Lacy Street Production Center from “Stitchers”

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (3 of 3)

They say the third time’s the charm, but I attempted to stalk today’s location on no less than ten different occasions before finally being successful!  Lacy Street Production Center, the exterior of which portrayed the site of a rave in an episode of Stitchers, is an actual working studio and, unfortunately, each time I showed up for a look-see, production trucks were parked over every square inch of the place, blocking all views of it from the street.  So I was thrilled to arrive on a recent Wednesday morning and find the complex free of any and all freighters, meaning I could finally snap some photos.  Considering the number of man-hours put into it, this stalk was truly a labor of love!

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It is at Lacy Street Production Center that Kristen Clark (Emma Ishta) and her team investigate the death of a young woman in the Season 1 episode of Stitchers titled “Friends in Low Places.”

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Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (1 of 1)

One look at the rusted-out smokestack visible in the episode and I was smitten!  I had never seen anything like it in Los Angeles and promptly got started trying to identify it.  Thankfully, the Seeing Stars website did the legwork for me, chronicling all of Stitchers Season 1 locales, including Lacy Street Production Center, aka the site of the “Friends in Low Places” rave.

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Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (1 of 1)

The conglomeration of buildings that today makes up Lacy Street Production Center originally served as the home of the Talbert-Whitmore Co., a window shade manufacturer that later became known as Columbia Mills.  Initially constructed in 1908, the complex was expanded multiple times over the years as Talbert-Whitmore grew, eventually developing into the largest window shade factory on the West Coast.  You can see an image of the plant from its early days here.

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (19 of 28)

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (21 of 28)

I could find absolutely no provenance regarding the American Wrecking Company signage so prominently splayed across the complex’s central structure – not via old building permits, newspaper.com archives or historic resources surveys.  I am guessing it is leftover from a shoot, quite possibly an episode of Star Trek: Enterprise.  But more on that in a bit.

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (15 of 28)

In 1982, the 9-building, 2-acre site was transformed into a de facto movie studio thanks to producer Barney Rosenzweig who was looking for a permanent spot to shoot his new TV series, Cagney & Lacey.  The former Talbert-Whitmore warehouse fit the bill perfectly, thanks to the vast open spaces it provided, perfect for building sets, not to mention the low rental rates, much less than those of an actual studio.  The show called Lacy Street Production Center home for its full six-year run.  When it wrapped, the complex’s owners, Don Randles and Jim Knight, began leasing the space out to other productions.

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Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (5 of 28)

It proved so popular that when Rosenzweig came back to Randles and Knight a couple of years after Cagney & Lacey went off the air in the hopes of renting out the facility for his new series The Trials of Rosie O’Neill, he was told it had already been booked by another show, Alien Nation.  Lacy Street Production Center has continued to be booked regularly ever since, serving as the home to such productions as Catch Me If You Can, L.A. Confidential and Seabiscuit.

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Shooting in a converted warehouse does have its drawbacks, though.  As author Bob Fisher stated in a 1987 American Cinematographer article about Cagney & Lacey, “The Lacy Street studio does impose some production limitations.  There are low ceilings with no room for scaffolds, comparatively small sets with immovable walls, pillars in the middle of rooms and large air conditioning ducts that add to the ambience but present some considerable obstacles to the director of photography who has to light in a comparatively cramped space.”  Still, there’s nothing quite like the authentic urban aura it provides.  Though not actually abandoned, it definitely has that feel.  As Peggy Archer said in a 2007 LAist article documenting Lacy Street’s dilapidation over the years, “Of course, the reason movies, TV and commercials keep shooting here although it’s about to fall over is that the place looks really. f*cking. cool.”

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (11 of 28)

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (7 of 28)

When Lacy Street Production Center came on the market in 2015, there were talks of razing several buildings, gutting interiors, and transforming it into a large-scale mixed-use development.  Commercial production company Buck Design eventually stepped in, purchasing the 90,000-square-foot complex for $20 million in August 2017.  Thankfully, the firm decided to continue to operate the site as a studio, going to great pains to bring it up to code, all while keeping intact all of the rough elements that make it so insanely shootable.  You can check out what the interior looks like post-rehab here.

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Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (16 of 28)

Lacy Street Production Center is nothing if not picturesque – especially with the blue skies of Los Angeles serving as its backdrop.

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Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (20 of 28)

The complex is just begging to be photographed, particularly my beloved smokestack which can be found in the center’s main parking lot, very visible from the street (well, at least when film trucks aren’t blocking it from view, anyway).

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The vast majority of productions that film on the premises make use of Lacy Street’s interior, building sets in the sprawling empty rooms.  A few, like Stitchers, have utilized the outside, though.

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The center masks as the Recovery House Youth Shelter in the 1991 horror flick Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare.

