The Virgil from “A Star Is Born”

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I got a text from my friend Liz the other day saying, “Don’t see A Star Is Born . . . OMG!” followed by a bunch of crying face emojis.  As Liz and most of my fellow stalkers are well aware, I do not like sad or depressing movies – at all.  Liz needn’t have worried.  While I have never watched any of the A Star Is Born iterations, I am familiar enough with the storyline to know that they are just not my cup of tea.  My friend Lavonna is on the other end of the spectrum, though.  She saw the latest installment as soon as it came out, became absolutely obsessed, and, during a recent visit to L.A., stalked a bunch of its locations, including The Virgil, which masked as Bleu Bleu in an opening scene.  As fate would have it, upon arriving at the East Hollywood bar, she stumbled upon some crew members from Glow striking set pieces from a shoot that had been done on the premises the day prior.  Lavonna struck up a conversation with one them who invited her inside to take a closer look and snap pictures.  Figuring it would make for a good blog post, she forwarded the photos on to me.  And while I still have yet to see A Star Is Born, thanks to Vudu, where it is available for streaming, I was able to scan through the beginning to familiarize myself with it a bit in preparation for this write-up.

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The Virgil was originally established in June 2012 by nightlife impresarios Louie and Netty Ryan, of Temple Bar Concepts, who also founded Townhouse/The Del Monte in Venice and Santa Monica’s famed Temple Bar (which is now closed), among a slew of others.

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The lounge, known for its specialty craft cocktails, occupies a space on the corner of Santa Monica Boulevard and North Virgil Avenue that formerly housed Little Temple, another of the Ryans’ watering holes which opened in mid-2004.  Prior to that, the site was the longtime home of The Garage, a rock club owned by Steve Edelson.

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Comprised of two spacious areas, the “Stage” room and the “B Side” (the latter of which Lavonna did not get any photos of, but you can see what it looks like here), The Virgil has a distinctly bohemian vibe . . .

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. . . with some Moroccan elements thrown in.

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With curtains flanking wide openings . . .

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. . . and unique carvings adoring various doorways, The Virgil looks like a really cool place to hang out.

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In A Star Is Born, Jackson Maine (Bradley Cooper) pops by “Bleu Bleu” to get a drink while on his way home from a performance.  The exterior of the bar is only shown briefly in the segment.

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Though, as Lavonna informed me, the billboard out front does provide some foreshadowing of the movie’s ending.  (And she wonders why I’m resisting watching it!  Yeah, that’s gonna be a hard ‘no’ from me!)

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It is at The Virgil that Jack first lays eyes on Ally (Lady Gaga) as she spectacularly performs “La Vie en Rose.”

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Due to low lighting and rather tight camera angles, not much of the bar can be seen in the movie.  We do get a better glimpse of it later in the scene, when Jack is invited to perform onstage while he waits for Ally after Bleu Bleu has closed for the evening.  Despite some major set dressing that was added for the shoot (which, per Vulture, took two days to complete), the place is still definitely recognizable from its appearance.

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I am unsure if the Bleu Bleu dressing room segments were shot at The Virgil, as well, but I am guessing that they were.

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  The Virgil is also featured twice in the Season 1 episode of Strange Angel titled “The Sage,” which aired in 2018.  The B Side area first pops up as the bar where Jack Parsons (Jack Reynor) laments to his friend Ernest Donovan (Rupert Friend) about not being allowed in to an important business function.

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The Stage room then masks as the gentleman’s club that Jack and Ernest visit later in the episode.

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As I mentioned earlier, Glow also did some filming at The Virgil, so be sure to look for it in an upcoming episode of the third season.

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

Big THANK YOU to my friend Lavonna for stalking this location for me!  Smile

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Virgil, aka Bleu Bleu from A Star Is Born, is located at 4519 Santa Monica Boulevard in East Hollywood.  You can visit the bar’s official website here.

