The House Where Judy Lewis, Loretta Young and Clark Gable’s Daughter, Was Born

Judy Lewis birth house (28 of 28)

Today’s locale is easily one of the coolest I have visited in my 13-plus years of living in Southern California, which is ironic being that it is comprised of mostly vacant land.  I am talking about the one-time location of the house where Judy Lewis, the secret love child of screen siren Loretta Young and movie legend Clark Gable, was born.  I learned about the spot in fellow stalker E.J.’s book Hollywood Death and Scandal Sites and, although I knew next to nothing about Loretta Young at the time, was immediately intrigued.  So I added the address to my To-Stalk list and began doing some preliminary cyber-stalking to see what the residence looked like now.  When I went to Google Street View, though, it only showed miles upon miles of what looked like vacant swampland.  I emailed to E.J. to ask if he knew what had happened to the area and he replied with a link to this CurbedLA article about the so-called Ghost Streets of Playa del Rey.  Well, believe you me, although I was sad that Judy Lewis’ birth house was no longer, hearing that Los Angeles had its own ghost town had me salivating and I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out there just a few days later.

[ad]

As the story goes, Loretta Young and Clark Gable met on the set of the 1935 film Call of the Wild.  She was 22 and single, he was 35 and married to his second wife, Ria Langham.  The two quickly began an affair that had Hollywood tongues wagging and it was not long before Loretta was pregnant.  In order to hide the pregnancy, which she thought would destroy both her and Clark’s careers, the young star took off to Europe for an extended vacation with her mother, Gladys Royal.  The rumors did not stop, though, and reporters followed Loretta and Gladys’ every move.  Mother and daughter wound up secretly returning to L.A. and Loretta immediately went into hiding at a rental property that she and Gladys owned at 8612 Rindge Avenue in Playa del Rey.  At 8:15 a.m. on November 6, 1935, Judy Lewis was born.  Loretta returned to her mansion in Bel Air shortly thereafter and Judy was left at the Rindge Avenue house in the care of a nurse.  She remained there until July 1936, at which time she was sent to St. Elizabeth’s Infant Hospital in San Francisco.  Loretta “adopted” Judy about five months later.  Rumors, of course, circulated around the adoption and as Judy grew up and came to resemble her famous father more and more, those rumors only caught fire.  As you can see below, there is absolutely NO denying that Judy Lewis was Clark Gable’s daughter.  It was not until Judy confronted Loretta at the age of 31 (at Loretta’s home in Palm Springs, which I am now going to have to stalk!), though, that the star admitted she was Judy’s biological mother and that Gable was her biological father.  Such an incredibly sad story.

ScreenShot7197

And while Judy states in her book that she was born at “8612 Rindge Street” in Venice, I have been able to surmise (with about 99.9% certainty) that, because there is no Rindge Street in Venice, Judy’s former house was actually located at 8612 Rindge Avenue in Playa del Rey, a neighborhood about two miles south of Venice.  I believe that Judy’s former residence is the one denoted with a pink arrow in the historic aerial view, circa 1952, below.

ScreenShot7195

Judy’s former house was located in Surfridge, an affluent seaside community that was founded in the 1920s by Minneapolis-born real estate developer Fritz Burns.  The neighborhood, which was situated overlooking the Pacific Ocean, immediately attracted celebrities including Cecil B. DeMille and Carmen Miranda, who had custom homes built there.  In 1928, a tiny airfield that was mostly used to host air shows was constructed on a plot of land neighboring and just east of Surfridge.  That airfield eventually became Los Angeles International Airport, what is now the sixth busiest airport in the world.  You can see LAX in the background of the photographs below.  It is almost shocking how close it is to the former Surfridge neighborhood.

Judy Lewis birth house (18 of 28)

Judy Lewis birth house (20 of 28)

As LAX began to expand in the 1960s, Los Angeles World Airports started to purchase -  and subsequently tear down – houses in the Surfridge community.

Judy Lewis birth house (3 of 28)

Judy Lewis birth house (8 of 28)

More than eight hundred residences wound up being razed, but, for whatever reason, roads, sidewalks, retaining walls, and street lights were left intact creating a spooky, almost surreal neighborhood of cracked streets that wind through empty lots.  Today, the area encompasses between 302 and 470 (depending on which newspaper article you are reading) fenced-in, vacant acres.

Judy Lewis birth house (13 of 28)

Judy Lewis birth house (14 of 28)

And while Los Angeles World Airports considered developing the site by building an 18-hole golf course, a sand dune preserve and a viewing station to watch planes take off and land, those plans wound up being thwarted for a variety of reasons.  All that exists on the property now is a 200-acre butterfly preserve where the once-endangered El Segundo blue butterfly now flourishes.  According to a recent Los Angeles Times article, a portion of the site is set to be restored in the near future, though, whereupon several ghost roads and ancient foundations will be removed and native plants brought in to return the area to its pre-developed state.

Judy Lewis birth house (2 of 28)

Judy Lewis birth house (9 of 28)

In the meantime, it’s a great place to watch planes take off and land, not to mention an intriguing stalking location.

