Mary’s House from “Why Women Kill”

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Today marks the third time I’m blogging about Why Women Kill, which is a bit surprising considering I’ve barely watched any of the 2019 CBS All Access series.  But while scanning through episode 6, “Practically Lethal in Every Way,” making screen captures for my recent post on Bistro Garden, the image of a massive Craftsman home came into view, and my heart was set aflutter!  I stared in awe at the home, which belongs to Mary (Analeigh Tipton) and her abusive husband, Ralph Vlasin (Scott Porter), on the 1963 portion of the show, and decided to track down it right then and there.  Thanks to its Arts and Crafts architecture, I had a feeling the pad was located in the Pasadena area, though I had never come across anything quite like it in all my years living there.  I did a Google search for “Why Women Kill,” “filming,” and “Pasadena,” which garnered no fruitful results.  Firm in my assertion that the house was in Crown City and knowing that productions sometimes shorten or abbreviate longer titles, I did a second search for “WWK,” “filming,” and “Pasadena,” and, sure enough, an article came up which stated that in June 2019 the series spent two days shooting on the 200 and 400 blocks of Oaklawn Avenue in South Pasadena.  I headed right on over to the 200 block via Street View, dropped down the little yellow man, and there was Mary’s Craftsman at 224 Oaklawn!

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I had never visited the street before and, in fact, only first heard about it last December thanks to my friend/fellow stalker Owen who emailed to alert me to another of its famous Craftsmans – 216 Oaklawn, aka the Browning residence from Zathura: A Space Adventure.  (I’ll be covering that property in a later post.)  The enclave, which consists of a small 0.2-mile curved stretch of road with a smattering of about thirty dwellings at South Pasadena’s northern edge, was established in 1904.  Oaklawn was the brainchild of the South Pasadena Realty and Investment Company and Henry and Charles Greene, the prolific architects responsible for the vast majority of the area’s landmark Craftsmans.  The brothers designed the layout of the street, which was initially centered around a large oak tree that no longer stands (hence the name), as well as a reinforced concrete footbridge leading to Fair Oaks Avenue (where residents could access local streetcars) and a waiting station.  Lots were sold undeveloped.  The subdivision was referred to in early advertisements as “Suburb de Luxe” and the homes eventually built there certainly lived up to the hype!  I was flabbergasted wandering the neighborhood, gawking at the massive, architecturally stunning properties surrounding me.  From Craftsman homes to Tudors to mid-century manses, each one is more spectacular than the last!  Two that caught my eye during my visit are pictured below.

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As Owen pointed out to me last December, Oaklawn also boasts a striking entrance feature.  He wrote, “When making screenshots, I noticed something in the background that I couldn’t ID.  I was like, ‘What the hell are boulders doing on a residential street?!’  I went to Google’s street view to check it out, and I came across something interesting and unusual that I had never known about.  You may be well aware of it, of course, but at the end of Oaklawn Avenue in South Pasadena, near the Zathura house, are rustic portals on each side of the street.  These picturesque portals, which look like something straight out of a lifestyle magazine, were also designed by Greene and Greene.”  I had not been aware of the portals – as I said, I had never even heard of the street before! – but was intrigued and had to take a look while stalking the neighborhood.

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The elaborate stone structures, initially designed to frame the central oak, were constructed long before any homes lined the street and, per the South Pasadena Preservation Foundation, “served as advertisements to the undeveloped lots.”

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Today, they welcome visitors to the picturesque idyll.

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Despite their substantial influence on Oaklawn, there’s no concrete evidence that Greene and Greene designed any of the enclave’s homes (though one resident speculates the street boasts as many as four properties that can be attributed to the brothers).  The majority of the lots were sold off in 1907 to various builders, including G.W. Stimson.  His son, architect G. Lawrence Stimson, is credited with designing many of the houses, including Mary’s from Why Women Kill.

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In real life, the 1910 home features 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, 3,930 square feet, a dining room with a cast aluminum ceiling, a carriage house designed by Frederick L. Roehrig, a fireplace with Grueby Faience Company tile, intricate Craftsman detailing, hardwood flooring, built-ins galore, a butler’s pantry, a 0.45-acre lot, and a backyard pond.

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You can check out interior photos of the massive abode here.

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The property pops up numerous times on Why Women Kill, first in the scene in which Beth Ann Stanton (Ginnifer Goodwin) introduces herself to Mary and Ralph, her new neighbors, in episode 6, “Practically Lethal in Every Way.”  The residence is said to be situated across the street from Beth Ann’s supposed Pasadena estate, so it is rather ironic that neither property is actually in Crown City.  Mary’s pad is, of course, in South Pas and Beth Ann’s, the mansion at the center of the series’ storyline, is a good 15 miles away at 113 Fremont Place in Hancock Park.

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Mary’s house goes on to appear in the episodes “I Was Just Wondering What Makes Dames Like You So Deadly” and “Kill Me as if It Were the Last Time.”

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The home is just as incredible in person as it is onscreen.

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The interior, namely the living room with the Grueby tile fireplace, is also featured on the show, as you can see in the screen capture below as compared to the MLS image from 2012, when the pad was last on the market.

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On Why Women Kill, Mary’s staircase (which is visible just beyond the front door) is very Craftsman in style with a natural wood finish, but, per the listing photos, at the time it was on the market it was painted white.

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I am not sure if the new owners changed the coloring back to the original wood or if the show’s production team did, but either way, it was a good move!  The natural wood is so much more appropriate to the architecture of the home, not to mention infinitely prettier.

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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: Mary’s house from Why Women Kill is located at 224 Oaklawn Avenue in South Pasadena.  The home from Zathura: A Space Adventure can be found right next door at 216 Oaklawn.

Frank’s Coffee Shop and Restaurant from “Why Women Kill”

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The Grim Cheaper and I often joke that my friend Lavonna should be in charge of our DVR.  She has recommended countless shows over the years that became fast favorites, including The Goldbergs, Veep, The Office, and Parks and Recreation.  Her latest suggestion, Why Women Kill, hasn’t quite hit the beloved mark for me yet (it’s just a bit too dark and risqué), though its premise – the CBS All Access series centers around a Pasadena mansion and three couples who call it home over various decades – is something I can certainly get behind!  And the locations are fab!  Early in her viewing, before I started to watch, Von texted me a photo of a diner used in the production to see if I recognized it.  Sure enough, I did!  The eatery was none other than Frank’s Coffee Shop and Restaurant, a historic Burbank spot I stalked and blogged about back in 2012 after it was prominently featured in fave romcom Larry Crowne.  Since its resume has seriously bulked up since then, I figured a redo was in order.

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Frank’s Coffee Shop and Restaurant, which is also known as Frank’s Steak House, was originally established by Frank Kunelis and his wife, Soula, in 1957.

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Lined with brown tufted booths and a long wooden counter with swivel stools, the interior looks as if not much has changed since opening day.  And I mean that in a good way.

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Pretty much the only thing that has been altered over the years is the fare, thanks to Jose Lopez, a longtime chef from another Burbank eatery named Genio’s, who purchased Frank’s in 2008.  As Lopez told the Los Angeles Times, “I thought I was going to retire there, but when Genio’s closed, and I bought Frank’s, I put the menus together.”  The result is a vast offering of salads, sandwiches, burgers, and traditional American comfort food.

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Other than that, though, the restaurant remains much as it was under Kunelis’ tutelage – which is just the way Frank’s customers like it.

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  Sadly, the eatery began suffering a decline in patronage in early 2012 and closed its doors in March of that year, shortly after I stalked it.  Sam Patel, owner of the adjacent Portofino Inn, wound up stepping in and purchasing the place.  He kept Jose on as manager and reopened that June much to the delight of locals.  Frank’s is still going strong today – especially when it comes to movie and television appearances!

