sometime after filming took place.  I think what led to that assumption is the fact that most sites list the address of the residence as 2330 Hillhurst Avenue.  There is no such address is Los Feliz.  The Chandler estate is actually located at 2411 Inverness Avenue.  But as you can see below, both addresses point to the same spot, which leads me to believe that the home was originally numbered 2330 Hillhurst.  In its early days, the Chandler estate boasted five acres.  The majority of the land was sold off over the years, though, and the residence currently sits on 0.83 acres.  I am guessing that the address was changed to 2411 Inverness at some point due to that division of land, leading Invasion fans to believe that the residence was no longer.  Thankfully though, it is still standing in its original state.

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The interior of the Belicec home was also shown in two Invasion of the Body Snatchers scenes, but I am uncertain if the the Chandler estate’s actual interior (if filming did, in fact, take place there) was used or a set.  I am leaning toward the latter, though.

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In 1985, the estate was used in a few Season 4 episodes of Falcoln Crest as the home of Gustav Riebmann (Paul Fremann), although very little of it could be seen in the episodes.

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The Chandler estate was also where Matthew Winfield (a very young George Clooney) hid out in the Season 3 episode of Hunter titled “Double Exposure,” which aired in 1987.  Both the exterior . . .

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. . . and the interior of the property appeared in the episode.

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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.

Chandler Estate Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1 of 12)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Chandler estate, from Invasion of the Body Snatchers, is located at 2411 Inverness Avenue in Los Feliz.

Harbor Steps Apartments from “The Ring”

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I am reaching deep into my stalking vault for today’s location.  I visited the Harbor Steps Apartments from The Ring during a trip to Seattle well over four years ago – shortly after being caught in a torrential downpour, which explains my hat in the above photograph – but somehow failed to blog about them.  Since the building’s appearance in the 2002 thriller was decidedly macabre, I figured what better time to write about it than during my annual Haunted Hollywood postings.  So here goes!

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The 734-unit Harbor Steps Apartments, which are situated overlooking downtown Seattle and Puget Sound, were completed in 2000.

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The upscale complex, which consists of four high-rise buildings, features three fitness centers, a basketball court, a volleyball court, three Jacuzzis, a sauna, a climbing wall, an indoor pool, a business center, a media room/theatre, stunningly gorgeous views, and (my personal favorite) 24-hour concierge service.

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The Harbor Steps Apartments sit directly across from the Seattle Art Museum and one of Jonathan Borofsky’s Hammering Man sculptures.  (There are several others situated throughout the world.)  The 48-foot-tall instillation was constructed in 1991 out of hollow-fabricated steel and, according to the City of Seattle’s official website, “celebrates the worker’s contribution to society.”

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Thanks to an electric motor, the sculpture’s arm makes a hammering motion every 15 seconds, 24 hours a day, every single day of the year.  Well, except each Labor Day, that is, when Hammering Man is programmed to take a rest – a fact which I thought was so incredibly cool.

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In The Ring, the Harbor Steps Apartments were where Rachel Keller (Naomi Watts) lived with her son, Aidan (David Dorfman).  According to the movie’s production notes, director Gore Verbinski chose to shoot the flick in Washington because, “The Pacific Northwest winter provided a seemingly perpetual overcast and cold, gloomy weather that only added to the story’s atmosphere of dread.  The lack of sun also lent itself perfectly to the soft light and lack of shadows that Verbinski and cinematographer Bojan Bazelli were employing to complement the story’s surrealistic moments.”  Production designer Tom Duffield based the film’s coloring on the paintings of Andrew Wyeth.  He says, “In Wyeth’s work, the trees are always dormant, and the colors are muted earth tones.  It’s greys, it’s browns, it’s somber colors; it’s ripped fabrics in the windows.  His work has a haunting flavor that I felt would add to the mystique of this movie, so I latched on to it. “

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He did a fabulous job, too, because, as you can see below, even moments after a downpour, the building is much more vibrant in person than Duffield made it appear to be in The Ring.

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Rachel supposedly lived in Unit 601 in the movie.

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But I am fairly certain that the interior of her apartment was a set.  You can check out a few interior photographs of some real life Harbor Steps Apartments here and here.

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The interior of Rachel’s unit seemed to be much larger and more open than those of the actual complex.

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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.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Harbor Steps Apartments from The Ring are located at 1221 First Avenue in Seattle, Washington.  You can visit the complex’s official website here.

