Tag: Celebrities

  • The Blankenhorn Lamphear House from “Teaching Mrs. Tingle”

    Teaching Mrs. Tingle house (5 of 10)

    As I mentioned in yesterday’s post (which you can read here), I recently went on a trek to find all of the locations used in the 1999 thriller Teaching Mrs. Tingle.  The locale I was most interested in tracking down, of course, was the huge Victorian manse belonging to the movie’s titular character, who was played by Helen Mirren.  Once I learned from the flick’s production notes that the residence was located in the Pasadena area, I figured that, thanks to its fabulous façade, it would most likely be chronicled in the architectural section of Hometown Pasadena.  So I immediately started scanning through the tome and fairly quickly came across a blurb about a property named the Blankenhorn Lamphear house which said, “This house is one of Pasadena’s finest examples of the Queen Anne style, the most romantic and fanciful of the Victorian era’s architectural idioms.”  I quickly punched the address provided into Google Street View and, sure enough, the Blankenhorn Lamphear house and Mrs. Tingle’s abode were one and the same!  So I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to stalk the place just a few minutes later.

    [ad]

    The Blankenhorn Lamphear house was originally constructed in 1893 by the Bradbeer and Ferris architecture firm.  It was commissioned by a wealthy railroad executive named David F. Blankenhorn.  David’s son, David F. Blankenhorn Jr., who was born on the premises, grew up to become a very successful real estate mogul – it was he who handled William Wrigley Jr.’s purchase of Catalina Island in 1919.  The Blankenhorns later sold the property to a Mr. and Mrs. John Lamphear, who lived there for many years with their three children.  The property changed hands once again in 1994 when the Lamphear estate sold it to its current owner for $425,000.

    Teaching Mrs. Tingle house (2 of 10)

    Teaching Mrs. Tingle house (7 of 10)

    As you can see below, the 6-bedroom, 2-bath, 3,017-square-foot home, which sits on 0.31 acres, is absolutely spectacular in person.

    Teaching Mrs. Tingle house (9 of 10)

    Teaching Mrs. Tingle house (8 of 10)

    In Teaching Mrs. Tingle, high school students Leigh Ann Watson (Katie Holmes), Luke Churner (Barry Watson) and Jo Lynn Jordan (Marisa Coughlan – in an AMAZING performance) pay a late night visit to the home of their mean-spirited English teacher, Mrs. Tingle, in order to clear up a misunderstanding.  Things don’t go quite according to plan, though, and the three wind up holding Mrs. Tingle hostage inside of the abode for a few days.

    ScreenShot6020

    ScreenShot6015

    A large gate and a massive amount of foliage were added to the residence for the filming, so it looks quite a bit different (and a lot less spooky) in person than it did onscreen.

    ScreenShot6019

    ScreenShot6027

    And while the Teaching Mrs. Tingle production notes state, “The filmmakers chose for Mrs. Tingle an elegant Victorian house in Pasadena, split by a mysterious spiral staircase – a layout that matches the constant shifts and turns of plot and ups and downs of the fate of Leigh Ann Watson and Mrs. Tingle”, because the majority of the movie’s action took place inside of the home, I do not believe that the real life interior was used in the flick.  Unfortunately, I was not able to find any interior photographs of the property with which to verify that hunch, though.

    ScreenShot6018

    ScreenShot6021

    ScreenShot6026

    ScreenShot6029

    Fellow stalker Anthony informed me that the very same house was also used as the residence where Helen North Beardsley (Lucille Ball) and Frank Beardsley (Henry Fonda) lived with their eighteen (!) children in the 1968 flick Yours, Mine and Ours.  As you can see below, the façade of the house has not changed much since that time.

    ScreenShot6006

    ScreenShot6013

    The home’s real life address number of “346” was even visible in the background of a few scenes.  Love it!

    ScreenShot6008

    ScreenShot6012

    According to a 1974 Pasadena Star News article, only the exterior of the Blankenhorn Lamphear house was used in the flick.  The interior of the Beardsley home was a set built inside of a soundstage somewhere in Hollywood.  As you can see below, it does not match the interior of Mrs. Tingle’s house in the slightest.

    ScreenShot6007

    ScreenShot6014

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Teaching Mrs. Tingle house (1 of 10)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Blankenhorn Lamphear house, aka Mrs. Tingle’s home from Teaching Mrs. Tingle, is located at 346 Markham Place in PasadenaThe Daddy Day Care house is located right around the corner at 351 Congress Place.

  • Coach Wenchell’s House from “Teaching Mrs. Tingle”

    Coach Wenchell's House - Teaching Mrs. Tingle (9 of 9)

    It’s that time again, my fellow stalkers!  October 1st – the beginning of my Haunted Hollywood postings.  And I could not be more excited!  So without further ado . . . let’s get started!  A couple of months ago, I stopped by my good friend Marci’s boyfriend’s house to pick up something she had left for me there.  (Marci just so happens to be the owner of one of my favorite places in the entire world – Lula Mae gift shop at 100 North Fair Oaks Avenue in Pasadena.  If you are in the area, I cannot more highly recommend stopping by.  I love the place so much, I practically hang out there.  It’s where I go whenever I need a gift, or am in a bad mood, or am suffering from writer’s block.  The store manages to cure all of my ails!  But I digress.)  While I was there, Marci’s bf and I got to talking about filming locations (imagine that!) and he mentioned that the 1999 thriller Teaching Mrs. Tingle had been filmed at a residence near where he used to live on Atchison Street in Pasadena.  Well, let me tell you, I just about fell over upon hearing the news as I had long been under the assumption that the flick had been lensed in North Carolina.  So I ran right out to purchase the DVD and immediately started trying to track down all of its locales.  Thanks to some big help from the usual suspects (fellow stalkers Mike, from MovieShotsLA, and Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog), I managed to find quite a few of them.  So I figured what better way to kick off my Haunted Hollywood month than by posting about the house that started my Teaching Mrs. Tingle obsession.

    [ad]

    As it turns out, the house on Atchison Street stood in for the residence where Coach Wenchell (Jeffrey Tambor) lived in Teaching Mrs. Tingle.  It popped up only once in the movie, in the scene in which Leigh Ann Watson (Katie Holmes) and Luke Churner (Barry Watson) drove the passed-out (and married!) Coach back to his home after he stopped by Mrs. Tingle’s (Helen Mirren) pad for a booty call.  And I should mention here that while I was not really a fan of Teaching Mrs. Tingle, this stalker absolutely LOVES LOVES LOVES herself some Katie Holmes, which is why I became so obsessed with tracking down locales from the flick.

    ScreenShot5997

    Coach Wenchell's House - Teaching Mrs. Tingle (3 of 9)

    After they arrive at his house, Leigh Ann and Luke dump the Coach onto his front porch and then Leigh Ann, sadly, spots the Coach’s wife sitting inside reading by herself.  Only a very tight shot of the home and its front porch area was shown in the flick.

    ScreenShot6002

    Coach Wenchell's House - Teaching Mrs. Tingle (5 of 9)

    ScreenShot6000

    Coach Wenchell's House - Teaching Mrs. Tingle (8 of 9)

    It was such a tight shot, in fact, that I had a hard time pinpointing the exact house that appeared in the movie.  (Marci’s boyfriend had only told me that the residence was located on the 1100 block of Atchison).  It was not until I spotted two very distinct trees in the background, located in front of a neighboring residence, that I was able to figure it out.

    ScreenShot5996

    ScreenShot6004

    In real life, Coach Wenchell’s house, which was originally built in 1926, boasts two bedrooms, two baths, 2,112 square feet of living space, and a 0.33-acre plot of land.  As you can see below, it is an absolutely adorable little house and I am really surprised that more of it was not shown onscreen.

    Coach Wenchell's House - Teaching Mrs. Tingle (4 of 9)

    Coach Wenchell's House - Teaching Mrs. Tingle (7 of 9)

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.  (I made the photograph below using some SERIOUSLY COOL Halloween filters, fonts and graphics that were just added to my favorite photo editing program PicMonkey.)

    Coach Wenchell's House - Teaching Mrs. Tingle (6 of 9)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Coach Wenchell’s house from Teaching Mrs. Tingle is located at 1101 Atchison Street in Pasadena.  Westminster Presbyterian Church, where Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag got married, is located just around the corner at 1757 North Lake Avenue.

  • Grand Central Air Terminal from “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure”

    Grand Central Air Terminal Glendale (11 of 11)

    While doing research for yesterday’s post (which you can read here), I came across a page on IMDB that stated that the bus station scene from Pee-wee’s Big Adventure was filmed at the Glendale Amtrak Station.  I knew from previous cyber-stalking, though, that the Pee-wee bus station scene was actually filmed a few miles north of the Amtrak depot at the now-defunct Grand Central Air Terminal (a location that I first learned about way back in March 2011 while writing my post on the nearby former bowling alley that stood in for the exterior of Jack Rabbit Slim’s in Pulp Fiction).  Ironically enough, I had actually stalked both the Glendale Amtrak Station and Grand Central Air Terminal on the same day in early May.  So to clear up the confusion about the Pee-wee bus station, I thought now would be as good a time as any to blog about the place.

    [ad]

    Grand Central Air Terminal was designed by Henry L. Gogerty in the Spanish Colonial Revival/Art Deco-style on the site of what was formerly a private airport for millionaire Leslie C. Brand.  The property was officially opened to the public on February 22, 1929 and featured the first paved runway west of the Rocky Mountains.  The airport was also the first to offer transcontinental passenger air service from Los Angeles to the East Coast and the premiere flight took place in 1929 with none other than Charles Lindbergh at the helm.  Hollywood luminaries Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks were also onboard.  Other stars who took flights to or from Grand Central over the years include Shirley Temple, Gary Cooper, William Randolph Hearst, Marion Davies, Clark Gable, Charlie Chaplin, Jack Warner, Louis B. Mayer, Carole Lombard, and Jean Harlow.  Such aviation pioneers as Howard Hughes, Glenn L. Martin, Eddie Rickenbacker, Amelia Earhart, and Douglas “Wrong Way” Corrigan are all counted as having piloted flights from the airport.

    Grand Central Air Terminal Glendale (3 of 11)

    Grand Central Air Terminal Glendale (1 of 11)

    In 1947, following World War II, Grand Central’s runway was cut down to 3,400 feet to make room for a road.  When the runway was later deemed too short for jet planes to use in 1959, the 125-acre property was closed and most of its hangars and runways demolished or removed.  All that remains of the original airport is the actual terminal building and its three-story Zigzag Moderne-tower.  The site was subsequently purchased by Prudential Insurance, who transformed it into an industrial park named Grand Central Business Park.  In 1961, The Walt Disney Company leased the vast majority of the property and subsequently purchased it in 1997.  The Park is currently used as Disney corporate offices and as the headquarters of Walt Disney Imagineering.  And while the Walt Disney Company has an agreement with the city of Glendale to restore the air terminal building, which suffered damage in the 1994 Northridge earthquake, back to its original grandeur by the year 2015, it has, sadly, been left to deteriorate in the meantime.

    Grand Central Air Terminal Glendale (4 of 11)

    Grand Central Air Terminal Glendale (8 of 11)

    In Pee-wee’s Big Adventure, Grand Central Terminal stood in for the supposed San Antonio bus station where Pee-wee Herman (Paul Reubens) ran into Simone (my former acting teacher Diane Salinger).

    ScreenShot5972

    Grand Central Air Terminal Glendale (6 of 11)

    ScreenShot5965

    Grand Central Air Terminal Glendale (5 of 11)

    You can even see a portion of a sign reading “Grand Central Building” in the background of the scene.

    ScreenShot5984

    Grand Central Air Terminal Glendale (2 of 11)

    Thanks to its proximity to several different Hollywood studios, Grand Central Air Terminal has been the site of countless filmings over the years.  In the beginning of 1933’s Air Hostess, it was the Los Angeles airport where the TWA flight from Albuquerque landed.

    ScreenShot5976

    ScreenShot5975

    ScreenShot5974

    Grand Central was also the airport where saxophonist Ronny Bowers (Dick Powell) landed upon first coming to Southern California in 1937’s Hollywood Hotel.

    ScreenShot5977

    ScreenShot5979

    In 1943, Grand Central stood in for Transatlantic Airways’ London Terminal in the movie Sherlock Holmes in Washington, although it only appeared very briefly.

    ScreenShot5980

    ScreenShot5981

    The north side of Grand Central Terminal stood in for the Carson Police Department in 1985’s My Science Project, although such a small portion of the building was shown that it is virtually unrecognizable.

    ScreenShot5987

    ScreenShot5988

    You can see below, though, that the front of the police station matches the area where Pee-wee sat in Pee-wee’s Big Adventure.

    ScreenShot5986

    ScreenShot5968

    Grand Central Air Terminal also looks to have been the inspiration for the painted backdrop that was used to portray Genovia International Airport in The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement.  While the layout of the terminal was, for whatever reason, flipped in the movie, the resemblance is undeniable.  You can check out a historic photograph of Grand Central, in which its similarities to the Genovia airport are obvious, here.  Being that the movie was produced by The Walt Disney Company, it makes sense that the former terminal served as the model for Genovia International.