Judy Lewis birth house (1 of 28)

Judy Lewis birth house (10 of 28)

You can check out some great photographs of the Surfridge neighborhood before it was razed here and here.

Judy Lewis birth house (11 of 28)

Judy Lewis birth house (17 of 28)

The abandoned Surfridge community is even a filming location.  The site was featured in the music video for the Azure Ray song “New Resolution”.

ScreenShot7198

ScreenShot7199

You can watch that video by clicking below.

Thanks to fellow stalker Jeff, I learned that the Surfridge neighborhood was also featured in the climax of the 2011 thriller In Time, although a little CGI trickery was employed to change the background of the scene.  You can read about the exact areas of Surfridge that appeared in the movie on the Seeing Stars website here.

ScreenShot7218

ScreenShot7219

You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

Big THANK YOU to E.J., from The Movieland Directory website, for telling me about this location!  Smile

Judy Lewis birth house (6 of 28)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The house where Judy Lewis, Loretta Young and Clark Gable’s daughter, was born was formerly located at 8612 Rindge Avenue in Playa del Rey.

O’Brien’s Irish Pub & Restaurant from “The Truth About Cats & Dogs”

O'Brien's Pub (9 of 9)

Last month, while spending the weekend in Santa Monica, the Grim Cheaper and I randomly grabbed dinner at Finn McCool’s Irish Pub on Main Street.  Immediately upon sitting down, I asked the bartender if anything had ever been lensed on the premises – as I am apt to do whenever I find myself dining somewhere for the first time.  (Shocker, I know.  Winking smile)  And while he was not sure about Finn McCool’s filming history, he did inform me that a scene from the 1996 romantic comedy The Truth About Cats & Dogs had taken place at a different Emerald Isle-themed watering hole located just a few doors down – O’Brien’s Irish Pub & Restaurant.  Because Los Angeles is a place where change seems to be an epidemic, I was absolutely shocked – and pleased – that an establishment that appeared in a movie shot almost two decades ago was still in existence.  So I dragged the GC right on out there the following night.

[ad]

O’Brien’s Irish Pub & Restaurant was originally founded in 1995, the same year that The Truth About Cats & Dogs was filmed.  Amazingly enough, though, despite its longevity, I could find little to no information about the place’s history online.

O'Brien's Pub (4 of 7)

O'Brien's Pub (3 of 7)

What I can say, though, is that the watering hole serves up some fabulous food.  I opted for O’Brien’s Veggie Patty, with added toppings of cheddar cheese and sautéed mushrooms, and am happy to report that it was absolutely divine.  The GC ordered the Slider Burgers and was also very happy with his choice.  I was most excited about O’Brien’s champagne offerings, though, which were fantastic!

O'Brien's Pub (8 of 9)

O'Brien's Pub (1 of 9)

I loved the place’s low-lit, wood-paneled ambiance, as well.

O'Brien's Pub (6 of 9)

O'Brien's Pub (4 of 9)

Check out the antique books displayed on the shelf above the opening to the restaurant’s main room in the photograph below.  Love it!

O'Brien's Pub (7 of 9)

O’Brien’s Irish Pub was featured only once in The Truth About Cats & Dogs, in the scene in which Noelle (Uma Thurman) poses as radio host/animal expert Dr. Abby Barnes (Janeane Garofalo), who is in turn posing as Noelle’s fictional friend Donna, while the two are out on a date with Brian (Ben Chaplin).

ScreenShot7188

ScreenShot7190

It is while at O’Brien’s that Abby spills salsa all over the front of her shirt causing her to say, “Of course!  Of course I would do that!”  Amen, Abby!  That is SO something I would do, as well.

ScreenShot7192

ScreenShot7193

The Truth About Cats & Dogs was filmed in O’Brien’s bar area, which is located towards the back of the restaurant.

O'Brien's Pub (2 of 9)

O'Brien's Pub (3 of 9)

The exterior patio area also appeared briefly in the flick.

ScreenShot7184

ScreenShot7185

In a rare twist, the restaurant’s real life name and location were used in the filming.  Not only did Brian tell Noelle to meet him at the bar “on the corner of Main and Pier” – O’Brien’s actual location – for their date, but a sign reading “O’Brien’s Irish Pub & Restaurant” was visible on the door in the background of the scene.  So incredibly cool!

ScreenShot7187

You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

O'Brien's Pub (6 of 7)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: O’Brien’s Irish Pub & Restaurant, from The Truth About Cats & Dogs, is located at 2941 Main Street in Santa Monica.  You can visit the eatery’s official website here.

Weekend Off!

Golf Tourney (3 of 4)

Sorry to have been M.I.A. for the past couple of days, but my dad and I spent the end of last week finishing up my closet (pictures to come just as soon as I am done organizing it) and then Miss Pinky Lovejoy, from the Thinking Pink blog, came out to the desert for a visit this past weekend, which did not leave much time for blogging.  I did get to meet the one and only LUKE PERRY (LOVE OF MY LIFE) on Friday night (he even kissed my cheek!), though, and, let me tell you, I had trouble breathing for a good thirty minutes afterward.  It was an amazing experience that I truly have not yet recovered from and promise to write a post about soon.  Anyway, I will be back tomorrow with a whole new location!

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile