The Ritz-Carlton, Rancho Mirage

Ritz Carlton Rancho Mirage The Bachelorette (48 of 50)

The Ritz-Carlton, Rancho Mirage recently re-opened after what amounted to countless delays and an almost eight-year closure.  A few years prior to its shuttering, when it was known as The Lodge at Rancho Mirage, the resort hosted the nuptials of Bachelorette Trista Rehn and Ryan Sutter, and I had been itching to stalk it ever since. The Grim Cheaper and I had actually stayed at the property a couple of times, long before Trista and Ryan’s wedding and long before I ever had a blog, but, unfortunately I never took any pictures, so, for me, the grand unveil could not come soon enough.  When the hotel finally did re-open a few months ago, I ran right out to stalk it.  Sadly though, it no longer looks anything like it did when Trista and Ryan tied the knot there a little over a decade ago.

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The 24-acre resort located at 68900 Frank Sinatra Drive was originally constructed in 1988 as the seventh hotel in the Ritz-Carlton chain.  In 2001, it was sold to Vail Resorts, Inc. and was renamed The Lodge at Rancho Mirage.  The décor and design largely remained the same as it was during the Ritz days.  During that time, the property was awarded several distinctions, including one of the Top 500 Hotels in the World by Travel + Leisure, one of the Top 100 Golf Resorts in North America by Condé Nast Traveler, and Highest Rated Resort, Palm Springs Area by ZAGAT.  Despite the success, Vail Resorts sold The Lodge to Gencom in 2005.  The site was shuttered the following year and arrangements made to fully renovate it and re-open it once again as a Ritz.  Things did not go according to plan, though, and the project was halted in 2008 when Lehman Brothers, which was backing the renovation financially, filed for bankruptcy.  The property was subsequently left vacant for the next five years until a new development company stepped in.  Construction resumed in 2013 and, after several delays, the redesign was finally unveiled this past May.

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Ritz Rancho Mirage

Ritz Carlton Rancho Mirage The Bachelorette (9 of 50)

That redesign turned out to be a complete gutting.  Sadly, the resort no longer resembles its former self in the slightest.  And while the remodel is undeniably beautiful, I much preferred the look of the place in its old state.

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I am of the opinion that a hotel should embrace the city it is located in.  If I am staying in a hotel in New York, I want to know I’m in New York.  If I check into a resort in Seattle, I want to know I’m in Seattle.  While some desert elements were incorporated into the new design of the Ritz, nothing about it says “Palm Springs” to me.  The place has more of a generic feel.  Walking through the lobby, I felt as if I could have been anywhere – Arizona, Pasadena or even Hawaii for that matter.

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Ritz Carlton Rancho Mirage The Bachelorette (10 of 50)

I was completely obsessed with the hardwood flooring, though.  Gorge!

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The outside remodel was also disappointing.  The resort’s exterior space used to be much more open, with green rolling lawns as far as the eye could see.  Today, the property is partitioned into several different areas and, while each section is beautiful, I prefer a sprawling look.

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Ritz Carlton Rancho Mirage The Bachelorette (42 of 50)

One thing that hasn’t changed, though, is the view.  The Ritz, which sits atop a 650-foot bluff, still boasts some of the best panoramas in the entire Coachella Valley.

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Ritz Carlton Rancho Mirage The Bachelorette (28 of 50)

Trista and Ryan’s wedding, which was televised by ABC (of course), took place on December 6th, 2003.  The lavish affair cost a reported $4 million, with some 30,000 roses flown in from Ecuador and Holland for the occasion.  The Lodge was shut down to the public for a whopping four days during the event.  You can check out some photographs of the nuptials here.

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The couple was married on The Lodge’s east lawn, in a spot adjacent to the resort’s popular wedding gazebo.  Sadly, that gazebo, and the entire lawn area, in fact, were dismantled during the renovation.  The former location of the gazebo is denoted with a pink arrow in the image below and the area where Trista and Ryan’s nuptials took place is denoted with a pink “X.”  You can check out some photographs of what the east lawn used to look like here.

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That same spot post-remodel is pictured below.  While it used to consist of a large sprawling lawn, today it is made up of a pool . . .

Ritz Carlton Rancho Mirage The Bachelorette (22 of 50)

Ritz Carlton Rancho Mirage The Bachelorette (23 of 50)

. . . and a large AstroTurf (I know, gross!) lounge area.

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Ritz Carlton Rancho Mirage The Bachelorette (24 of 50)

It is also now surrounded by hotel wings on three sides (one of the wings is a new addition) and, therefore, not as open as it once was.

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Ritz Carlton Rancho Mirage The Bachelorette (25 of 50)

Trista and Ryan are hardly the only celebs to have stayed at the resort.  A few of the other luminaries who have walked the halls include Brad Pitt, Jennifer Aniston, Jennifer Lopez, former president Gerald Ford, John Travolta, Bruce Springsteen, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Kathy Ireland.

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On an exciting side-note – this Thursday morning at 8 a.m. PST, I will be a guest on my favorite desert radio show, “The Bill Feingold Show Featuring Kevin Holmes” on K-News 94.3.  (That’s me with Bill “Bulldog” Feingold below.)  You can listen to it live online here.

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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.

Ritz Carlton Rancho Mirage The Bachelorette (50 of 50)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Ritz-Carlton, Rancho Mirage, aka the place where Trista Rehn and Ryan Sutter got married, is located at 68900 Frank Sinatra Drive in Rancho Mirage.  You can visit the resort’s official website here.

The Infamous Ray Pruit Stairs

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Since moving to the desert last January (I cannot believe it has been a year!), I have wanted to revisit Rancho Las Palmas, the sprawling Rancho Mirage resort where Ray Pruit (Jamie Walters) pushed girlfriend Donna Martin (Tori Spelling) down a flight of stairs in the Season 5 episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 titled “P.S. I Love You: Part II.”  I originally stalked and blogged about the location back in September 2008, but, because the hotel has 120 sets of identical stairs, at the time I was unsure of which set had appeared in the episode.   Thankfully, the resort’s sales manager saw my post and left a comment, informing me of exactly where the scene had been shot.  And while it took me over five years to get back out there to re-stalk the place, once I did, I could NOT have been more excited!

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Rancho Las Palmas is massive.  The 240-acre resort boasts a 27-hole championship golf course, four eateries, a spa, 50,000-square-feet of event/meeting space, and three pools – one of which is Splashtopia, a two-acre water feature made complete with a 425-foot lazy river, two 100-foot water slides, a man-made sand beach, a Jacuzzi, and a café.  Guests also have access to 25 tennis courts at the Palm Springs tennis center located in the Rancho Las Palmas Country Club, which is adjacent to the hotel.

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Rancho Las Palmas has quite an interesting history.  The property was originally the site of the Desert Air Hotel & Resort, a 320-acre compound that was founded by architect  H.L. Gogerty in 1946.  The resort consisted of an airstrip for private planes, World War II army barracks that pilots and travelers could rent for the night, and a bar and a pool that were added in 1951.  You can see a picture of what the property looked like at that time here.  Luminaries like Edgar Bergen, Dwight D. Eisenhower and Robert Taylor flocked to the place and The Bob Cummings Show was even filmed onsite for a time.  The resort was sadly shuttered in 1976 and then demolished a year later to make way for a new Marriott hotel.  According to the Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields website, one former Desert Air patron had this to say of the new lodging, “I visited the site several years ago – nothing left, except that the main fairway of the golf course seems to be aligned with the old northwest/southeast runway, and there’s a Desert Air Drive in the condos by the hotel.  Very ritzy, very posh, but it will never have the understated chill-out class of the old place, with guest cottages made from recycled WW2 barracks huts.  I think the difference speaks volumes about the way this country has changed.”  I have to admit, it would have been pretty darn cool to vacation in authentic World War II barracks.

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At the time that 90210 was filmed, the hotel was known as Marriott’s Rancho Las Palmas.  After being taken over by KLM in 2006, the site underwent a massive renovation and the “Marriott” dropped from its name.  Today, the property is operated by Omni Hotels & Resorts.

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In “P.S. I Love You: Part I” and “P.S. I Love You: Part II,” Rancho Las Palmas was where Steve Sanders (Ian Ziering), Brandon Walsh (Jason Priestley) and the rest of the C.U. gang attended a national KEG/ALPHA convention.  Several areas of the resort were shown in the episodes, including the front entrance;

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the Azure Adult Pool (where Ray had a fit over Donna’s choice of swimwear);

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and, of course, the infamous stairs that Ray pushed Donna down.

