Woodsboro Police Station from “Scream”

Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (48 of 54)

Happy, happy Halloween!  I can’t believe it is already time to wind down my Haunted Hollywood posts, but here we are.  Another October in the books!  The season definitely turned into a full-blown Scream-fest on the blog (as predicted a couple of weeks ago) and I am a-OK with it!  Amazingly, there are still quite a few locales from the 1996 horror flick that I have yet to write about, so I figured I’d finish things off this year with Oakville Grocery Co., the former Healdsburg City Hall which masked as Woodsboro Police Station onscreen.  Like all the other Scream sites I’ve blogged about recently, I stalked this one back in 2016 while in Northern California for a brief visit.

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The southeast corner of Matheson and Center Streets in downtown Healdsburg was home to the area’s City Hall for 110 years.  The original building, a towering three-story brick and stone Romanesque Revival structure which you can see here and here, was erected in 1886.  Comprised of city offices, a library, a post office, and a gym for a nearby school, it was razed in 1960.  The building that replaced it was a vast departure from its predecessor with a decidedly mid-century modern feel.  Designed by A.C. Steele, the new Healdsburg City Hall was dedicated on July 4th, 1961.  Built at a cost of just over $175,000, the one-story, 7,544-square-foot site housed both city offices and the police station and featured a beamed overhang, a front patio, pebble rock siding, and globe lighting.  You can check out a photo of it here.  It is that building that appeared in Scream.

Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (51 of 54)

Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (54 of 54)

In the hopes of making downtown Healdsburg more tourist-oriented, City Hall was moved to a new, larger building a couple of blocks northwest at 401 Grove Street and the police station re-located next door to 238 Center Street in 1996, shortly after Scream was lensed.  The former city hall site was subsequently given a massive overhaul and transformed into the Oakville Marketplace, home to a winery, a jewelry store, a spa, a clothing boutique, and an upscale deli/market named Oakville Grocery Co.  Boasting a Mediterranean façade, the 9,000-square-foot retail complex is hardly recognizable from its days as City Hall, though structurally it remains the same.

Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (17 of 54)

Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (4 of 54)

Though I abhor the fact that a Scream location has been gutted, Oakville Grocery Co., which takes up a third of the former City Hall space, has long been our favorite spot to eat when in town.  With a large front patio complete with a fireplace, a wide selection of specialty grocery items, and excellent deli sandwiches, Oakville just can’t be beat!

Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (3 of 54)

Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (6 of 54)

Healdsburg City Hall pops up as Woodsboro PD twice in Scream, first in the scene in which Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell) is brought in by Deputy Dewey (David Arquette) to make a report following the attack by Ghostface.  As you can see below, the exterior is recognizable from its 1996 cameo in shape only, unfortunately.

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Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (18 of 54)

I first saw Scream in December 1997 with some friends who had rented it on DVD over Christmas break.  I remember being shocked when the end credits rolled and I spotted a nod to the City of Healdsburg in the “Filmmakers Wish to Thank” section, suggesting filming had taken place there.  The charming Northern California town was only about an hour away from where I then resided and a stone’s throw from where my aunt lived (and still lives).  I begged my mom to take me up there pronto and a few days later she obliged.  At the time I was not entirely sure what portions of the movie had been filmed in the area – this was long before location websites that could point me in the right direction existed – so when we arrived, my mom suggested I pop into the local police station to inquire, which I distinctly remember garnering an eye roll and a “Seriously, mom?!?” from me.  I did as she recommended, though, and just about fell over when the detective I spoke with informed me that filming had actually taken place at the former police station!  By then, the remodel had already occurred and Oakville Grocery Co. was in full swing, but he walked us over to explain where the station used to be and which areas of it had appeared onscreen – proving further that mothers always know best!  As he told us, the actual interior of City Hall was utilized as Woodsboro PD in the movie.

