Evergreen Memorial Park & Crematory

A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (2 of 48)

A couple of months ago, while doing research on locations for my Haunted Hollywood postings, I came across some online images of Evergreen Memorial Park & Crematory in Boyle Heights and practically started drooling over the place’s fabulously haunting chapel.  Then when I learned that the cemetery had been featured in the 1980 horror classic A Nightmare on Elm Street, I decided that I just had to stalk it and dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out there.

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Evergreen Memorial Park was originally established on August 23rd, 1877.  It was Los Angeles’ first private cemetery and is one of the oldest surviving and largest graveyards in the city.  During its early years, the property was a beautiful site and boasted meandering pathways, sprawling lawns and over 2,000 trees, with varieties including palm, wisteria, willow, and pine.

A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (4 of 48)

A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (29 of 48)

The 67-acre cemetery is home to over 300,000 departed souls, many of whom figured prominently in the City of Angels’ founding.  Just a few of the notables buried at Evergreen include oil baron Charles Canfield, Ralphs founder George Ralph, Our Gang’s Matthew Beard, Church of Christ founder Charles Price Jones, former slave-turned-entrepreneur Bridget “Biddy” Mason, Robinsons-May department store founder Joe Winchester Robinson, the Penguin’s Jesse Belvin (who co-wrote the song “Earth Angel”), the Coasters’ Bobby Nunn, and Isaac Lankershim and his son-in-law, Isaac Newton Van Nuys, who together founded both the cities of Van Nuys and North Hollywood.  The gravesite of Susanna Lankershim, Isaac’s wife, is pictured below.

A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (16 of 48)

A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (17 of 48)

Evergreen Memorial Park is also notable for never having banned African Americans from being buried there.

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A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (32 of 48)

As you can see below, the site is, unfortunately, in a rather sad state today, marred by acres of dead grass;

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churned-up dirt;

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and toppled headstones.  According to this website, several grave markers have even gone missing over the years.

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The place does boast some pretty nice views of downtown Los Angeles, though.

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A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (8 of 48)

And the Gothic-style chapel, which was originally constructed by architects Declez and Gilbert in 1882, is still eerily enchanting.

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A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (24 of 48)

Especially with those vines creeping up the side of the entrance.

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A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (27 of 48)

Evergreen Memorial Park & Crematory has been used in several productions over the years, but its most notable appearance was in A Nightmare on Elm Street, in which it was the funeral site for Rod Lane (Jsu Garcia).

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Rod’s gravesite in the movie was situated in Section I of Evergreen, behind the real life graves of Louise Minier and Belle Kuster.

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A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (48 of 48)

In the 1985 drama Mask, Evergreen was both where Red (Harry Carey Jr.) was buried (with his motorcycle!) . . .

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. . . and where Roy L. ‘Rocky’ Dennis (Eric Stoltz) was laid to rest.

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In the Season 4 episode of Criminal Minds titled “Brothers in Arms,” Evergreen was where Officer Mark Cunningham (Shane Conrad) was buried.

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Some websites have claimed that Evergreen Memorial Park was where Hector Lopez (Wilfredo Hernandez) lived in the 1986 flick 8 Million Ways to Die, but I believe that to be incorrect.  Not much of the cemetery is shown in the flick, but what is shown does not resemble Evergreen.

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According to IMDB, Evergreen appeared in the Season 2 episode of Criminal Minds titled “Sex, Birth, Death,” but I scanned through the episode and did not see the cemetery pop up anywhere.  IMDB also states that the graveyard was featured in the Season 3 episode of Baretta titled “The Ninja,” 1983’s Mausoleum, 1992’s Samurai Vampire Bikes from Hell (and yes, that is a real movie!), and 1993’s Blood In, Blood Out, but I was unfortunately not able to find copies of those productions with which to verify that.

A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (9 of 48)

A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (28 of 48)

For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter and InstagramAnd you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (13 of 48)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Evergreen Memorial Park & Crematory is located at 204 North Evergreen Avenue in Boyle Heights.  The gravesite that was used in A Nightmare on Elm Street can be found in Section I behind the real life graves of Louise Minier and Belle Kuster, and is denoted with an orange X in the aerial view below.

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Scully’s Bar from “Parks and Recreation”

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (24 of 28)

I thought I would take a break today from Behind the Candelabra/Liberace locations to blog about a spot that I spent what seems like forever trying to track down – Clancy’s Crab Broiler in Glendale, the Irish-style bar that has appeared a couple of times on fave show Parks and Recreation.  I can’t actually take credit this particular find, though.  After several months of unsuccessfully cyberstalking pretty much every Irish pub from Pasadena to Santa Monica trying to identify the site, I finally managed to locate a P&R crew member a couple of weeks ago who told me where filming had taken place.  I could not believe that the bar wound up to be in Glendale – right in my own former backyard – and dragged the Grim Cheaper over there for lunch while in L.A. two weekends ago.

