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  • Footsies Bar from “Bad Santa”

    Bad Santa Bar (3 of 9)

    One location that has been a thorn in my side for as long as I can remember is the gorgeous wood-paneled bar featured in the opening scene of Bad Santa.  Despite having contacted several crew members and spending copious amounts of time searching for it online, I just cannot seem to find the place – and, let me tell you, it is driving me absolutely crazy!  A locale from the 2003 black comedy that I was able to track down last January, though, thanks to location manager Steve Beimler, was Footsies – a different watering hole that appeared in the movie.  While Beimler originally informed me that Footsies was the bar from Bad Santa’s opening scene, when I went to stalk it – with Mike, from MovieShotsLA – I knew right away that it was not the right spot.  Regardless, I was excited to have a Christmas locale for my stalking backlog and figured it was most definitely blog-worthy.

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    Footsies popped up towards the beginning of Bad Santa as the supposed Milwaukee-area tavern where Willie (Billy Bob Thornton) and Marcus (Tony Cox) celebrated their successful robbery of a local mall.  It was also where Willie told Marcus that he was hanging up his Santa hat and moving to Miami Beach.  Only the interior of the bar was used in the filming.

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    Bad Santa Bar (8 of 9)

    In real life, the establishment looks very much the same as it did onscreen, despite a slight remodel.

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    Bad Santa Bar (7 of 9)

    According to Mike, who grew up in L.A., Footsies has been around forever.  Oddly enough, though, I could find no information whatsoever – nothing, nada, zip! – about its history online.

    Bad Santa Bar (5 of 9)

    Bad Santa Bar (9 of 9)

    I did learn that the bar appeared in two episodes of Southland, though.  The exterior was used in the Season 1 episode titled “Derailed” as the watering hole that Officer Dewey Dudek (C. Thomas Howell) stumbled out of before heading to work early in the morning.

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    And in the Season 5 episode titled “Bleed Out,” Footsies was where  Officer Ben Sherman (cutie Ben McKenzie – sigh!) and Detective Sammy Bryant (Shawn Hatosy) investigated a disturbance.

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    For any of my fellow stalkers who might have information or are interested in helping with the hunt, the exterior of the thorn-in-my-side Bad Santa bar is pictured below.  According to a crew member that I spoke with, it is located somewhere in Santa Monica and was dressed for the filming.  (I am guessing that the entire green front panel may have been faked.)  The locale is a one-story brick building that sits perpendicular to a traffic light.

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    The interior of the thorn-in-my-side bar might also be located in Santa Monica (although no crew members can say either way with any certainty).  It is such a beautiful, historic-looking site, I am shocked that no one I have spoken with has any recollection of its whereabouts.

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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.

    Bad Santa Bar (1 of 9)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Footsies bar, from Bad Santa, is located at 2640 North Figueroa Street in Los Angeles’ Cypress Park neighborhood.

  • The “Four Christmases” Bar

    Four Christmases Bar (4 of 6)

    Last December, while doing research on the Venice residence that was used as the interior of the house belonging to Kate (Reese Witherspoon) and Brad (Vince Vaughn) in Four Christmases (which I blogged about here), I came across this Venice Paper article that stated that the 2008 comedy had also done some filming at a neighboring property located at 1319 Abbot Kinney Boulevard.  When I Googled the address, I learned that it was the location of a spiritual gift shop/bookstore named Mystic Journey (which has since moved).  Being that Four Christmases did not have a scene that took place at any sort of a store, I could not for the life of me figure out what the space had been used for in the flick.  It was not until I came across these interior photographs of the building’s second floor that I figured out a fake bar had been built there for the shoot.  I later confirmed my theory with the movie’s incredibly nice production designer, Shepherd Frankel, and then ran right out to stalk the place in early February.

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    The 6,057-square-foot, three-story ultra-modern building was originally constructed in 2007 and was set up to accommodate two different retail/office spaces.  The ground floor consists of a 2,000-square-foot storefront that has been vacant ever since Mystic Journey moved out this past April.  (According to the Yo Venice website, It will soon be home to an IRO clothing store outpost.)  You can see photographs of that bottom level here.

    Four Christmases Bar (2 of 6)

    Four Christmases Bar (5 of 6)

    The top two floors are comprised of a 4,057-square-foot open live-work space with a full kitchen, hardwood flooring, two patios, and plenty of windows.

    Four Christmases Bar (3 of 6)

    Four Christmases Bar (6 of 6)

    As you can see in the interior photographs below (which I got from the building’s former real estate listing), the place is absolutely incredible!  Throw in a huge walk-in closet and it’s pretty much my ideal living space.