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That same year, the building situated just west of the smokestack portrayed a chop shop in Out for Justice.

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That structure is pictured below.

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Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (9 of 28)

Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) has a showdown with a terrorist in Lacy Street Production Center’s front courtyard in the Season 1 episode of 24 titled “3:00 a.m. – 4:00 a.m.,” which aired in 2001.

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The property portrayed the Detroit lair of a group of Reptilians seeking to destroy humanity in the Season 3 episode of Star Trek: Enterprise titled “Carpenter Street,” which aired in 2003.  In the episode, the “American Wrecking Company” signage is very visible.  As I mentioned earlier, I could find no information regarding a business by that name ever operating in Los Angeles, so I am thinking the painted words may have been set dressing installed for the shoot that Lacy Street’s owners decided to leave intact post-filming.  Who knows, though.

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Several portions of Justin Timberlake’s 2016 “Can’t Stop the Feeling!” music video were lensed at the studio.

That same year, it served as the abandoned mental health hospital where Maura Isles (Sasha Alexander) was held prisoner in the Season 6 episode of Rizzoli & Isles titled “Hide and Seek.”

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Lacy Street Production Center is also the site of a huge shootout at the end of the Season 10 episode of NCIS: Los Angeles titled “Better Angels,” which aired in 2019.

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For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

Big THANK YOU to the Seeing Stars website for identifying this location.  Smile

Lacy Street Production Center from Stitchers (6 of 28)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Lacy Street Production Center, from the “Friends in Low Places” episode of Stitchers, is located at 2630 Lacy Street in Lincoln Heights.

7th Street/Metro Center Station from “Cruel Intentions”

7th Street-Metro Center Station from Cruel Intentions-9757

We all have those movie scenes – the ones so dramatic, so full of romance or even so disturbing (like this, for example) that, for better or worse, they remain ingrained in our memories.  Two of my favorites happen to be from the same film and, oddly, it’s a film I don’t even like – 1999’s Cruel Intentions.  The first, as mentioned in my recent post on the Fletcher-Sinclair Mansion, is the scene in which Annette Hargrove (Reese Witherspoon) implores Sebastian Valmont (Ryan Phillippe) to take himself less seriously by making adorably silly faces.  The other is the escalator scene.  Ladies, you know what I’m talking about, amirite?  For those who haven’t seen it (and if not, I urge you to check it out ASAP), here’s a rundown – after a major argument, Sebastian shows up at what is supposedly Penn Station in New York to surprise Annette.  As she heads up an escalator upon debarking her train and sees him waiting for her at the top, she says “I’m impressed,” to which he responds, “Well, I’m in love.”  Hearts of teenage girls everywhere broke wide open for Phillipe while watching the scene – mine included.  So when I recently learned via The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations that the 7th Street/Metro Center Station in downtown L.A. portrayed Penn Station in the bit, I just about fell over from excitement and immediately added the site to my To-Stalk List.  I made it out to the station a few weeks later and was thrilled to see the place looking virtually frozen in time from its onscreen stint almost twenty years ago.

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7th Street/Metro Center Station is located beneath Figueroa Tower on the corner of South Figueroa and West 7th Streets in downtown’s Financial District.

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Completed in 1988, the 24-story structure, originally known as Home Savings Tower, mixes Chateauesque and post-modern styles.

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The station’s entrance can be found at the building’s southwest corner, beneath a gorgeous mural titled “City Above.”

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Painted by Terry Schoonhoven in 1991, the imagery of the colorful piece appears to change drastically as riders journey up the escalators to the street or down to the subway.

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The depot itself, the first subway station to open in Los Angeles since the city shut down subterranean transportation in 1955, debuted in February 1991 to much fanfare.  The site’s lower level, which was behind schedule, opened two years later.

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Very little of the terminal can actually be seen in Cruel Intentions.  Thankfully, an elevator is visible behind Sebastian at one point which helped me pinpoint the exact spot where filming took place.

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In the iconic scene, Annette and Sebastian reunite on the station’s first level mezzanine, at the set of escalators that abut the elevator just past the turnstiles near the 7th & Figueroa Street entrance.  That area is pictured below.

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The escalator that Annette rides up in the segment actually moves downward in real life, so it was a bit hard to get a matching shot of her POV.  The image below is the closest I got.

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Despite the directional switch, thanks to the fact that the camera pans down in the scene, stepping onto that escalator made me feel like I was actually living out the movie.  I swear I could almost make out “Colorblind” playing in the background.

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The segment also features a blurred view of the station’s ceramic tile art installation titled The Movies: Fantasies and The Movies: Spectacles, hand-painted by Joyce Kozloff, as Annette and Sebastian inevitably kiss.  Sigh!

