Birthday Visit to L.A.

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I am heading to L.A. this week to meet up with my good friends Kim and Lavonna who are visiting from Ohio.  (That’s us, along with Pinky Lovejoy, of the Thinking Pink blog, at Ellen two years ago.)  We have about a million fun things planned (hello Disneyland!) and I am extra excited because my birthday is on Tuesday!  Needless to say, I will be taking the week off from blogging.  Don’t forget to check out my latest Los Angeles magazine post on Thursday here and I’ll see y’all next week!

Tom’s Bistro from “Parks and Recreation”

Tom's Bistro Parks and Recreation (17 of 22)

A couple of months ago, I asked fellow stalker Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, to assist me in finding Tom’s Bistro from fave show Parks and Recreation.  It took him less than a minute to track the place down (thanks to this April 25th tweet).  As it turns out, a Hollywood pizzeria named Delancey stood in for the supposed Pawnee, Indiana-area restaurant.  Once Owen told me the news, I wanted to kick myself as the very same eatery had been used as a location in another of my favorite shows, Dexter.  Though I had never stalked it, how I did not recognize the place is absolutely beyond me!  So I decided to amend the situation and ran out to visit Delancey last week while I was in L.A.  (You can tell from the photograph above that Mike, from MovieShotsLA, was with me when I did so.  The pictures I take never turn out that good!)

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Delancey was originally opened by restaurateur George Abou-Daoud (he also founded Bowery, Rosewood Tavern and The Mercantile Wine Bar, as well as several other L.A. eateries) in April 2008.  He designed the space, which previously housed Taste of Thai, to resemble a New York bistro.

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Tom's Bistro Parks and Recreation (11 of 22)

Delancey’s exterior is marked by red subway tile and wrought-iron detailing and does very much look like a restaurant one would find in the West Village.

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Tom's Bistro Parks and Recreation (16 of 22)

The interior boasts much of that same Big-Apple vibe, with dark Cherry hardwood floors, exposed brick arches, pressed-tin ceilings, antique radiators, an oak bar and red leather booths.

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Tom's Bistro Parks and Recreation (19 of 22)

Sadly, Mike and I did not get to sample any of Delancey’s fare while we were there (we had just finished a big meal elsewhere), but, from what I’ve read online, the food is superb.  I cannot wait to go back there sometime in the near future.

 Tom's Bistro Parks and Recreation (13 of 22)

Delancey was first featured in the Season 6 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “New Slogan,” in the scene in which Donna Meagle (Retta) and April Ludgate (Aubrey Plaza) took Tom Haverford (Aziz Ansari) location scouting for his new restaurant.  Only the interior of the gastropub appeared in the episode.

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Tom's Bistro Parks and Recreation (22 of 22)

The interior actually only appeared in that one episode.  According to the super-nice server that we spoke with, a set based on Delancey’s interior was built at CBS Studio Center, where the series is lensed, shortly following the “New Slogan” filming.

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Tom's Bistro Parks and Recreation (21 of 22)

Delancey was not featured again until the Season 6 finale of Parks and Rec, which was titled “Moving Up.”  This time, the exterior of the eatery was shown in both a daytime shot . . .

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Tom's Bistro Parks and Recreation (7 of 22)

. . . and a nighttime shot.

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Tom's Bistro Parks and Recreation (4 of 22)

In “Moving Up,” the replica set was used for interior filming.

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As you can see below, the interior of Tom’s Bistro is considerably larger than the actual Delancey interior.  (This marketing scheme is absolutely amazing, by the way!)

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On a random Parks side-note – In the “Moving Up” episode, Aubrey Plaza looked to be wearing Adina Reyter’s Tiny Square Necklace – the very same necklace that my girl Kristin Cavallari regularly wears, which I had a faux gold replica of made a couple of years ago.

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As I mentioned earlier, Delancey also appeared in Dexter. In the Season 5 episode titled “My Bad” the restaurant was used in a flashback scene in which Rita Bennett (Julie Benz) and Dexter Morgan (Michael C. Hall) had their first date.

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Only the interior of Delancey was shown in the scene.