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    At the time of the filming of Four Christmases in December 2007, the building’s first floor and roof were being temporarily utilized for a Smart Car promotional event called the “Smart House.”  Shepherd and his team took over the property’s second and third levels, which were vacant, and transformed them into a supposed San Francisco-area bar/art gallery.

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    The bar was only featured once in Four Christmases – in the opening scene, in which Kate and Brad pretended to be strangers named “Kent” and “Daphne.”

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    As you can see below, the place was dressed heavily for the filming and is virtually unrecognizable from the real estate listing photographs.

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    The third floor railing, thankfully, remains the same, though, and is what eventually tipped me off as to what the building had been used for in the movie.

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    The bathroom where Brad and Kate, ahem, rendezvoused in the scene was a set that Shepherd constructed inside of the building.

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    Although the exterior of the bar/gallery is never visible in Four Christmases, Kate and Brad are shown leaving the establishment and hopping onto a cable car.  That portion of the scene was actually filmed in San Francisco (one of the few scenes that was), just outside of Café Grecco, which is located at 423 Columbus Avenue.

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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.

    Four Christmases Bar (1 of 6)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The fake Four Christmases bar/art gallery was created on the second and third floors of the building located at 1319 Abbot Kinney Boulevard in Venice.  The spot where Kate and Brad caught a cable car outside of the bar can be found about 400 miles away at 423 Columbus Avenue in the North Beach area of San Francisco.

  • The “Four Christmases” Church

    Four Christmases Church (7 of 13)

    Due to the fact that Christmas movies filmed in the L.A. area are few and far between, I typically only compile about five holiday-themed locales to blog about each year.  (If I could swing an entire month of Christmas posts, believe me, I would.)  This year was no different and because there are only five blogging days left until Christmas, you know what that means – my Yuletide posts start today!  Yay!  So here goes.  Last January, while on the hunt for locations from Four Christmases, I managed to track down New Life Community Church, the Hawthorne parish that masqueraded as the United Church of Faith and Worship, Piedmont Branch, in the 2008 comedy.  So I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on over to stalk it a couple of weeks ago, after first stopping by Marilyn Monroe’s childhood home (which I blogged about here).

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    While most of the interior spaces that appeared in Four Christmases were studio-built sets, I knew from the movie’s production notes that an actual religious institution in Hawthorne was used for the filming of the church scene.  Because only the inside of it was shown, though, I had a tough time tracking it down.  That is, until I came across production designer Shepherd Frankel’s FABULOUS website last year, on which were posted exterior photographs of the ultra-modern-looking parish where filming took place.  From there I just did a Google search for modern places of worship in Hawthorne and was fairly quickly led to images of New Life Community Church.

    Four Christmases Church (3 of 13)

    Four Christmases Church (13 of 13)

    New Life Community Church pops up towards the middle of Four Christmases (in the second Christmas vignette), in the scene in which Marilyn (Mary Steenburgen) takes her daughter Kate (Reese Witherspoon) and Kate’s boyfriend, Brad (Vince Vaughn), to a bit of an unconventional mass to meet her new boyfriend, Pastor Phil (Dwight Yoakam).  While there – and despite Kate’s massive stage fright – Kate and Brad get roped into portraying Mary and Joseph in a reenactment of the Nativity of Jesus.  According to the production notes, the church’s hi-tech style was not the original design concept.  Director Seth Gordon states, “Pastor Phil was originally meant to play guitar and deliver a brief sermon, but Dwight brought such stature and swagger to it, with his arms raised and a booming voice that played to the furthest pews.”  From there, the design scheme of the church was changed to include a large stage, huge video screen backdrops, colored lights, smoke, and blasting music.  Frankel says, “The church was an environment that morphed considerably from its earliest conception.  Pastor Phil’s sermon was originally written as something with a dilapidated smoke machine on a bare stage, but once Dwight got involved, it turned into a real rock n’ roll event with projection screens and lighting cues and neon illuminating the nativity.  We did keep the smoke, though, and made it a key visual element to the set.”

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    Sadly, New Life Community Church was not open when we showed up to stalk it, so I was not able to get any interior photographs of the place.  But you can see some on the church’s official Facebook page here.

    Four Christmases Church (6 of 13)

    Four Christmases Church (4 of 13)

    Despite the fact that the church’s architecture is unusual to say the least, I could not find any information whatsoever about its construction or history online.  The only thing I was able to discern – thanks to the Historic Aerials website – was that the structure was built sometime after 2005.

    Four Christmases Church (8 of 13)

    Four Christmases Church (10 of 13)

    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.

