High Tower from “Dead Again”

High Tower from Dead Again-1200499

I did not see Dead Again when it was first released in 1991 (at 14, I was too young for such an intense thriller), but I vividly remember my parents coming home from the theatre raving about how great it was and how much I would have loved a particularly disturbing scene involving cigarettes.  It was not until years later, after I met the Grim Cheaper, that I finally sat down for a viewing.  The flick was worth the wait.  Dead Again is honestly one of the most well-crafted crime dramas I have ever watched.  And my parents were right – that cigarette scene is horrifyingly fabulous.  The film also boasts one of the spookiest locations ever featured in a movie – High Tower, the striking Italianate campanile (a word I just learned today!) housing the elevator leading to Amanda Sharp’s (Emma Thompson) hillside home.  I first stalked the site shortly after seeing Dead Again and have been back many times since.  In fact, I used to take an acting class just down the road from it and would drive by on a weekly basis.  Each time I would marvel at how lucky I was to be living in such a magical city, where passing by historic and iconic locales is natural happenstance.  It randomly struck me recently that I had never blogged about High Tower, despite it being the perfect Haunted Hollywood spot.  So I am amending that situation today.

[ad]

Though there are a few differing reports floating around online, according to the Los Angeles Historic Resources Survey, High Tower was originally constructed in 1923.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200480

At the time, the hillside it flanks looked quite a bit different, as you can see in photos of the structure from its early days here and here.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200469

High Tower from Dead Again-1200471

The elevator was originally installed to service the dotting of homes on the tiny street of Alta Loma Terrace, situated just northeast of the tower.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200497

In 1935, over a decade after High Tower’s inception, architect Carl Kay began construction on a series of four Streamline Moderne duplexes cantilevered directly behind the campanile on Broadview Terrace.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200507

The complex, which Kay modeled after Positano, Italy and dubbed “High Tower Court,” was not completed until 1956.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200478

Today, the elevator solely services the four High Tower Court properties.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200479

The garages for the complex are situated at the bottom of the hill, a good five stories below the homes, and, amazingly, none of the residences have direct street access (moving must seriously be a b*tch!), making the conveyance an absolute necessity.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200484

 High Tower from Dead Again-1200483

Without it, residents would have to resort to climbing a haphazard tangle of staircases comprised of more than 200 steps in order to access their units.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200482

High Tower from Dead Again-1200486

Each High Tower Court unit pays $51 per month for use of the elevator, which, while costly, is well worth it in my book.  (However, there is something to be said for the fact that anyone who decided to save money and forgo the perk would easily have the best legs in town!)  Sadly though, the structure is off-limits to the rest of us.  Without one of the coveted keys doled out to homeowners, the gated tower can’t be accessed.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200493

High Tower from Dead Again-1200492

While researching for this post, I was floored to learn via a 1993 Los Angeles Times article that, while the elevator is private, High Tower Court is publicly accessible – as long as you’re willing to hoof it those 200 steps.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200491

I wish I had known that fact before my most recent stalk of the place.  I so would have ventured up the hill!  Can you even imagine the views?  For those interested in journeying to the top, Secret Stairs-LA put together a fabulous itinerary of a 2.6-mile trek that will lead you there.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200496

High Tower from Dead Again-1200498

High Tower Court has attracted quite a few notable residents over the years, including illusionist David Copperfield, author Michael Connelly (several of his books are even set at High Tower), musician Michael Feinstein, and actress Adriana Caselotti (aka the voice of Snow White in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs).

High Tower from Dead Again-1200489

Though some reports state that Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love also lived at High Tower in the early ‘90s (during the time that In Utero was written and Frances Bean was born), that information is incorrect.  The couple actually resided just behind the complex at 6881 Alta Loma Terrace.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200494

High Tower appears a couple of times in Dead Again.  In the movie, Amanda, an amnesiac, resides in the large white home situated directly east of the elevator.

Screenshot-006384

High Tower from Dead Again-1200504

As ‘Piccolo’ Pete Dugan (Wayne Knight) tells her after finally discovering her true identity, “You live at 1454 Hightower in the old Carl Kay house.  You know, the one with the elevator?”  In reality, the address of the pad used in the flick is 2182 Broadview Terrace.