    ScreenShot5964

    Grand Central Terminal was also supposedly used in 1923’s Going Up, 1930’s Hell’s Angels, 1933’s Lady Killer, Captured and Central Airport, 1934’s Bright Eyes, 1936’s Hats Off, 1938’s Sky Giant, and 1941’s Sky Raiders, but, unfortunately, I could not find copies of any of those productions with which to verify that information.

    Grand Central Air Terminal Glendale (7 of 11)

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Grand Central Air Terminal, from Pee-wee’s Big Adventure, is located at 1310 Air Way in Glendale.  The former bowling alley that was used as the exterior of Jack Rabbit Slim’s restaurant in Pulp Fiction is located right around the corner at 1435 Flower Street.

  • The Glendale Amtrak Station from “Bulletproof”

    Glendale Amtrak Station (13 of 20)

    I don’t know about y’all, but this stalker is so darn excited for Halloween that I am practically bursting at the seams!  I have already decorated my apartment with all things orange and black (much to the Grim Cheaper’s chagrin) and can hardly wait for Monday when I can begin my Haunted Hollywood postings.  Only three more days to go!  Yay!  Smile  Anyway, while going through some stalking photographs from earlier this year, I came across pictures of the Glendale Amtrak Station that the GC had taken way back in May and I decided that it was about time I do a blog post on the place.  So here goes.

    [ad]

    The Glendale Amtrak Station was originally constructed in 1924 on the site of the former 1883 Atwater Track Office.  The Mission Revival-style structure was commissioned by the Southern Pacific Railroad line and was designed by architect Kenneth MacDonald Jr. (who also designed Villa de Leon in Pacific Palisades and the Portal of the Folded Wings Shrine to Aviation in North Hollywood) and structural engineer/architect Maurice Couchot (who also designed The Bellevue Club in Oakland and the 1917 warehouse that later became the Gift Center in San Francisco).  The site was originally named the Glendale Southern Pacific Railroad Depot and then was later known as the Tropico Station.

    Glendale Amtrak Station (14 of 20)

    Glendale Amtrak Station (18 of 20)

    In 1989, Southern Pacific sold the depot to the city of Glendale for $3.5 million, at which time the name was changed to the Glendale Amtrak Station (or the Glendale Amtrak/Metrolink Station or the Glendale Transportation Center, as the site is also sometimes called).  A $6 million renovation and extension project was begun shortly thereafter, during which the building was restored to its original 1923 grandeur.  As you can see below, the result is nothing short of spectacular!  The dazzling exterior of the Glendale Amtrak Station, which was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997, features elaborately sculpted terra cotta;

    Glendale Amtrak Station (1 of 20)

    a faux second story;

    Glendale Amtrak Station (2 of 20)

    ornamental wrought-iron detailing;

    Glendale Amtrak Station (8 of 20)

    and ornately carved wooden doors.

    Glendale Amtrak Station (3 of 20)

    The small, one-room interior boasts a terra-cotta tiled floor,

    Glendale Amtrak Station (10 of 20)

    intricately painted exposed wooden beams;

    Glendale Amtrak Station (9 of 20)

    checkered tile baseboards;

    Glendale Amtrak Station (11 of 20)

    and old-school wooden benches.  (I love the arty photograph that the GC took below.  I think it’s a framer!  Smile)

    Glendale Amtrak Station (12 of 20)

    The second I walked inside the historic depot, I was instantly taken back to the famous train station scene from the Season 4 episode of Family Ties titled “The Real Thing: Part 2”, during which Alex P. Keaton (Michael J. Fox) finally professed his love to Ellen Reed (Tracy Pollan).  While the train station featured in that scene was just a set, it was very reminiscent (to me, at least) of the Glendale Amtrak Station.  When I mentioned this to the GC, he said, “I don’t remember a train station scene from Family Ties.”  I swear, how did the two of us end up married???

    ScreenShot5962

    ScreenShot5963

    You can watch the Family Ties train station scene by clicking below.  “Now, what did you think I would say at this moment . . . ”  Sigh!  Has to be one of the best scenes in television history.  Smile

    “Family Ties” Train Station Scene

    In 1996’s Bulletproof, the Glendale Amtrak Station stood in for the supposed Pasadena bus station where Keats (Damon Wayans) and Moses (Adam Sandler) met up with special agents Gentry (Xander Berkeley) and Cole (Sal Landi).

    ScreenShot5949

    Glendale Amtrak Station (15 of 20)

    ScreenShot5951

    Glendale Amtrak Station (4 of 20)

    Bulletproof was hardly the first production to film on the premises, though.  In 1931’s Big Business Girl, the station was where Johnny Saunders (Frank Albertson) bid adieu to his lady love, Claire ‘Mac’ McIntyre (Loretta Young).  Although, not much of the station is visible in the scene.

    ScreenShot5958

    ScreenShot5959

    The Glendale Amtrak Station also stood in for the depot where Kay Curtis (Glenda Farrell) and June Dale (Mary Brian) missed their train in 1933’s Girl Missing.  Not much of the station can be seen in that movie, either, though.

    ScreenShot5954

    ScreenShot5957

    The only recognizable detail from the station that is visible in the movie is the ornate light fixture pictured below.

    ScreenShot5956

    Glendale Amtrak Station (6 of 20)

    Thanks to the stalking tome Location Filming in Los Angeles by Harry Medved, Marc Wanamaker and Karie Bible, I learned that 1927’s Horse Shoes, 1931’s One More Chance and 1934’s Here Comes the Groom were also shot at the Glendale Amtrak Station, but, unfortunately, I could not find copies of any of the productions with which to make screen captures for this post.  The Glendale Amtrak Station was also featured in 1927’s College and 1948’s Act of Violence, which you can see screen captures of on the Silent Locations blog here.  And True Blood apparently did some filming on the premises a couple of weeks ago, as well.  The station also had a brush with history when, on September 20th, 1959, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev stopped there for about six minutes.   You can see a photograph of his visit here.

    Glendale Amtrak Station (17 of 20)

    Glendale Amtrak Station (16 of 20)

    And while IMDB states that 1966’s The Trouble with Angels was filmed at the Glendale Amtrak Station, when I scanned through the movie yesterday, I found that the two depots did not match.  Upon digging further, I came across this article which stated that the station used in the opening and closing scenes of the flick was actually the Monrovia Santa Fe train station located at 101 West Duarte Road.  Sure enough, as you can see in this historic photograph, the two depots are indeed one and the same.