    Four Christmases Church (1 of 13)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: New Life Community Church, from Four Christmases, is located at 5009 West 119th Street in Hawthorne.  You can visit the church’s official website here.

  • The Guesthouse Hotel from “National Lampoon’s Vacation”

    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (28 of 30)

    Once fellow stalker Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, tracked down the Town House Motel from National Lampoon’s Vacation (which I blogged about here) a couple of weeks back, he set about trying to find the hexagon-shaped pool where Clark W. Griswold (Chevy Chase) went skinny dipping with The Girl in the Ferrari (Christie Brinkley) in the 1983 flick.  After, as he said, “putting in more Google search permutations and combinations than I can count,” he came across the locale right in the heart of Norwalk, of all places.  As you can imagine, I was absolutely chomping at the bit to stalk it as soon as he gave me the address (I was thisclose to driving from Palm Springs to Norwalk for the day), but did not manage to make it out there until last week when the Grim Cheaper and I were in L.A. for a brief visit.

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    While sleuthing – and only after looking at a lot of results pages – Owen was led to this Panoramio photograph of a phone booth in Norwalk, on which a commenter named Joe Gattuso happened to mention that he was fairly certain a nearby hotel named the Guesthouse International was used in the filming of National Lampoon’s Vacation.  So Owen did a Google search for images of the Guesthouse pool and, sure enough, it was the spot where Clark had skinny dipped.  Woot woot!

    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (27 of 30)

    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (26 of 30)

    The Griswold clan – Clark and his wife Ellen (Beverly D’Angelo), son Rusty (Anthony Michael Hall) and daughter Audrey (Dana Barron) – check into the Guesthouse International, which is said to be located about ten hours outside of Los Angeles, towards the end of National Lampoon’s Vacation.  While there, Clark and Ellen get into a fight and Clark winds up heading to the hotel bar alone, where he encounters The Girl in the Ferrari.  Sadly, the Guesthouse’s lounge area has been completely remodeled in recent years, according to the super nice hotel employee that I spoke with, and no longer looks anything at all like it did in Vacation.  Boo!  (It was closed at the time that I was stalking the hotel, so I was not able to get any photographs of it in its current state.)

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    After a few drinks, Clark and The Girl in the Ferrari decide to go skinny dipping in the hotel’s pool (“This is crazy!  This is crazy!  This is crazy!”) and end up waking up all of the guests, including Clark’s family, while doing so.

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    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (3 of 30)

    I am fairly certain that the area where the scene took place is right about where the Jacuzzi (which was not there when the movie was filmed) is today.

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    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (7 of 30)

    At the time of the filming, the hotel was known as the Saddleback Inn.  You can see a photograph of it from that era here.  Amazingly enough, despite a name change (that resulted from what I am guessing was a change of ownership), the place still looks pretty much exactly the same today as it did in 1982 when Vacation was filmed.  Seriously, how cool is that?  Over three decades later and the place is still completely recognizable!  LOVE IT!

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    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (2 of 30)

    I am fairly certain that one of the hotel’s actual rooms was also used in the filming, but because the hotel interiors have since been updated, it is impossible to tell.  You can see some photographs of what the rooms currently look like here.

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    Today, the Guesthouse International Hotel boasts 230 rooms, 8 acres, 6 buildings, 2 pools, 1 Jacuzzi – and a partridge in a pear tree.  Winking smile  According to the Desert USA website, President Ronald Reagan even stayed there at one point in time.

    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (14 of 30)

    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (16 of 30)

    I was absolutely floored to see the pride that the Guesthouse takes in its cinematic history.  Signs stating that Vacation was filmed on the premises are posted throughout the lobby and by the pool.  I so wish more hotels would do this sort of thing!

    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (19 of 30)

    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (20 of 30)

    The super nice employee that I spoke with also informed me that the lobby area was used in the filming of the Lifetime movie Drew Peterson: Untouchable.  Unfortunately though, I could not find a copy of the production with which to make screen captures for this post.

    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (24 of 30)

    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (22 of 30)

    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 Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, for finding this location!  Smile

    National Lampoon's Vacation Hotel (25 of 30)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Guesthouse International Hotel, where Clark skinny dipped in National Lampoon’s Vacation, is located at 12500 Firestone Boulevard in Norwalk.  You can visit the hotel’s official website here.  There are two pools located on the premises – the one that appeared in Vacation is the larger of the two, located on the eastern side of the property, closest to the lobby.