Screenshot-006382

According to William A. Gordon in The Ultimate Hollywood Tour Book, “The location was deliberately chosen (and even included in the original script), because the producers wanted to show that Emma Thompson was literally cut off from outside help.”

Screenshot-006388

High Tower from Dead Again-1200509

The inside of Amanda’s apartment appears to have been a set as it does match the actual interior of 2182 Broadview, which you can take a look at here.  (While you’re at it, you can also check out the interiors of the other three High Tower Court duplexes – 2181 Broadview, 2185 Broadview, and 2189 Broadview.)

Screenshot-006385

Screenshot-006387

In real life, Amanda’s residence, which was built in 1936, boasts 2 bedrooms, 4 baths, 2,067 square feet, and a 0.10-acre lot.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200506

Dead Again is hardly the only production to feature High Tower.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200472

In the Season 2 episode of Naked City titled “New York to L.A.,” which aired in 1961, Franklin Maquon (Frank Sutton) confronts and kills Caldwell Wyatt (Martin Balsam) just outside of the elevator.

Screenshot-006379

Screenshot-006380

Like Emma Thompson, Philip Marlowe (Elliott Gould) calls 2182 Broadview home in the 1973 noir The Long Goodbye.

Screenshot-006396

Screenshot-006397

Unlike Dead Again, though, it really does look as if the actual interior of the property was utilized in the shoot.

Screenshot-006398

Screenshot-006403

The kitchen seen in the movie, where Marlowe’s poor tabby refuses his attempts at feeding him some non-Courry-Brand cat food, is pretty much a direct match to the kitchen pictured in 2182’s MLS photos.

The Long Goodbye Kitchen

High Tower was also featured in a video adaptation of the first chapter of Michael Connelly’s 2006 book Echo Park.

Screenshot-006391

Screenshot-006392

And the site portrayed the apartment of murder victim Sandy Boudreau (Alexa Davalos), said to be at 121 Bendix Avenue, in the pilot episode of Raines, which aired in 2007.

Screenshot-006393

Screenshot-006394

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

High Tower from Dead Again-1200495

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: High Tower, from Dead Again, is located at 2178 High Tower Drive in the Hollywood Hills.  Amanda’s house from the movie can be found just up the hill at 2182 Broadview Terrace.  Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love’s former residence is located just around the corner at 6881 Alta Loma Terrace.

Wayne Manor From the “Batman” Television Series

IMG_5978-1

Just up the street from the Just Married mansion which I blogged about yesterday is the residence which stood in for Wayne Manor, aka Batman’s abode, in the 1966 television series and movie of the same name.  As I mentioned in yesterday’s post, the Batman mansion and the Just Married mansion are quite often mistaken for each other due to a myriad of reasons.  So, to set the record straight – and since we already were in the area a couple of weeks ago doing some Just Married stalking- I decided to drag my fiancé a few hundreds yards up the road to also stalk Bruce Wayne’s pad.  Sadly, though, not very much of it is visible from the street.

IMG_5987-1

According to Zillow, the residence, which was built in 1928, boasts ten bedrooms, six bathrooms, a whopping 16,599 square feet of living space, and sits on over five acres of land!  And if you look at the above photographs, it is very easy to see why the property is often confused with the Just Married mansion that burned down in October of 2005.  Not only are both houses gargantuan, set far back from the road, and Tudor/Gothic Revival in style, but both were constructed almost entirely out of brick by the very same architect, Paul Revere Williams, and bear a striking resemblance to each other.  Further adding to the confusion between the properties is the fact that they are located within blocks of each other on the very same street, San Rafael Avenue, in Pasadena and have both been featured in countless productions over the years.

  IMG_5985-1  

Because the location rumors about the two mansions have been running rampant for so very long, this weekend I decided to try to get my hands on as many of the productions filmed on the premises as I could to try to set the record straight once and for all.  And I didn’t do too bad – the only movies I wasn’t able to track down were Topper, Three Men and a Little Lady, Executive Action, The Gumball Rally, The Bells of St. Mary’s, Sweet Bird of Youth, and True Confessions.  If anyone has those movies or has seen them in the past, can you let me know which, if either, of the San Rafael mansions was featured in them?