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The stair scene was shot on the northwest side of Building #5.

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In real life, the stairwell leads up to Room 520.

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You can watch the stair scene by clicking below.  I love when Valerie says, “Ray, go get the hotel doctor!  Go!”  LOL  Hotel doctor???  How about, “Let’s get her to a hospital,” Val!

And you know I just had to do it!  Winking smile

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While re-watching the “P.S. I Love You” episodes (big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for loaning me his Season 5 DVDs), I was shocked to see that the interior scenes had not been filmed inside Rancho Las Palmas (the Rancho lobby is pictured below), but at another location that I was familiar with – Hyatt Westlake Plaza in Westlake Village, which also appeared as a Coachella Valley-resort in the Season 1 episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 titled “Palm Springs Weekend.”  I stalked Hyatt Westlake Plaza in February 2010 (you can read that post here) and recognized it immediately when it popped up in “P.S. I Love You.”  I guess the Hyatt was 90210’s go-to Palm Springs hotel stand-in.

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The first thing that clued me in to the fact that Hyatt Westlake Plaza had been used in “P.S. I Love You: Part I” and “Part II” was the large fountain that was seen in the center of the lobby in the episodes.  That same fountain is pictured below in a 2010 photograph that I took of the Hyatt lobby.  While no longer tiled, the shape of the Hyatt fountain is an exact match to the shape of the 90210 fountain.

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The general layout of the Hyatt lobby also matches the lobby that appeared on 90210.  Sadly, the Hyatt was remodeled sometime after the episodes were filmed, so the décor and flooring look quite a bit different today.

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In “P.S. I Love You: Part II,” Brandon is shown walking through the Hyatt lobby, past a side table.  That same side table (as well as the lamps on it and the painting behind it) is a direct match to a side table that Brenda Walsh (my girl Shannen Doherty) walked by in “Palm Springs Weekend.”  Love it!

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The recessed hotel room doors and positioning of the room signage that appeared in the “P.S. I Love You” episodes also match those of Hyatt Westlake Plaza.

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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: The “P.S. I Love You” episodes of Beverly Hills, 90210 were filmed at Rancho Las Palmas, which is located at 41000 Bob Hope Drive in Rancho Mirage.  You can visit the resort’s official website here.  Ray Pruit’s infamous stairs can be found on the south side of the property, just off Avenue Las Palmas, in Building #5, which is denoted with a pink arrow below.  The stairs are on the north side of the building and lead up to Room 520.  The pool that appeared in the episode is the Azure Adult Pool, which is located just outside of the hotel’s main lobby and is denoted with a blue arrow below.  The interior scenes from the “P.S. I Love You” episodes were shot at the Hyatt Westlake Plaza, which is located at 880 South Westlake Boulevard in Thousand Oaks.  You can visit the hotel’s official website here.

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The Kenaston Residence

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Even though I have always been one hundred percent on Team Aniston – I even have the sweatshirt to prove it  😉 – while visiting Palm Springs during Halloween weekend a few months back I became a bit obsessed with stalking the home where Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie posed for their famous “Domestic Bliss” photo spread which appeared in the July 2005 issue of W Magazine.  It all started a few days before Halloween when I came across the following People Magazine article while doing some cyberstalking of the Palm Springs area, trying to come up with a list of desert locations to stalk.  The article mentioned that Brangelina’s  controversial photoshoot – controversial because it occurred on March 25, 2005, the very same day that Jennifer Aniston filed for divorce from Brad – had taken place at a private residence located in Rancho Mirage.  And that was it for me!  The next few hours were spent trying to track down the exact location of the property where my least favorite celebrity couple had posed for their 60-page spread.  Being that I can’t stand either Brad or Angelina, I have no valid explanation as to why I became so darn determined to find the house.  All I can say is that when I get on a kick, I get on a kick and there’s absolutely no stopping me.  So, I was completely overjoyed when I was finally able to pinpoint the location of the house, which is known as the Kenaston Residence in real life, and I made my fiancé stop there during our drive over to Palm Springs, before we even had a chance to check into our hotel.  Not kidding.  🙂

