The Queen Mary Observation Bar from “He’s Just Not That Into You”

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (3 of 4)

I am beginning to discover that The Queen Mary is a lot like the Millennium Biltmore Los Angeles in that every square inch of it has appeared onscreen in multiple notable productions.  Case in point – while scanning through Adaptation to make screen captures for my post on Zipper Concert Hall last week, I noticed that the 2002 drama’s opening scene took place in the ship’s Observation Bar & Art Deco Lounge.  I had long been aware of the watering hole’s appearance in favorite movie He’s Just Not That Into You (which I detailed in a 2014 article for L.A. magazine), but immediately got curious about what other productions made use of it.  When I got to digging, I was shocked at the number of big and small screen hits that feature the bar.  So I figured it was only right to dedicate a post to it.

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When we lived in Los Angeles, The Queen Mary was one of my and the Grim Cheaper’s favorite places to staycation.  Originally a Cunard-White Star Line luxury liner, the grand 1934 ship is permanently moored just south of downtown Long Beach.

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (2 of 4)

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (1 of 4)

She was purchased by the city after making her final voyage (the last of 1,001 Atlantic crossings) in 1967.  Following a painstaking three-year renovation, The Queen Mary opened as a hotel and tourist attraction.  The restored vessel is nothing short of stunning inside and out and stepping aboard immediately transports one back in time to the grand old days of ocean travel.  I first visited the ship with my parents for my birthday in June 2000, at the height of my Titanic obsession, and honestly felt like I had wandered right onto one of the film’s opulent sets.

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (2 of 2)

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (1 of 2)

On that visit, the Observation Bar & Art Deco Lounge quickly became one of our favorite spots on the boat.  Originally a first class parlor (you can see what it looked like in its early days here), the gilded space appears to have been ripped right out of the pages of an Art Deco magazine.  Shockingly, during The Queen’s time as a troop ship in World War II, the ornate room was utilized as a dormitory for soldiers.  I can’t even imagine bunking amid all that glitz!

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (1 of 1)

For some inexplicable reason, as the ship was being renovated into a hotel, it was decided that The Queen Mary should take on an Old English theme (which explains the extremely odd grouping of fairy-tale-like storefronts that dot the parking lot).  As such, all of the Observation Bar’s glam Art Deco furnishings were removed (but thankfully not thrown away) and replaced with Old English décor, giving the space a pub-like feel.

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (2 of 10)

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (1 of 2)

Fortunately, the watering hole was returned to its initial grandeur in the early ‘80s and, though it has gone through some additional revamps in the years since, it remains an utterly glorious space.

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (10 of 10)

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (2 of 10)

Today, the semi-circle-shaped site boasts massive red torchiere lamps, a carved balustrade, a Massacar ebony bar, silver and bronze detailing, maple and cedar woodwork, an original mural that hangs above the bar, 21 windows, and amazing views of Queensway Bay.

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (9 of 10)

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (2 of 2)

It is in the elegant space that Anna (Scarlett Johansson) sings at the end of 2009’s He’s Just Not That Into You.

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Back in 1981, Dr. R. Quincy, M.E. (Jack Klugman) discovers what has been ailing his fellow cruise passengers when a woman goes into premature labor in the Observation Bar in the Season 7 episode of Quincy M.E. titled “Slow Boat to Madness: Part 2.”  (Spoiler – it’s contaminated tortillas!)

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The Observation Bar portrays the New York cocktail lounge where NYPD detective Mike Keegan (Tom Berenger) takes murder witness Claire Gregory (Mimi Rogers) for drinks on his last night of protecting her in the 1987 thriller Someone to Watch Over Me.

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In 1989, the Observation Bar popped up a couple of times in the Season 6 episode of Murder, She Wrote titled “The Grand Old Lady.”

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The site masks as the New York bar where Garland Stanford (David Warrilow) tells Barton (John Turturro) that Capital Pictures wants to put him under contract in 1991’s Barton Fink.

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In the Season 6 episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 titled “You Say It’s Your Birthday: Part 1,” which aired in 1996, Kelly Taylor (Jennie Garth) and Valerie Malone (Tiffani Thiessen) discuss Colin Robbins’ (Jason Wiles) disappearance with FBI agent Richard Ballen (Jon Hensley) while at the Observation Bar.  (Don’t mind the craptastic screen captures below.  Unfortunately, the episode is not available to stream anywhere, not even on Hulu which inexplicably has all of the others from Season 6, so I had to settle for grabs from a poor-quality Dailymotion upload.)

