Homer’s House from “The Day of the Locust”

Homer's House from Day of the Locust (4 of 4)

Today’s locale is an oldie but goodie.  Way back in October 2010, while in Eagle Rock stalking with Mike, from MovieShotsLA, we passed by a residence at 4911 College View Avenue and Mike informed me that it was featured in The Day of the Locust.  At the time I had never heard of the 1975 surrealistic thriller, which was based upon the 1939 Nathanael West book of the same name.  I snapped a few photos regardless, but somehow the pad went straight to the back of my mind pretty much as soon as I got the images uploaded to my computer.  It wasn’t until organizing my location spreadsheet a few months ago that I was reminded of it.  Figuring the home would make for a good Haunted Hollywood post, I finally sat down to watch the movie.  Though the name sounds straight out of a horror film, as it turns out it is neither horror nor slasher – nor are there any locusts to be found!  The Day of the Locust is instead about several show business hopefuls in 1930s-era Hollywood.  Because it is easily one of the oddest, most disturbing flicks I have ever seen, I decided it was still fitting for an October posting.

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In a 1975 review, Roger Ebert explains The Day of the Locust’s odd titling as such, “The locusts are the little people, faceless and sad, who accumulate on the benches of Los Angeles, waiting for a bus that will never come.  They’re surrounded by the artificial glitter of Hollywood, which provides dreams that certainly are happier and sometimes seem more real than the America of the 1930s.  But one day, the dreams will end and the locusts will swarm and the whole fragile society will come crashing down.”  Said “crashing down” occurs in an almost zombie-ish scene at the end of the film in which a bloody riot breaks out in front of Grauman’s Chinese Theatre during a big Hollywood premiere.  Living amongst the locusts in the film are three archetypal Tinseltown characters – talented aspiring art director Tod Hackett (William Atherton), opportunistic blonde starlet Faye Greener (Karen Black  – who, in real life, became something of a horror movie queen later in her career), and wealthy, lonely, older recluse Homer Simpson (Donald Sutherland) who gets taken advantage of by her.  It is the latter’s house that Mike took me to stalk that warm October day nine years ago.  (And yep, you read that right – Sutherland appeared as a live-action big-screen “Homer Simpson” twelve years before the infamous animated patriarch made his television debut and quickly became a household name.)

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Homer's House from Day of the Locust (2 of 2)

Miraculously, the 1928 pad looks very much as it did onscreen when The Day of the Locust premiered over four decades ago – though there have been a few alterations.

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Homer's House from Day of the Locust (1 of 1)

Most notably, the front door is in a different spot.  Odd, I know!  But in the movie, the home’s main entrance was situated at the southern end of the front porch, facing West Fair Park Avenue which runs perpendicular to College View Ave.

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Homer's House from Day of the Locust (1 of 2)

Though it is hard to see in my photos due to a hedge standing in the way, when I stalked the house the front door was situated in the middle of the porch, facing College View Avenue, as the below Google Street View image from May 2009 shows.

In an incredible twist, since my 2010 visit the front door has been relocated again!  (In all my years of stalking, this is the first time I’ve come across a house with a front door that has been moved twice!)   Per current Google Street View imagery, the door is now situated in the same spot it was during the filming of The Day of the Locust, as you can see in the extreme side view of the property below.

In place of the former front entrance is now a paned window.

The detached garage which once stood at the rear of the property and which was intact when I stalked the place has also since been torn down.  In its place is what is referred to in the building permits I dug up as a 528-square foot “recreation room” with a 2-car garage below it.  Apparently, in 2012 plans were submitted to the city to subdivide the 0.44-acre plot of land the residence stands on in order to build a secondary home on the northern parcel, but they look to have been denied.  I am guessing the “recreation room” was constructed as an alternative.

Per aerial views, the pad also has some sort of guest house/second garage located in the backyard and I am fairly certain that the measurement information supplied by Zillow includes that of the main property as well as the guest cottage and the “recreation room” being that the home itself appears far too small to comprise the reported 6 bedrooms, 5 baths and 3,022 square feet.

Homer's House from Day of the Locust (3 of 4)

I am fairly certain that the residence’s actual backyard was featured in The Day of the Locust . . .

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. . . as was its original garage.