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The Kenaston Residence was built in 1957 by mid-century modernist architect E. Stewart Williams for a Palm Springs resident named Roderick W. Kenaston.  Stewart Williams is perhaps best known for building Frank Sinatra’s desert hideaway with the piano shaped swimming pool, which I stalked a couple of years ago and the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway’s Mountaintop Station, which I have also stalked but have yet to blog about.  In 2003, after several different ownerships and re-models, a Los Angeles area art director and his wife purchased the Kenaston Residence and spent two years restoring it back to its original grandeur.  Sadly, out of the five Rancho Mirage area homes built by Stewart Williams, the Kenaston Residence is the only property that still looks the same today as it did when it was built.  The remaining homes have all either been altered or completely destroyed.  🙁 

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The U-shaped Kenaston Residence, which was built around a large square shaped swimming pool, features four bedrooms, 3.5 baths, over 5,000 square feet of living space, a media room, 50 palm trees!, a six car garage, an interior/exterior rock wall, a “floating fireplace”, floor to ceiling glass walls, mountain views, concrete floors, and a 17 foot long living room planter.  The house was built on a half acre of land and Williams even had the remarkable foresight to situate the home facing North, so as to avoid the extreme desert temperatures.   Besides the Brangelina shoot, the Kenaston Residence has also been the site of photoshoots for Madonna, James Blunt, the band Coldplay and has been featured in Italian Elle, Luxury Living, The London Independent, and on Bravo Television.  In 2007, the home was sold to new owners for $2,350,000.  I swear, if I owned a house like that, I don’t think I would ever be able to let it go.  Especially since, according to the previous owner, it earned at least $50,000 in photoshoot rental fees each year!  Cha-ching!  🙂  You can see interior photographs of the home from its 2007 real estate website here

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Brad and Angie’s “Domestic Bliss” photo spread, which featured the couple and several children acting out scenes of an unhappy family life in the 60s, made use of the entire Kenaston Residence, both inside and out.  According to this article, because Pitt, who actually co-created and co-directed the shoot with photographer Stephen Klein, was “tired of celebrity portraiture and always up for an artistic ‘jam sesh’”(UGH, gag me!), he came up with the unique idea of basing the spread on “unidentifiable malaise” in a marriage.  Speaking about what I can only assume was his union with my girl Jen, he said, “You don’t know what’s wrong because the marriage is everything you signed up for.”  You honestly don’t know what’s wrong, Brad?  Um, I think your wandering eye might have had something to do with it!!  The duo’s photo shoot took two full days to complete, during which time Angelina, who had brought along her then-only son Maddox, and Brad stayed in separate rooms at the Le Parker Meridien Hotel in Palm Springs.  So, I guess I am going to have to stalk the Le Parker in the near future, too.   Oh honey, I feel a trip to Palm Springs coming on!  😉

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The property is actually quite unassuming and non-descript from the street.  One could easily drive right by, without realizing the rich architectural history that lies just beyond the home’s walnut wood walls. 

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Amazingly enough, even though there is a large concrete wall surrounding the back of the property, much of the Kenaston Residence can still be seen from the street.  And because the surrounding wall is only about four feet tall, you can easily see into the backyard area, where the cover photo from Brangelina’s W Magazine issue was shot, as well.   Love it!

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Interestingly enough, photographer Steven Klein’s inspiration for the “Domestic Bliss” photo spread came from the photographs of legendary architectural photographer Julius Shulman.  One of the poses from the issue was almost a direct copy of a very famous photograph Shulman took of Case Study House #21, aka the Bailey House (pictured above).  I found this little bit of trivia out while doing some research on the Kenaston Residence and became absolutely fascinated by it, as I am a huge fan of Julius Shulman, who sadly passed away in July of this past year.  Those of you who read my blog regularly will remember the post I wrote about the tour of Case Study House #22 (aka The Stahl House) that I took in March of last year and Julius Shulman’s iconic photograph which led me to stalk the house in the first place.

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You can see the entire 60-page “Domestic Bliss” portfolio here.

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

Stalk It: The Kenaston Residence is located at 39-767 Desert Sun Drive in Rancho Mirage.  To get an overall view of the house, I would also recommend venturing  west on Mashie Drive and south onto Keenan Drive.  The Case Study House #21, upon which one of the Brangelina pictures was based, is located at 9036 Wonderland Park Avenue in Los Angeles.