    ScreenShot5952

    ScreenShot5953

    And while countless websites state that the Glendale Amtrak Station was where Phyllis Dietrichson (Barbara Stanwyck) dropped off Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) in the thriller Double Indemnity, that information is actually incorrect.  In reality, the station used in the 1944 flick was the old Burbank Southern Pacific Station, which once stood at 201 North Front Street, but was sadly partially burned down in 1991 and then completely demolished a few years later.  The Burbank Metrolink Station was subsequently built on that site.  You can check out some historic photographs of the former Burbank Southern Pacific Station here and here.  As you can see, there is no denying that it matches the station that appeared in Double Indemnity (pictured below) perfectly.

    ScreenShot5960

    ScreenShot5961

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Glendale Amtrak Station (19 of 20)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Glendale Amtrak Station, from Bulletproof, is located at 400 West Cerritos Avenue in Glendale.

  • Rachel’s House from “(500) Days of Summer”

    emmy

    Today’s post is, unfortunately, going to be a short one being that I am absolutely exhausted from what turned out to be a very exciting and very successful Emmy weekend.  (That’s me on the red carpet above!  Smile)  While I had a blast, I truly feel like I could sleep for days and am looking forward to what should be a calm week ahead.  But I digress!  Now, on with the post!

    [ad]

    Way back in May, while perusing through fellow stalker Tony’s amazing On Location in Los Angeles Flickr photostream, I came across a picture of the house where Rachel (Chloe Grace Moretz), the wise-beyond-her-years teenage sister of Tom (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), lived in the 2009 flick (500) Days of Summer.  And even though I was not at all a fan of the “unromantic comedy” (as Tony calls it) due to the fact that it was incredibly depressing, I did absolutely LOVE the charming and picturesque dwelling that Tony featured on his page (although I did not actually remember seeing it in the movie).  So I, of course, ran right out to stalk the place that very weekend.

    (500) Days of Summer house (13 of 19)

    In real life, the Anywhere, U.S.A.-style home, which was originally built in 1910, boasts four bedrooms, three baths, 2,249 square feet of living space, and a 0.34-acre plot of land.  As you can see below, it is absolutely adorable in person!

    (500) Days of Summer house (6 of 19)

    (500) Days of Summer house (7 of 19)

    The house actually only shows up once in (500) Days of Summer, and very briefly at that (which explains why I did not remember it), on Day (11) in the scene in which Tom and Rachel are shown playing a Wii tennis game while discussing Tom’s new girlfriend, Summer (Zooey Deschanel).  It is in the scene that Tom says, “She likes Magritte and Hopper and we talked about Bananafish for like twenty minutes!  We’re so compatible, it’s insane!  She’s not like I thought at all.  She’s amazing.”  To which Rachel utters her famous line, “Just ‘cause some cute girl likes the same bizarro crap you do, that doesn’t make her your soul mate, Tom.”  LOL  As you can see below, Rachel’s abode looks very much the same in person as it did onscreen, although the mailbox has since been moved to a different spot.

    ScreenShot5946

    (500) Days of Summer house (2 of 19)

    I am fairly certain that the real life interior of the home also appeared in the scene, although I could not find any interior photographs of the house with which to verify this.

    ScreenShot5947

    ScreenShot5948

    I think one of the property’s bedrooms might also have been used as Tom’s childhood bedroom during the movie’s opening montage, but, again, I could not find any photographs with which to verify that hunch.

    ScreenShot5939

    I did find an extended version of the Wii scene on YouTube, though, in which Rachel is shown sitting on the residence’s front porch.

    ScreenShot5940

    More of the property’s interior is shown in the extended scene, as well.

    ScreenShot5944

    ScreenShot5945

    You can watch the extended scene on YouTube by clicking below.

    Rachel’s House–”(500) Days of Summer”-Extended Scene

    According to this shoot sheet posted on the Seeing Stars website, the same house was also used in a television commercial for Countrywide Financial in March 1997.  Because the residence is so incredibly idyllic and picturesque, I am sure it has been featured in countless other productions, as well.

    (500) Days of Summer house (3 of 19)

    (500) Days of Summer house (4 of 19)

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Tony, from the amazing On Location in Los Angeles Flickr photostream, for finding this location! Smile

    (500) Days of Summer house (8 of 19)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Rachel’s house from (500) Days of Summer is located at 5231 Shearin Avenue in Eagle Rock.  The party house from Teen Wolf (which I blogged about here) is located right next door at 5223 Shearin Avenue.

  • Canter’s Deli from “Entourage”

    Canter's Deli Entourage (6 of 12)

    This will, unfortunately, be my last post for this week as I am heading out to Palm Springs bright and early tomorrow morning to take my dad to a few doctor appointments and I will not be back until late Thursday night.  And because I am going to the Emmy’s on Sunday (whoo hoo – pinch me now!), there is a good chance that I will not have time to write a new blog post for Monday, either.   So apologies in advance.  I will for sure be back on Tuesday, though, with a whole new location.  And now, on with the post!  One very historic locale that I have stalked several times, but, for whatever reason, never blogged about is the legendary Canter’s Deli in Los Angeles’ Fairfax District.  So when the Grim Cheaper suggested we grab a bite to eat there a couple of weekends ago, I decided that it was about time I snap some pictures of the place and do a post on it.  Here goes!

    [ad]

    Canter’s Deli was originally founded in 1924 as Canter Brothers’ Delicatessen by Ben Canter and his two brothers in Jersey City, New Jersey.  When the deli faltered due to the stock market crash of 1929, the three brothers moved to Los Angeles with only a shared $500 to their name.  They settled in the then-predominantly Jewish area of Boyle Heights and, in 1931, opened a West Coast outpost of their delicatessen, which you can see a photo of here.  When L.A.’s Jewish population started to migrate west towards the Fairfax District following World War II, Ben and his brothers decided to move their establishment, as well.  In 1948, they purchased a storefront at 439 North Fairfax Avenue and changed the eatery’s name to the simpler “Canter’s Deli”.  In 1953, the restaurant was moved once again, this time to the old Esquire Theatre at 419 North Fairfax, where it remains to this day.  Thanks to its massive popularity, the eatery expanded in 1953 and then, in 1961, added on a bar and cocktail lounge named the Kibitz Room.  The Kibitz’s stage has hosted countless well-known musicians over the years including Blues Traveler, The Black Crowes, The Wallflowers, and, most notably, Guns N’ Roses, who got their start on the premises.