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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

Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, for finding this location!  Smile

Tom's Bistro Parks and Recreation (5 of 22)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Delancey, aka Tom’s Bistro from Parks and Recreation, is located at 5936 Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here.

Phil’s Diner from “The X-Files”

Phil's Diner the X-Files (20 of 27)

When I was in L.A. last week, Mike, from MovieShotsLA, and I spent two full days stalking.  Our adventures took us from one end of Los Angeles to the other.  At one point, while in North Hollywood, we passed by Phil’s Diner at 5230 Lankershim Boulevard and stopped to snap some pics.  I figured the historic-looking restaurant had to have appeared onscreen at some time, so I did a quick Google search on my iPhone and just about fell over when I learned that the eatery had been used in my very favorite episode of The X-Files EVER, Season 2’s “Humbug.”  (“I’ve seen the future and the future looks just like him!”)  Talk about a lucky twist of fate!

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Phil’s Diner was constructed in 1926 for the J.F. Phillip restaurant chain (hence the name).  It was designed in a train-car style by Charles Amend and originally stood (according to this article) near the intersection of Ventura and Lankershim Boulevards.  The eatery was relocated at some point to 11138 Chandler Boulevard, where it spent the bulk of its years.  (There are several online articles which state that the café was moved countless times throughout its history, once sitting on Crenshaw Boulevard, near the corner of West Adams.  I am fairly certain that information is incorrect, though.   I believe that storefront was a different Phil’s outpost – one that is no longer standing.)  You can check out some fabulous early photographs of Phil’s at its Chandler Boulevard location here.

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Phil's Diner the X-Files (26 of 27)

For over two decades, beginning in the 1970s, Phil’s Diner was run by Charles and Wendy Hong, a native Korean couple who served up no-fuss American comfort food with an Asian flair.  The restaurant flourished under their leadership.  Then, in the mid-90s, nearby MTA Red Line construction and tunneling caused a severe downfall in patronage and in 1997 the couple was forced to shutter the café.  While it was purchased by a man named Casey Hallenbeck the next year, it stood abandoned for the following decade.  The structure was eventually moved to a vacant lot in 2009, where it sat on blocks in a sad graffiti-covered state.

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Phil's Diner the X-Files (17 of 27)

While sitting abandoned, Phil’s vintage signage was stolen and never ended up being recovered.  The sign that currently stands in front of Phil’s is a replica.

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In 2011, Phil’s was moved to its current location and plans were made to reopen it as part of the new NoHo Commons complex.  After a $1.1-million restoration, the eatery opened in April 2011, but sadly only lasted eight months.  By December, the restaurant, which is California’s oldest dining car and the only surviving outpost of the Phil’s chain, was shuttered.  It remains closed to this day.

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Phil's Diner the X-Files (18 of 27)

Though closed, I managed to snap a few photographs of Phil’s interior through the windows.

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Phil's Diner the X-Files (7 of 27)

As you can see, despite being out of operation for several years, the eatery is still in great shape.  The wood-detailing is simply gorgeous!  And what I wouldn’t give to catch a close-up glimpse of those headshots lining the ceiling!

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Phil's Diner the X-Files (5 of 27)

Thanks to its historic look, Phil’s Diner has been featured in numerous productions over the years.  Phil Everly, of the Everly Brothers, shot the cover of his 1974 solo album, aptly titled “Phil’s Diner,” in front of the eatery.

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The diner was visible in the background of a 1977 informational video for the Emergency Medical Service titled “Life or Death,” which you can watch here.

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Phil’s Diner briefly appeared in 1986’s Night of the Creeps, in the scene in which Detective Ray Cameron (Tom Atkins) raced to a death scene.

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In the Season 2 episode of The X-Files titled “Humbug,” Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) travel to Gibsonton, Florida to investigate a murder that took place in a rural community of sideshow circus performers.  Upon first arriving in town, the duo head to a local café to speak to Sheriff Hamilton (Wayne Grace) about the killing.  Phil’s Diner was used for the establishing shot of that café.

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Interior filming took place elsewhere, though – somewhere in Vancouver where the series’ first five seasons were lensed.  As you can see below, the interior of the diner that was used was substantially larger than the interior of Phil’s.

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Phil’s Diner was also featured in episodes of Baretta, The Millionaire Matchmaker, Hart to Hart and The White Shadow, and in one of the Friday the 13th movies.  I am unsure of the particulars of those productions, though, but if any of my fellow stalkers have information on the filmings, please fill me in.

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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: Phil’s Diner, from the “Humbug” episode of The X-Files, is located at 5230 Lankershim Boulevard in North Hollywood.  The restaurant is currently closed.

Jason Priestley’s Former Apartment

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I haven’t been getting much sleep the past few nights and it’s all Jason Priestley’s fault.  His new book, Jason Priestley: A Memoir, has me burning the midnight oil.  The chapters are brief (most only a page or two) and begging to be perused.  I find myself repeatedly thinking ‘I’ll just read one more,’ and the next thing I know it’s midnight.  Ah, well, the fatigue has been worth it.  The tome is fabulous and enthralling.  I cannot more highly recommend it – especially since JP includes the addresses of quite a few stalking locations, one of which is the apartment building where he lived shortly before landing his life-changing role on Beverly Hills, 90210.  So Mike, from MovieShotsLA, and I ran right out to stalk the place last week while I was in L.A.

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In the fall of 1987, 18-year-old Jason and his good friend/fellow actor Bernie Coulson moved into a two-bedroom unit at the Klump Regency apartment building located at 5050 Klump Avenue in North Hollywood.  JP describes the place as “your basic Valley craphole.”   During the eight months that he lived on the premises, JP would vary between traveling back and forth to his native Vancouver for small film and television roles and auditioning in L.A. where he was trying to make it big in Hollywood.  On one occasion after returning home from a Canadian shoot, Priestley walked into his bedroom to find a “tall skinny” guy asleep in his bed.  That lanky man turned out to be none other than a young Brad Pitt!  Brad, whom JP calls “the nicest Midwestern guy imaginable,” Bernie and Jason continued to live in the apartment for the next few months, with Pitt crashing on the couch.

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Jason Priestley's Former Apartment (4 of 16)

In mid-1988, Brad rented a two-bedroom duplex on La Jolla Avenue in West Hollywood (where he lived for several years afterwards, according to Jason) and invited JP and Bernie to move in with him.  Because the Writers Guild of America strike was making roles hard to come by at the time, Jason chose instead to temporarily relocate to Vancouver.  It was not long before he returned to L.A., though, and landed the role that would turn him into a household name.

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Jason Priestley's Former Apartment (15 of 16)

Thanks to Jason’s not-so-keen description of the place, I was expecting Klump Regency to be rather dingy, but it is actually pretty nice.  You can check out some interior photographs of one of the building’s two-bedroom apartments hereAccording to Zillow, the 50-unit complex features a swimming pool, Jacuzzi, gym and laundry facilities.  Not too shabby digs for a bunch of struggling actors!

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Jason Priestley's Former Apartment (2 of 16)

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

Jason Priestley's Former Apartment (7 of 16)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Klump Regency, Jason Priestley’s former apartment building, is located at 5050 Klump Avenue in North Hollywood.

Chez Jay from “A Single Man”

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The April issue of Los Angeles magazine (for which I wrote my very first print article ever – you can read it here) featured a Time Frame image of one of Santa Monica’s most historic restaurants, Chez Jay, reminding me that while I had stalked the watering hole ages ago, I had yet to blog about it.  So here goes!

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Chez Jay was originally founded by a Connecticut-born struggling actor named Jay Fiondella.  During the 1950s, Jay was working as a bartender at Sinbad’s on the Santa Monica Pier and, before his shifts, he would often grab a bite to eat at a nearby coffee shop named Dawn’s Cafe.  He learned through his regular visits that Dawn’s was struggling financially and one fateful day the owner offered to sell the place to him for the bargain price of $1.  Fiondella laid down the bill and the eatery became his.  He named the place “Chez Jay,” in honor of Chez Joey, the restaurant owned by Frank Sinatra in the 1957 movie Pal Joey.  (In a fateful twist, Sinatra would later become a Chez Jay regular.)  The new eatery opened for business on July 4th, 1959.  For the grand opening fete, Jay brought in showgirls and an elephant.  Yes, an elephant!  (You can see a photograph of it here.)  Legend has it that the animal slammed its trunk on the bar at one point in the evening, denting it, and that that dent it still visible to this day.