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Clancy’s Crab Broiler was originally founded almost four full decades ago by Jack Williams and his son, Jeff.  While growing up in the San Fernando Valley, Jeff had helped his father out in the small Tujunga–area fast food eatery that he had owned since the early 1950s.  It was not until 1972, though, upon graduating from the University of Southern California with a degree in business, that Jeff decided to pursue a career in the restaurant world.  Jack’s partner had just gone bankrupt and Jack subsequently took over full ownership of the eatery.  Jeff stepped in to help his father out once again and wound up flourishing.  It was not long before he had his eye on a storefront on Brand Boulevard that he thought would be the perfect location for a seafood place.  Clancy’s opened its doors shortly thereafter in 1975 and at the time could seat 72 patrons and served mainly fish and chips.

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (28 of 28)

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (7 of 28)

After a fire damaged the original Clancy’s in 1983, Jeff and Jack moved the establishment a couple of blocks west to a larger site on Central Avenue, where it still stands to this day.  The new location, which is run by a staff of 85 (!), seats 300 people, feature two full bars, a billiards area, and a banquet room!  The restaurant is actually made up of two parts – the large bar area which is named the Blue Whale Bar . . .

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Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (17 of 28)

. . . and the large sawdust-on-the-floor dining room.

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Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (23 of 28)

Today, Jeff, who was named Restaurateur of the Year by the California Restaurant Writers Association in 1999, and Jack own five area restaurants, including The Black Cow Café on Honolulu Avenue in Montrose, which was featured in fave movie The Wedding Singer.

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Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (20 of 28)

The GC and I grabbed lunch in the Blue Whale Bar and I have to say that it was phenomenal!  While I opted for the restaurant’s Cobb Salad, which was fabulous, I think I actually chose poorly, because the GC ordered a bowl of Clancy’s famous Boston Clam Chowder and I can honestly say it was one of the best things I have ever tasted in my life!

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Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (16 of 28)

Clancy’s Crab Broiler has popped up twice on Parks and Recreation.  It first appeared in the Season 1 episode titled “The Banquet” as the supposed Pawnee, Indiana-area Scully’s Bar where Tom Haverford (Aziz Ansari) and Mark Brendanawicz (Paul Schneider) went to “hit on chicks.”

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It was then featured in the Season 3 episode titled “Ron & Tammy: Part Two” as O’Shay’s, where Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler) and Ben Wyatt (Adam Scott) threw a pizza party for local Pawnee policemen.  Both the interior . . .

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. . . and the exterior of Clancy’s were used in that episode.

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During lunch, our super-nice server filled us in on some of the other productions that have been lensed on the premises, including 2003’s American Wedding, in which Clancy’s stood in for the supposed Grand Rapids, Michigan-area pub where Jim Levenstein (Jason Biggs), Kevin Myers (Thomas Ian Nicholas), Steve Stifler (Seann William Scott), and Paul Finch (Eddie Kaye Thomas) regularly hung out.

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On an American Wedding side-note – fellow stalker Mikey, from the Mike the Fanboy website, was an extra in the flick!  That’s him below.  Smile

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Clancy’s was where Michael Scott (Steve Carell) took Holly Flax (Amy Ryan) for lunch in the Season 5 episode of The Office titled “Business Ethics” in 2008.

In 2009, the site popped up in the Season 2 episode of Denise Richards: It’s Complicated titled “Funbags or Die”, in the scene in which Denise’s father, Irv Richards, shot a commercial for Clancy’s, one of his favorite restaurants.

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Clancy’s was where Elizabeth Halsey (Cameron Diaz) posed as a journalist to meet with a standardized test worker named Carl Halabi (Thomas Lennon) in the 2011 comedy Bad Teacher.

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In the Season 8 episode of Criminal Minds titled “Nanny Dearest”, which aired in 2013, Clancy’s masqueraded as the Seattle seafood restaurant (complete with rain!) where Tara Rios (Yara Martinez) worked.

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In the Season 2 episode of Secrets and Lies titled “The Racket,” which aired in 2016, Danny Voss (Kenny Johnson) attempts to kidnap Melanie Warner (AnnaLynne McCord) from outside of Clancy’s.

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.

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (25 of 28)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Clancy’s Crab Broiler, aka Scully’s Bar from Parks and Recreation, is located at 219 Central Avenue in Glendale.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here.