Anoakia Mansion from “Doppelganger”

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There’s no denying that Doppelganger is a pretty horrible movie.  But part of the fun of the Halloween season is watching ridiculously terrible horror flicks from years past – and stalking their locations, of course.  I had long been on the hunt for the psychiatric institution from the 1993 thriller and was given a tip a couple of years ago that a historic, since-demolished mansion named Anoakia in Arcadia was the right spot.  (For the life of me, I cannot remember who gave me the information.  To whomever it was, I apologize.)  Even though the place is long gone, I figured that it still proved blog-worthy being that several people have asked me about its location over the years.

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Anoakia was originally constructed in 1913 for Anita Baldwin, the daughter of Elias Jackson “Lucky” Baldwin, the founder of Arcadia.  The 50-room estate was designed in the Italian Renaissance style and boasted 17,000 square feet of space, a bowling alley, a gym, wood-paneled rooms, etched glass doors, a pool, an aviary, a bee yard, tennis courts and murals painted by artist Maynard Dixon. The 20-acre grounds featured ponds, gardens, stables, a bathhouse and a chapel.  Upon Anita’s death in 1939, the property was turned into a boarding school for girls.  In 1944, it was purchased by Lowry McCaslin, a former manager of the Baldwin estate.  He continued to operate a school on the premises for several decades.  Unfortunately, after the Whittier earthquake in 1987, McCaslin was forced to make costly upgrades to the mansion to keep it up to code.  Maintaining the site was no longer feasible for the 82-year-old, so he had the school moved and made plans to develop Anoakia’s grounds, keeping the mansion intact.

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City officials rejected all of McCaslin’s proposals and Anoakia sat vacant for the next decade and began to dilapidate.  In 1999, a developer from Orange County purchased the site from Lowry’s estate (McCaslin passed away in 1995) and came up with a plan to build a gated community of 31 homes on the land.  To do this, the Anoakia would need to be demolished.   While the developer met with some opposition from preservationists, the city eventually approved of his plans and the historic mansion was leveled in 2000.  You can see some pictures of how it looked in its last days here.

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Doppelganger Psychiatric Hospital Anoakia (6 of 12)

Today, the upscale community is known as Anoakia Estates.

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The only part of the original property to remain intact are the perimeter wall and a guard house located in the southeast corner of the grounds (circled in the two aerial views below).

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I did not know about the guard house at the time that I stalked the location so I did not take any photographs of it, but you can see what it looks like it via the Google Street View image below.

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In Doppelganger, Anoakia stood in for Our Lady of Mercy Psychiatric Institute, where Holly’s (Drew Barrymore) brother, Fred, was institutionalized.

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True to life, the institute was said to be located in Arcadia in the movie.

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Anoakia showed up a couple of times in Doppelganger.

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The real life interior of the mansion was used in the movie, as well.

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From what was shown in Doppelganger, it is obvious that Anoakia was an absolutely idyllic estate.  What a shame that it is no longer standing!

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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.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Anoakia Mansion, aka Our Lady of Mercy Psychiatric Institute from Doppelganger, was formerly located at around 1200 North Baldwin Avenue in Arcadia.

The American Cement Building from “Scream 3”

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While I am admittedly not a fan of MacArthur Park, there is a property situated on the border of it that I would absolutely LOVE to live in – The American Cement Building.  Mike from, MovieShotsLA, pointed out the dramatically stunning structure many moons ago during one of our very first stalks together and I have been obsessed with it ever since.  And while Mike also informed me that the edifice had appeared in the 2000 horror flick Scream 3, for some reason I never thought to blog about the place during my Haunted Hollywood postings.  That changes today!

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The American Cement Building was constructed in 1964 and originally served as the American Cement Company’s headquarters.  The Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall (DMJM) architecture firm designed the 13-story structure, which was, fittingly, manufactured out of reinforced concrete.

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The north and south sides of the building are covered in latticework comprised of 450 X-shaped pieces of precast concrete.  While the design adds beauty to the structure’s façade and is striking to look at, it serves a functional objective, as well.  According to the Los Angeles Conservancy website, “The primary purpose of the latticework is to provide external support for the structural system so the building’s interior can be free of columns.”

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The American Cement Building underwent a multi-million dollar renovation in 2002 during which time the office spaces were transformed into 71 live/work lofts.  You can check out some great interior photographs of the property here.  The units – and their views – are breathtaking!

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In Scream 3, The American Cement Building housed the office of horror movie producer John Milton (Lance Henriksen).

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At the time of the filming, the interior of the building was far less modern than it is today.