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In the August 2019 pilot episode of Why Women Kill, titled “Murder Means Never Having to Say You’re Sorry,” Frank’s masks as the supposed Glendale-area Jansen’s Diner, where Beth Ann Stanton (Ginnifer Goodwin) catches her husband cheating with a waitress named April Warner (Sadie Calvano).

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The eatery goes on to appear in subsequent episodes of the series as Beth Ann attempts to befriend April.

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Though the chandeliers were swapped out for the shoot, I recognized Frank’s as soon as I laid eyes on the screen captures Lavonna sent me.

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Thanks to its retro décor and Anywhere, U.S.A. appeal, the restaurant has long been a favorite of location scouts.

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   Frank’s was used for exterior shots of the diner where Valerie Malone (Tiffani Thiessen) convinced Ray Pruit (Jamie Walters) to return to Beverly Hills in the Season 5 episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 titled “Squash It,” which aired in 1995.  Interiors were filmed elsewhere, though.

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The eatery has been featured in no less than five episodes of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation!  It first popped up in Season 6’s “Rashomama,” which aired in 2006, as the supposed Las Vegas, Nevada-area coffee shop where the car belonging to Nick Stokes (George Eads) was stolen (pictured below).  It then went on to appear in Season 7’s “Law of Gravity,” Season 9’s “Mascara,” Season 11’s “The List,” and Season 12’s “Willows in the Wind.”

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Ron Swanson (Nick Offerman) takes his ex-wife, Tammy Swanson (Megan Mullally), out for lunch at Frank’s in the Season 2 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “Ron and Tammy,” which aired in 2009.

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Frank’s serves as the central location in the 2011 romantic comedy Larry Crowne.  It is there that Larry (Tom Hanks) gets a gig as a line cook after losing his job at the local U-Mart store.

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The diner is the site of a confrontation between Wynn Duffy (Jere Burns) and Art Mullen (Nick Searcy) in the Season 5 episode of Justified titled “Shot All to Hell,” which aired in 2014.

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Nick Dunne (Ben Affleck) meets his sister, Margo (Carrie Coon), and his lawyer, Tanner Bolt (Tyler Perry), at Frank’s to discuss his case in the 2014 thriller Gone Girl.

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Walter O’Brien (Elyes Gabel) and his team commandeer the restaurant in order to save a doomed plane in the pilot episode of Scorpion, which aired in 2014.

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Efraim Diveroli (Jonah Hill) presents David Packouz (Miles Teller) with a severance agreement at Frank’s in the 2016 crime drama War Dogs.

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In the Season 1 episode of Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and the Notorious B.I.G. titled “Tupac Amaru Shakur,” which aired in 2018, Detective Greg Kading (Josh Duhamel) and Officer Daryn Dupree (Bokeem Woodbine) meet with an informant named Percy (Amin Joseph) at Frank’s.

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The eatery masks as the Denver Diner in the Season 3 episode of Lethal Weapon titled “Panama,” which aired in 2018.

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Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss) and David Madson (Cody Fern) dine at Frank’s and reminisce about the night they first met in the Season 2 episode of American Crime Story titled “House by the Lake,” which aired in 2018.

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In the Season 1 episode of I Am the Night titled “Phenomenon of Interference,” which aired in 2019, Jay Singletary (Chris Pine) meets with an old army buddy at Frank’s.

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And Leslie Peterson (David Hornsby) shares a meal with Baby Tyler (Caleb Emery) at the coffee shop just prior to heading to jail in the Season 3 episode of Good Girls titled “Nana,” which aired in 2020.

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On a Why Women Kill Side-Note – For those wondering, the stunning “Pasadena” mansion at the center of the series isn’t really in Pasadena at all, but Hancock Park.  It can be found at 113 Fremont Place.  Sadly, it is located in a gated community, so I won’t be blogging about it, but figured I’d provide the info here.

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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: Frank’s Coffee Shop and Restaurant, from Why Women Kill, is located at 925 West Olive Avenue in Burbank.  You can visit the eatery’s official website here.