Krotona Apartments

Krotona Apartments True Romance (23 of 30)

I have always maintained that I am an equal opportunity stalker.  It is not just filming locations that enthrall me, but pop culture landmarks, historical sites, and architectural curiosities.  In fact, the curiouser the better.  So when I came across a grouping of grandiose Moorish-style structures dotted throughout a small section of the Hollywood Hills while searching for the Swingers party house, my interest was immediately piqued.  I headed over to Google and soon discovered that the properties were initially constructed as part of the Krotona Colony, a compound built in the early 1900s by the Theosophical Society religious sect.  At the center of the sprawling onetime commune is the former Krotona Inn, a massive complex that originally served as the group’s national headquarters, but today is a bohemian apartment complex.  It should come as no surprise that to the top of my To-Stalk List the site, now known as Krotona Apartments, went.

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The rambling Krotona Colony was the brainchild of Theosophical Society follower Albert Powell Warrington who desired to build a U.S. headquarters for the India-based group.  He won approval for the project from the organization’s then leader, Annie Besant, and in 1912 purchased ten acres of land in the Hollywood Hills.  Of the bucolic locale, he told Besant, “The trolley comes within one long block of our site . . .  one can be in the business center of the city in 30 minutes.  On the other hand, twenty minutes walk up the canyon will put one entirely outside all building improvements, and tucked in between charmingly wild canyons, one is as if in the wildest and most far-off mountain retreat.  I have never known such an extraordinary combination of favorable conditions . . . We can make the spot a veritable Garden of Eden.”  He derived the name of his oasis from Crotone, the Italian city where mathematician Pythagoras lived and studied.

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Krotona Apartments True Romance (9 of 30)

Several Victorian-style buildings were already standing on the land at the time that Warrington purchased it and the Theosophical Society members set up shop in them before eventually adding more structures, all with Moorish influences.

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Krotona Apartments True Romance (13 of 30)

The “heart of the commune,” as described by Curbed Los Angeles, was the Krotona Inn, an idyllic stucco complex designed by the Mead and Requa architecture firm in 1912 that boasted a central courtyard with a lotus pond, meandering pathways, a communal dining room, a kitchen, a cafeteria that served solely vegetarian dishes (natch), offices, lecture spaces, dormitories, a rooftop terrace, patios, and a large domed meditation venue known as the Esoteric Room.  Two years after the property’s completion, architects Arthur and Alfred Heineman were commissioned to build a 350-seat auditorium directly next door that became known as the Grand Temple of the Rosy Cross.  You can see what the two structures looked like in their early days here.

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Krotona Apartments True Romance (27 of 30)

Many of the Theosophical Society’s wealthier members erected private Moorish-themed residences for themselves on the streets surrounding the Colony, ultimately creating a fantastical conglomerate of mystical architecture.  The vast majority of the properties, amazingly, still stand.

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Despite Krotona Colony’s idealized nature, the Theosophical Society did not remain there for long.  In 1924, the group left Los Angeles behind and migrated to Ojai.  Following their departure, the Krotona Inn was sold to actor/writer Rupert Julian and his wife, Elsie, who made it their primary residence.  You can see some photographs from their time on the premises here.  When Rupert passed away in 1943, Elsie moved to a smaller house nearby, at which point her former estate was converted to apartments.

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Krotona Apartments True Romance (19 of 30)

Today, the complex, which was purchased by real estate investor Mayer Moizel in the 1990s, boasts 17 units, a pool, a large parking lot, several courtyards, and an on-site laundry facility.  The former Esoteric Room meditation space now serves as a one-room studio apartment, which you can see photos of here.

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While we were stalking Krotona Apartments, the friend of a resident happened to stroll outside to smoke a cigarette, struck up a conversation with us, and ultimately invited us into the courtyard for a closer look!

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Krotona Apartments True Romance (18 of 30)

The property could not be more picturesque, with canopied trees, colorful plants, flowering blooms, and sparkling fountains dotting every square inch.

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Krotona Apartments True Romance (14 of 30)

Not surprisingly, celebrities have long been attracted to the place.  Per a 2011 Los Angeles Times article, both Jimi Hendrix Experience bassist Noel Redding and Evil Dead II screenwriter Scott Spiegel lived there at different points in time.  Quentin Tarantino has even called the place home, crashing on Spiegel’s couch for nine months before selling his first script.

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Krotona Apartments True Romance (15 of 30)

That first script just happened to be for True Romance, which, according to the same Los Angeles Times article, did some filming at Krotona.  Supposedly, one of the building’s second-floor units portrayed Dick Ritchie (Michael Rapaport) and Floyd’s (Brad Pitt) apartment in the 1993 dramaBecause only a small portion of the space can be seen in the flick and there is a lack of interior photos of the complex available online, I cannot say with any certainty whether or not that information is correct, though.

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

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Krotona Apartments, aka the former Krotona Inn, is located at 2130 Vista Del Mar Avenue in the Hollywood HillsThe party house from Swingers can be found right around the corner at 6161 Temple Hill Drive.

Catherine Willows’ House from “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation”

The Cox House from The O.C. (18 of 18)

I’ll never forget the first time I saw CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.  It was back in 2003 and my parents had come home from a random stop at the video store (remember those?) with a DVD of the series’ inaugural season in hand.  I had not heard of the show at the time and decided to give the pilot a watch with them.  I was immediately transfixed, as were my parents.  We proceeded to binge all 23 episodes (the old-fashioned way!) in pretty much one sitting and then ran right back out to the video store to grab Season 2.  I continued to be an avid viewer of the procedural (as well as the spin-offs CSI: Miami and CSI: NY) for years.  Then somehow it fell off my radar.  Nonetheless, I was thrilled to receive an email this past August from a fellow stalker named Sacha who wanted to know if I had any intel on the house belonging to Catherine Willows (Marg Helgenberger) in the series’ twelfth season.  I headed over to Hulu to take a look at the residence Sacha was searching for and recognized it immediately.  It’s a place I’ve not only stalked, but blogged about before!  As it turns out, Catherine’s pad is none other than South Pasadena’s Cox House, which portrayed Oliver Trask’s (Taylor Handley) Palm Springs dwelling on The O.C.  Because the property has since gone on to appear in an episode of Ray Donovan, I figured it was due for another write-up.