  • Citizens Bank Building from “The Sting”

    The Sting Bank (6 of 11)

    Upon landing my new gig writing for Los Angeles magazine’s CityThink blog, I comprised a list of iconic SoCal locales to spotlight in my weekly column, one of which was the Santa Monica Pier Carousel from 1973’s The Sting.  The only problem was that I had never actually seen The Sting.  Neither had the Grim Cheaper.  So I set out to remedy the situation and immediately ordered the DVD from Amazon.  We watched it shortly after it arrived and I was shocked at how good it was – forty years later!  Not to mention the fact that the locations absolutely blew my mind.  While The Sting takes place in 1936 Chicago, the vast majority of it was lensed in 1973 Los Angeles, with a significant portion of the filming taking place in my former hometown of Pasadena.  Shockingly, I did not recognize any of the Rose City locales that were featured and when I started doing research on the flick, I just about fell out of my chair.  One spot used prominently towards the end of the movie was the J. Crew store in Old Town, a place I used to shop at on a weekly basis!  So while I was in L.A. last week, I spent one particularly cold morning (the GC said my outfit above resembled Nanook of the North) stalking the flick’s Pasadena locations, one of which was the historic Citizens Bank Building.

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    The Citizens Bank Building was constructed in quite an unusual manner.  The bottom floor of the structure was built in 1906 to house Citizens Bank.  The site was designed by architects John Parkinson [who also gave us the Bullocks Wilshire department store from Christmas Vacation (which I blogged about here) and Union Station (which I blogged about here)] and George Edwin Bergstrom.

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    In 1914, when Citizens Bank was ready to expand, Parkinson and Bergstrom added the top six levels to the structure, creating the seven-story building that stands today.

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    The square cast metal clock featured on the corner of the edifice was added in 1926 and is still currently in working condition.

    The Sting Bank (1 of 11)

    The Sting Bank (3 of 11)

    Citizens Bank occupied the site until September 2004, at which point it was sold to a developer, who immediately began a large renovation.  The first-level former bank area was gutted entirely and now serves as offices for the Dilbeck real estate company.

    The Sting Bank (5 of 11)

    I found this spot thanks to The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations and just about fell over when I did, due to the fact that the GC had an office in the Citizens Bank Building for years.  His office was reached via a side door, though, and neither of us had ever seen the interior of the bottom floor bank space during his tenure there.

    The Sting Bank (4 of 11)

    The bank popped up in the beginning of The Sting, in the montage scene in which grifter Henry Gondorff (Paul Newman) is shown getting together a team of people to help exact revenge on Doyle Lonnegan (Robert Shaw).

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    The space is only featured for a brief moment in the scene and only a very small portion of the interior is shown.

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    The interior of the former bank area, post-remodel, is pictured below.  While researching this location, a few things gave me pause as to whether it was the bank that was used in The Sting.  For instance, the shape and spacing of the windows that appeared onscreen don’t seem to match up to the building’s actual windows.  And in a very frustrating twist, I could not find any interior photographs of the space prior to its renovation to verify that it was the location used.  I even contacted the current property manager and sent her screen captures from the movie, but she was uncertain as well.  Boo!  If anyone out there has any photographs of the site pre-remodel, please let me know as I’d love to verify this locale.

    The Sting Bank (7 of 11)

     The Sting Bank (8 of 11)

    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.

    The Sting Bank (11 of 11)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Citizens Bank Building from The Sting is located at 255 East Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena.

  • Visiting L.A.

    I have been in L.A. the past few days doing some stalking and visiting friends and therefore have not been able to write any new blog posts.  I will be back next week, though, so until that time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

  • Melrose Avenue from “L.A. Story”

    Wacko L.A. Story (11 of 17)

    Another L.A. Story location that has been waiting patiently in my stalking backlog is the block of Melrose Avenue where Harris K. Telemacher (Steve Martin) and Sara McDowel (Victoria Tennant) walked and talked after attending a fundraiser for a private art museum in the 1991 flick.  Unfortunately though, because the movie was lensed over twenty years ago and that area of Melrose has changed quite a bit during the interim, I am unsure of the exact spot where filming took place.  But I sure did my best to try to pinpoint it.

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    While watching Harris and Sara’s walk-and-talk scene in L.A. Story, I noticed a neon sign in the background that spelled out “Wacko.”  Harris had mentioned in the scene that they were wandering down Melrose, so I decided to begin my hunt there and did a Google search for “Wacko” and “Melrose Avenue.”  Sure enough, I was led to an April 1997 Los Angeles Times article that stated, “Wacko, a toy and trinket shop with a bizarre inventory ranging from eyeball magnets to ‘mystic smoke for fingertips,’ is famous for its colorful neon name sign that has become an icon of hipness known worldwide.”  (I must not be all that hip being that I had been completely unaware of the sign prior to reading the article.  Winking smile)  From there, finding the address of the former Wacko storefront – at 7404 Melrose Avenue – was fairly easy.