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I absolutely LOVE the fact that Milton had a diving board attached to his window in the flick.  Anyone care for a swim?  Winking smile

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The American Cement Building also appeared in Pharrell Williams’ music video “Come Get It Bae,” which featured Miley Cyrus.

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The building’s parking garage was where The Bride (Uma Thurman) learned how to wiggle her toe again in Kill Bill: Vol. 1.

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The Entourage movie also apparently did some filming at the building in March of this year.

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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 Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for telling me about this location!  Smile

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The American Cement Building, from Scream 3, is located at 2404 Wilshire Boulevard in Westlake.  You can visit the building’s official website here.

Whitey Bulger’s Former Apartment

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It is finally that time of year again – October 1st, the start of my Haunted Hollywood postings.  And I could not be more excited, so let’s get to it!  The October 2013 issue of Los Angeles magazine featured an absolutely enthralling article about the arrest of the infamous Boston mobster James “Whitey” Bulger.  I read the column, titled “The Old Man Next Door,” in one short sitting and was elated that author Steven Mikulan had included the address of Bulger’s former Santa Monica apartment building.  I finally made it out to stalk the place in January of this year, but held off on blogging about it until now as I figured the locale would make for a perfect Haunted Hollywood posting.

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James Bulger was born in 1929 in Boston’s North End.  He was given the nickname “Whitey” thanks to his bright blonde hair and reportedly hated the moniker as much as fellow mobster Benjamin Siegel hated being called “Bugsy.”   Whitey moved to a South Boston housing project with his family at a young age and his life of crime began shortly thereafter.  By the age of fourteen, he had been arrested for larceny and was eventually sentenced to a juvenile facility.  By 30, he was serving time at Alcatraz for a bank robbery conviction.  After his release, it was not long before he was running South Boston’s infamous Winter Hill Gang.  (Jack Nicholson’s Frank Costello character in The Departed was based on Bulger.)  In 1993, a task force was implemented to catch and arrest Whitey for numerous crimes, including 19 murders.  The task force was ready to take Bulger in the following year, but he was tipped off and immediately fled Boston.  Oddly enough, he originally went on the lam with a longtime girlfriend named Teresa Stanley.  She tired of life on the run fairly quickly and, upon her return to Massachusetts, Whitey asked a different longtime girlfriend, Catherine Greig, to flee with him.  Apparently, Greig didn’t mind playing second fiddle.

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Upon arriving in Santa Monica in 1996, James and Catherine took up residence at the Princess Eugenia apartment building located at 1012 Third Street.  They lived for the next 15 years under the aliases of Charlie and Carol Gasko.  Their life at the Princess Eugenia was a fairly quiet one, though Whitey could often be seen on his balcony looking through a pair of binoculars.  The couple went on daily walks, were friendly with neighbors and took care of a couple of local stray cats.  Their two-bedroom, two-bath apartment hid a more sinister existence, though.  Holes in the walls concealed a stash of $822,198 in cash and a collection of thirty guns.

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The Gasko’s lurid past caught up with them on June 22, 2011.  The previous day, a former Icelandic native named Anna Bjornsdottir had randomly watched an FBI video about Bulger and Greig on TV and recognized the couple immediately.  Anna had lived at the Embassy Hotel Apartments (now named Palihouse) across the street from the Princess Eugenia many years prior and had become friendly with Catherine thanks to a stray neighborhood cat that both women cared for.  She called the FBI and less than 24 hours later they had infiltrated Whitey’s building.  Shortly thereafter and thanks to some help from Josh Bond, the Princess Eugenia’s manager, Bulger and Greig were arrested without incident in the building’s garage.

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Greig wound up pleading guilty to identity fraud and conspiring to harbor a fugitive and was sentenced to 8 years in prison.  She is currently serving her time at the Wyatt Detention Center in Central Falls, Rhode Island. Whitey’s trial lasted two months and he was convicted of 31 counts, including murder involvement, drug trafficking, racketeering, money laundering, and extortion.  He was given two life sentences plus five years and is currently serving that time at the United States Penitentiary in Tucson, Arizona.

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During their stint at the Princess Eugenia, Whitey and Catherine lived in Apartment 303, a corner unit located on the western side of the building’s third floor.  Their unit is denoted with an orange arrow below.  You can check out some photographs of the interior of the apartment from the time that the couple lived there here.  To say the place was odd would be an understatement.  Why there was a bed in the living room is beyond me.  You can also see some interior photographs of what the space currently looks like here.