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Amazingly, the escalator bit wasn’t an original element of the Cruel Intentions storyline.  Per a script I found online dated February 10th, 1998 (which is about four months before filming began), the train station scene initially lacked dialogue and simply consisted of Annette disembarking from a train at Grand Central Station to find Sebastian standing in the busy concourse waiting for her.  She runs to him and they kiss.  End scene.  I would love to know what motivated the change.  Did the director take one look at 7th Street/Metro Center Station’s escalator layout and become inspired?  Being that locations typically serve as my inspiration, I’d like to think that was the case.

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Cruel Intentions is not the only production to have made use of 7th Street/Metro Center Station.  Lt. Sam Cole (Tom Sizemore) ventures out of the depot at the end of the Season 1 episode of Robbery Homicide Division titled “Hellbound Train,” which aired in 2003.

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In the 2004 thriller Collateral, Annie (Jada Pinkett Smith) and Max (Jamie Foxx) run into the station and onto a train in an attempt to escape from Vincent (Tom Cruise).

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That same year, the site appeared in two episodes of 24.  It is at 7th Street/Metro Center Station that Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) and his team set up a stakeout to catch Arthur Rabens (Salvator Xuereb) in Season 3’s “11:00 A.M. – 12: 00 P.M.” . . .

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. . . and “12:00 P.M. – 1:00 P.M.”

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The entrance to the station also appears in the Season 6 episode of 24 titled “7:00 A.M. – 8 A.M,” which aired in 2007 . . .

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. . . though interiors were shot about 15 miles away at North Hollywood Station located at 5391 Lankershim Boulevard in North Hollywood.

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Both the subway’s Figueroa and 7th Street entrance . . .

. . . as well as its other entrance at West 7th and South Flower Street make brief appearances in the 2009 family comedy Hotel for Dogs.

 

Richard Castle (Nathan Fillion) and Kate Beckett (Stana Katic) investigate the death of a subway maintenance worker at the station in the Season 3 episode of Castle titled “Murder Most Fowl,” which aired in 2010.

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The depot and its 7th & Flower entrance also pop up in Castle’s Season 7 episode titled “Kill Switch,” which aired in 2014.

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Taylor Swift dances at 7th Street/Metro Center Station (barefoot, no less!) in her 2018 music video for “Delicate,” which you can watch here.

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The station’s 7th & Flower entrance masks as the entrance to New York’s Chamber Street Station in the Season 1 episode of For the People titled “Rahowa,” which aired in March of this year.

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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: 7th Street/Metro Center Station, aka Penn Station from Cruel Intentions, can be reached from the bottom level of the Home Savings Tower, which is located at 660 South Figueroa Street in downtown Los Angeles.  The escalator that appeared in the movie is situated just beyond the turnstiles at that entrance, in front of the elevator.  Be advised, you will need to purchase a TAP card and buy a fare to access the area featured in the scene.

24

Today while driving in Pasadena, I happened to pass by one of those yellow filming signs I am so fond of seeing, and it turns out that the TV show 24 was filming at Saint Luke’s Hospital. So I immediately parked my car and ran onto the set in the hopes of seeing Keifer Sutherland or one of the show’s other stars. Unfortunately I didn’t see anyone famous, but I did get to hang out for a bit and watch some of the filming. The scene being filmed showed a large tank full of Army men pulling up to the side of the hospital and all of the army men running out of the tank.

Saint Luke’s is actually a former hospital and is not currently in use. It closed its doors in 2002 and is now used strictly as a filming location. The fireman and security guard that I hung out with on the set today gave me a lot of history of the filming at St. Luke’s. Kill Bill, In Her Shoes, Rush Hour 3, Las Vegas, and Something’s Gotta Give were all filmed at the hospital. 24 films there almost every week, as does Desperate Housewives, which used the hospital for the scenes when Mike was in a coma, when Carlos’ mom was in a coma, and when Carlos went blind. Geez, is anybody ever healthy on that show?! 🙂

The fireman on duty also told me that he also worked during the filming of Something’s Gotta Give starring Jack Nicholson, Diane Keaton, and Keanu Reeves. Apparently the movie was being filmed during the Laker playoffs and everyday at precisely 4:30pm, Jack Nicholson would leave the set to head to Staples Center to watch the game. Like clockwork, no matter what was going on or how mad the director would get, Jack was out of there at 4:30pm. LOL I guess no one comes between Jack and his Lakers.

Until next time, Happy Stalking! 🙂

Stalk It: Saint Luke’s Hospital is located at 2632 East Washington Boulevard in Pasadena. Chances are if you drive by the hospital on a weekday, you will see film crews set up there. Pasadena film crews are notoriously friendly and will most likely fill you in on what is being filmed and even let you hang out and watch. 🙂