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    It was not until later that I realized a street sign for “Martel Avenue” was visible in the background of the scene.  My search would have been a whole lot easier had I noticed that earlier!  D’oh!

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    Wacko was originally established in 1984 by entrepreneur/art collector Billy Shire.  Shire’s parents had founded the Soap Plant, a boutique specializing in handmade soap, ceramics and leather clothing, in Los Feliz in 1971.  In 1980, Billy took over the family business and moved it to a strikingly unique corner building at 7400 Melrose Avenue.  The new space was larger, enabling Billy to expand his wares to include jewelry and books.  Four years later, when two vacant storefronts located next door to the Soap Plant became available, he opened a “pop culture toy shop” named Wacko, aka “The Second Happiest Place on Earth.”  Besides selling Japanese robots, wind-up trinkets and games, Wacko also offered the largest selection of postcards in all of Los Angeles.  In 1986, Shire founded an art showplace named La Luz de Jesus Gallery in the space located upstairs from the Soap Plant and Wacko.  All three were so successful that nine years later he opened up sister locations in a 6,500-square-foot space at 4633 Hollywood Boulevard in Los Feliz.  Sadly, as the Melrose Avenue clientele shifted from punk to hipster in the late ‘90s, his business began to decline and he wound up closing his outposts there in 1997.  His Hollywood Boulevard shops are still alive and well, though.  Today, Wacko’s former Melrose Avenue home is the site of a boot shop and cell phone store.  You can check out what the building looked like during the Wacko days here.

    Wacko L.A. Story (3 of 17)

    Wacko L.A. Story (1 of 17)

    While the former Wacko building was an easy find, I still have not been able to pinpoint the exact storefronts that Harris and Sara walked in front of in L.A. Story.  It is clear from the position of Wacko’s neon sign in the scene that the two were on the north side of Melrose Avenue, heading east from the Martel Avenue intersection towards North Fuller Avenue.  None of the storefronts on that particular block match up to what appeared onscreen, though.

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    Wacko L.A. Story (9 of 17)

    Granted a lot can change in 22 years time, but I was absolutely certain that I would find something that had remained the same, something that would allow me to identify the exact storefronts.  Sadly though, the Grim Cheaper and I walked up and down that particular block of Melrose several times, screen captures in hand, without turning up a single thing.

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    Wacko L.A. Story (15 of 17)

    The storefront that I most wanted to locate was the spot with the neon-decorated three-panel window, where Harris and Sara paused and where Harris uttered his famous line, “So there I was jabbering at her about my new job as a serious newsman – about anything at all – but all I could think was wonderful, wonderful, wonderful, wonderful, wonderful, and most wonderful, and yet again, wonderful.”

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    While I originally thought that the window that appeared behind them in the scene was arched, as you can see in the screen capture pictured below (which I lightened a bit), that is not actually the case.  Some sort of arched backdrop was used to create that illusion, but in reality the window is rectangular in shape.

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    My best guess is that the storefront used is the one located at 7365 Melrose Avenue, which now houses Freak Chic Tattoo.  That is just a guess, though.  While the shop does boast a similarly-shaped three-panel window, because there are no other identifying marks, it is virtually impossible to say for sure.

    Wacko L.A. Story (10 of 17)

    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.

    Wacko L.A. Story (12 of 17)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Harris and Sara’s walk-and-talk from L.A. Story took place on the 7300 block of Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles’ Fairfax district.  The couple was on the north side of the street in the scene, near the storefronts located at 7377 and 7383, heading east.  I believe that Harris and Sara stopped in front of the storefront located at 7365 Melrose Avenue.  The former site of Soap Plant and Wacko can be found at 7400/7404 Melrose Avenue.  You can visit the Soap Plant/Wacko official website here.

  • The Former KCET Studios from “L.A. Story”

    KCET LA Story (12 of 27)

    While perusing through my extensive backlog of stalking photographs recently, I realized that there were a few L.A. Story locales that I had yet to blog about, one of which was the former site of KCET Studios in Los Feliz, where Harris K. Telemacher (Steve Martin) worked in the 1991 comedy.  I had actually stalked the spot way back in May, but, for whatever reason, never got around to writing about it.  So here goes.