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The Cox House, named for original owner Paul Cox, was designed by local Pasadena architect John Galbraith in 1959.

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The Cox House from The O.C. (10 of 18)

The Mid-Century Modern masterpiece is also known as the “Tree House” thanks to the large conifer that grows right through the roof of its entryway.

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The Cox House from The O.C. (15 of 18)

The one-story pad, which boasts Miesian Modernist and Southern California Regional Modernist elements, features 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, 3,032 square feet of living space, glass and stone walls, a massive tile fireplace, hardwood flooring, a 0.46-acre lot, multiple patios, a pool, and a hot tub.

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The Cox House from The O.C. (5 of 18)

The property last sold in December 2000 for $641,000.

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The Cox House from The O.C. (16 of 18)

You can check out some interior photos of it here.

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The Cox House from The O.C. (6 of 18)

While undeniably striking and cinematic, I am surprised the place wound up on CSI, which is set in Las Vegas, being that it doesn’t really have a Sin City vibe.  A different home was actually utilized as Catherine’s in Season 5’s “Weeping Willows” (it’s at 17145 Nanette Street in Granada Hills) and it, too, had a decidedly Mid-Century Modern-style, though, so what do I know?

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The Cox House from The O.C. (14 of 18)

The Cox House first popped up on CSI in Season 12’s “Zippered,” which aired in 2011.  Only the interior of the residence was shown in the episode, in the scene in which Catherine meets up with her old friend Laura Gabriel (Annabeth Gish).

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The pad was subsequently featured in the next episode of CSI titled “Ms. Willows Regrets.”  In the episode, Catherine returns home from visiting a crime scene and winds up ambushed herself.  Both the exterior . . .

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. . . and interior of the property were featured prominently in the episode.

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The Cox House appeared again in the following episode of CSI titled “Willows in the Wind,” in which the team investigates Catherine’s attack.

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As I mentioned earlier, the home was also featured on The O.C.  In Season 1’s “The Links,” which aired in 2004, Oliver invites Marissa Cooper (Mischa Barton), Ryan Atwood (Ben McKenzie), Seth Cohen (Adam Brody), and the rest of the Harbor School gang for a weekend visit to his parents’ Palm Springs pad, said to be located “right on PGA West.”  Now the Cox House portraying a Palm Springs property I can certainly buy.  The residence definitely bears that desert look.

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While the home’s actual interior appeared in the episode (as well as some of the actual furniture) . . .

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. . . the two bedrooms shown were just sets built at Raleigh Manhattan Beach Studios (now MBS Media Campus), where the series was lensed.

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Not surprisingly, the Cox House also popped up as a Palm Springs residence on Ray Donovan.  In Season 1’s “Black Cadillac,” which aired in 2013, Mickey Donovan (Jon Voight), Bunchy Donovan (Dash Mihok), and Daryll (Pooch Hall) visit Daryll’s mother, Claudette (Sheryl Lee Ralph), at her supposed desert home.  Upon arriving, Mickey proclaims, “What the f*ck kinda architecture is this?”  It’s called Mid-Century Modern, Mickey!  Mid-Century Modern at its finest!

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The interior of the residence also appeared in the episode.

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That built-in firewood holder is the stuff of dreams!

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The Cox House’s backyard was featured in “Black Cadillac,” as well.

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

The Cox House from The O.C. (7 of 18)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Catherine Willows’ house from CSI: Crime Scene Investigation is located at 534 Arroyo Drive in South Pasadena.

The Benjamin N. Duke House from “The First Wives Club”

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They say revenge is a dish best served cold.  Well, I think revenge movies are a dish best served with a side of comedy.  The Other Woman9 to 5The StingThe First Wives Club?  All perfection!  The latter is one of my ultimate favorites, so when I saw the address of the spectacular Upper East Side townhouse where wealthy socialite Gunilla Garson Goldberg (Maggie Smith) lived in the 1996 flick listed in the book Manhattan on Film, I promptly added it to my To-Stalk List for my April 2016 trip to the Big Apple.  The Beaux Arts-style structure, known as the Benjamin N. Duke House in real life, turned out to be even more stunning in person than it appeared onscreen.  It is easily one of the prettiest pads I have ever laid eyes upon!

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The Benjamin N. Duke House, also known as the Duke Semans Mansion, was originally constructed as part of a spec development of four adjacent Fifth Avenue estates.  Brothers William W. and Thomas M. Hall commissioned the Welch, Smith & Provot architecture firm to design the elaborate dwellings.  Sadly, the Duke house is the only one that remains standing today.

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Completed in 1901, the 8-story property boasts a stately limestone and brick edifice, a French Renaissance interior, hand-carved wood paneling, trompe l’oeil accents, plaster friezes, a 5-story staircase, hardwood flooring, 12 bedrooms, 14 bathrooms, 2 rooftop patios, 11 wood-burning fireplaces, 3 elevators, a whopping 20,000 square feet of living space, and views of Central Park and The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

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The pad even has a separate penthouse level complete with a private entrance and staircase.

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Though the townhouse fronts Fifth Avenue . . .

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. . . it is its 82nd Street side that is most impressive.  The building reminds me quite a bit of the Cravens Estate in Pasadena, but on a much grander scale.

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Shortly after its completion, the 100×27-foot property was purchased by American Tobacco Company founder Benjamin N. Duke.

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The manse continued to be owned by members of the Duke family for more than one hundred years.  It was not until 2006 that Benjamin’s granddaughter Mary Duke Biddle Trent Semans (hence the name Duke Semans Mansion) sold the townhouse to real estate mogul Tamir Sapir.  The purchase price?  A cool $40 million!