    Canter's Deli Entourage (7 of 12)

    Canter's Deli Entourage (10 of 12)

    Canter’s Deli, which, amazingly enough, is still owned and operated by the Canter family, has been a celebrity hot spot since its inception.  In the heyday of Hollywood, such stars as Arthur Miller, Elizabeth Taylor, Cary Grant, Jack Benny, Elvis Presley, and my girl Marilyn Monroe all dined there.  In more recent years, Drew Barrymore, John Travolta, Dick Van Dyke, Brooke Shields, Sidney Poitier, Adam Brody, Shenae Grimes, Lea Michele, Cory Monteith, and Taylor Swift have all been spotted at the eatery.  Sarah Silverman even did a photo shoot at Canter’s for the clothing company Boy by Band of Outsiders, which you can take a look at here.

    Canter's Deli Entourage (2 of 12)

    Canter's Deli Entourage (4 of 12)

    Canter’s Deli has won countless awards over the years (and deservedly so!) including “Best Waffles” from Los Angeles Magazine, “Best Deli” from both MyFoxLA and LA Hotlist, and, my personal favorite, Top 10 Jewish Silver Screen Landmarks from the Jewish Journal.

    Canter's Deli Entourage (3 of 12)

    Canter's Deli Entourage (5 of 12)

    All of Canter’s offerings are handmade on the premises each day, including their humongous pickles, which are nothing short of fabulous – as is all of their food.  Amazingly enough, over its “lifetime”, the deli has served over 2 million pounds of lox, 9 million pounds of corned beef, 10 million matzo balls, 20 million bagels, and 24 million bowls of chicken soup!  Oy vey, that’s a lot of food!  Winking smile

    Canter's Deli Entourage (1 of 12)

    Canter’s Deli has been featured in quite a few notable productions over the years.  In the 1982 flick I Ought to Be in Pictures, Herbert Tucker (Walter Matthau) took his estranged daughter, Libby Tucker (Dinah Manoff, aka “Marty Maraschino” from Grease), for a late-night meal at the historic eatery.

    ScreenShot5930

    ScreenShot5932

    In the 1998 thriller Enemy of the State, the interior of Canter’s masqueraded as the interior of Washington, D.C.’s Sam’s Deli Restaurant, where lawyer Robert Clayton Dean (Will Smith) told his informant/former girlfriend, Rachel F. Banks (Lisa Bonet), that he wanted to meet her source, Brill (Gabriel Byrne).

    ScreenShot5918

    ScreenShot5920

    For the exterior of Sam’s, a different location was used, though.

    ScreenShot5915

    In the Season 4 episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm titled “The Blind Date”, which aired in 2004, Canter’s was where Larry David (Larry David) took his new friend Haboos (Moon Unit Zappa) for lunch.  Both the exterior . . .

    ScreenShot5921

    . . . and the interior appeared in the episode.

    ScreenShot5923

    ScreenShot5924

    In 2005’s Be Cool, Canter’s was where Raji (Vince Vaughn) told hitman Joe Loop (Robert Pastorelli) that he killed the wrong guy.  Both the exterior . . .

    ScreenShot5925

    ScreenShot5926

    . . . and the interior were used in the flick.

    ScreenShot5927

    ScreenShot5929

    In the Season 6 episode of Entourage titled “Berried Alive”, which aired in 2009, Canter’s Deli is where the gang – Vincent Chase (Adrian Grenier), Eric Murphy (Kevin Connolly), Johnny Drama (Kevin Dillon), and Turtle (cutie Jerry Ferrara, who I am dying to meet, by the way!) – grabbed late-night drinks and where Drama ran into his former boss, Melrose Place-producer Phil Yagoda (William Fichtner).  Both the exterior . . .

    ScreenShot5910

    ScreenShot5911

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

    ScreenShot5912

    ScreenShot5914

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Canter's Deli Entourage (11 of 12)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Canter’s Deli, from the “Berried Alive” episode of Entourage, is located at 419 North Fairfax Avenue in the Fairfax District of Los Angeles.  You can visit the official Canter’s website here.  The deli is open 24 hours a day, 363 days a year (it is closed on both Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur).

  • The First Beverly Hills House

    First Beverly Hills House (8 of 9)

    As I mentioned a couple of weeks ago, fellow stalker E.J., from The Movieland Directory website, recently published an e-book about Old Hollywood titled Unscripted: Hollywood Back-Stories, Volume 1 (which you can purchase on Nook here and on Kindle here).  I read the entire tome – which was fascinating, by the way – in two nights, highlighter and stalking notebook in hand, and, of course, accumulated quite a few new addresses to add to my ever-growing To-Stalk list – the most notable of which was the address of the very first residence ever to be built in Beverly Hills.  And I finally managed to drag the Grim Cheaper out there to stalk the place this past Saturday afternoon.

    [ad]

    The city of Beverly Hills actually had a very inauspicious beginning.  The six square miles that now make up one of the most exclusive and luxurious areas on the planet started out as a 4,539-acre Spanish land grant known as “El Rancho Rodeo de las Aguas”, or “The Ranch of the Gathering of the Waters”.  In 1900, after a succession of different owners, Burton Green, president of the Amalgamated Oil Company, purchased the site – which at the time was being called “Morocco Junction” and was being utilized as a lima bean farm – and began drilling for oil.  And while he did not come across any, he did find an abundance of water and, in 1906, decided to develop the land into an upscale housing community and changed his company’s name to the Rodeo Land and Water Company.  Green dubbed his new locality “Beverly Hills”, in honor of his hometown of Beverly Farms, Massachusetts.  Ground was broken on the site in 1907, whereupon wide, curving boulevards were mapped out (each planted with a different type of tree), parks were landscaped and model homes were built.  The first model home (pictured below) stood at 515 North Canon Drive.

    First Beverly Hills House (2 of 9)

    First Beverly Hills House (4 of 9)

    Green began selling plots of land for around $500, but, unfortunately, no one was buying.  In order to bring attention to his faltering community, he decided to construct a luxury hotel and, in May 1912, the Beverly Hills Hotel, aka “The Pink Palace”, was born.  Amazingly enough, according to Unscripted, the BHH “was an hour carriage ride from Hollywood and three hours by train and carriage from downtown L.A.”  And I thought today’s traffic was bad!  Winking smile  While the hotel proved popular with the showbiz set, it was not until Hollywood darlings Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks purchased a secluded estate in 1920 at 1143 Summit Drive, which they then commissioned famed architect Wallace Neff to transform into a mega-mansion dubbed “Pickfair”, that the city became a celebrity draw.  As Unscripted says, “Pickfair brought the stars, who’d never been interested in Beverly Hills, to Beverly Hills.  The hilltops within view of Pickfair were soon boasting mansion estates for the likes of Charlie Chaplin, Tom Mix, Rudolph Valentino, Francis Marion and Fred Thompson, and John Barrymore.”  And the rest, as they say, is history.