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An interview that fellow stalker Ashley of The Drewseum recently emailed me a scan of leads me to believe that it was the City Hall portion of the building, not the actual police station, utilized in Scream.  In the blurb, production designer Bruce Alan Miller says, “There’s a City Hall on the corner of the square that we turned into our police station.  We just changed some signs and put a few things in the windows.  We couldn’t use a real police station, because we would have been at their mercy, and we couldn’t be disrupting their police activity.”  Though I was unable to unearth any photos of the interior areas featured in Scream, I did find 1961-era pictures of Healdsburg City Hall’s lobby, courthouse, and city council chambers.  (Here’s another of the lobby for good measure.)

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Perhaps even more famous to Scream fans than Woodsboro Police Station is the alley that runs alongside it, where Dewey escorts Sidney and Tatum (Rose McGowan) after Sidney gives her statement.  Said alley can be reached via Center Street, just south of Oakville Grocery, but it, too, has largely been remodeled.  The door that the girls walk out of in the scene, unfortunately, fell casualty to the 1996 renovation, though the pipe visible just beyond it still stands.

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Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (32 of 54)-2

The door’s former location is pretty much where the middle glass block window is currently situated, as denoted with an orange rectangle below.

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The rain gutter and window due east of the door’s former location are also still intact, which was thrilling to see!  Along with the aforementioned pipe, they are pretty much the only elements that remain from the time Scream was filmed.

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Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (25 of 54)-2

The dumpster enclosure and chain link fencing situated at the rear of the alley also largely remain the same.

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Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (1 of 1)

It is in the alley that Sidney famously gives Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) a fist to the face.

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Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (34 of 54)

Had to do it!

Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (38 of 54)

During my ‘97 visit, my officer friend informed me that the people standing across the street in the punching scene were not background actors hired to be there, but interested locals hoping to catch a glimpse of the filming.  Taking advantage of the situation, Wes Craven installed barricades to give the illusion that the crowd was made up of lookie-loos waiting outside the station for news about the murders of Casey Becker (Drew Barrymore) and Steve Orth (Kevin Patrick Walls).  In his commentary on the Scream Collector’s Series DVD, Craven calls them “free extras.”

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Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (40 of 54)

Woodsboro Police Station also shows up in a later scene in which Dewey drops the girls off to go grocery shopping while he checks in with his boss, Sherriff Burke (Joseph Whipp).

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Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (16 of 54)

That segment gives us a better look at City Hall’s former exterior.  It truly was a piece of mid-century perfection!

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Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (13 of 54)

Today, the entrance to Woodsboro PD serves as the exterior of the Virginia Carol clothing boutique (the shop with the yellow awning below).

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Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (47 of 54)

Man, what I wouldn’t give to have seen the old City Hall building still intact!

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Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (8 of 54)

The happiest of Halloweens to all of my fellow stalkers!

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

Woodsboro Police Station from Scream (15 of 54)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Oakville Grocery Co., aka Woodsboro Police Station from Scream, is located at 124 Matheson Street in HealdsburgHealdsburg Town Plaza, which portrayed downtown Woodsboro in the movie, is right across the road at the intersection of Healdsburg Avenue & Matheson Street.

Lacy Street Production Center from “Stitchers”

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (3 of 3)

They say the third time’s the charm, but I attempted to stalk today’s location on no less than ten different occasions before finally being successful!  Lacy Street Production Center, the exterior of which portrayed the site of a rave in an episode of Stitchers, is an actual working studio and, unfortunately, each time I showed up for a look-see, production trucks were parked over every square inch of the place, blocking all views of it from the street.  So I was thrilled to arrive on a recent Wednesday morning and find the complex free of any and all freighters, meaning I could finally snap some photos.  Considering the number of man-hours put into it, this stalk was truly a labor of love!

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It is at Lacy Street Production Center that Kristen Clark (Emma Ishta) and her team investigate the death of a young woman in the Season 1 episode of Stitchers titled “Friends in Low Places.”

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Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (1 of 1)

One look at the rusted-out smokestack visible in the episode and I was smitten!  I had never seen anything like it in Los Angeles and promptly got started trying to identify it.  Thankfully, the Seeing Stars website did the legwork for me, chronicling all of Stitchers Season 1 locales, including Lacy Street Production Center, aka the site of the “Friends in Low Places” rave.