Barnsdall Art Park from “Big Little Lies”

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The Grim Cheaper is easily the most creative gift-giver I know.  Not only does he find incredibly thoughtful presents, but he always comes up with highly unique ways of presenting them.  I have only ever managed to match his ingenuity on rare occasions – one being Valentine’s Day 2011 when I created a scavenger hunt around Los Angeles during which he solved clues that disclosed GPS coordinates of spots I thought he would enjoy visiting.  The hunt included stops at Grub Restaurant, LACMA, Boardner’s of Hollywood, the HMS Bounty Bar and Restaurant, Annenberg Space for Photography, and Barnsdall Art Park.  The latter, a sprawling esplanade situated atop a hill in East Hollywood, boasts two of the largest staircases I’ve ever seen in my life – one leading from the lower parking lot to the northern side of the property and the other situated next to the complex’s Junior Art Center building on its eastern end.  While exploring, the GC and I climbed both, much to my chagrin.  (I’ve never been one for exercise, especially on a holiday.)  They were so long and daunting that images of them have remained ingrained in my mind ever since.  So when Madeline Martha Mackenzie (Reese Witherspoon) was shown scaling the Junior Art Center steps in the second episode of Big Little Lies, titled “Serious Mothering,” I recognized them immediately.  I was floored when Barnsdall popped up multiple times in later episodes of the 2017 HBO series, most notably the finale in which it played a major role.  Though I mentioned the park’s use on the show in my post about Big Little Lies filming locations last April, I figured it was high time I get back out there to do a proper stalk and proper post about the place.

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Barnsdall Art Park is the brainchild of Aline Barnsdall, a wealthy Chicago oil heiress who came to California hoping to establish a community center that would serve as the headquarters for her theatre company.  After purchasing a 36-acre site atop Hollywood’s Olive Hill, she hired Frank Lloyd Wright to design a complex consisting of a theatre, studio space, dorms for actors, homes for visiting directors, and a massive private residence for herself on the vast property.  It was Wright’s first Los Angeles commission.

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Aline’s home, which became the park’s centerpiece, was designed with Mayan and Japanese influences in a style that Wright dubbed “California Romanza.”

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The dwelling was named “Hollyhock House” in honor of Barnsdall’s favorite flower, the hollyhock, which Wright incorporated heavily into his creation.

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The unique poured concrete structure, made to take advantage of the idyllic outdoor landscape surrounding it, is quite striking, with a look that bears more resemblance to an ancient temple than a residence.

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As noted by Alice T. Friedman in her book Women and the Making of the Modern House, “The project on which Wright and Barnsdall collaborated between 1915 and 1923 represents one of the most unusual challenges Wright encountered during his long career, since it called for a rethinking of building types and particularly of notions concerning house design, family life, and domesticity.  Barnsdall’s Hollyhock House, the most important piece of that project to survive, was a house built not for the private life of a family but as a residential centerpiece in a public garden and theater complex; its large, formal spaces and evident lack of domestic feeling reflect this program.  Yet in rejecting the conventions of domestic planning and searching for an unusual hybrid type, architect and client were free to push the boundaries of architecture to new limits, focusing on theatricality, on the experience of monumental form, and on the vividness of the landscape as it was framed and defined by the house.”

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Even before construction had started, Aline referred to the complex as an “art park,” where, as again stated in Women and the Making of the Modern House, “Not only would theater patrons be encouraged to stroll outside during long intermissions, but there would also be a roof garden for ‘afternoon teas and theater suppers’ and extensive gardens for the use of the public.”  Sadly, and for numerous reasons, one of which was an ongoing discord with Wright, only three of the intended structures were completed.  It would be several decades before Barnsdall’s vision of a community “art-theater garden” came to be.

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Though Aline attempted to donate Hollyhock House and the eight acres surrounding it to the city in 1923, her offer was refused.  The generous bequest was eventually accepted in December 1926 and Barnsdall Art Park was born.   It was not until 1971, though, a full 45 years later, that a theatre and art gallery (the Barnsdall Gallery Theatre and Los Angles Municipal Art Gallery, respectively) were built at the site.  In an interview that took place in 1919, long before her home had been completed, the heiress said, “I propose to keep my gardens always open to the public that this sightly spot may be available to those lovers of the beautiful who come here to view sunsets, dawn on the mountains and other spectacles of nature, visible in few other places in the heart of the city.”  Her words were finally a reality.

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Barnsdall Art Park’s vistas are, indeed, spectacular and rare.  Even the Hollywood Sign can be viewed from the property’s expansive lawn . . .

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. . . as can the Griffith Observatory.

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The park is a fabulous place to spend a sunny afternoon.  With its shaded central courtyard, grassy terrace, theatre showings, art gallery exhibitions, countless offerings of art workshops for both children and adults, and self-guided and docent-led tours of Hollyhock House, the possibilities for both activity and leisure are endless.