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Sapir subsequently sold the pad in 2010 to the richest man in the world at the time, Mexican business tycoon Carlos Slim, for $44 million.  Five years later, Slim put the residence on the market with an asking price of $80 million (!!!), but it does not appear that there were any takers.

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The Benjamin N. Duke House is not only listed on the National Register of Historic Places, but is also a New York City Landmark.

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Sadly, there are not many photographs of the mansion’s interior floating around online, but you can catch a glimpse of a few here, as well as watch some videos that show portions of the inside of the structure here and here.

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In The First Wives Club, Shelly Stewart (Sarah Jessica Parker) heads to the Benjamin N. Duke House for a “super social luncheon” with Gunilla.

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I am unsure if the actual interior of the mansion was utilized in the scene, but I do not believe so.  None of the photographs of the inside of the townhouse that I have come across match what was shown onscreen, so I am guessing that interiors were filmed at another Manhattan estate or on a studio-built set.

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The First Wives Club is not the only production to feature the Benjamin N. Duke House.

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In The French Connection, the property portrays an apartment building where actor Dom Ameche and a criminal named Weinstock (Harold Gray) are both said to reside.

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The mansion looked quite a bit different when the Best Picture-winning thriller was shot in 1971 than it does today, as you can see below.

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The townhouse also portrayed the home of Henry Turner (Harrison Ford) and his family in the 1991 drama Regarding Henry.

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Scenes taking place inside the Turner residence were shot elsewhere, though, on what I believe was a studio-built set.

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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: The Benjamin N. Duke House, aka Gunilla’s mansion from The First Wives Club, is located at 1009 Fifth Avenue on New York’s Upper East Side.

The New York Yacht Club from “Hannah and Her Sisters”

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While filming locations are, of course, my first love, I am all about discovering unique, off-the-beaten-path, non-Hollywood-related landmarks and hidden gems, as well (as evidenced here, here and here).  So my interest was immediately piqued when, shortly before my 2016 trip to the Big Apple, my friend/fellow stalker Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, informed me of a building known as the New York Yacht Club that boasts highly unusual ship-like windows.  Photos of the structure I found online only served to further my intrigue and I promptly added the site to my stalking itinerary.  In person, it did not disappoint.  I was completely taken with the whimsical property and snapped numerous photographs of it, never imagining it was a filming locale.  So imagine my excitement when I spotted it pop up in Hannah and Her Sisters while scanning through the 1986 dramedy in preparation for my recent post on Bemelmans Bar.  Though its appearance in the flick is extremely brief, I figured the building was still most-definitely deserving of a write-up.

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The New York Yacht Club was originally established in 1844 by 9 sailing enthusiasts.  Though initially headquartered in Hoboken, New Jersey, the group moved to its current home, a Beaux Arts-style stunner located at 37 West 44th Street in Midtown, in 1901.  Designed by the Warren and Wetmore architecture firm, who also gave us Grand Central Terminal, the stunning structure, which cost $350,000 to complete, features an elaborate maritime-inspired limestone façade with a grand main entrance, fourth floor rooftop terrace, and massive wooden pergola.

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The building’s pièce de résistance, though, is a set of 3 towering bay windows that were built to resemble the sterns of 16th Century Dutch ships.  The mammoth oriels, situated on the club’s second floor, are held up by carved cascading waves that appear seconds from spilling onto the pavement below.

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The galleon-style windows are fanciful, cartoonish, and striking all at the same time and very reminiscent, to me at least, of those located at the rear of Captain Hook’s pirate ship.

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Of the Yacht Club’s eccentric design, The New York Times stated in a 1906 article, “Except for the absence of motion, one might fancy oneself at sea.”

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Though the NYYC’s exterior is exquisite, its interior is even more impressive, with a Grill Room modeled after the hull of a wooden ship, a sprawling library that houses more than 13,000 books, and an extravagant 100-foot long Model Room that is capped by a giant Tiffany-designed stained glass ceiling.  Sadly, only members and invited guests are allowed past the front door to see the spectacle.  The rest of us have to make due with admiring the stunning interior from afar via the various photos and videos that can be found online.

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In addition to its architecture, the private, invitation-only club is famous for its extensive roster of prominent past and current members which include John Jacob Astor, William F. Buckley Jr., Ted Kennedy, Michael Bloomberg, Cornelius Vanderbilt III, Walter Cronkite, Ted Turner, J.P. Morgan, and Franklin D. Roosevelt.  The NYYC is also known for having not only won the America’s Cup in 1851, but managing to hang on to the coveted trophy until 1983, when it was lost to the Australia-based Royal Perth Yacht Club.

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And the club can add “filming location” to its already-impressive bio.  In Hannah and Her Sisters, David (Sam Waterston) takes April (Carrie Fisher) and Holly (Dianne Wiest) on a tour of some of his favorite architectural landmarks, which includes a brief drive-by of the New York Yacht Club.

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The club is also visible in the background of the scene in which “Wall Street King” Eli Colton (Tate Donovan) and his drug dealer Harry Ingram (Will Brill) discuss a payoff in the Season 18 episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit titled “Net Worth,” which aired in 2017.

Though some online sources have claimed that the Yale Club scene from the 2000 drama American Psycho was lensed at the NYYC, that is not, in fact, correct.  The segment was actually shot at the Consort Bar at The Omni King Edward Hotel in Toronto, Canada.

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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 my friend Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, for telling me about and taking me to this location!  Smile

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The New York Yacht Club, from Hannah and Her Sisters, is located at 37 West 44th Street in Midtown Manhattan.