ScreenShot4130

As I mentioned above, the mansion’s most famous appearance was as Wayne Manor in the 1966 television series Batman and the subsequent movie of the same name that was made that very same year.  But its resume hardly ends there.

ScreenShot4105

ScreenShot4102 

ScreenShot4103

The residence was also used as both the St. Audrey’s Home for Boys where Grace (aka Emma Thompson) was taken in by a nun . . .

ScreenShot4106

ScreenShot4107

ScreenShot4108

. . . and as Roman Strauss’ (aka Kenneth Branagh’s) home in 1991’s Dead Again.

 ScreenShot4109 

ScreenShot4116

 ScreenShot4113 

ScreenShot4112

In the first Rush Hour movie, the mansion stood in for Los Angeles’ Chinese Consulate.

ScreenShot4115

IMG_5980-1

As you can see in the above photograph and screen capture, though, the exterior gate which appears in that movie is not the home’s real life gate.

 ScreenShot4121

ScreenShot4124

ScreenShot4126 

In 1999’s Bowfinger, the mansion was used as the residence of action star Kit Ramsey (aka Eddie Murphy).

 ScreenShot4118

IMG_5976-1 

[ad]

ScreenShot4120

IMG_5975-1

And in that flick the home’s real life gate does actually appear and was the site of one of the movie’s funniest scenes.

ScreenShot4127

ScreenShot4128 

ScreenShot4129

In Scary Movie 2, the mansion stood in for Hell House/Kane Manor where most of the film’s action takes place.

ScreenShot4137 

ScreenShot4138

ScreenShot4139

In X-Files: Fight The Future, it was used as the Somerset, England home of the Well-Manicured Man (aka John Neville).

 ScreenShot4131

 ScreenShot4132 

ScreenShot4133

According to some reports that I found online, the mansion was also featured in 1986’s Stand By Me, which seemed a bit odd being that I had always heard that Stand By Me was filmed almost in its entirety in the state of Oregon.  After re-watching the flick earlier today, though, I believe that the mansion did appear once at the very end of the movie as the residence of “The Writer” (aka Richard Dreyfuss).  As you can see in the above screen captures, the front driveway area does match that of the Batman  mansion. Why would they come all the way to Pasadena to film this one brief scene, though, when the rest of the movie was filmed hundreds of miles away in Oregon, you ask?  Well, according to IMDB’s Stand By Me trivia page, an actor named David Dukes was originally cast in the role of “The Writer”.  After his scenes were shot, though, and filming had wrapped, they re-cast the role with actor Richard Dreyfuss and re-shot all of his character’s scenes.  So, since the Richard Dreyfuss scenes were filmed at a later date – I am guessing after principal photography in Oregon had already wrapped – it makes sense that they would have been shot somewhere in the L.A. area, closer to where the film was being edited.

 ScreenShot4135 

ScreenShot4136

And if you’ll notice in the above screen captures, which were taken from the movie Dead Again, the mansion’s front window and the view from it does sort of match that which appeared in Stand By Me, which makes me think that the property was actually used in the movie, although I don’t have any concrete proof to back that up.

Fellow stalker Ivan just sent me the above screen captures from the television series Land of Giants, in which Wayne Manor stood in for the residence belonging to Uncle Trojar in the episode entitled “Collector’s Item”.  And, yes, the mansion was blown up t the end of that episode.  Thank you, Ivan!  🙂

IMG_5984-1 

According to fave website OnLocationVacations, the mansion was also the site of some filming from the upcoming Dinner For Schmucks movie starring Steve Carell, Paul Rudd, and Zach Galifianikis.   Besides being a filming location, the mansion was also the Pasadena Showcase House of Design in 1997.  So, I hope that at least partially puts to rest some of the locations rumors about the two landmark San Rafael Avenue mansions.  If I come across any further information, I will post it here!  And please let me know, dear readers, if you come across any information yourselves! 

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

Stalk It: Wayne Manor from the Batman television series is located at 380 South San Rafael Avenue in Pasadena.  Unfortunately, the residence is not very visible from the street.  To see the best views of the home, drive just a bit north of where the main gates are located.