Mary’s House from “All About Steve”

Mary's House from All About Steve (1 of 1)

If you listened to critics, you probably think All About Steve has no redeeming qualities whatsoever.  You’d be wrong, though.  While the 2009 comedy (and I use the term “comedy” loosely) is not remotely funny, boasts an odd storyline, and fails to properly showcase the talents of its fabulous cast, which includes Bradley Cooper, Sandra Bullock, Thomas Haden Church, Ken Jeong and DJ Qualls, it does feature some pretty stellar locations.  The delightfully retro residence where Mary Horowitz (Bullock) lives with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Horowitz (Howard Hesseman and Beth Grant, respectively), in the flick especially had me drooling.  I, of course, set out to track it down shortly after first viewing All About Steve ten years ago, but was unsuccessful.  And though I subsequently revisited the hunt several times over the years following, I always came up empty.  Then, a couple of weeks ago, I decided to call in the big guns (aka my friend Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog), to see if he might be able to provide some assistance and in less than 24 hours he had an address for me.   Thanks to a helpful crew member, we learned that the Horowitz home is located at 1704 Wellington Road in Mid-City’s Lafayette Square neighborhood.  So I immediately ran out to stalk it.

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In real life, the All About Steve house is known as the J. Phyromn Taylor Residence.  The two-story pad was designed in 1953 by prolific architect Paul Revere Williams (you can read a few of my posts on his many famous properties here, here, here, here, here, here and here) for his good friend, wealthy doctor Jackson Phyromn Taylor.

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Mary's House from All About Steve (4 of 34)

Built in a style known as Los Angeles Contemporary, the home also boasts prairie, international, and midcentury design elements, as well as a lot of geometric detailing.  Per The Paul Revere Williams Project website, “The motif was used in a floating staircase flanked by a dramatic two-story sandblasted glass wall, metal work, etched room dividers, light fixtures and other midcentury-style custom furnishings designed for the space.”

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Mary's House from All About Steve (5 of 34)

Williams also incorporated Lafayette Square’s strict design regulations into the architecture of the residence, which included a second-floor balcony, deep setbacks, clean lines and a horizonal layout, with the long end fronting the street.

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Sadly, Dr. Taylor passed away just a few short years after his home was completed, but the extraordinary residence remains in his family today.  It is currently owned by Lauren Smith, his granddaughter, who told the Larchmont Ledger, “They [Jackson Phyromn Taylor and his wife, Pearl] surrounded themselves with art, music their entire lives.  My uncle Phyromn was an accomplished jazz saxophonist so music was definitely a part of our lives.  My mom was a music major in college as well.  Very social, Paul Williams designed their house with their desire to entertain in mind.  My grandparents were proud to have an African American man, their friend, design their unique house.”

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Mary's House from All About Steve (9 of 34)

The home features 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, a whopping 5,062 square feet of living space, a 2-car garage, and a 0.27-acre lot.

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Mary's House from All About Steve (25 of 34)

Unfortunately, the property looks quite a bit different today than it did onscreen in All About Steve.  Not only is it now significantly covered over with foliage, but it has undergone a drastic paint change.  The result is a residence that is much darker and less aesthetically pleasing, at least in my opinion.  In fact, if it had boasted its current color scheme in the movie, I probably wouldn’t have been nearly as enamored of it.

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Due to the pad’s rectangular orientation and decidedly midcentury feel, I had been convinced that it was an apartment building, not a single-family home, in real life.

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And because of the mansion-like properties situated next door . . .

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. . . and across the street, I knew it had to be located in an upscale neighborhood.  Accordingly, I spent copious hours searching Hancock Park and West Hollywood for a midcentury apartment complex, so it’s no surprise that I couldn’t find the place.  Somehow I had completely forgotten about Lafayette Square, an area I’ve been to a few times and even written abouttwice!  Thank goodness for the helpful crew member who provided Owen with the address!

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Mary's House from All About Steve (1 of 2)

The J. Phyromn Taylor Residence popped up several times in All About Steve.