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In an eerie twist, while writing this post I learned that Whitey’s former apartment unit is blurred out on Google Street View, as you can see below.  I looked up Google’s privacy policy and apparently anyone can request to have their residence blurred from view.  Whether this request was made by Whitey himself (a distinct possibility considering he had plastic sheets, duct tape, and black curtains covering all of his windows when he lived at the Eugenia) or the new tenants is anyone’s guess, but I was pretty spooked when I came across it.  Freaaaaaaky!

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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.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Princess Eugenia, aka Whitey Bulger’s former apartment building, is located at 1012 Third Street in Santa Monica.

The “That Thing You Do!” Mailbox Scene

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Well folks, this post sadly marks the end to my 2013 Haunted Hollywood locales, which is especially depressing because this year was easily the Best. Halloween. Ever.  Once again, the GC and I (dressed up as The Bachelorette’s Emily Maynard and Jef Holm) headed out to our friends’ house in Malibu.  (And yes, I am aware that Emily and Jef are no longer together, but neither are Brenda and Dylan and we dressed up like them, too, one Halloween. 😉 )   Dick Van Dyke ended up not hosting his usual Halloween shindig this year (you can read about his 2011 fest here and his 2012 fest here), so we went instead to a party that our friends’ friends were having in a different gated community nearby.  And let me tell you, it was UH-MA-ZING.

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Not only was every single house in the neighborhood dressed to the nines (I swear, nobody does Halloween like the ‘Bu) . . .

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. . . but there were celebrities galore, including none other than Gwyneth Paltrow!  The GC actually spotted Gwyneth first and, while I just about died of excitement on the spot, because she was with her children, I restrained myself from asking for a photo.  I obsessed about it, though, for the next thirty minutes or so and eventually, without me knowing, the GC went up to her and said, “Gwyneth, could you please take a picture with my wife before her head explodes?”  Next thing I knew, there was a tap on my shoulder and GP was standing in front of me, saying “I heard you wanted a photo.”  Yeah, I was DYING.  And absolutely falling in love with the GC all over again.  Smile  Gwyneth truly could NOT have been nicer (easily one of the sweetest celebs that I have ever had the pleasure of meeting) and I adore her even more now than I did before.  So suck it, Vanity FairWinking smile

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Also in attendance were Cindy Crawford . . .

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. . . and Neil Patrick Harris.  Like I said, Best. Halloween. Ever.  Not sure how I’m ever going to recover from this one!  Here’s hoping next year is just as good.  Smile

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In the meantime, though, it is back to regular, non-haunted postings here at IAMNOTASTALKER.  So here goes!  As I mentioned in my post about the Cecil Hotel in downtown Los Angeles, in early October Miss Pinky Lovejoy, of the Thinking Pink blog, hosted her bachelorette party at my favorite place in the entire world, Disneyland.  Because we did not want to make the long drive back to Palm Springs that night, the GC and I got a hotel room in the area, which turned out to be a fateful decision.  The following morning, on our way out of town, I did a GPS search for a nearby Starbucks and when I saw that the closest outpost was located in the city of Orange, I just about had a heart attack as my very favorite movie scene EVER had been filmed in Orange – the mailbox scene from 1996’s That Thing You Do!  So I immediately braced the GC for the fact that we would be making a little unexpected stalking detour.

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In the scene, Faye Dolan (Liv Tyler) is listening to a portable radio and mailing letters in what is supposedly 1960s downtown Eerie, Pennsylvania, when she hears “That Thing You Do!”, her boyfriend’s band’s song, playing on the radio for the very first time.  She starts screaming and runs down the street towards an Army/Navy store where she finds fellow band member T.B. Player (Ethan Embry).  The two then race to Patterson’s Appliances, where another band member, Guy Patterson (cutie Tom Everett Scott), works.  (I will be blogging about the location of Patterson’s Appliances tomorrow.)  Guy turns all the radios in the store to the station playing the song and, shortly thereafter, the other two members of the group, Jimmy Mattingly (Johnathon Schaech) and Lenny Haise (Steve Zahn), show up and proceed to dance around manically.  Liv Tyler is sheer perfection in the scene and it is physically impossible not to be happy while watching it.

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You can take a look at the That Thing You Do! mailbox scene by clicking below.  Go ahead, try not to smile while watching – I dare you.  Winking smile

In the scene, the mailbox was set up in front of an empty storefront located at 173 North Glassell Street, in pretty much the exact spot where the red sandwich board sign is situated in the photograph below.