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Later in “You Say It’s Your Birthday: Part 1,” Kelly grabs breakfast with Andrea Zuckerman (Gabrielle Carteris) at the bar.

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In 1999’s Being John Malkovich (such a great movie!), John Malkovich (playing himself) enters the portal to his own head and winds up seeing himself everywhere at the Observation Bar.

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The 2002 film Adaptation opens with actual behind-the-scenes footage of the Being John Malkovich segment lensed at the lounge.  (I apologize for the blurry screen caps below, but the scene has a lot of movement.)

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Howard Hughes (Leonardo DiCaprio) also celebrates the wrap of Hell’s Angels at the Observation Lounge in the 2004 biopic The Aviator.

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

Queen Mary from HJNTIY (3 of 10)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Observation Bar & Art Deco Lounge, from He’s Just Not That Into You, is located on the bow of The Queen Mary’s Promenade Deck at 1126 Queens Highway in Long Beach.  You can visit the ship’s official website here.  Tickets or hotel reservations are required to venture aboard.

Zipper Concert Hall from “The West Wing”

Zipper Concert Hall from The West Wing (1 of 13)

Most actors will tell you that extra work is the worst.  But when I first landed in L.A. back in 2000, I did quite a bit of it and couldn’t have enjoyed myself more.  Just being on a movie or television set was surreal and provided an indelible opportunity to observe the inner workings of a production, watch my favorite actors live and in person (and sometimes even interact with them), and be truly immersed in the filmmaking process.  I ate it all up with a spoon.  One of my more memorable experiences took place on April 24th, 2000 (yes, I remember the date) when I sat in the audience of a supposed live town hall meeting with President Josiah ‘Jed’ Bartlett (Martin Sheen) for the Season 1 finale of The West Wing titled “What Kind of Day Has It Been.”  I was not a viewer of the hit NBC series at the time and, despite my extraordinary experience on set, did not watch the episode when it aired and, shockingly, did not end up seeing it until last month when the Grim Cheaper and I went on a West Wing binge.  Even though 19 years had passed, I was immediately brought right back to the day of the shoot and decided that I had to write a post on the auditorium where filming took place.  While I did not remember its exact location, I did recall that it was in downtown L.A. near the U.S. Bank Tower.  So I got to Googling and amazingly the first result kicked back when I inputted “auditorium” and “downtown Los Angeles” was a link to Zipper Concert Hall which turned out to be the right spot!

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Zipper Concert Hall is located on the campus of The Colburn School, a performing arts institution originally founded in 1950 as part of the USC School of Music.  Initially housed in a warehouse across from the Shrine Auditorium in University Park, the facility offered piano lessons to young children.  At some point, the curriculum was expanded to include college-level courses and the place re-branded as the Community School of Performing Arts.  The academy broke away from USC in 1980 thanks to a sizeable donation from philanthropist/music enthusiast Richard D. Colburn and six years later it was renamed in his honor.  Twelve years after that, The Colburn School was relocated to a new, larger custom-built campus at the corner of South Grand Avenue and East 2nd Street in downtown L.A., where it remains today.

Zipper Concert Hall from The West Wing (11 of 13)

Designed by Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer Associates, at its inception the modern complex boasted a library, a rehearsal hall, two dance studios, a piano lab, 28 teaching spaces, and the 415-seat Zipper Concert Hall.  The auditorium (it’s the sloped structure with the sheet metal roof below) was named after Vienna-born musician Herbert Zipper who served as The Colburn School’s artistic advisor from 1980 until his death in 1997.

Zipper Concert Hall from The West Wing (2 of 13)

Zipper Concert Hall from The West Wing (13 of 13)

Interestingly, the Lloyd Wright-designed former studio of violinist Jascha Heifetz was also incorporated into the layout of the campus.  Initially situated on the grounds of Heifetz’s Beverly Hills estate (at 1520 Gilcrest Drive), the standalone structure, which was connected to the main residence via a breezeway, was saved from demolition by a very unlikely source.  Upon Heifetz’s passing in 1987, his home was sold to none other than James Woods, who set about tearing the place down.  The actor recognized the significance of the studio, though, and offered it up to anyone who was willing to pay to have it relocated.  The Colburn School’s then dean, Joseph Thayer, jumped at the chance.  The small edifice was subsequently deconstructed and transported to a storage facility where it sat until the new campus was completed.  It was then reassembled on the third floor of the Grand Building.  You can check out some images of it in its original form and its current state here and here.

Zipper Concert Hall from The West Wing (7 of 13)

Zipper Concert Hall from The West Wing (8 of 13)

In 2007, the Colburn campus was expanded by the Pfeiffer Partners architecture firm at which time a 384,000-square-foot, 12-story building was added, as were a 3,900-square-foot rehearsal hall, residential housing for 147 students, a cafeteria, offices, an art park, and numerous practice and performance spaces.  And the school is still growing.  Just last year, prolific architect Frank Gehry was tapped to design yet another addition, this one bringing in 200,000 square feet, an additional concert hall, and a theatre.  You can check out some images of what the school currently looks like here and here.

Zipper Concert Hall from The West Wing (10 of 13)

In the “What Kind of Day Has It Been” episode of The West Wing, Zipper Concert Hall masks as Virginia’s Newseum.  Though exteriors were filmed at the museum’s former location at 1101 Wilson Boulevard in Rosslyn . . .

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. . . all interiors were shot at Zipper.  It is there that President Bartlett speaks to a large audience about the apathy of America’s youth when it comes to government and politics.

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The hall appears prominently at both the beginning and end of the episode.  Sadly, Zipper was closed when we showed up to stalk it so I did not get to revisit the inside, but you can check out some photographs of it here.

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The Colburn School’s Grand Foyer (which you can see images of here) was also featured in “What Kind of Day Has It Been” . . .

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. . . as was its Mayman Recital Hall (photos here and here).

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I can still remember the filming of the episode as if it was yesterday.  I even recall exactly where I was sitting – fourth row, right.  (That’s me below!)  During the shoot, I became completely enamored with Martin Sheen, who is very much like his presidential character in real life – gregarious, warm, witty, chatty, and a wealth of random knowledge that he loves to share.  Throughout breaks in filming, he actively engaged the extras, both individually and as a group, and discussed everything from how he spent the day prior, Easter Sunday, memorizing the speech we were now listening to him perform to behind-the-scenes tidbits (like the fact that Dr. Josiah Bartlett, Jed’s supposed great-grandfather’s great-grandfather and the New Hampshire delegate to the second Continental Congress in 1776, whom he mentions in the speech, was, in fact, a real person) to Elián González, the young Cuban boy who had been seized by federal agents and returned to his father just a few days prior.  To see him seamlessly transition between his character and his actual self, turning Jed Bartlett on and off like a switch, was incredible.  The president’s speech in the scene was long (much longer than what was actually shown in the episode), detailed, wordy, and full of facts and figures.  Martin knew it inside and out, though, and nailed it on every.single. take.  The fact that he could be jovial and joking with us one minute and then, as soon as “action” was called, be immediately in character and 100% on-point the next was thrilling and fascinating to watch.  It was a long day, too, but Martin was just as fresh on his first take as he was on his last, a good ten to twelve hours later.  Witnessing his creative process was an incredible experience – truly a once-in-a-lifetime.  I’ll never forget coming home that night and telling my parents that I had learned more about acting (not to mention the way an actor should behave on set) from one day of observing Martin Sheen than I had in my four years of college as a theatre major.  They were not pleased by the news considering they footed the bill for the latter.  Winking smile

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The West Wing is not the only production to feature The Colburn School.  In the 2002 drama Adaptation, Charlie Kaufman (Nicolas Cage) attends Robert McKee’s (Brian Cox) Story Seminar at Zipper Concert Hall.

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The school masks as the Museum of Design, where Milly Wilder (Mandy Moore) and Jason (Tom Everett Scott) go to see an art exhibit, in the 2007 romcom Because I Said So.

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And in the Season 7 episode of Castle titled “Castle, P.I.,” which aired in 2015, Colburn portrays The Eastbourne School, where Richard Castle (Nathan Fillion) and Kate Beckett (Stana Katic) investigate the murder of admissions director Shana Baker (Gia Mora).  (Note – the exterior seen in the episode is the school’s Olive Street entrance.)

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

Zipper Concert Hall from The West Wing (3 of 13)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Zipper Concert Hall, from the “What Kind of Day Has It Been” episode of The West Wing, is located on the campus of The Colburn School at 200 South Grand Avenue in downtown Los Angeles.  You can check out the hall’s upcoming events on the school’s official website here.