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The movie did a fabulous job of showcasing the dwelling . . .

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. . . and all of its unique architectural details.

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As fabulous as those details are, it was the interior of the Horowitz home that really stole my heart, namely the floating staircase.  The openness of the steps, the paned glass panel behind them, and the stone walls on either side practically had me drooling.

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I am torn as to whether what was shown onscreen was the real interior of the J. Phyromn Taylor Residence or a set modeled after it, though I’m leaning toward the former.  As you can see below, the glass panel pictured behind the stairs in All About Steve is a perfect match to that of the actual home.

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And the geometric elements visible in several scenes, like the open metal wall in the foreground below . . .

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. . . and the silver sculpture to the left of the pool table, mesh with the interior detailing described on The Paul Revere Williams Project website.

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I am fairly certain, though, that Mary’s colorful bedroom . . .

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. . . and bathroom were just sets.

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Either way, what I wouldn’t give to see the inside of that place!

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Big THANK YOU to my friend Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, 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: The J. Phyromn Taylor Residence, aka the Horowitz home from All About Steve, is located at 1704 Wellington Road in Lafayette SquareThe McGinley Residence, where Robert F. Kennedy is reported to have spent his last night, is right around the corner at 1821 South Victoria Avenue.  And the incorrectly identified Leave It to Beaver house is two blocks west at 1727 Buckingham Road.

Leo’s Apartment Building from “Relativity”

Leo's Apartment Relativity (8 of 8)

During my recent Relativity location-finding fest, I also managed to track down the apartment building where Leo Roth (David Conrad) lived with his quirky roommate, Doug (Adam Goldberg) – who was actually my favorite character – on the show.  I really could kick myself over this one, though, because I began searching for the property while watching the third episode of the series, which was titled “First Impressions”, and did not have many clues to help with the hunt.  Had I waited until the fifth episode, “Moving,” in which Leo’s address was literally spelled out, it would have been a much quicker find.  Instead, I spent a ridiculous amount of time scanning the background of “First Impressions,” looking for readable signage on storefronts near Leo’s place and then Googling to see if said businesses were still in existence.  Thankfully, after numerous searches, I finally found one that was.

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In “First Impressions,” a sign reading “Asia Auto Center” was visible across the street from Leo’s apartment.  An internet search led me to a listing for an Asia Auto Center at 3700 West Pico Boulevard in Arlington Heights.  Sure enough, when I looked at the address via Google Street View, there was Leo’s building right across the street.

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In reality, Leo’s building is located at 1310 4th Avenue, just south of West Pico Boulevard.  So when I watched the “Moving” episode a few nights after finding the place and heard it mentioned several times that Leo lived near “Pico and 4th Avenue,” I had a major face-palm moment.  D’oh!

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Leo's Apartment Relativity (6 of 8)

Pictured below are a few of the many neighborhood signs that I had tried to read and do Google searches for.  As you can see, it was not the easiest of tasks.

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It is said several times on the series that Leo’s neighborhood is a bit sketchy and I can attest to that fact being true in real life, as well.  Just as I pulled into a parking space near the building, a man hopped over the fence of the business across the street, opened the dumpster located there and began throwing its contents onto the sidewalk.  Yeah, I pretty much could not wait to get out of there, hence the limited number of photographs I have for this post.

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The full exterior of Leo’s building is never actually shown on Relativity – at least not in any of the episodes I have re-watched up until this point.  Typically, tight shots of the doorway and balcony are all that appear onscreen.

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Thanks to that doorway, with its ornate casing, and balcony, with its wrought-iron detailing, the building has a very New Orleansy-feel.

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The structure still looks very much the same today as it did when Relativity was filmed 18 years ago.  As you can see below, not even the address plate has been altered since 1996!  Love it!

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The Arlington Heights building was only used for exterior filming on the series.  The ramshackle interior of Leo and Doug’s loft existed only on a studio soundstage.

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For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Leo’s apartment from Relativity is located at 1310 4th Avenue in Los Angeles’ Arlington Heights neighborhood.