The Oviatt Penthouse from “Hollywood”

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There’s no denying that Henry Willson (Jim Parsons), the Hollywood character based upon the real-life post-war power agent to the stars, is despicable.  But he’s also, hands down, one of the best parts of the show!  Those one-liners, amirite?  I couldn’t help but smile every time he came onscreen.  The only thing better than his pithy comments was his incredible, mid-century office!  The ziggurat lighting sconces, shiny wood paneling, and marble fireplace were enough to make me drool!  Thanks to the space’s unique detailing, I recognized it immediately as the Oviatt Penthouse, the sleek Art Deco former home of clothier James Oviatt.  I got to tour the grand site, situated on the 13th floor of downtown L.A.’s Oviatt Building, while scouting wedding venues back in 2008 and was completely taken with it – so much so that I brought my mom back to see it just a few days later.  She was equally taken, describing it as having the feel of an Old Hollywood train car.  Though the Grim Cheaper and I did not end up getting married there, the Oviatt Penthouse left an indelible impression, so I, of course, identified it straightaway when it popped up on Hollywood.

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The exquisite 10-room suite was created in 1928 by Parisian interior design firm Saddler et Fils (French for “Saddler and Son”).

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Replete with gleaming marble, ornate chandeliers, Lalique glasswork, moire wall coverings, hand-carved parquet flooring, and burled maple, mahogany and thuya built-ins, the Oviatt Penthouse is a definite stunner!

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Interestingly, the master bath is one of the space’s most lavish and talked-about areas, featuring carved lacquer-covered terra cotta walls, a Lalique glass skylight, a brightly-tiled steam/massage room, two sinks (one strictly for shaving), a large step-down bathtub, and a bidet.

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With a hideaway toilet, the powder room is also pretty darn unique!  (And yes, I know it looks like our tour guide is flipping off the camera below, but, in reality, I just happened to catch him at an unfortunate moment while he was pointing out features of the latrine.)  Now you see it . . .

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. . . now you don’t!

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The powder room features a hidden sink, as well!

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The Oviatt Penthouse also has an upper and lower terrace, the latter of which is reached via the curved staircase pictured below.  During James’ tenure, the spaces were comprised of a tennis court, a small pool, a putting green, gardens, and a sunbathing beach made complete with sand brought in from the French Riviera.

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James, who lived as a bachelor there until marrying his wife, Mary, in 1945, called the penthouse his “castle in the air.”  The couple remained on the premises until their deaths in the 1970s.

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The Oviatt Penthouse was completely restored in 1977 and then again in 1988 and today is used as a special events venue.

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During the latter renovation, a wall was taken down, combing the property’s second bedroom with the dining area to create more space for revelers.

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The terrace accoutrements were also removed to make the outdoor area special-event friendly.

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Otherwise, the flat was left largely unchanged and simply restored to its original glory.  As a 1988 Los Angeles Times article states, “Guests stepping from the elevator now will see virtually the same flooring spaces that Oviatt and his architects laid out 60 years ago.”  You can check out additional photos of the penthouse here, as well as a video tour here.

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Henry Willson’s office appears several times throughout Hollywood, first popping up in the episode titled “Hooray for Hollywood: Part 2” in the scene in which aspiring actor Rock Hudson (Jake Picking) has his initial meeting with the agent.

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The penthouse’s living room was utilized for all of Henry’s office scenes.

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Though outfitted with a desk, bookshelf, and other furnishings for the shoot, producers really didn’t have to add much to transform the space into a 1940s-era talent agency.

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For whatever reason, the room’s intricate chandeliers were swapped out with more conventional ones.  The originals would have fit better with the time period, as well as the accompanying décor, so it was a bit of an odd move.  Otherwise though, the office is perfection!

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Additional areas of the penthouse appeared on Hollywood, as well, including the dining room, which portrayed Henry’s waiting room.  The space was heavily dressed for the shoot and the wall mural covered over, rendering it largely unrecognizable as you can see in the screen capture and matching photograph below.

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The master bedroom also made an appearance . . .

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. . . as did many of its actual furnishings.

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The penthouse’s spectacular hallway, which is capped by a canopied ceiling painted with a night sky, was featured, too.  The bold geometric carpeting running the length of it is a nod to both The Shining and Murphy’s American Horror Story: Hotel (the latter was also shot at the Oviatt Building!).  It looks as if the carpet was even left intact after Hollywood wrapped.