Jesse and Becky’s Honeymoon Send-Off Location from “Full House”

Jesse and Becky Wedding Send-Off Location from Full House-8346

I have grown used to productions playing fast and loose with location continuity, but was still flummoxed when I came across a thread back in January 2016 on a now defunct website in which a commenter asked if anyone knew which residence was used as the Tanner family home in the Season 4 episode of Full House titled “The Wedding: Part 2.”  At the time, I was completely unaware that a pad other than the one at 1709 Broderick Street in San Francisco (which I blogged about here and here) had ever been utilized as the Tanners’ on the series.  I immediately emailed my friend/guest poster extraordinaire/resident Full House expert Michael (you can read his many IAMNOTSTALKER articles here) to see if he had any intel on the locale and was not at all surprised when he wrote back telling me that he did.  As he informed me, in “The Wedding: Part 2,” Jesse Katsopolis (John Stamos) and his new wife, Becky (Lori Loughlin), are sent off on their honeymoon from outside of 1320 Carroll Avenue in Echo Park.

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For those who don’t remember the circumstances of “The Wedding: Part 2,” all 8 seasons of Full House are currently available for streaming on Hulu.  I’ll also provide a little refresher here, though.  Thanks to a series of hapless events, Jesse winds up arrested and jailed in “Tomato Country” on his wedding day and has to be bailed out by his bride-to-be moments before the ceremony.  The nuptials finally go off without any additional hitches and by the end of the episode, the couple are sharing their first dance (to “Jailhouse Rock,” no less) in the Tanner family living room.  (And wow, can I just say that is quite the headdress on Becky!)

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Not that D.J.’s (Candace Cameron Bure) is much better.  But I digress.

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After Becky and Jesse cut the cake and toss the requisite bouquet and garter, the scene cuts to a night shot on what is supposedly the Tanners’ San Francisco street, where Danny (Bob Saget), Stephanie (Jodie Sweetin), D.J., and the rest of the clan wave good-bye to the departing newlyweds as they venture off via motorcycle on their honeymoon.  The residence barely visible in the background of the scene is known as the Heim House in real life.  Other than a similar style of architecture, it does not bear much resemblance to 1709 Broderick – though, truth be told, it is never really specified that the pad is supposed to be the Tanners’ in the episode.  In all fairness, maybe producers intended it to be a neighboring property or perhaps one across the street.  Regardless, being that Full House was lensed in Los Angeles, it makes sense that cast and crew did not travel all the way to San Francisco to shoot the brief honeymoon send-off segment and instead found a suitable replacement location closer to home.

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What perplexed both Michael and me is why the production did not make use of the Midwest Residential Street homes on the Warner Bros. Studio backlot where we both thought the show had been lensed.  As Michael emailed me, “The scene is so quick and dark that the WB houses could have been used to similar effect.”  As he came to find out, though, Full House was not shot at Warner Bros. during its entire eight-year run.  Stage 28 at Sony Pictures Studio in Culver City was actually home to the series for its first 6 seasons.  (To confuse matters further, Sony was known as Lorimar-Telepictures when Full House initially began shooting in 1987.  The Sony changeover took place in 1989.)  It was not until the start of Season 7 in 1993 that the production was moved to the WB in Burbank.  Because Sony does not have a backlot to speak of, producers had to head to a real street to shoot “The Wedding: Part 2” in 1991 – and what better place to go to than the 1300 block of Carroll Avenue, which is comprised of the largest concentration of Victorian-style homes in Los Angeles.

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The Heim House, originally built in 1887, boasts one of the block’s prettiest façades with a wraparound porch, carved wooden detailing, two towers, and zigzag trim.

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The Queen Anne-style pad is Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #77.

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The picturesque property also briefly appeared in the Season 3 episode of Charmed titled “Primrose Empath” as one of the houses from which Prue (Shannen Doherty) could hear the voices and feel the pain of its inhabitants.

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The two dwellings located east of the Heim House, 1300 Carroll Avenue, which is known as the Phillips House in real life, and 1316 Carroll Avenue, aka the Russell House, are also visible in “The Wedding: Part 2,” though as you can see below, the former is now obscured by foliage and can no longer be seen from the angle from which the episode was shot.

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On a Tanner house side-note – when I went to input a map link for 1709 Broderick Street in the opening paragraph of this post, I noticed that a large group of fellow stalkers can be seen posing for photos in front of the Tanner home in the most recent Google Street View imagery of it from June 2017, which absolutely cracked me up.

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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 my friend Michael for finding this location!  Smile  You can check out his many IAMNOTASTALKER guest posts here.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: In “The Wedding: Part 2” episode of Full House, Jesse and Becky are sent off on their honeymoon from outside of 1320 Carroll Avenue in Echo Park.

Pasadena Elks Lodge from “Veep”

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Anyone who has visited Pasadena has likely taken note of the sprawling pillared building situated on the southeast corner of Colorado and Orange Grove Boulevards.  As the many signs adorning the structure indicate, it serves as Elks Lodge #672.  I passed the site regularly during the 15+ years I called Crown City home and knew of its frequent use as both a filming location and production basecamp (Star Waggons are ubiquitous in the massive parking lot out front), but because the lodge is private and only accessible to members, I never set foot on the premises.  When I learned, thanks to this Instagram photo posted by Veep executive producer David Mandel, that the property had been featured extensively in the popular HBO series’ Season 6 episode “Georgia,” though, I became a wee bit obsessed with changing that.  So, while in L.A. a couple of weeks ago, I decided to stop by to see if I could possibly be given a tour.  Thankfully, the member who answered my knock could not have been nicer and immediately invited me in to see all the areas that appeared on Veep and to regale me with a brief history of the lodge and the Elks organization itself.

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The Benevolent and Protective Order of the Elks of the United States of America (B.P.O.E.) was initially founded in 1867 by singer Charles Algernon Sidney Vivian as a drinking club for Manhattan performers, of all things.  Originally dubbed the “Jolly Corks,” per the Elks official website the main function of the organization was “to circumvent a New York law that closed saloons on Sundays.”  The group’s focus eventually became far more altruistic and service-oriented, leading to its name change.  According to the website, the order chose their eponym based upon a “number of attributes that are deemed typical of those to be cultivated by members of the fraternity.  The Elk is distinctively an American animal.  It habitually lives in herds.  The Elk is the largest of our native quadrupeds, it is yet fleet of foot and graceful in movement.  It is quick and keen of perception; and while it is usually gentle and even timorous, it is strong and valiant in defense of its own.”