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The tiny space, which boasts a scant 10 tables, 12 bar stools and a 150-square-foot kitchen, quickly became popular with everyone from locals to the Hollywood set.  Just a few of the luminaries who have dined there over the years include Ava Gardner, Vivien Leigh, Peter Sellers, Angie Dickinson, Chris Penn, Bronson Pinchot, Warren Beatty, Hugh Hefner, Robert Mitchum, my girl Marilyn Monroe, Joe DiMaggio, Marlon Brando, Judy Garland, Cary Grant, Jim Morrison, Michael Caine, Fred Astaire, John Belushi, Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Clint Eastwood, Dennis Hopper, Steve McQueen, Natalie Wood, Henry Kissinger, Leonard Nimoy, Cher, Viggo Mortensen, Renee Zellweger, Kiefer Sutherland, Mick Jagger, Tony Bennett, Joan Baez, Lee Marvin (legend has it that he once rode his motorcycle right up to the bar and ordered a drink), Julia Roberts, Sean Penn, Quentin Tarantino, Drew Barrymore, and Kevin Bacon.  Frank Sinatra and other members of the Rat Pack would dine there weekly before their regular poker game.  David E. Kelley and Michelle Pfeiffer even met there for the first time during a dinner party.  And Matt Damon and Ben Affleck worked on their Oscar-winning screenplay for Good Will Hunting in the establishment’s back room.  Not too shabby of a clientele!

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Legend has it that Chez Jay was also the inspiration for the Regal Beagle, local Santa Monica hangout of Jack Tripper (John Ritter) and the gang, on Three’s Company.

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Jay Fiondella passed away in 2008 at the age of 82 and the iconic restaurant is now run by his son, Chaz, daughter, Anita, and longtime business partner, Michael Anderson.  The eatery’s future became uncertain shortly after Jay’s death when the City of Santa Monica began demolishing an adjoining parking lot to build what is now Tongva Park.  During construction, city officials decided that Chez Jay did not fit in with their vision and hoped to demolish the place to make room for an open-air, family-friendly establishment.  Thankfully, preservationists stepped in and the historic watering hole was given landmark status in late 2012.  Chez Jay’s future is still somewhat uncertain, though, as the restaurant may be forced to undergo a remodel or an add-on.  You can read a more in-depth history of the site here and here.

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Despite having stalked Chez Jay on more than one occasion, the Grim Cheaper and I have never actually eaten there.  It’s not for lack of trying, though.  The place is always packed to the gills and typically doesn’t even have any standing-room-only space.

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Chez Jay (7 of 8)

Thanks largely to the fact that little of Chez Jay has been changed over its 55-year history, the place has been featured onscreen several times.  In the 1990 film Bad Influence, the restaurant was where Alex (Rob Lowe) took Michael Boll (James Spader) for a beer shortly after meeting him.

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The interior of Chez Jay was also shown briefly in the scene.

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In the 2009 drama A Single Man, Chez Jay popped up twice as The Starboard Side bar.  It first appeared in the flashback scene in which George (Colin Firth) remembered first meeting his longtime boyfriend, Jim (The Good Wife’s Matthew Goode).

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While the interior of the bar was also used briefly in the scene, not much of it was visible.  The large amount of people shown packed inside it is a pretty accurate depiction of what the place is like in real life, though.

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In a later scene, George runs into a student named Kenny (Nicholas Hoult) while at Chez Jay and the two have drinks.

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The interior is shown in that scene, as well.

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Chez Jay is also where Mark Callan (Wilson Bethel) meets with one of his father’s cronies in the Season 1 episode of All Rise titled “What the Constitution Greens to Me.”

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: Chez Jay, from Bad Influence, is located at 1657 Ocean Avenue in Santa Monica.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here.