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The Netflix series isn’t the penthouse’s first cameo.

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Bugsy Siegel (Warren Beatty) very briefly takes a telephone call in the master bathroom in the 1991 biopic Bugsy.

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Max Hoover (Nick Nolte) and Elleroy Coolidge (Chazz Palminteri) break up a party there in the 1996 drama Mulholland Falls.

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And thanks to fellow stalker Gilles I learned that Mylene Farmer also shot her “California” music video at the penthouse in 1996.

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: The Oviatt Penthouse, aka Henry Willson’s office from Hollywood, is located on the top floor of the Oviatt Building at 617 South Olive Street in downtown L.A.  The space is not open to the public, but can often be viewed via the Los Angeles Conservancy’s Art Deco Walking Tour.

Janine and Ben’s House(s) from “He’s Just Not That Into You”

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You know those crime novels where a main character is trying to solve a case and there is some niggling clue that tugs at them throughout the story – an important piece of evidence that would solve the whole mystery, but which remains elusive until the final pages?  That was how I felt while trying to track down the Baltimore row house where Janine (Jennifer Connelly) and Ben (Bradley Cooper) lived in He’s Just Not that Into You.  Though the 2009 film was largely panned by critics, it is one of my favorite romcoms of all time and prior to our recent trip to Charm City, I set out to track down its locations, namely Janine and Ben’s handsome brick townhome.  Try as I might, though, I could just not locate it.  During the tail end of my search, I found myself sitting at my computer staring at a screen capture of the residence for what seemed like hours, aware of the fact that I was missing something, but unsure of exactly what.  Then finally, something clicked!

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All of a sudden, I noticed that a fire hydrant was visible on the street corner next to Janine and Ben’s pad.  I swear, I started to hear angels sing when I realized that said hydrant was painted red, white, and green.  That could only mean one thing – the house had to be located in Little Italy!  Not being familiar with Baltimore, I wasn’t even sure if the city had a Little Italy neighborhood, but a quick Google search told me that it does.  So I started searching the area via Street View and found the place within minutes.

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Throughout He’s Just Not That Into You, Janine and Ben’s dwelling is under extensive renovation.

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Because of the work being done, it is not until the end of the movie that we actually get a clear view of the property’s exterior.  Aside from the front door being changed, the structure looks much the same in person as it did onscreen.

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Something I did not notice until making screen captures for this post (despite my many viewings of the movie) is that Janine and Ben actually owned two neighboring townhomes that were being combined into one, hence the scaffolding on the two residences you see below.  (And yes, I realize how blonde that makes me sound being that, as stated earlier, I spent a considerable amount of time staring at a screen capture of the house during my search for it.  In my defense, though, I was looking at the grab pictured above, which is from the scene in which the remodel has already been completed.)

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Because I did not realize that both properties were used in He’s Just Not That Into You, I only shot photographs of the residence that Janine walked into towards the end of the flick.

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Per Zillow, that handsome pad, located at 226 South Exeter Street, boasts 1,508 square feet of living space, 2 bathrooms, a 0.02-acre lot, a fireplace, and a 325-square-foot finished basement.

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The property, which was built in 1860 (yes, 1860!), last sold in December 2002 for $135,000.

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While the exterior of Janine and Ben’s residence is quite stately, it is the interior that I fell in love with.  I mean, #housegoals, right?  All of the exposed brick, built-in shelving, and woodwork had me drooling.

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Sadly, I am fairly certain that it was all a set built on a soundstage in Los Angeles, where the majority of the movie was lensed.  Only two weeks of filming took place in Baltimore, which is far too short a time for the interior house sequences to have been shot at the actual residence.  Add to that the fact that, from most of the articles I’ve read, it does not seem that Bradley Cooper, who was present in many of the home scenes, traveled to Baltimore for any filming.  I believe Kevin Connolly, Scarlett Johansson, Ginnifer Goodwin, and Jennifer Connelly were the only cast members who were in Charm City for the on-location portion of the shoot.