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Today, the Elks organization boasts a million members with 2,000 lodges dotted across the U.S.

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Lodge #672 was erected in 1911.  Designed in the Colonial Revival style by architect Myron Hunt (who also gave us Thornton Gardens, Occidental College, Wattles Mansion, the Langham Huntington Hotel, and the Huntington Library, Art Collection, and Botanical Gardens), the 31,000-square-foot structure has served as the Pasadena headquarters of the B.P.O.E. ever since.

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Pasadena Elks Lodge from Veep-1200074

Though a Bennett-and-Haskell-designed annex was added to the property in 1928 and a restoration took place in 2010, little of the lodge has changed over the course of its 107-year history.

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You can check out some early photos of it here.

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Pasadena Elks Lodge from Veep-1200069

Though Lodge #672 appears quite large from the street, I was shocked at the sheer size of the place upon entering.  The structure is huge with myriad meeting places, event venues and ballrooms, each of them prettier than the next.

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The Main Ballroom, pictured above and below, was being dressed for an event while we were there.

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Our tour guide informed us that the Veep production team altered the Main Ballroom’s bar for the “Georgia” shoot . . .

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. . . adding in the mirrors and shelving you see below for a scene that ultimately wound up on the cutting room floor.

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A few faux maroon pillars, like the one pictured below, were also installed for the filming of the deleted scene . . .

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. . . and the walls surrounding the bar were painted with the faces of Old Hollywood stars.  While the Elks chose to leave the paintings intact, I was not able to view them, unfortunately, due to the fact that they were temporarily covered over with the faux stone walls you see below by yet another production that filmed on the premises just prior to us stalking the place.

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The room below, which I believe is named the Fireside Room, is situated off the lodge’s main entrance.

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The formal space boasts a fireplace . . .

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. . . and a perimeter of decorative columns.

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It is the Lodge Room, though, that is the most impressive.

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The venue, which is situated on the second floor and boasts plush seating along the two side walls, serves as the Elks’ meeting room.

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Calling it grand would be an understatement.

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Though the room is original to the property, the stage was added in 1945 and a remodel took place in 2000.

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You can check out some more images of the lodge’s interior here.

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The Pasadena Elks Lodge portrays two different locations in “Georgia.”  The Lodge Room masks as Georgia’s Election Monitoring Headquarters where Selina Meyer (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) flip-flops on which candidate she is backing (based upon which of them happens to be offering to donate the most money to her presidential library at the time) in the county’s first free and democratic election.

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The lodge’s Fireside Room portrays the lobby of the Tbilisi Grand Hotel, where Selina and her team stay while in town.

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A prop elevator was set up in the corner of the room for the shoot, as you can see in the background of the images below.

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In reality, that area serves as a doorway to Lodge #672’s front office.

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The image below is the only view we get of the Main Ballroom in the episode.  It appears in a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it moment as the Tbilisi Grand’s restaurant in the scene in which Jonah Ryan (Timothy Simons) discovers that his fellow congressmen are dining without him.

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Only the interior of the Pasadena Elks Lodge is featured in “Georgia.”

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For exterior shots of the Tbilisi Grand, producers used a mash-up of locations both near and far.  The establishing shot of the hotel is of an actual Georgian lodging – the Ambassadori Tbilisi Hotel and Casino located at 17 loane Shavteli Street.  You can check out some images of it here.

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All on location exterior filming took place much closer to home at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel located at 506 South Grand Avenue in downtown Los Angeles.

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The hotel was significantly roughed up for the shoot, with graffiti added to the walls and strewn furniture discarded on the sidewalk out front.

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The Pasadena Elks Lodge has been host to many filmings over the years.

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In the 1992 comedy The Distinguished Gentleman, the EPA oversight hearing of the Committee on Power and Industry takes place in the Lodge Room.

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Senator Bob Rumson (Richard Dreyfuss) campaigns in the Lodge Room in the 1995 comedy The American President.

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Though no part of Lodge #672 can actually be seen, per the book Twilight: Director’s Notebook, Bella’s (Kristin Stewart) bedroom set was rebuilt on the premises for a reshoot of the scene in which she and Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson) kiss for the first time in 2008’s Twilight.

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Ron Donald (Ken Marino) caters his own reunion at the Pasadena Elks Lodge in the Season 1 episode of Party Down titled “James Rolf High School Twentieth Reunion.”

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As you can see, when the episode was shot in 2009, the Main Ballroom’s bar was in its original state and looked much different than it does now after the alterations made by the Veep crew.

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In the 2010 comedy The Back-up Plan, Nana (Linda Lavin) marries Arthur (Tom Bosley) in the lodge’s Fireside Room.

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Thanks to my buddy Mikey, from the Mike the Fanboy website, I learned that the lodge masked as Elder & Massey Auction House, where Doug Wilson (Kevin Nealon) attended a NASA inventory liquidation auction and almost won a flight-worn suit of Captain Jim Wetherbee, in the Season 8 episode of Weeds titled “Unfreeze,” which aired in 2012.  Mikey was actually on set the day filming took place and got to meet and take a photo with Kevin.  You can read about his experience here.

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

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Pasadena Elks Lodge, from the “Georgia” episode of Veep, is located at 400 West Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena.  You can visit the lodge’s official website here.  Please keep in mind that the club is private and not accessible to the public.

30th Street Station from “Trading Places”

30th Street Station from Trading Places-1170926

If you’re a filming location buff, you really shouldn’t travel to Philadelphia without first seeing Trading Places, the 1983 Dan Aykroyd/Eddie Murphy comedy set in the City of Brotherly Love.  And filming location buff or not, you really shouldn’t leave Philly without a visit to 30th Street Station, the city’s main railroad depot which had a brief, but memorable role in the flick.  I had never actually watched the movie until just prior to our trip back east in September 2016, but it has always been one of the Grim Cheaper’s favorites, so I knew I had to give it a go.  And even though he is not at all into locations, I made sure to add a few of its sites to our stalking itinerary.  30th Street Station was at the top of that list thanks to some photos I had seen of its grandly dramatic interior online.  In person, it did not disappoint.