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Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (1 of 1)

The conglomeration of buildings that today makes up Lacy Street Production Center originally served as the home of the Talbert-Whitmore Co., a window shade manufacturer that later became known as Columbia Mills.  Initially constructed in 1908, the complex was expanded multiple times over the years as Talbert-Whitmore grew, eventually developing into the largest window shade factory on the West Coast.  You can see an image of the plant from its early days here.

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (19 of 28)

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (21 of 28)

I could find absolutely no provenance regarding the American Wrecking Company signage so prominently splayed across the complex’s central structure – not via old building permits, newspaper.com archives or historic resources surveys.  I am guessing it is leftover from a shoot, quite possibly an episode of Star Trek: Enterprise.  But more on that in a bit.

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (15 of 28)

In 1982, the 9-building, 2-acre site was transformed into a de facto movie studio thanks to producer Barney Rosenzweig who was looking for a permanent spot to shoot his new TV series, Cagney & Lacey.  The former Talbert-Whitmore warehouse fit the bill perfectly, thanks to the vast open spaces it provided, perfect for building sets, not to mention the low rental rates, much less than those of an actual studio.  The show called Lacy Street Production Center home for its full six-year run.  When it wrapped, the complex’s owners, Don Randles and Jim Knight, began leasing the space out to other productions.

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (22 of 28)

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (5 of 28)

It proved so popular that when Rosenzweig came back to Randles and Knight a couple of years after Cagney & Lacey went off the air in the hopes of renting out the facility for his new series The Trials of Rosie O’Neill, he was told it had already been booked by another show, Alien Nation.  Lacy Street Production Center has continued to be booked regularly ever since, serving as the home to such productions as Catch Me If You Can, L.A. Confidential and Seabiscuit.

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (12 of 28)

Shooting in a converted warehouse does have its drawbacks, though.  As author Bob Fisher stated in a 1987 American Cinematographer article about Cagney & Lacey, “The Lacy Street studio does impose some production limitations.  There are low ceilings with no room for scaffolds, comparatively small sets with immovable walls, pillars in the middle of rooms and large air conditioning ducts that add to the ambience but present some considerable obstacles to the director of photography who has to light in a comparatively cramped space.”  Still, there’s nothing quite like the authentic urban aura it provides.  Though not actually abandoned, it definitely has that feel.  As Peggy Archer said in a 2007 LAist article documenting Lacy Street’s dilapidation over the years, “Of course, the reason movies, TV and commercials keep shooting here although it’s about to fall over is that the place looks really. f*cking. cool.”

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (11 of 28)

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (7 of 28)

When Lacy Street Production Center came on the market in 2015, there were talks of razing several buildings, gutting interiors, and transforming it into a large-scale mixed-use development.  Commercial production company Buck Design eventually stepped in, purchasing the 90,000-square-foot complex for $20 million in August 2017.  Thankfully, the firm decided to continue to operate the site as a studio, going to great pains to bring it up to code, all while keeping intact all of the rough elements that make it so insanely shootable.  You can check out what the interior looks like post-rehab here.

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Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (16 of 28)

Lacy Street Production Center is nothing if not picturesque – especially with the blue skies of Los Angeles serving as its backdrop.

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Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (20 of 28)

The complex is just begging to be photographed, particularly my beloved smokestack which can be found in the center’s main parking lot, very visible from the street (well, at least when film trucks aren’t blocking it from view, anyway).

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (4 of 28)

The vast majority of productions that film on the premises make use of Lacy Street’s interior, building sets in the sprawling empty rooms.  A few, like Stitchers, have utilized the outside, though.

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The center masks as the Recovery House Youth Shelter in the 1991 horror flick Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare.

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That same year, the building situated just west of the smokestack portrayed a chop shop in Out for Justice.

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That structure is pictured below.

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (10 of 28)

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (9 of 28)

Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) has a showdown with a terrorist in Lacy Street Production Center’s front courtyard in the Season 1 episode of 24 titled “3:00 a.m. – 4:00 a.m.,” which aired in 2001.

