Anthony’s House from Twilight Zone: The Movie”

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Perhaps no film in the history of filmdom has been as mired in controversy as Twilight Zone: The Movie.  Bring up the 1983 thriller to anyone and talk will likely turn to the death of three of its actors in a harrowing and, what has been argued, completely avoidable accident.  On July 23rd, 1982 at Indian Dunes movie ranch in Valencia, while lensing the segment titled “Time Out,” star Vic Morrow carried two young children, Renee Chen and Myca Dinh Le, through a pond in a simulated Vietnam War battle.  A helicopter flying overhead during the shoot happened to get hit by one of the explosive special effects, causing it to crash to the ground, crushing Chen to death and decapitating Morrow and Le in the process.  Director John Landis and four other crew members were brought up on manslaughter charges following the disaster, but all were found not guilty at the end of the nearly ten-month trial.  The film has been shrouded in darkness ever since, though.  Considering my penchant for the macabre, surprisingly, up until just recently I had never watched Twilight Zone: The Movie or done any stalking of it.  That all changed when I came across a photo of the sprawling Victorian where Anthony (Jeremy Licht) lived in the “It’s a Good Life” portion of the film on the Then & Now Movie Locations website earlier this summer.  Fascinated with the massive structure, I added it to my To-Stalk List and headed right on out to see it in person shortly thereafter.

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The immense Queen Anne-style pad was originally built in 1887 by prominent San Francisco architect Joseph Cather Newsom, who also gave us the Walker House in San Dimas, the Sessions House in Echo Park, and the Carson Mansion in Eureka.

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Amazingly, per the Los Angeles Office of Historic Resources, the dwelling was initially located in Pacoima, but was moved – literally picked up and relocated – to its current home at 17410 Mayerling Street in Granada Hills in the 1970s.

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The picturesque estate currently boasts 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, 3,842 square feet of living space, 11-foot ceilings, stained glass windows, hardwood flooring, 2 fireplaces, wainscoting, original moldings, beveled glass mirrors, a clawfoot tub (be still my heart!), an updated kitchen with granite counters and stainless steel appliances, a formal dining room, a den, pull-chain toilets (which seriously creep me out for unknown reasons), a glass-ceilinged conservatory, a 2-car garage, a wraparound porch, a vineyard, and a detached 1-bedroom, 1-bath guesthouse with a kitchen and a private yard.

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The property last sold in 2015 for $849,000, which seems abnormally low to me considering the sheer size of the house, not to mention the land.

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I mean, look at that backyard!  It’s huge.

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You can check out some MLS photos of the pad from the time it was on the market here.

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Though undeniably beautiful, it is not hard to see how the place wound up being cast in a horror/sci-fi film like Twilight Zone: The Movie.

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There is just something about old Victorians that renders them downright spooky (read: the Smith Estate).

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The “It’s a Good Life” chapter of Twilight Zone: The Movie centers around a misunderstood and rather disturbed young boy named Anthony who can create things with his mind.  As such, he conjures up a Victorian house based upon one featured in the cartoon Mouse Wreckers.  While segments of the actual 1948 cartoon classic were utilized in the film, the opening scene was altered to show a dwelling matching the Granada Hills pad.

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The true imagery featured at the beginning of Mouse Wreckers is pictured below.

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Anthony’s residential creation is a true house of horrors in which any family member who disagrees with him or tries to admonish him meets an unpleasant fate, like Ethel (Nancy Cartwright, aka the voice of Bart Simpson on The Simpsons) who gets banished to an evil cartoon world where she is terrorized by animated monsters after an unsuccessful attempt to escape from the home.

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Remarkably, the dwelling still looks almost exactly the same today as it did onscreen 35 years ago, excluding a change in paint color and the addition of the detached guest house on the property’s east side.

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A close-up view of the guest house is pictured below.

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The area around the residence has changed considerably in the ensuing years, as you can see in the Google Street View image as compared to the screen capture below.  Though still rather rural in nature, the 17400 block of Mayerling Street has been built up a bit since Twilight Zone: The Movie was shot.

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Only the exterior of the property was used in “It’s a Good Life.”

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The inside of Anthony’s house, which bears no resemblance whatsoever to the home’s real life interior, was nothing more than a soundstage-built set at Warner Bros. Studio in Burbank.  Though the front doors were modeled after those of the actual dwelling . . .