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30th Street Station was originally built by the Pennsylvania Railroad between 1929 and 1934.

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Designed by Graham, Anderson, Probst & White, the imposing structure was erected out of steel, limestone, granite, and sandstone.

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Technologically advanced for its time with a pneumatic tube system, a reinforced roof that allowed for small aircraft landings, and a progressive intercom schematic, the site became the headquarters of the Pennsylvania Railroad shortly after opening.

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To say that 30th Street Station is grand would be a vast understatement.  From the towering front portico . . .

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. . . to the striking main concourse – the depot makes quite an impression.

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Though the exterior of the building is Classical in style, the 562,000-square-foot interior is all Art Deco – and it is stunning.

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The colossal 290-foot by 135-foot concourse features travertine walls, marble columns, 5-story windows, and gilded detailing.

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It is the coffered ceiling, which soars 97 feet above the floor, though, that had me gaping.

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Walking into the space, one can’t help but simply marvel.

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Situated adjacent to the concourse is the North Waiting Room, another gleaming chamber of travertine and marble.

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The room is best known for the massive bas-relief that sits on its rear wall.

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   Named “Spirit of Transportation,” the 1895 piece was sculpted by Karl Bitter and details evolving modes of transit.  Originally displayed at the now defunct Broad Street Station formerly located just a few miles away, the installation was moved to its current home in January 1933.

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  From 1988 to 1991, 30th Street Station, which according to The Architects Newspaper accommodates 11 million commuters each year, underwent a $100-million revitalization.  The area surrounding it is currently set to undergo a massive renovation of its own.

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In order to expand the city’s commercial district, 30-million square feet of new space consisting of office and apartment buildings, hotels, parks, shops, and restaurants will be constructed around the depot along the banks of the Schuylkill River.  Considering the views are already pretty stellar, I can only imagine how beautiful it is going to be.

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30th Street Station pops up at the end of Trading Places in the scene in which Louis Winthorpe III (Dan Aykroyd) and Billy Ray Valentine (Eddie Murphy) catch a train to New York.

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It is there, in the main concourse, that Coleman (Denholm Elliott) and Ophelia (Jamie Lee Curtis) hand over their life savings in order to help Louis and Billy Ray get revenge on scheming brothers Randolph and Mortimer Duke (Ralph Bellamy and Don Ameche, respectively).  On a Trading Places side-note – while researching for this post, I came across a fabulous oral history of the movie.  Those interested can check it out here.

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Considering its dramatic architecture, it should come as no surprise that the station has been featured in a plethora of productions over the years.

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In Alfred Hitchcock’s 1964 thriller Marnie, Marnie Edgar (Tippi Hedren) arrives in Philadelphia via 30th Street Station.  I am fairly certain that no actual filming took place on the premises, though, and that the depot was solely utilized in an establishing shot.

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The station that Marnie is shown exiting from in the movie looks to be nothing more than a studio-built set.

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In the 1981 thriller Blow Out, Burke (John Lithgow) stalks a prostitute in 30th Street Station’s North Waiting Room and then kills her in one of the depot’s bathrooms before heading to the concourse to meet up with Sally (Nancy Allen).

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Samuel (Lukas Haas) witnesses a murder at 30th Street Station in the 1985 drama Witness.

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Elliot Moore (Mark Wahlberg), Alma Moore (Zooey Deschanel) and Julian (John Leguizamo) flee Philadelphia via a train at 30th Street Station in the 2008 thriller The Happening.

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 At the beginning of 2015’s The Visit, Mom (Kathryn Hahn) drops off her kids, Becca (Olivia DeJonge) and Tyler (Ed Oxenbould), at 30th Street Station.

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In the 2017 thriller Split, Kevin Wendall Crumb (James McAvoy) buys flowers at 30th Street Station, though not much of the site can be seen in the scene.

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The site also pops up each week in the opening credits of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, which started airing in 2005.

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

30th Street Station from Trading Places-1170923

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: 30th Street Station, from Trading Places, is located at 2955 Market Street in Philadelphia.

Emerson College Los Angeles from “Scandal”

Emerson College from Scandal-1200939

Despite the fact that I live in Palm Springs, I tend to think of myself as having my finger on the pulse of L.A.  But when penning A Film Lover’s Guide to Tomorrow’s Movie Location Stars for Los Angeles magazine in 2015, I overlooked two key spots, which I hope speaks more to the vast landscape of the city than it does to my lack of awareness.  Though I noted Wilshire Grand Center, Hollenbeck Community Police Station, 8500, Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust, and the revamped Grand Central Air Terminal as the then newly-constructed sites I thought location managers would soon be flocking to, I somehow failed to include The Broad, a contemporary art museum in DTLA with a highly unusual perforated exterior, and Emerson College Los Angeles, an arts and communication school in Hollywood with a campus the Times deemed “a futuristic complex of aluminum and glass.”  I actually did not become aware of the latter until watching the Season 5 episode of Scandal titled “Pencils Down” in March 2016, a full two years after its completion.

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In “Pencils Down,” Olivia Pope (Kerry Washington) clandestinely meets up with Alex Vargas (Danny Pino) outside of the supposed Washington, D.C.-area venue where Mellie Grant (Bellamy Young) and Susan Ross (Artemis Pebdani) are participating in their first presidential debate.  One look at the staggering wall of geometric panels pictured in the background of the scene and the dramatic vistas shown in wide shots and I was transfixed.  I promptly paused my DVR and began trying to figure out where filming had taken place.  Because Scandal shoots in L.A., I knew the locale had to be somewhere within the thirty-mile-zone, though I was certain I had never come across it in any of my stalking travels.  So I did a Google search for “new modern building” and “Los Angeles” and pored through the countless images that were kicked back until finally landing upon one of Emerson College that matched what I had seen onscreen.  Pulling up additional photos of the campus only served to make me more obsessed with the place.  Though I immediately added the school to my To-Stalk list, it was not until this past December that I finally made it out there.  Thankfully, Emerson, or ELA as it is also called, was worth the wait.