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I found this locale thanks to the Seeing Stars website and my trusty iPhone.  As soon as the GC and I arrived in Orange, I watched the scene on YouTube and saw that the mailbox was located across the street from a Woolworth store.   Seeing Stars listed the address of the store that masqueraded as Woolworths as 160 North Glassell Street, so from there it was simply a matter of matching up the angles of what appeared onscreen to the real life buildings.   You can check out some images of the Woolworths building and the rest of the downtown area dressed for the filming on the City of Orange website here.

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

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The mailbox scene from That Thing You Do! was filmed in front of what is now a vacant storefront located at 173 North Glassell Street in Orange.  The building that was dressed to look like a Woolworths in the flick can be found across the street at 160/162 North Glassell.

“The Seventh Sign” House

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NOTE – This blog was supposed to post yesterday, but somehow did not, so it looks like I am a day late and a dollar short.  Sorry about that!  I would like to start off by wishing my fellow stalkers a very HAPPY HALLOWEEN!  I hope all of you have a fabulously spook-filled day.  Smile  And now, on with the post!  Way back in July 2012, Mike, from MovieShotsLA, and I embarked upon a stalking adventure in and around the Venice Beach area.  While there, he took me by an adorable little dwelling that was the main location used in the 1988 horror film The Seventh Sign.  I had never actually heard of the flick at the time, but Mike figured that the residence would fit in perfectly with my Haunted Hollywood theme.  And, as luck would have it, we happened to meet the longtime homeowner while we were stalking the place and he not only told us all sorts of behind-the-scenes information about the shoot, but invited us into the backyard where quite a bit of the filming took place!

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The Grim Cheaper and I ended up watching The Seventh Sign shortly after I returned home and I can’t say that I was a big fan.  As I mentioned in my post about the residence belonging to Heather Langenkamp (who played herself) in Wes Craven’s New Nightmare, I am not especially fond of sci-fi-style horror flicks.  It was very cool to see the house that I had just stalked a few days prior featured so prominently onscreen, though.  In The Seventh Sign, the two-story bungalow is where Abby Quinn (Demi Moore) lives with her husband, Russell Quinn (Michael Biehn), and their demonic unborn child.

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According to the homeowner, whose parents owned the pad back in 1988 when The Seventh Sign was filmed, the property was chosen for the shoot because producers liked the fact that it was located on a corner, that it had an apartment above the garage, and that the main house and garage could both be captured onscreen in a single shot.  Due to a massive amount of foliage that has since grown, that is no longer the case, though, as you can see below.  Otherwise, the abode looks very much the same as it did onscreen, despite the passage of over 25 years.

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In The Seventh Sign, Abby and Russell rent out that garage apartment to a rather mysterious individual named David Bannon (Jürgen Prochnow) in order to make some extra income before their baby arrives.  Things don’t quite go as planned, though.

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Amazingly enough, while the landing is now different, the stairs leading up to the garage apartment look very much the same today as they did back in 1988.

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I was floored when the owner allowed me to pose for a photograph on the stairs, which Mike had told me played a significant role in the filming.  Smile

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The homeowner also informed us that an incredibly difficult-to-shoot scene was filmed in which Abby walked across a beam of light (in actuality it was a wooden bridge) from the main house to the garage apartment.  The scene was very labor-intensive, expensive, required countless retakes, took several nights to complete, and in the end wound up on the cutting room floor!  Ya gotta love Hollywood!

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Several areas of the residence’s real life interior were also used in the filming, including the living room;

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the kitchen;

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and the front room.  You can check out some more interior photographs of the property on an old rental listing here.

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In real life, the charming little cottage, which was originally built in 1916, is not a single-family dwelling.  It actually consists of three units – the main home, which features two separate apartments, one on each floor, and a third apartment located above the property’s detached garage, as was depicted in the movie.

The Seventh Sign House (5 of 19)

The Seventh Sign House (1 of 19)

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

Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for telling me about this location!  Smile

The Seventh Sign House (4 of 19)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Seventh Sign house is located at 902 Palms Boulevard in Venice.

The Cobb Estate from “Phantasm”

Cobb Estate Phantasm (13 of 15)

One locale that I came across (thanks to an article on Amoeblog) while doing research for my 2012 Haunted Hollywood posts was the former Cobb Estate in Altadena, the gates of which appeared in the 1979 cult horror film Phantasm.  And while I stalked the location shortly thereafter, for whatever reason I never got around to blogging about it last October.  I actually completely forgot about the site, in fact, until I sat down to write my recent post on Angeles Abbey Memorial Park, which was used in two installments of the Phantasm series – Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead and Phantasm IV: Oblivion.  Well, it is better to be late than never, as they say, right?