    First Beverly Hills House (3 of 9)

    First Beverly Hills House (7 of 9)

    There seems to be quite a bit of discrepancy online about Beverly Hills’ first model home.  From what I have been able to gather via property records, the dwelling was originally constructed in 1908, which gels with the timeline of the city’s inception.  According to the YouTube video below, though, which was made when the residence was for sale earlier this year, the 5-bedroom, 5-bath, 3,883-square-foot property was “recently built” by architect Alec Dugally.  And while I could not find any permits or documents pertaining to a remodel, tear-down or rebuild at the site, according to Redfin, the property was, indeed, renovated in 1948.  Adding to the confusion is the fact that Alec Dugally seems to have worked predominantly in the ‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s, though, not in 1948 and not in “recent” years.  So it seems that both Redfin and YouTube might have some bogus information posted.  Either way, someone’s wires got crossed somewhere over the years and I cannot state with certainty that the model home is still in its original form today.  If I had to guess, though, I would say that the property was, at some point, remodeled.  Boo!

    The First Beverly Hills House

    According to this Beverly Hills Historic Resources Survey, Green’s model home was still standing in its original form in 1986.  As you can (sort of) see below in the Historic Aerial’s view of the house circa 1980 as compared to the more current Bing image, it does appear as if some alteration may have taken place.  Because the 1980 view is so hazy, though, it is impossible to say for certain either way.

     ScreenShot5902

    ScreenShot5903

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The first house ever built in Beverly Hills is located at 515 North Canon Drive.

  • Malibou Lake from “Parks and Recreation”

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (20 of 21)

    A couple of months ago, I set out to find the lake house belonging to Donna Meagle (Retta) and her family in the Season 4 episode of fave show Parks and Recreation titled “Sweet Sixteen”.  (It was that search that led me to discover Johnson Lake in Pasadena, which I blogged about here.)  And while I was absolutely convinced that Donna’s home was located on the banks of the oft-filmed-at Lake Sherwood, I scanned through aerial views of pretty much every single property in that area and came up completely empty-handed.  Then fate took a hand and led me to some information about another oft-filmed-at lake in the vicinity – one that I had never before heard of – named Malibou Lake in Agoura.  I immediately became intrigued with the place and, after a few minutes of searching, found Donna’s house.  Yay!  Unfortunately though, because Malibou Lake is a bit of a hike from Pasadena, I was unable to drag the Grim Cheaper out there to stalk it until a couple of weekends ago.  But, let me tell you, it was well worth the wait!

    [ad]

    Malibou Lake Mountain Club, as the area has come to be known, was originally founded in 1922 by fishermen George Wilson and Bertram Lackey, who had purchased 350 acres of land in the Santa Monica Mountains with the intent of turning them into a lakeside community, resort and social club.  According to a November 2007 Los Angeles Times article, the development was named Malibou Lake with an “o” to avoid being confused with the nearby Malibu Lagoon.

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (2 of 21)

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (4 of 21)

    To create their idyllic development, Wilson and Lackey built a clubhouse, sold plots of land for housing, dammed up two nearby creeks, and waited for the 65-acre central basin to fill with water and become a lake.  That water took four years to arrive, though, to the consternation of the many new homeowners who had built what they thought were lakeside residences.  Finally in the spring of 1926, thanks to a long-overdue bout of storms, twenty million gallons of rainwater fell into the basin and Malibou Lake was born.

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (5 of 21)

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (8 of 21)

    I can honestly say that Mailbou Lake is one of the coolest, most picturesque places that I have ever stalked.

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (15 of 21)

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (16 of 21)

    Not to mention one of the most unique.  Pictured below is a sign that I never thought I would see in L.A.

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (3 of 21)

    I cannot even imagine what it would be like to live there!  As you can see below, one lakeside house even had a sailboat docked nearby!  Sigh!

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (9 of 21)

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (10 of 21)

    And while the club, lake and surrounding houses are gated and private, I am very happy to report that much of the area is visible from public streets.

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (17 of 21)

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (18 of 21)

    Malibou Lake Mountain Club has appeared in hundreds upon hundreds of productions since its founding and it would be absolutely impossible for me to catalog them all here, but I will do my best to mention its more notable onscreen appearances.  In the “Sweet Sixteen” episode of Parks and Recreation, Donna’s lake house is where the gang threw a surprise party for Jerry Gergich (Jim O’Heir).  Sadly, the property is not visible from the road, so I was not able to snap any photographs of it.

    ScreenShot5848

    ScreenShot5850

    The interior of the house – which is uh-ma-zing, by the way – also appeared in the episode.  You can check out some interior pictures of the property here.

    ScreenShot5849

    ScreenShot5851

    The iconic drowning scene from 1931’s Frankenstein was filmed at Malibou Lake.  You can read a FABULOUS article about the exact spot where filming took place penned by screenwriter John Cox (a man truly after my own heart) on the Frankensteinia blog here.

    ScreenShot5843

    ScreenShot5844

    In the 1940 film The Great Dictator, Malibou Lake was where Hynkel – Dictator of Tomania (Charlie Chaplin) shot ducks and was later captured.

    ScreenShot5878

    ScreenShot5880

    In 1956’s The Bad Seed, Malibou Lake stood in for Fern School – the private school attended by Rhoda Penmark (Patty McCormack).

    ScreenShot5868

    ScreenShot5869

    The Malibou Lake Mountain Club clubhouse masqueraded as the Havenhurst Motel in the Season 4 episode of Perry Mason titled “The Case of the Angry Dead Man”, which aired in 1961.  The lake and its environs have actually appeared in countless episodes of Perry Mason over the years, some of which are detailed on the Perry Mason TV Series website here.

    ScreenShot5875

    ScreenShot5877

    Malibou Lake was where Lane Meyer (John Cusack) first met Beth Truss (Amanda Wyss) in 1985’s Better Off Dead.

    ScreenShot5884

    ScreenShot5885

    In 1990 and 1991, Malibou Lake stood in for “Easter Park” in several episodes of Twin Peaks, including the Season 1 episode titled “Cooper’s Dreams” (pictured below).

    ScreenShot5853

    ScreenShot5854

    The Malibou Lake Mountain Club office also appeared throughout the series as the Timber Falls Motel.  You can see some real life photographs of the office along with comparison screen captures on the In Twin Peaks blog here and on the Brad D Studios website here.

    ScreenShot5855

    ScreenShot5857

    Malibou Lake was used extensively as Urbania, Ohio in 1994’s Little Giants.

    ScreenShot5881

    ScreenShot5882

    In 1998’s Mr. Saturday Night, Malibou Lake stood in for the Catskills resort where Buddy Young Jr. (Billy Crystal) regularly performed his comedy routine and also met his future wife, Elaine (Julie Warner).

    ScreenShot5886

    ScreenShot5887

    In the 1999 dramedy The Story of Us, Malibou Lake masqueraded as the lake at Camp Pinewood, the summer camp where Ben Jordan (Bruce Willis) and Katie Jordan (Michelle Pfeiffer) spent Parents’ Weekend with their children, Erin (Colleen Rennison) and Josh (Jake Sandvig).

    ScreenShot5872

    ScreenShot5873

    In the 2002 horror flick The Ring, a house on Malibou Lake was used as the office of Doctor Grasnik (Jane Alexander), where Rachel (Naomi Watts) went to seek out more information on Samara Morgan (Daveigh Chase).

    ScreenShot5862

    ScreenShot5867

    The real life interior of the house was also used in the movie.

    ScreenShot5864

    ScreenShot5866

    Sadly, that property was torn down to make way for a new, larger residence sometime in 2010 or 2011.  The original home is still visible via Bing aerial maps, though, as you can see below.

    ScreenShot5888

    A view of the vacant plot of land that remained after the residence was torn down, which I found on fave website Zillow, is pictured below.

    ScreenShot5889

    And the new abode, which is currently for sale for a cool $1.29 million, is pictured below.  The GC and I had actually been gushing over it while stalking the lake.  You can check out its real estate listing here.  Um, yeah, I could live with that.  Winking smile

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (1 of 1)

    John Cusack returned to Malibou Lake in 2005 to film the scene for Must Love Dogs in which Sarah Nolan (Diane Lane) chases down his character, Jake, to ask for a second chance.

    ScreenShot5845

    ScreenShot5847

    Thanks to fellow stalker Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, I learned that in the Season 4 episode of The Office titled “Dunder Mifflin Infinity”, which aired in 2007, Malibou Lake stood in for Lake Scranton where Michael Scott (Steve Carell) drowned his car due to “faulty” GPS directions.

    ScreenShot5891

    ScreenShot5892

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out the latest post – about trying to track down a diabetic-friendly evening bag – on my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Donna's Lake House - Parks and Recreation (12 of 21)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Malibou Lake Mountain Club is located at 29033 West Lake Vista Drive in Agoura Hills.  Donna’s lake house from the “Sweet Sixteen” episode of Parks and Recreation is located at 2140 East Lakeshore Drive, inside of the gated Malibou Lake Mountain Club community.  It is, unfortunately, not visible from the road.  The home that was used as Doctor Grasnik’s office in The Ring was formerly located at 29175 South Lakeshore Drive, but it has since been torn down and replaced with a new home.

  • Tom Bergin’s Tavern from “Duplex”

    Tom Bergin's (6 of 19)

    Two weeks ago, while doing research on Molly Malone’s (which I blogged about here), I came across a website for another historic Irish pub also located on South Fairfax Avenue in L.A.’s Fairfax District.  The bar is named Tom Bergin’s Old Horseshoe and Thoroughbred Club (or just simply Tom Bergin’s Tavern) and not only was it originally founded over seven decades ago (y’all know how much this stalker absolutely loves herself some historic restaurants), but the place is also a filming location AND a big-time celebrity hangout!  So I, of course, immediately added the address to my To-Stalk list and could hardly wait to drag the Grim Cheaper right on over there, which I finally did last Saturday evening.  And, amazingly enough, this was one location that he did not mind being dragged to.

    [ad]

    Tom Bergin’s Tavern was first founded on February 12th, 1936 by a 46-year-old lawyer named – you guessed it – Tom Bergin.  The bar was originally named the Old Horseshoe Tavern and Thoroughbred Club in honor of a Boston-area watering hole owned by Bergin’s uncle.  And while the establishment first stood at 6110 Wilshire Boulevard, when the lease on that location expired in 1949, Bergin built a new eatery, named Tom Bergin’s Horseshoe Tavern, just down the street at 840 South Fairfax Avenue.  Employees and customers alike carried the pub’s legendary horseshoe-shaped bar three blocks south to its new home.  And amazingly enough, not only is Tom Bergin’s still located in that very same spot on Fairfax – over six decades later! – but that very same horseshoe-shaped bar is still in use to this day!

    Tom Bergin's (3 of 19)

    Tom Bergin's (2 of 19)

    In 1973, Bergin sold the tavern to T.K. Vodrey and Mike Mandekic.  And while Mandekic ended up leaving to pursue other endeavors in 1998, Vodrey stayed on for more than another decade.  In 1999, Vodrey changed the pub’s name once again, this time to Tom Bergin’s Tavern, as it is still known to this day.  When Vodrey retired in 2011, Warner Ebbink thankfully stepped in, purchased the site and set about restoring it.  Ebbink, who owns Little Dom’s (one of my favorite L.A. restaurants, which I blogged about here) is no stranger to historic eateries, having also purchased and restored both the 101 Coffee Shop (another fave that I blogged about here) and Dominick’s (a 1940s-era establishment where Frank Sinatra and the Rat Pack used to hang out, which I have sadly yet to stalk).  Ebbink immediately set about giving Tom Bergin’s a much-needed 7-month face-lift, of which he said in a May 2012 The Hollywood Reporter article, “It’s more restoration than renovation, keeping with what was true of Bergin’s.  We just replaced and repaired what needed to be replaced and repaired, then distressed them so people won’t even know.”  Um, LOVE IT!

    Tom Bergin's (11 of 19)

    Tom Bergin's (14 of 19)

    Ebbink truly is a man after my own heart.  In an April 2012 Los Angeles Times article about Tom Bergin’s, he is quoted as saying, “L.A. doesn’t respect its history.  Back when this was built, you could build places with themes.  The architecture alone was worth saving, and it has this super-rich history.  We knew it was a special place.”

    Tom Bergin's (18 of 19)

    Tom Bergin's (19 of 19)

    And I am very happy to report that Tom Bergin’s Tavern did indeed look old and weathered, but I mean that in the best way possible.  The place just oozes history and walking through its front door is like stepping back in time.

    Tom Bergin's (8 of 19)

    Tom Bergin's (7 of 19)

    Tom Bergin’s even serves champagne in old-school, Marilyn Monroe-style coupes! Love it, love it, love it!