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    The 4.5-acre lot located at 4401 Sunset Boulevard in Los Feliz has been the site of a moviemaking facility just shy of one hundred years.  The first studio to be established there was Lubin Manufacturing Company in 1912, which was founded by film producer Siegmund Lubin to create educational videos.  After he sold the location in 1913, it changed hands numerous times and then was eventually purchased by an actor named Charles Ray in 1920.  Ray built several red brick structures on the premises, most of which still stand to this day.  He also constructed a cutting-edge soundstage with a glass-enclosed stage, glass roof, removable sides, a water tank, and extensive electrical equipment.  Amazingly, that soundstage, known as Studio A, is still currently in use.  When Charles Ray Productions went bankrupt in 1923, the locale again went through a succession of different owners including Monogram Pictures, Allied Artists, and ColorVision.  In 1971, KCET purchased the facility for $800,000.  The company remained there for the next 40 years.

    KCET LA Story (3 of 27)

    KCET LA Story (4 of 27)

    The studio, which was named a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 1978, was acquired by the Church of Scientology to be used as one of their “production of religious and social betterment audiovisual properties” in April 2011.

    KCET LA Story (25 of 27)

    KCET LA Story (15 of 27)

    In L.A. Story, KCET Studios stood in for the KYOY 14 news facilities. The exterior of the structure was shown in one of the movie’s opening scenes, in which Harris arrived at work to give his daily wacky weather report.  In the scene, he drove through the studio’s east entrance, which is located near 1441 North Hoover Street.

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    KCET LA Story (8 of 27)

    I am fairly certain that the area where Harris parked his car in the scene is on the studio’s north side, near the intersection of Sunset Drive and North Commonwealth Avenue.  I could not match the exact angle of the screen capture below being that the spot where Harris parked is located on the studio grounds, but I believe the street visible behind him is North Commonwealth Avenue.

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    KCET LA Story (21 of 27)

    And that the satellite pictured below is the one he parked next to.

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    KCET LA Story (18 of 27)

    The interior of one of the studio’s soundstages was also used as the KYOY 14 news set in the film.

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    Thanks to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, I learned that the exterior of the former KCET Studios was also featured as the City Emergency Hospital where Dr. Miles J. Bennell (Kevin McCarthy) was evaluated in the 1956 horror flick Invasion of the Body Snatchers.

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    I believe that the area used as the hospital entrance is the gate located near 4368 Sunset Drive, just east of where Harris parked his car in L.A. Story.

    KCET LA Story (14 of 27)

    KCET LA Story (16 of 27)

    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.

    KCET LA Story (5 of 27)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The former KCET Studios, from L.A. Story, is located at 4401 Sunset Boulevard in Los Feliz.  The entrance that Harris drove through in the flick can be found near 1441 North Hoover Street, in between Fountain Avenue and Sunset Drive.  The area where he parked is located just south of the intersection of Sunset Drive and North Commonwealth Avenue.  The City Emergency Hospital gate from Invasion of the Body Snatchers can be found near 4368 Sunset Drive, slightly east of where Harris parked his car in L.A. Story.

  • Marilyn Monroe’s Childhood Home

    Marilyn Monroe's former house (10 of 10)

    One location that had been on my To-Stalk list for what seemed like ages was the Hawthorne-area home where my girl Miss Marilyn Monroe spent the first eight-and-a-half years of her life.  Fellow stalker Lavonna had texted me the address years ago, but because I so rarely find myself in that neck of the woods, I was never able to make it out there.  Until a couple of weeks ago, that is, when I realized that the residence was not too far from a hotel near LAX where the Grim Cheaper and I happened to be staying.  So I dragged him right on over to stalk it (and to a Four Christmases locale that I will be writing about in late December).

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    Gladys Mortensen was single, living in Hollywood and working as a film cutter at Consolidated Film Industries when she became pregnant with Marilyn in 1925.  In December of that year, shortly before she was to give birth, she headed to Hawthorne in the hopes that she could move in with her mother, Della, for a brief time before and after the delivery.  Della had other plans, though – she was about to sail to Borneo to make amends with her estranged husband, Charles Grainger, who was working in the oil fields there.  Arrangements were instead made for Gladys to stay across the street at the home of Wayne and Ida Bolender, a deeply religious couple who served as foster parents to several children.

    Marilyn Monroe's former house (1 of 10)

    Marilyn Monroe's former house (2 of 10)

    The Bolenders had moved into the 3-bedroom, 1-bath, 1,376-square-foot clapboard residence pictured below in 1919.  At the time, the home, which was built in 1913, boasted 4 four acres of land (it now sits on a 0.20-acre parcel), where the family raised chickens and goats and grew vegetables.  The property’s original address was 459 East Rhode Island Street, but during the re-districting of the area in the ‘30s and ‘40s it was changed to 4201 West 134th Street.  You can see a photograph of the house from the time that the Bolenders owned it here.  It is absolutely REMARKABLE how little of it has changed over the past ninety-plus years!  You can also check out a picture of a newborn Marilyn in front of the dwelling here, in which a “459” address placard is visible in the background.  So incredibly cool!