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The property portrayed the Detroit lair of a group of Reptilians seeking to destroy humanity in the Season 3 episode of Star Trek: Enterprise titled “Carpenter Street,” which aired in 2003.  In the episode, the “American Wrecking Company” signage is very visible.  As I mentioned earlier, I could find no information regarding a business by that name ever operating in Los Angeles, so I am thinking the painted words may have been set dressing installed for the shoot that Lacy Street’s owners decided to leave intact post-filming.  Who knows, though.

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Several portions of Justin Timberlake’s 2016 “Can’t Stop the Feeling!” music video were lensed at the studio.

That same year, it served as the abandoned mental health hospital where Maura Isles (Sasha Alexander) was held prisoner in the Season 6 episode of Rizzoli & Isles titled “Hide and Seek.”

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Lacy Street Production Center is also the site of a huge shootout at the end of the Season 10 episode of NCIS: Los Angeles titled “Better Angels,” which aired in 2019.

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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 the Seeing Stars website for identifying this location.  Smile

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (6 of 28)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Lacy Street Production Center, from the “Friends in Low Places” episode of Stitchers, is located at 2630 Lacy Street in Lincoln Heights.

The Trenton Family Home from “Cujo”

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Cujo is regularly hailed as one of the best cult horror movies of all time.  I never actually saw the 1983 flick until just prior to writing this post, but I came across some information about the main house – or, more accurately, houses – used in it while researching filming locations in Sonoma County in preparation for my recent trip up north.  What I read fascinated me and I became obsessed with tracking the residences down.  Thanks to a major assist from my aunt Lea, who lives in the area, I was able to do so!

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The article that piqued my interest was originally published by Fort Bragg Advocate-News in 1982 and was then reprinted by the newspaper as part of a “Glance at the Past” series in 2012.  According to the blurb, a façade based upon a real life home in Santa Rosa was constructed around a mansion in Mendocino for the Cujo shoot.  As you can imagine, this information had me practically foaming at the mouth (see what I did there?) to locate both properties.

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I headed right on over to Netflix to scan through Cujo and fairly quickly discerned that the façade referenced in the newspaper article was built to represent the sprawling home where the Trenton family – Donna (Dee Wallace), Vic (Daniel Hugh Kelly), and their son, Tad (Danny Pintauro, in his first movie role) – lived in the flick.  Yes, as shocking as it may seem, the dwelling pictured below is not real, but a false front constructed around an actual residence!

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My first move was to track down the Mendocino property where the façade was built.  Fort Bragg Advocate-News had referenced the home as the “Mullner Mansion” and noted that it overlooked Mendocino Bay.  A Google search of “Mullner Mansion” and “Mendocino” did not yield as much as I had expected in the way of information, but it did kick back a PDF of a pamphlet published by the Mendocino Coast Chamber of Commerce titled Mendocino Coast & Beyond.  The pamphlet contained a four-page section on films made in the area and Cujo was one of the movies detailed.  In it, the Mullner Mansion was said to be located on Crestwood Drive.  Thank you, Chamber of Commerce!

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I immediately opened up Google Street View and was thankful to see that Crestwood Drive was a short road with only a few residences situated on it.  After lining up the houses visible across the street from the Trenton home in Cujo (those houses are pictured below via Street View), I quickly discerned that the façade was constructed around the property located at 44777 Crestwood Drive.

Cujo House Mendocino

A view of the real home (via Google Street View) as compared to the Cujo façade is pictured below.

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I was thrilled to see that the fencing visible in Cujo is still intact today, more than three decades after filming took place!

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I was also thrilled to spot what I believe is the top of the actual home’s turret in a shot.  You can check out some additional photos of the real life dwelling here.

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Next up, I was desperate to locate the property that the façade was based upon, which is also where interiors were filmed.  That hunt proved easier said than done.  As noted in the Fort Bragg Advocate-News article, the Santa Rosa pad was known as the “Nielson Mansion.”  A Google search of “Nielson Mansion” and “Santa Rosa” yielded nothing, though.  At what seemed to be a dead end, I called for reinforcements!  My aunt Lea lives in the Santa Rosa area and I asked if she wouldn’t mind going to her local library to search through some 1980s phone books to see if there was a listing for a Nielson family.  She did me one better and called the library to inquire if they had any information on Cujo filming in the area.  A very nice woman ended up returning Lea’s call and provided her with a wealth of info!  As it turns out, Fort Bragg Advocate-News made an error in their reporting.  The librarian explained to my aunt that filming had actually taken place at the Nielsen (not Nielson) Mansion located at 3415 Nielsen Road.  The 1933 dwelling was named for Mrs. Francis Nielsen, who lived on the premises until her death in 1980.