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The Cobb Estate is named after lumber magnate Charles H. Cobb, who, along with his wife, Carrie, purchased the then vacant 107-acre site in 1916.  Two years later, the couple commissioned a rambling Spanish-style mansion to be built on the premises.  When Charles, who was a Freemason, passed away in 1939, he willed the massive estate and its acreage to the Pasadena Scottish Rite Temple.  The brotherhood sold the site just a few years later and it subsequently went through a succession of different owners, including the Sisters of Saint Joseph.  Then, in 1956, the Marx Brothers (yes, those Marx Brothers) purchased the property as an investment.  It was left vacant while they debated what to do with it and became a popular hangout for miscreants who vandalized the once elegant grounds and mansion.  Sadly, in 1959, the Brothers decided to demolish the majority of the Cobbs’ former home.  Today, all that survives is the foundation, a few rock walls, some exterior stairwells, a long, twisting driveway, and the front gates.

Cobb Estate Phantasm (8 of 15)

Cobb Estate Phantasm (5 of 15)

In 1971, after their plans to turn to site into a cemetery were thwarted, the Marx Brothers put the land up for auction.  Bob Barnes, a social studies teacher at nearby John Muir High School in Pasadena, caught wind of the sale and, fearing that it would be acquired and pillaged by developers, rallied his students to raise funds to save the property.  Miraculously, they did.  In nine days time – and thanks to a generous donation from art collector Virginia Steele Scott – the group garnered over $150,000.  According to this 2011 Pasadena Star-News article, when the auction was held, Barnes was outbid by $25,000, but he made a last-minute plea to auctioneer Milton Wershaw saying his was the “people’s bid.”  Wershaw halted the auction for five minutes so that the group could raise the extra funds and even chipped in $1,000 himself.  The money was gathered, at which point, in a heart-warming twist, one of the land developers stepped down, announcing, “I am with the people, I shall bid no more!”  Barnes wound up donating the 107 acres to the Angeles National Forest and, in my favorite part of the story, headed out to Hollywood the following day, purchased a map of the stars’ homes, rang Groucho Marx’s doorbell, and thanked him.  So incredibly cool!

Cobb Estate Phantasm (9 of 15)

Cobb Estate Phantasm (10 of 15)

Today, the Cobb Estate is, as the sign on the gate will tell you, “A quiet refuge for people and wild life forever.”  The popular hiking area is apparently open 24 hours a day and after-dark walks are allowed.  Um, no thanks.  Winking smile

Cobb Estate Phantasm (1 of 15)

Cobb Estate Phantasm (3 of 15)

At some point in time (and for reasons unknown to this stalker – and seemingly everyone else on the internet, although there have been some reported unexplained occurrences), the property gained the nickname the “Haunted Forest.”  (It is also known as the “Enchanted Forest.”)

Cobb Estate Phantasm (15 of 15)

Cobb Estate Phantasm (11 of 15)

In Phantasm, the gates of the Cobb Estate masqueraded as the entrance to Morningside Cemetery, lair of The Tall Man (Angus Scrimm).

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Oddly enough, though, all of the scenes that supposedly took place behind the gates were actually shot about 400 miles away at the Dunsmuir Hellman Historic Estate in Oakland.

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

Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for making the Phantasm screen captures that appear in this post!  Smile

Cobb Estate Phantasm (7 of 15)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The gates to the Cobb Estate, from Phantasm, are located at the intersection of North Lake Avenue and East Loma Alta Drive in Altadena.

George Nader’s Former Home

George Nader House (16 of 16)

Earlier this year, while doing research on the various Coachella Valley-area houses formerly owned by pianist Liberace, I came across a blurb in fave book Palm Springs Confidential about the city’s first ever triple homicide, which took place in a Las Palmas Estates residence that once belonged to actor George Nader.  After wiping the drool from my chin Winking smile, I added the site to my Haunted Hollywood To-Stalk list and finally managed to drag the Grim Cheaper out there a couple of weekends ago.