    Marilyn Monroe's former house (3 of 10)

    Marilyn Monroe's former house (4 of 10)

    Gladys gave birth on June 1st, 1926 in the charity ward of Los Angeles General Hospital.  She named her new daughter Norma Jeane Mortensen.  After twelve days, the two returned to the Bolender’s.  Gladys spent about three weeks at the Hawthorne house with Marilyn before heading back to Hollywood and her job at Consolidated in July.  She left her baby behind, paying Wayne and Ida $5 a week to care for her.  Contrary to what has been reported, Gladys did not abandon Marilyn entirely, but came to visit her on a weekly basis, often spending the night.

    Marilyn Monroe's former house (6 of 10)

    Marilyn Monroe's former house (7 of 10)

    When Gladys’ son from her first marriage, Jackie, from whom she was estranged, died at the age of 14 in August 1933, she became compelled to regain custody of Norma Jeane.  She took on a second job and by October 1934, had saved enough money to purchase a six-thousand-dollar house (at 6812 Arbol Drive in Hollywood – sadly, it’s no longer standing).  That same month, eight-year-old Marilyn left the Bolenders and moved in with her mother.  She didn’t stay long, though.  Gladys had a nervous breakdown in late December and was committed to an asylum, at which point Norma Jeane was sent to live with one of her mother’s good friends, Grace McKee.  She didn’t stay there long, though, either.  By 1935, Gladys could no longer afford to care for Marilyn and sent her to the Los Angeles Orphan’s Home (now Hollygrove Home for Children, which I blogged about here).  The girl who would become the world’s most famous blonde spent the remaining years of her childhood being bounced around from foster parents to family members.  Then, at the tender age of 16, she married her first husband, James Dougherty, and moved into a guest house in Sherman Oaks, which also, unfortunately, no longer stands.  You can read my blog post on that location here.

    Marilyn Monroe's former house (9 of 10)

    Marilyn Monroe's former house (5 of 10)

    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 Lavonna for telling me about this location! Smile

    Marilyn Monroe's former house (8 of 10)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Marilyn Monroe’s childhood home is located at 4201 West 134th Street in Hawthorne.

  • Clifford Lambert’s Former House

    Clifford Lambert House (5 of 6)

    A couple of months ago, my favorite desert radio personalities “Bulldog” Bill Feingold and Kevin Holmes interviewed Tyson Wrensch, co-author of Until Someone Gets Hurt.  The book, which chronicles the disappearance and murder of 74-year-old Palm Springs retiree Clifford Lambert at the hands of five San Francisco-based grifters (27-year-old playboy Daniel Garcia, 26-year-old Nepalese expat Kaushal Niroula, 26-year-old bartender Miguel Bustamante, 69-year-old attorney David Replogle, and 30-year-old former Marine Craig McCarthy), sounded absolutely intriguing and I ordered it immediately.  Sadly, it turned out to be a bit of a disappointing and rather difficult-to-follow read.  The story did fascinate – and sicken – me, though, and as soon as I finished reading it, I ran right out to stalk Lambert’s former house.  And while I do realize that this article would fit in best with my Haunted Hollywood postings, I wanted to write it while the details were still fresh in my mind.  So here goes.

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    The convoluted story of Lambert’s disappearance began in April 2008 when the former art dealer, who had just recently broken up with his much-younger partner of 14 years, met Daniel Garcia online.  The two began a digital flirtation and it was not long before Cliff flew his new friend out to Palm Springs for the weekend.  While there, Daniel pilfered some of Lambert’s credit cards and bank statements and, in a rather brazen maneuver, used one of those credit cards to upgrade his seat to First Class on his flight home to San Francisco.  Cliff caught wind of it immediately and severed all ties to the con man.  Or so he thought.  A couple of weeks later, Garcia showed up on Lambert’s doorstep, flowers in hand, to apologize.  The atonement was a ruse, though, because during the visit, Daniel stole several of Cliff’s paintings, jewelry, and silver pieces.

    Clifford Lambert House (1 of 13)

    Clifford Lambert House (2 of 13)

    A few months later, Garcia, his good friend Kaushal Niroula, who was a seasoned con artist, and Niroula’s boyfriend, David Replogle, began making plans to kidnap Cliff, whereupon they would force him to sign over his estate.  (Lambert’s flashy lifestyle and expensive toys had led Daniel to believe he was a multi-millionaire.  He wasn’t.  While well off, Cliff did not have anything close to the amount of money that Garcia suspected.)  In early December 2008, Niroula, posing as a New York estate lawyer named Samuel Orin, called Lambert and told him that he was poised to receive a large inheritance.  The two made arrangements to discuss the matter in person and Niroula headed out to the desert.  He was accompanied by his good friend Miguel Bustamante and Bustamante’s roommate, Craig McCarthy, both of whom were being paid to execute the kidnapping.  At some point during their stay, and for reasons not made entirely clear in the book, plans changed, though, and Kaushal decided that Lambert would have to be killed.

    Clifford Lambert House (4 of 13)

    On December 4th, Kaushal and Cliff met for the first time at Dink’s Restaurant to “discuss the inheritance.”  While the two were dining, McCarthy and Bustamante snuck into Lambert’s garage and hid.  For whatever reason, though, when Cliff arrived home, they chickened out and fled.  The following night, Kaushal and Lambert met once again, this time at Lambert’s house to “finalize paperwork.”  At one point, Niroula excused himself and went to let Miguel and Craig into the home through a side door.  The two then killed Cliff by stabbing him to death with kitchen knives while Kaushal watched.  After cleaning up the mess, they put him into the back of his own Mercedes and drove to a remote area where they buried him in a shallow grave.  His body has never been found.

    Clifford Lambert House (3 of 13)

    Shortly thereafter, Replogle forged documents that gave one of Niroula’s acquaintances, a 67-year-old Palm Springs art dealer named Russell Manning, power of attorney over Clifford’s estate.  (It is likely that Manning did not know about the murder.  Replogle had told him that Lambert was in jail for raping Niroula and infecting him with HIV and was signing over his estate as reparation.)  Once the group had their hands on Lambert’s bank accounts, they began to blow through his money.  In less than a month, Niroula and Garcia spent over $215,000.  They also attempted to put his house on the market.  Thankfully, the real estate agent they contacted about the sale had an instinct that something was fishy and did some online digging.  When he learned that Lambert had been reported missing, he called the police.  Around that same time, Bustamante showed up at Cliff’s house with a moving van and five day laborers and began to clear the place out.  One of the neighbors saw the group, immediately contacted the authorities and Bustamante was arrested.  While in custody, he folded and confessed the whole sordid tale.  Warrants were soon issued for his five accomplices and all were arrested shortly thereafter.

    Clifford Lambert House (10 of 13)

    Clifford Lambert House (5 of 13)

    While McCarthy pled guilty to voluntary manslaughter and was sentenced to 25 years in prison and Manning pled guilty to fraud and was sentenced to 5 years, Replogle, Garcia, Bustamante, and Niroula all stood trial.  They were each eventually found guilty and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

    Clifford Lambert House (8 of 13)

    Clifford Lambert House (9 of 13)

    Lambert’s former 4,301-square-foot house, which was originally built in 1954, was put on the market as a probate sale in May 2011 for $879,000.  From what I can glean from property records, it sold fairly quickly for $737,000.  It was then put on the market again the following year and sold in June 2012 for $1,030,000.  According to the 2011 real estate listing, the Mid-century abode boasts four bedrooms, five baths, a 0.34-acre corner plot of land, a pool, a formal dining room, a large living room with an architectural fireplace and wood-beamed peaked ceilings, an office, a wet bar/ice cream bar, a guest wing, a large master bedroom with a double-sided fireplace, and, as you can see below, soaring views of the San Jacinto Mountains.  You can check out some current interior photographs of the residence here, as well as some pictures from the time that Cliff owned it here.

    Clifford Lambert House (6 of 13)

    Clifford Lambert House (7 of 13)

    According to a sign posted on the dwelling, the place is named Villa dei Leoni (which is the Italian translation of “House of Lions”).  I am unsure if Lambert gave the pad its nickname or if it was done by a previous or subsequent owner.

    Clifford Lambert House (3 of 6)

    Clifford Lambert House (4 of 6)

    I am also unsure if the gold L’s posted on the home’s front and side gate stand for Lambert or Leoni.

    Clifford Lambert House (1 of 6)

    Clifford Lambert House (2 of 6)

    While I typically love true crime stories, this one was so completely twisted and perverse that it was almost repulsing.  Reading about such morally-devoid people was quite tough for me to stomach.  For those who are interested in additional information on the case (and it’s not pretty, let me tell you), you can check out a more in-depth write-up here and you can watch Part I of a KMIR 6 news special by clicking below.

    Part II of that same special is below.

    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.

    Clifford Lambert House (13 of 13)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Clifford Lambert’s former house is located at 317 Camino Norte in the Old Las Palmas area of Palm Springs.  Liberace’s third desert residence, which I blogged about here, is located just around the corner at 1441 North Kaweah Road.