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In Big Little Lies, Barnsdall Art Park masks as the supposed Monterey-area community theatre where Madeline works.

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Several times throughout the series she is seen walking up the massive, always under-repair set of stairs leading to the theatre.

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As I mentioned earlier, Madeline’s staircase can be found on the east side of the park, adjacent to the Junior Art Center.

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The steps are easily the most recognizable of the many Barnsdall locations used on Big Little Lies.

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Definitively dramatic, it is not very hard to see how they came to be adopted as a focal point on the series.

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Big Little Lies also utilized the Barnsdall Gallery Theatre.

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The venue’s interior is where the Avenue Q rehearsals and performance took place.  You can check out photos of the inside of the space here.

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For the theatre’s exterior, though, producers instead chose to film the outside of the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, which is situated just north of the Gallery Theatre.

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The park’s tree-lined central courtyard makes several appearances on the series.  Not only is Madeline shown walking on one of its pathways on her way to work in “Serious Mothering” . . .

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. . . but the Trivia Night costume party in the finale, titled “You Get What You Need,” takes place there.

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The red carpet that party attendees walk down on Trivia Night . . .

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. . . which is the same one shown in the series’ opening credits, was set up on a pathway on the northern side of the courtyard.  Said pathway runs through the center of the courtyard and abuts the double set of stairs situated between the Hollyhock House Garage and the Municipal Art Gallery.

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That double set of stairs served as the Trivia Night valet drop-off in “You Get What You Need.”

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It, too, was affixed with a red carpet for the shoot.

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The Trivia Night stage, where Ed Mackenzie (Adam Scott) so movingly sang “The Wonder of You” (fun fact – that was actually the voice of the Villagers’ Conor O’Brien you heard in the scene) was actually just the heavily-dressed exterior of the Municipal Art Gallery.

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For the episode, the structure’s portico was draped with material, stung with lights, and affixed with a small stage.

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In real life, it is almost unrecognizable from its “You Get What You Need” appearance.  In fact, it was so heavily dressed, it took me quite a while to figure out the stage’s exact position in the scene.

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The stairs that figure so prominently in the series’ climax are the very same ones that Madeline regularly climbed.

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The landing where the killing took place is situated in between the staircase’s two main flights, next to the western-most Junior Art Center building.

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A couple of other productions have also made use of Barnsdall Art Park.  Thanks to fellow stalker Gilles, I learned that the Municipal Art Gallery was utilized in establishing shots of the Colby Collection on the 1980s series The Colbys.

In 1989’s ridiculously-named Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death (and yes, that is a real movie!), Hollyhock House masks as the “secret temple of the Piranha Women.”  (I swear, I’m not joking!)

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Upon first approaching it in the film, Dr. Margo Hunt (Shannon Tweed) says “Their architecture is surprisingly advanced,” to which Jim (Bill Maher) responds, “It looks like a big Lego to me.”

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As I mentioned in a 2015 article for Los Angeles magazine, a Season 2 episode of True Detective was shot at the park.  In the episode, titled “Maybe Tomorrow,” Paul Woodrugh (Taylor Kitsch) interrogates prostitutes he comes across in Barnsdall’s lower parking lot for information about a missing city manager.

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Wills Reid’s intro package for the most recent season of Bachelor in Paradise was also shot at Barnsdall.

Though IMDB says that Hollyhock House was featured in Dirty Love, I scanned through the 2005 comedy and didn’t see it anywhere.

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

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Barnsdall Art Park, from Big Little Lies, is located at 4800 Hollywood Boulevard in East Hollywood.  You can visit the park’s official website here.  As denoted in the graphic below, the stairs Madeline regularly walks up, which is also where the series’ climax takes place, can be found in the eastern portion of the property, adjacent to the Junior Art Center.  The exterior of the community theatre where Madeline works, which is also where the Trivia Night stage was set up, is the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery in the center of the park.  Theatre interiors, where the Avenue Q performance was held, were shot inside the Barnsdall Gallery Theatre, which is situated next to and just south of the Art Gallery.  The Trivia Night valet drop-off stairs can be found at the northern end of the park, adjacent to the Hollyhock Garage.  The Trivia Night red carpet, aka the opening credits red carpet, was set up on the pathway that runs just south of the stairs and through the center of the central courtyard.