The Trenton Home from Cujo-1190334

The Trenton Home from Cujo-1190335

While the librarian was not sure if the home was still standing, Lea ran right out to stalk the place for me and reported back that it was, indeed, still intact.  I then headed over to stalk it for myself during my trip up north earlier this month.  Unfortunately, as you can see below, the residence is gated and not much is visible from the road.

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Though some portions of it can be seen through the fencing.

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Thankfully, aerial views provide us with much better imagery.  As you can see below, the property is an exact match to the Trenton home from Cujo.

Cujo House Santa Rosa

In real life, the pad boasts 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, 4,438 square feet of living space, a 2.03-acre lot, and a 600-square-foot attached garage.

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As mentioned in the Fort Bragg Advocate-News article, most scenes involving the interior of the Trenton home were shot at the property.

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The story behind the Trenton house begs the question, if producers liked the look of the Nielsen Mansion exterior (not to mention the interior) that much, then why not just film at the home?  Why did they instead go to all of the trouble of building an exact replica of the place around another residence in a different city?  My guess is that they wanted to make use of the fabulous views the Mullner Mansion had to offer.  But yikes, it sure does seem like a heck of a lot of effort to go to just to showcase a pretty view.  Either way, I cannot imagine how cool it must have been for the Nielsen family.  I would absolutely love it if an exact replica of the exterior of my home was re-created in another location for a movie shoot!

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A big THANK YOU to my aunt Lea for tracking down this location for me!  Smile

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

The Trenton Home from Cujo-1190333

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The façade of the Trenton family home from Cujo was built at 44777 Crestwood Drive in Mendocino.  The façade was modeled after the Nielsen Mansion located at 3415 Nielsen Road in Santa Rosa, where interiors were also filmed.

HarborPlace Tower from “The Craft”

Harbor Place Tower from The Craft-1150469

Today’s location is a special request from my good friends Katie and Lavonna, who, in a group text, both suggested I blog about some sites from The Craft as part of my Haunted Hollywood postings.  Now the 1996 horror flick is not one of my favorites and its locales have been pretty well documented elsewhere online, but I am never one to turn down a stalking plea from friends.  So Katie and Lavonna, this one’s for you!  Thankfully, I already had a few sites from the film stockpiled, ahem, stalkpiled.  Back in May 2015, a fellow stalker named Nathan wrote to me asking for some help in tracking down two locales from the movie, the occult shop (I told the story behind that search here) and the building where Nancy Downs (Fairuza Balk) lived with her mom, Grace Downs (Helen Shaver).  Lucky for me, that spot was an easy find thanks to a notation on IMDB which stated that The Craft had done some filming at Long Beach’s HarborPlace Tower.  Though Nathan didn’t think that was the right place, one look around the property on Google Street View told me it was.  I finally made it out to see the structure in person this past May.

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Construction on HarborPlace Tower (and no, that’s not a typo – per the building’s official website, the name is spelled “HarborPlace” with no spacing) began in 1990 and was completed in September 1992.

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The modern, Art Deco-ish building is comprised of 225 luxury condos.

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The structure boasts 22 floors, though there is no 13th, which I thought was quite fitting being that I am covering HarborPlace as a Haunted Hollywood locale.

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Building amenities include a pool, a spa, his-and-hers saunas, concierge service, a gym, an underground garage with parking for 600 cars, a 24-hour security guard, a sun deck, a park with artwork designed by sculptor Ned Smyth (some of those pieces are pictured in the images above and below), an expansive lobby, ocean views, and meeting rooms.

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You can check out a video showing the interior of the building and one of the units here.

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In The Craft, teen witch Nancy places a spell on her abusive step-father causing him to have a heart attack and die.  Thanks to his extensive life insurance policy, Nancy and her mom are subsequently able to move from the trailer park where they live to more upscale digs at HarborPlace Tower.