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. . . the stairs of the Mayerling pad are situated completely differently than those of its onscreen counterpart, as you can see in the screen captures below as compared to the MLS photo above.

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The onscreen living room, which was designed to have a cartoonish feel, also looks nothing like the home’s actual living room.

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P.S. Big Bang Theory fans, be sure to check out this great LAist article about the show’s locales that I was recently interviewed for.

Big THANK YOU to the Then & Now Movie Locations website for finding this location!  Smile

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: Anthony’s house from Twilight Zone: The Movie is located at 17410 Mayerling Street in Granada Hills.

“The Hogan Family” House

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One Pasadena area filming location that I had long assumed was well-known in the stalking community was the home where the Hogan family lived in the 1986 television sitcom Valerie, aka Valerie’s Family, aka The Hogan Family.  So, the other day when I happened to point out the location to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, while the two of us were in the area doing some stalking, I was absolutely shocked to discover that not only had he never been to the house, but prior to me mentioning it, he had no idea that it was even in Pasadena!  I had originally found this location upon first moving to Southern California way back in 2000 thanks to an early edition of The Ultimate Hollywood Tour Book which featured a short blurb about the house.  I’ve noticed, though, that, for whatever reason, more recent editions of the book do not mention the location.  So, I decided to do a little more digging and was shocked to find out that not only was The Hogan Family house information not mentioned anywhere online, but that IMDB had even gone so far as to incongruously claim that the Hogan residence was the very same place where the Cunninghams lived on Happy Days.  So, I figured it was high time I blogged about the true location of the residence to put the falsehoods to rest!  🙂 

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The Hogan Family house was actually one of the very first places I ever stalked and for that reason it will always hold a very special place in my heart.  Shortly after relocating to Pasadena, my mom and I decided to spend an entire day driving around the City of Roses looking at its various movie and television sites.  I remember being BEYOND excited that so many locations could be found in the city I was now calling home.  Pasadena became my very own treasure trove that day and remains so even now.  🙂  Anyway, one of the locales my mom and I stalked was The Hogan Family  house and I still remember how completely floored I was when I saw it as it looked very similar in person to how it appeared on the show.  And I am very happy to report that even today – almost two and a half decades after the series premiered – the house still looks EXACTLY the same as it did when it was on TV!    Even the same blue and white striped awnings are still flanking the home’s front windows.

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The home’s address plaque also still looks much the same as it did in 1986, although it is now situated on a different side of the front porch.  Love it!  Love it!  Love it!  Oh, and please excuse the horrible quality of my screen caps.  I don’t own The Hogan Family on DVD and had to settle for making them off of YouTube.   According to Zillow, in real life the Valerie house has four bathrooms, five bedrooms, measures 3,846 square feet and was built in 1910.  And it’s not very hard to see why producers chose to use it in the series, as it looks like the typical all-American home of the typical all-American family.

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It is simply amazing to me that the series went through no less than THREE name changes during its five year run.  During its first two years on the air, the show was known simply as Valerie, but when star Valerie Harper was fired in the summer following Season Two, the name was changed to Valerie’s Family: The Hogans.  The following year, after the much publicized lawsuit that followed Harper’s dismissal, the name was changed once again to The Hogan Family.  I was completely fascinated re-reading the many news articles written about the lawsuit while researching today’s post, as I had largely forgotten about the hugely bitter and widely publicized ordeal, which took place in 1987.  As this article written about Harper’s firing and the subsequent lawsuit states, the controversy surrounding the show is far more memorable than the show itself.  😉  Even more juicy than the lawsuit, though, at least in my eyes, is the fact that the author of Valerie’s pilot episode would go on to pen Artistic Differencesa novel about a Hollywood writer who is hired to create a sitcom for an egocentric, narcissistic actress.  Hmmm wonder what television show his book was based on?  😉  And a little bit of Hogan Family trivia for you – the sitcom starred none other than Josh Taylor (aka Dylan McKay’s father Jack from Beverly Hills, 90210) as Valerie’s pilot husband.  🙂

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

Stalk It: The house from The Hogan Family, aka Valerie’s Family, aka Valerie is located at 840 Bellefontaine Place in Pasadena.