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Construction on the 107,000-square-foot, 10-story, $110-million structure began in 2012 and grew out of a need for a more permanent place for the Boston-based Emerson to house and teach students in its semester-abroad program – abroad in this case being Hollywood.

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The program, originally established in the 1980s, allows for participants to not only spend a semester studying in the show business capital of the world, but to also participate in invaluable internships at places like MTV, Comedy Central, and E! Entertainment.  With no West Coast home base to call its own, students were originally taught in leased space in Universal City and put up in furnished units at the Oakwood  at Toluca Hills by Avalon complex in Burbank.  That all changed when Emerson’s Hollywood campus was completed in early 2014.

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The striking complex, situated on the site of a former Sunset Boulevard parking lot measuring a scant 0.80 acres, essentially consists of one large box-shaped building with an open center.  Two residential towers housing 217 dorm rooms, as well as a few faculty apartments, make up the framework of the structure.

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Common areas, which include classrooms, editing labs, two black box theatres, a screening room, a conference room, rehearsal space, and lecture halls, are situated in between the two towers.

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To say the site, which is the brainchild of Pritzker Prize-winning architect Thom Mayne of the Morphosis architecture firm, is dramatic would be an understatement.

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As ELA’s founding director (and the executive producer of Friends!) Kevin Bright said of the structure, “I don’t care whether you walk around it or drive by it or you see it from a distance; the thing about this building is it demands your attention.”

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I’ve honestly never seen anything quite like it.

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Considering the building’s completely unique and dramatic aesthetic, it is no surprise that location scouts came a-calling pretty much immediately.

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Emerson College from Scandal-1200945

As this ArchDaily article puts it, “Looking to the local context, the center finds a provocative precedent in the interiority of Hollywood film studios, where outwardly regular facades house flexible, fantastical spaces within.  With rigging for screens, media connections, sound, and lighting incorporated into the framework, the upper platform serves as a flexible armature for outdoor performances, transforming the undulating scrim into a dynamic visual backdrop. The entire building becomes a stage set for student films, screenings, and industry events, with the Hollywood sign, the city of Los Angeles, and the Pacific Ocean in the distance providing added scenery.”  The place truly is a location manager’s dream.

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Besides appearing in the scene in which Olivia and Alex exchange damaging information on rival presidential candidates in “Pencils Down” . . .

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. . . one of Emerson’s residential hallways served as the spot where Susan breaks up with her cheating boyfriend David Rosen (Joshua Malina).

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At the beginning of the Season 1 episode of Extant titled “More in Heaven and Earth,” which aired in 2014, ELA portrays the upscale The Villas condominium building where Molly Woods (Halle Berry) attempts to question Derek Pearce (Rocco Vienhage) about the Aruna mission.

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Molly returns to The Villas in a later scene only to discover that Derek has died, the victim of an apparent suicide.

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Julie Gelineau (Grace Gummer) and Odim James (Charlie Bewley) also dine on the premises in “More in Heaven and Earth.”  In the episode, the two share a meal at Emerson Kitchen, a restaurant that was formerly located on the college’s ground floor.  Today that space houses Homeward Ground.

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On The Catch, a now defunct series that aired on ABC from 2016 to 2017, ELA appeared regularly as the exterior of the Anderson/Vaughan Investigations office.

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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: Emerson College Los Angeles, from the “Pencils Down” episode of Scandal, is located at 5960 Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood.  You can visit the school’s official website here.

Ambassador College from “That Thing You Do!”

Ambassador College from That Thing You Do-5076

All historic structures in the Los Angeles area with the word “ambassador” in their name seem to be doomed.  The famed Ambassador Hotel, which once stood at 3400 Wilshire Boulevard in Koreatown, was razed in 2005.  And the former Ambassador College, at 131 South St. John Avenue in Pasadena, was largely demolished beginning in 2013.  Coincidentally, both sites were featured in the 1996 film That Thing You Do!  I never got to see the Ambassador Hotel in person while it was still intact, sadly, but I did visit Ambassador College on many occasions during the time I lived in Pasadena.  Though a frequent filming locale, for whatever reason, I never blogged about the place.  Until now, that is.

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Ambassador College was originally established by radio evangelist/Worldwide Church of God founder Herbert Armstrong in 1947.  Upon moving his church’s headquarters to Pasadena, Armstrong decided to create a four-year university on the premises that would teach the religious institution’s ideals.  He purchased several neighboring homes and mansions on Orange Grove Boulevard and began transforming them into a school.

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Ambassador College from That Thing You Do-5051

Over the years, Armstrong acquired more nearby residences and plots of land, and his school, which he dubbed Ambassador College, eventually encompassed a large 4-block, 48-acre area consisting of outcroppings of mansions, gardens, and buildings.

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In 1963, he employed the Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall (DMJM) architecture firm to devise a cohesive design for the haphazard site.

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The group’s creation was a mid-century modern masterpiece.

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DMJM hired architect Peter J. Holdstock to design many new campus buildings, including three that became a focal point – the Ambassador Auditorium;

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the Hall of Administration;

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and the Student Center;

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all of which surround a reflecting pool and fountain . . .

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. . . that is capped off by a towering sculpture of egrets taking flight designed by David Wynne.

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Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall also bought in landscape architect Garrett Eckbo to overhaul the campus’ sprawling grounds.

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The result was a dazzling array of colorful gardens, picturesque vistas, and sparkling fountains.  You can see some fabulous photos of the school shortly after the redesign project was completed here.