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The 3-bedroom, 3.25-bath, 3,608-square-foot home, which was originally built in 1961, has quite a distinguished Hollywood pedigree.  Upon its completion, the dwelling was first inhabited by George Arnold, the longtime producer of Las Vegas’ popular Rhythm on Ice show.  When he moved out in the mid-60s, the pad was purchased by The Merry Widow actress Gregg Sherwood, who continued to own the place until 1976, when she sold it to a race track executive named Ed Friendly and his wife, San Francisco socialite Sophia.  The couple did not live there long.  At around 7:30 p.m. on the evening of Thursday, October 12th, 1978, Sophia, who was then 71, and Ed, who was 74, were just preparing to eat a fish dinner that had been prepared by their housekeeper, 67-year-old Frances Williams, when the doorbell rang.  The visitor was granted access to the home and proceeded to have a brief conversation with Sophia, during which he pulled out a .45-caliber handgun.  Sophia tried to flee down a hallway, but was shot in the back of the head and died instantly.  The killer then entered the kitchen and shot Frances, who had just placed the Friendlys’ dinner in a warming oven.  Ed, who was hard of hearing and likely unaware of the carnage taking place just a few feet away, was shot last, in the bedroom where he was watching TV.  Before leaving, the killer grabbed a fedora from the hallway and placed it over Sophia’s face.  None of the neighbors saw or heard a thing.

George Nader House (1 of 16)

George Nader House (2 of 16)

At 7:30 the following morning, the pool man showed up at the property and spotted Frances’ corpse through the window.  When police arrived later, they discovered the bodies of Ed and Sophia, as well as spent shell casings in the den, kitchen and hallway.  The warming oven, with the Friendlys’ dinner inside, was still turned on.  The house was in disarray, but nothing appeared to have been stolen.  And while the case led investigators all over the globe, it was eventually dropped due to a shortage of funds, the death of two key witnesses, and a lack of evidence, and remains open and unsolved to this day.  Police do have a theory, though, and, boy, is it tawdry!

George Nader House (3 of 16)

George Nader House (14 of 16)

Prior to meeting Ed, Sophia was married for 24 years to Curtis Wood Hutton, who just so happened to be the first cousin of Woolworth heir Barbara Hutton.  Curtis and Sophia had two children, Edward and Sophia (yes, she apparently named her daughter after herself).  At some point during the early years of the marriage, Barbara gifted Curtis, who was said to be one of her favorite relatives, a $1 million trust fund.  When he joined the Navy during World War II, Sophia, nervous that her husband might be killed in the line of duty, leaving her penniless, had the trust amended so that it would be payable to her upon Curtis’ death.  If she happened to precede her husband in death, the two Hutton children would inherit the money.  The amendment turned out to be irrevocable, so even after Curtis and Sophia divorced in 1951, she still stood to inherit the $1 million if he passed away before her.  Then, in 1977, the sh*t hit the proverbial fan.  Not only did Sophia amend her will, disinheriting her son and daughter, but Curtis also became terminally ill.  Edward, who was destitute at the time, realized he had to act fast if he ever wanted to see a dime of his father’s trust fund.  Police speculate that he paid Andreas Christensen, a London-based friend of his who was no stranger to crime, to commit the murders.  Things went according to plan, too, because Curtis died on October 28th, just two weeks after Ed and Sophia, and the Barbara Hutton trust, which then amounted to $1.3 million, was divided between Edward and his sister.  As I said, tawdry stuff!  You can read two fabulous, more in-depth articles about the murders on the DuJour magazine website and on the SFGate website.

George Nader House (6 of 16)

George Nader House (8 of 16)

Actor George Nader and his life partner, Mark Miller, purchased the property in 1991.  They owned the place until George’s death in 2002.  According to Palm Springs Confidential, at the time that they purchased it, the couple had no idea that a triple homicide had taken place on the premises.  Miller said, “We were never told about the murders.  We found out two years later.”  Nice disclosure job from the real estate agent.  Winking smile

George Nader House (10 of 16)

George Nader House (9 of 16)

Sadly, the residence was sold in August 2011 and the new owners have since completely remodeled the place.  You can see what the home used to look like via Google Street View below and in these photographs from the 2011 real estate listing.  I personally prefer the pre-remodel design.  So Old Hollywood!

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On a side-note – I would like to wish a big CONGRATULATIONS to my dear friend Miss Pinky Lovejoy, of the Thinking Pink blog, and her new husband, Keith Coogan.  The two tied the knot this past Saturday in Malibu and a fabulously pink time was had by all.  (Can you tell that I was just a little excited to be partnered up with none other than Jeremy Miller during the ceremony?? Smile)  You can read a great write-up on the festivities, which included the bride and groom driving off in a DeLorean, on the Mike the Fanboy website here.

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

George Nader House (7 of 16)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: George Nader’s former house, where Ed and Sophia Friendly were murdered in 1978, is located at 893 Camino Sur in Palm Springs’ Las Palmas Estates neighborhood.