    Tom Bergin's (12 of 19)

    The pub’s now legendary tradition of honoring regular customers by displaying a green shamrock with their name on the ceiling was started in 1950 by longtime manager Jake Ohlsen.  It was not long before the bar’s entire ceiling was covered in the shamrocks and today there are over 7,000 on display.

    Tom Bergin's (9 of 19)

    During the renovation, each shamrock was removed, cleaned and then re-hung.  Love it!

    Tom Bergin's (16 of 19)

    Tom Bergin’s Tavern has countless ties to Hollywood.  Just a few of the celebrities who have been spotted there over the years include Kiefer Sutherland, Tommy Lasorda, Julia Roberts, Ronald Reagan, Cary Grant, George Wendt, John Ratzenberger, Lee Majors, Glenn Ford, Bing Crosby, Pat O’Brien (the actor, not the The Insider host), and, my personal favorite, Luke Perry.  Cary Grant’s favorite booth is pictured below and his shamrock is currently in the process of being framed to hang nearby.

    Tom Bergin's (10 of 19)

    Longtime regular Kiefer Sutherland’s shamrock is pictured below.  When the two were a couple, Julia Roberts’ shamrock hung right next to Kiefer’s, but he had it removed shortly following their break-up.

    Tom Bergin's (13 of 19)

    Legend has it that producers Glen and Les Charles got the inspiration for their long-running hit television series Cheers while at Tom Bergin’s and that the character of “Coach” was based on Bergin’s longtime head bartender Chris Doyle.

    Tom Bergin's (17 of 19)

    Tom Bergin's (15 of 19)

    In 2003’s Duplex, Tom Bergin’s Tavern stood in for the supposed Brooklyn-area bar where Alex Rose (Ben Stiller) holed up during a rainy day in order to finish writing his book, and where his wife, Nancy Kendricks (Drew Barrymore), later met him for a drink.  In the movie, both the exterior . . .

    ScreenShot5825

    . . . and the interior were used.

    ScreenShot5827

    ScreenShot5828

    ScreenShot5830

    ScreenShot5831

    In the Season 2 episode of Top Chef Masters titled “Pub Food”, contestants were challenged to create an upscale version of a traditional pub dish at Tom Bergin’s.  In the episode, both the exterior . . .

    ScreenShot5832

    ScreenShot5835

    . . . and the interior of Tom’s were used.

    ScreenShot5833

    ScreenShot5834

    ScreenShot5836

    ScreenShot5837

    A photo shoot for House of Pain’s eponymous first album was also held at Tom Bergin’s in 1992 (pictured below).  And while episodes of 24 and It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia were also supposedly lensed at the bar, I was unable to verify that or figure out which episodes specifically.

    ScreenShot5824

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Tom Bergin's (5 of 19)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Tom Bergin’s Tavern is located at 840 South Fairfax Avenue in the Fairfax District of Los Angeles.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here.

  • The McGinley Residence – Where Robert F. Kennedy Is Said to Have Spent His Last Night

    McGinley House -Robert F. Kennedy (5 of 5)

    Another Lafayette Square-area home that was mentioned in the “Affairs of Estate” article that I blogged about yesterday was the property located at 1821 South Victoria Avenue, where, according to author Ann Herold, Robert F. Kennedy spent the last night of his life.  And while that assertion would be extremely hard to prove (and some sites speculate that the senator’s last night was spent either at the Sportsmen’s Lodge in Studio City or the Malibu home of director John Frankenheimer), because the Victoria Avenue residence belonged to RFK’s godfather’s son at the time, it is an entirely likely possibility.  So after stopping by the incorrectly identified Leave It to Beaver house this past Saturday afternoon, I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on over to stalk the place.

    [ad]

    The residence that originally stood at 1821 South Victoria Avenue was constructed in the Prairie School-style by Emmett G. Martin in 1924.  In 1939, McGinley Oil Company-heir Charles E. McGinley commissioned Paul R. Williams – the legendary architect who also designed the now-defunct Perino’s restaurant (which I blogged about here) and the Just Married mansion (which I blogged about here) – to remodel and enlarge the dwelling.   What ended up happening, though, according to the Paul R. Williams Project website, was a complete refab after which only the original home’s foundation remained.  McGinley also purchased two neighboring plots of land during that time, essentially tripling the size of his lot.  Williams’ remodel, which became known as the McGinley residence, transformed the house into a Classical Regency Revival-style manse and enlarged the property to 6 bedrooms, 4 baths, and 5,952 square feet.  At the time, the place looked quite a bit different than it does today.  While the façade remains exactly the same shape as it did during the 1939 re-construction, it appears as though the abode was originally painted white, as you can see here.  I prefer the unpainted red brick, myself, as it reminds me of the Home Alone house – one of my favorite movie houses of all time.

    McGinley House -Robert F. Kennedy (3 of 5)

    As I mentioned above, Charles McGinley’s father, oil tycoon Walter T. McGinley, was Robert F. Kennedy’s godfather.  And although Walter passed away in 1932, more than thirty years before RFK was assassinated, it is entirely plausible that Kennedy and his family spent some time with Charles while in the area that week – including the night of June 3rd, 1968, Kennedy’s last full night alive.  Late the next evening, June 4th, it was announced that the senator had won the California Primary and he gave a short speech in the Embassy Room of the Ambassador Hotel just after midnight on June 5th.  Following the speech, Kennedy and his entourage exited through the Ambassador’s kitchen area, where he was shot four times by Sirhan Sirhan.  RFK was first taken to Central Receiving Hospital and then Good Samaritan Hospital where he passed away at 1:44 a.m. on June 6th, almost 26 hours after he had been shot.  You can check out a more detailed chronology of his assassination on the fabulous FindADeath website here.

    McGinley House -Robert F. Kennedy (2 of 5)

    Ironically enough, while we were stalking the McGinley residence, the owners’ son-in-law happened to come outside and we got to chatting.  When I mentioned the recent Los Angeles Magazine article and his in-laws’ home’s connection to Robert F. Kennedy, the gentleman was absolutely bowled over with excitement and ran right inside to let them know the news.  I so love it when homeowners are not only nice about me taking photographs of their property, but are also excited about to learn new things about their residence’s history.  Smile

    McGinley House -Robert F. Kennedy (4 of 5)

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER. And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    McGinley House -Robert F. Kennedy (1 of 5)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The McGinley residence, where Robert F. Kennedy is reported to have spent his last night, is located at 1821 South Victoria Avenue in the Lafayette Square neighborhood of Los Angeles.