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The interior of Homer’s house, though, was, I believe, just a set.  While the camera angles certainly made it look as if the actual inside of 4911 College View was utilized, because so many scenes took place there, it seems a lot more feasible that a set was constructed on a soundstage for the production.

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Said set was seriously (and appropriately) eerie – and reminds me quite a bit of the Canfield-Moreno Estate in Silver Lake – another great Haunted Hollywood locale that I blogged about in 2012.

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Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for showing me this location!  Smile

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Homer’s house from The Day of the Locust is located at 4911 College View Avenue in Eagle Rock.

The Wedding Singer Bakery

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A few weeks ago, fellow stalker Owen asked for my help in locating the bakery featured in one of his all time favorite movies, the 1998 comedy The Wedding Singer.  Owen had actually contacted one of the movie’s crew members who happened to remember that the bakery where filming took place was located somewhere in Montrose, a small town in the San Gabriel Valley where quite a few scenes from The Wedding Singer were filmed.  Because Owen does not live in the area, he sent me out on a mission to stalk all of the bakeries located in the tiny town in the hopes that I would eventually find the right one.   So, early one morning last week, I dragged my parents out to Montrose to hopefully stalk the Wedding Singer  bakery.

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And, sure enough, it was the very first bakery we walked into!!  Ironically, I had ALREADY STALKED this location just last month while visiting some sites from the Will Ferrell comedy Old School.  It turns out that the exterior of the Wedding Singer bakery was also used as the restaurant in Old School  where Luke Wilson and his “brothers” have a meeting about saving their fraternity!  I didn’t immediately recognize the place from my previous stalking trip because, due to the fact that only the exterior of the bakery was featured in Old School,  I never ventured inside.  But while walking by last week, I peeked in the window and immediately recognized the pink sign pictured above which reads “This is the same ol place”.  That sign was featured pretty prominently in the Wedding Singer  bakery scene, so as soon as I saw it I knew I had found the right spot.  It was at that point that I pretty much started screaming “This is it!  This is it!  This is it!” to my parents right there on the street out in front of the shop!   While I had figured that the bakery featured in the movie would still be around, never in a million years did I think it would still look EXACTLY the same today as it did when the Wedding Singer  was filmed over a decade ago!  YAY! 

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Montrose Home Bakery and Sandwich Shoppe actually pops up during my very favorite part of The Wedding Singer – at the beginning of the Drew Barrymore/Adam Sandler falling in love montage set to the Hall & Oates song “You Make My Dreams Come True”.  🙂  In the scene, Drew Barrymore and friends are first seen looking at wedding cakes in the bakery’s glass display counter.  You can even see the bakery’s striped awning behind actor Allen Covert in the above screen capture.

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Drew and friends then proceed to feed each other wedding cake in the scene.  Although the bakery is only featured for a few brief moments, thanks to the awesome ’80s song playing in the background, it’s quite a memorable little part of the movie. 

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While stalking the bakery, I happened to start up a conversation with the owner who really could NOT have been nicer to us!  He answered a whole bunch of my silly questions and told me to take all the pictures I wanted.  It turns out that the Montrose Home Bakery and Sandwich Shoppe has been used for quite a bit of filming over the years.  Besides The Wedding Singer and Old School, the shop was also featured in several episodes of the now-defunct television series Dirty Sexy Money.  There is even a photograph of the owner and Donald Sutherland taken during the filming posted in the shop’s front window.  Apparently, he used to have a picture of himself with Drew Barrymore in that same window, but it is now stored at his home.  He told me that if he posted all of his celebrity photographs from all of the filming that has taken place at his little shop, his entire front window would be covered up!  LOL LOL LOL LOVE IT!  

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Montrose Home Bakery and Sandwich Shoppe is a super cute little place and I HIGHLY recommend stalking it.  The shop smelled absolutely delicious inside, but, unfortunately, because I am diabetic, I wasn’t able to sample any of the sweets.  🙁  I am seriously thinking about having them make the cupcakes for my wedding, though.  How fitting would it be to get my wedding cupcakes from the Wedding Singer  bakery????  😉

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

Stalk It: The Wedding Singer  Bakery, aka Montrose Home Bakery and Sandwich Shoppe, is located at 2325 1/2 Honolulu Avenue in Montrose.  The shop houses both a bakery and a restaurant, and, from what I’ve heard, the restaurant serves up a GREAT breakfast.