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Harbor Place Tower from The Craft-1150472

In the scene in which Sarah Bailey (Robin Tunney), Bonnie (Neve Campbell), and Rochelle (Rachel True) visit Nancy’s new apartment for the first time, the girls enter the property on its East Ocean Boulevard side.  The buildings visible in the background (located at 555 East Ocean and 455 East Ocean) still look much the same today as they did in 1996 when The Craft was filmed.

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The interior of one of HarborPlace’s actual units stood in for Nancy’s apartment in the flick.

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While it was under construction, the building appeared as itself in the Season 10 episode of Columbo titled “Columbo and the Murder of a Rock Star,” which aired in 1991.

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And in the 1995 action flick Heat, Lt. Vincent Hanna (Al Pacino) ambushed Hugh Benny (Henry Rollins) at HarborPlace Tower.

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

Harbor Place Tower from The Craft-1150483

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: HarborPlace Tower, from The Craft, is located at 525 East Seaside Way in Long Beach.

Viola’s Mansion from “Monster-in-Law”

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The second Monster-in-Law location that I set my sights on tracking down this past weekend was the gargantuan mansion owned by Viola Fields (aka Jane Fonda) in the flick.  Once again, fellow stalker Nick had done most of the legwork on this one by discerning that the house was located in Pasadena and had been built in 1927 by famed Los Angeles-area architect Wallace Neff, the very same man who was responsible for designing King Gillette Ranch (aka the Biggest Loser Ranch) and the dwelling where Brad and Jen lived during most of their five year marriage.  But even though Nick had provided me with that wealth of information, for some reason, I had a very difficult time finding this particular residence.  As fate would have it, not only did Wallace Neff design quite a few homes in the Pasadena area, but the vast majority of them were Mediterranean in style and extremely similar in appearance to the Monster-in-Law mansion.  So, I once again headed over to fave bookstore Vroman’s with the hope that it could provide me with some Wallace Neff insight.  And, sure enough, it did!  As was the case with Kevin’s house from Monster-in-Law, which I blogged about yesterday, Viola’s mansion was chronicled in the very first book in which I looked – Wallace Neff: Architect of California’s Golden Age.

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In real life, the Monster-in-Law mansion is known as the “George O. Noble House” and, as I mentioned above, it was designed by Wallace Neff in 1927.  The Spanish Revival-style abode boasts six bedrooms, five bathrooms, and a whopping 8,971 square feet of living space.  And, while it once sat on over three acres of land, much of the parcel was subdivided in later years and the property currently encompasses “only” 1.2 acres.  Sadly, though, not much of the residence is visible from the street.

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But, as I’ve said before, that’s why God created aerial maps!  😉  As you can see in the above image, the George O. Noble House is not only stunning, but absolutely ginormous!

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The mansion was featured quite a few times in Monster-in-Law . . .

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. . . most notably in the scene in which Charlie Cantilini (aka Jennifer Lopez) and Kevin Fields (aka Michael Vartan) get married.

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And, thanks to a photograph provided in the book Architectural Realism, you can see that the mansion’s real life interior was also used in the flick. 

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The George O. Noble House also appeared in the 2009 horror flick Drag Me to Hell as the residence belonging to Clay Dalton’s (aka Justin Long’s) parents.  And, as was the case with Monster-in-Law, the real life interior of the residence was also used in the movie.

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A few other Monster-in-Law locations can also be found in the Pasadena area, including the Ross House, which I blogged about yesterday, and the Bundy House, aka the Governor’s mansion from Benson, which was used as the home of one of Charlie’s dog walking employers (pictured above).  And, yes, I did also find Charlie’s apartment building from Monster-in-Law.  Tune in tomorrow for that location.  🙂

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Big THANK YOU to Nick for helping me find this location!  🙂

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

Stalk It: The George O. Noble house, aka Viola’s mansion from Monster-in-Law, is located at 675 Burleigh Drive in Pasadena.  The Governor’s Mansion from Benson is located at 1365 South Oakland Avenue in Pasadena.