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (1 of 38)

I thought I would break away from tradition today by blogging about a place that has no celebrity or film connection – Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch, which is without a doubt the BEST pumpkin patch I have ever been to in my life!  I may be breaking from the norm more often in the coming months actually, by turning my site into more of a guide to L.A. than strictly to filming locations.  The focus will, of course, always be movie, TV and pop culture locales, but I have come across so many cool spots over the years with no celebrity connection (like Lula Mae, one of my favorite places in the world) that I wanted to feature, but didn’t feel like I could.  Because I get countless emails from fellow stalkers asking for restaurant/hotel/things-to-do recommendations on an almost daily basis, though, I figured it was time that I started.  Today’s post is about one of those types of spots.  And while Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch is located in Redlands and, therefore, a bit out of the way, it is worth every minute of the drive.  If you live in the area or are visiting L.A. during the month of October, you should definitely make the trip!

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Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch was originally founded in 1980 by a man named Gregg Palmer.  Back in the 1950s, Gregg’s grandfather, Lowell S. Palmer, was driving towards Los Angeles from the Palm Springs area and during the journey happened to turn his head to watch cattle grazing in a pasture near the freeway.  Fate intervened when the wind blew Lowell’s hat off and into the pasture.  He pulled over to recover it and, while doing so, struck up a conversation with the landowner and wound up purchasing the 450-acre site that same day.  Lowell named his new farm Live Oak Canyon Ranch.

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (5 of 38)

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (2 of 38)

In 1980, Gregg decided to plant Christmas trees, pumpkins and gourds in a 45-acre section of the property that was then vacant.  The Live Oak Canyon Christmas Tree Farm started selling trees in 1983.  A few years later, the Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch, or The Pumpkin Patch, as it is also known, opened on the site.  It has been going strong ever since.

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (12 of 38)

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (8 of 38)

The Grim Cheaper and I discovered the location last year while driving back to Pasadena from my parents’ house in the desert thanks to a huge pumpkin displayed on a mountaintop overlooking the freeway.  I was immediately in awe of the patch due to its size and the fact that we could actually cut the pumpkins off the vine ourselves.  I had never known places like that even existed!  We ended up spending about five hours at the patch that day and this year Live Oak Canyon was at the top of my list of Halloween-related locales to visit.

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (33 of 38) (2)

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch, where one can easily spend an entire day, boasts an amazeballs gift shop filled with all sorts of Halloween paraphernalia (none of which the GC would let me buy Sad smile), a picnic area, a snack tent, pony rides, a petting zoo, a quad race, a hay castle, several bounce houses, slides, games, an aviary, a huge food court with over a dozen specialty vendors, live entertainment, a tractor-pulled hayride, acres and acres of sunflowers, and a corn maze.

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (38 of 38)

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (9 of 38)

This year, the GC and I decided to buy tickets for said corn maze, which I mistakenly thought would be a snap to get through.

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (37 of 38)

The labyrinth, which is comprised of 12,000 feet of twists, turns and dead-ends, wound up taking us a good two hours to complete and was beyond challenging – and beyond fun!

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (18 of 38)

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (21 of 38)

The two-part maze works as follows – upon entering, one is given a card with sketchings of eight different “Photo Op” spots that can be found hidden inside the cornfield, four in each section.

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (14 of 38)

Each Photo Op spot has a corresponding number on it that is part of two different four-digit codes.

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (19 of 38)

One code is required to unlock the lockbox on the doors leading from Part I to Part II of the maze and the second code is needed to exit the door located at the very end of the challenge.  As you can see we had a blast – and got our exercise for the day.  I seriously wish I had been wearing my pedometer because I think we walked over ten miles getting through that thing!  The patch also offers a special nighttime corn maze for those who are so inclined to complete in the dark.  Yeah, no thank you.  Winking smile

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (23 of 38)

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (27 of 38)

After the maze, the GC and I headed over to the U-Pick pumpkin patch.

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The 12-acre area features over 15 different varieties of orange pumpkins and over 15 specialty pumpkin varieties . . .

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (29 of 38)

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (32 of 38)

. . . all of which you actually pull of the vine yourself!  I mean, how incredibly cool is that?  LOVE IT!

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (30 of 38)

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (31 of 38)

Pictured below is the pumpkin the GC and I picked.  I adore the stem!

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (35 of 38)

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (36 of 38)

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

Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch (34 of 38)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Live Oak Canyon Pumpkin Patch is located at 32335 Live Oak Canyon Road in Redlands.  You can visit the patch’s official website here.  The property is open 7 days a week through November 2nd.  Admission on weekends is $2 per person and weekdays are free.