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I have to give major props to the production team for their seriously keen eye for detail.  In the scene at the end of the movie in which Ben comes home and discovers (spoiler alert!) that Janine is divorcing him, a panoramic photo of the actual houses located across the street from 226 South Exeter was displayed as a backdrop outside of the set windows.  As you can see below, the residences visible through the windows of Janine and Ben’s dwelling match perfectly to the properties located across the street in real life!  A generic backdrop featuring random homes could just as easily have been used in the scene, so I am extremely impressed that the production team went to such trouble to be authentic.

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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: Janine and Ben’s houses from He’s Just Not That Into You are located at 224 and 226 South Exeter Street in Baltimore’s Little Italy neighborhood.

I Am Just So That Into It!

On Friday night, literally the second my boyfriend got off work, I dragged him right out to see new movie He’s Just Not That Into You. He said afterwards that if he had known it was a two-hour-and-nine-minute-long-movie, he never would have agreed to see it. LOL Needless to say, he just wasn’t that into the movie. But I, on the other hand, was! I ABSOLUTELY LOVED IT! LOVE LOVE LOVED IT! I was practically skipping out of the theatre afterwards, with a huge grin on my face, thinking to myself that movies like HJNTIY are the reason I moved to Hollywood. Movies like that make me want to act. 🙂 I’m not aiming to be the next Meryl Streep and I have no desire to be the darling of the independent film circuit – I just want to make people laugh and walk out of that movie theatre with a big ol’ smile on their face. 🙂 That’s the kind of acting I want to do – and HJNTIY is EXACTLY the kind of movie I hope to someday be a part of. So, in case you didn’t get it the first few times – I LOVED THIS MOVIE! 🙂

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So, yesterday, after I found one of the movie’s filming locations, I, of course, ran right out to stalk it. 🙂 Although the movie is set in the East Coast city of Baltimore, most of the filming took place – of course – in Los Angeles. Only two weeks of filming actually occured in Baltimore and only four of the HJNTIY actors (Bradley Cooper, Scarlett Johansson, Jennifer Connelly, and Kevin Connolly) made the trip out to the East Coast. The film’s writers, Marc Silverstein and Abby Kohn, decided to set their story in Baltimore because they had never seen it done before. Most romantic comedies are set in either New York or Los Angeles and Marc and Abby were hoping to shake things up a bit. Since Marc had lived in Baltimore for ten years before moving to L.A. to pursue a screenwriting career, he knew the coastal city well and thought it was the perfect choice to set their story.

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But since I couldn’t very well run right out to Baltimore to stalk HJNTIY, I decided to try to find some of the movie’s West Coast locations. I really wanted to stalk the coffee shop where Drew Barrymore met Kevin Connolly towards the end of the movie, but I struck out on that one. Instead, after a bit of Googling, I happened to find these paparazzi photos of Scarlett Johansson and Bradley Cooper filming a scene at a grocery store in Burbank. From there it was just a matter of finding the right grocery store. And sure enough, I did! 🙂

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In real life the grocery store is called Handy Market and it is a very cute and very tiny little shop. According to one of the Handy Market checkers, back in October of 2007 the store was shut down for a full day and a half for the filming of the two short scenes that took place there. Scenes were filmed both inside the store – at the first check-out stand and in a few of the aisles – and outside on the market’s exterior West facing wall.

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It’s not hard to see why producers chose to use Handy Market. According to this article about the filming of HJNTIY , director Ken Kwapis said “One of the things that I love about Baltimore is that the texture of the city can be summed-up in one word: brick. The brick textures of the interiors and the exteriors are, to me, so expressive, so distinctive. Being a resident of Baltimore, you may not realize it, but boy, it’s not easy to find a lot of brick in L.A.” LOL Handy’s all-brick exterior must have made it a shoe-in for being used in the movie.

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So, for all of you out there who weren’t like me and didn’t catch HJNTIY on opening night, drop what you’re doing and go see it now! I guarantee you so will be that into it! 🙂

Until next time, Happy Stalking! 🙂

Stalk It: Burbank’s Handy Market is located at 2514 W. Magnolia Boulevard in – you guessed it! – Burbank. The Home Depot store located at 16800 Roscoe Boulevard in Van Nuys was also used in He’s Just Not That Into You, although I most likely won’t stalk that location. 🙂 My boyfriend would probably be really excited if I did, though. LOL