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Sadly, virtually none of it remains.  Armstrong passed away in 1986 and Ambassador College faltered in his absence.  The school, a four-year, liberal arts institution, was not without its fair share of controversy, which didn’t help matters.  I won’t get into the details, but tales from disgruntled alumni can be found all over the internet, most describing the Worldwide Church of God as a cult.  The campus was shuttered in 1990 and students and teaching staff were transferred to a sister facility in Texas.  The Pasadena site remained vacant for almost a decade before being put up for sale in 1999.  The property was finally sold off in 2004 to three different entities – Harvest Rock Church, Maranatha High School, and the Sares-Regis Group.  The latter made plans to turn their 11-acre portion of the campus into a mixed-use development.

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As part of the project, Sares-Regis tore down many of the school’s historic structures.  Today, Ambassador College is a shell of its former self.

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My most recent visit to the school took place last month and I was shocked to see that the campus was virtually unrecognizable.  Thankfully, the Ambassador Auditorium still stands.

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The fabulously honeycombed Hall of Administration is long gone, though.

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Fortunately, I managed to snap a photo of its interior during a previous visit in August 2015.

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Ambassador College was featured at the end of That Thing You Do!, in exterior shots of the supposed Santa Monica City of Broadcasting, where The Wonders filmed their The Hollywood Television Showcase segment.

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The Ambassador Auditorium’s dressing room . . .

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. . . and a campus bathroom were also utilized in The Hollywood Television Showcase scene.

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That Thing You Do! is hardly the only production to have been lensed at Ambassador College, which should come as no surprise.  The school’s clean lines and striking architecture transfer beautifully to both the big and small screen.

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The campus has been such a hotbed of filming activity over the years, in fact, that it would be impossible for me to chronicle its entire resume here.  But a list of some of the highlights can be found below.

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In the Season 1 episode of The Incredible Hulk titled “Life and Death,” which aired in 1978, Ambassador College masked as the hospital where Dr. Stan Rhodes (Andrew Robinson) worked, though not much of it was shown.

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The school popped up once again on The Incredible Hulk later that same year, this time as a psychiatric institute at the University of Hawaii in Season 2’s “Married.”

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The campus’ Hulett C. Merritt mansion is where Dr. David Banner (Bill Bixby) married Dr. Carolyn Fields (Mariette Hartley) in the episode.

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James ‘Thunder’ Early (Eddie Murphy) drops his pants during a live televised performance being shot in the Ambassador Auditorium in 2006’s Dreamgirls.

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George (Colin Firth) taught at Ambassador College in the 2009 drama A Single Man.  Of shooting at the school, an Interiors article states, “The filmmakers searched for a lecture hall that fit the time period; while most colleges had updated their lecture halls and buildings, this college in particular had been left untouched, for the most part.  There was some modification and adjustments done in the interior spaces, such as painting and the removal of modern accoutrements, such as replacing whiteboards with blackboards, as a way of making the space more appropriate for the period.”  Sadly, the Fine Arts Building, where filming took place, was one of the buildings lost to development, demolished in 2013.

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2009 was busy for Ambassador College.  That year, the interior of the Hall of Administration portrayed an immigration office in the Season 1 episode of Lie to Me titled “Depraved Heart.”

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That same year, Nathan Ford (Timothy Hutton) attended a gala at the Ambassador Auditorium in the Season 1 episode of Leverage titled “The First David Job.”

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The Hall of Administration popped up – as a museum – in the Leverage episode that followed, as well, titled “The Second David Job.”

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The Hulett C. Merritt mansion also served as temporary safe house for Nathan and his team in the episode.  Both the exterior . . .

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. . . and interior of the property were utilized in the shoot.

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The Hall of Administration portrayed the FBI office where Brian O’Conner (Paul Walker) worked in Fast & Furious, also in 2009.

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President Fitzgerald Grant (Tony Goldwyn) was shot outside of the Ambassador Auditorium in the Season 2 episode of Scandal titled “Happy Birthday, Mr. President,” which aired in 2012.

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That same year, the school appeared in one of my favorite commercials of all time, the Microsoft Surface “Movement” ad directed by Jon Chu.  You can watch it here.

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The campus was featured extensively in the first season of the reality competition series King of the Nerds, which aired in 2013.

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In 2014, Jennifer Jareau (A.J. Cook) was kidnapped from outside of the Ambassador Auditorium at the end of the Season 9 episode of Criminal Minds titled “The Road Home.”

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That same year, the interior of the Hall of Administration masked as the interior of Golden Fang Enterprises, Inc. Corporate Headquarters in Inherent Vice.

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Melinda May (Ming-Na Wen) fights Andrew Garner (Blair Underwood) in the Hall of Administration’s lobby in the Season 3 episode of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. titled “Chaos Theory,” which aired in 2015.

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And in 2016, Ambassador College masked as the Japanese National Archives in Tokyo in the Season 3 episode of The Last Ship titled “Legacy.”

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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: The former Ambassador College site, from That Thing You Do!, is located at 131 South St. John Avenue in Pasadena.

The Francis F. Palmer House from “Gossip Girl”

The Francis F. Palmer House from Gossip Girl-1140663

A Gossip Girl tour of New York wouldn’t be complete without a visit to Constance Billard School for Girls/St. Jude’s School for Boys, the elite preparatory academy attended by Serena van der Woodsen (Blake Lively), Blair Waldorf (Leighton Meester), Chuck Bass (Ed Westwick), and the rest of “Manhattan’s elite” teenage set on the CW series.  The only problem is that four different locations (yes, four!) actually portrayed the learning institution.  I visited (and blogged about) the most recognizable of the bunch, the Museum of the City of New York, while in NYC back in 2009.  And while I desperately wanted to stalk the second-most recognizable spot, the Francis F. Palmer House, aka the Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (try saying that one five times fast!), I wasn’t able to get around to it on that trip.  So there was no way I was missing it during my latest Big Apple vacation last April.

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The Francis F. Palmer House was originally constructed from 1916 to 1918 on a corner plot of land located at East 93rd Street and Park Avenue that was once the site of an 1847 residence built by Winfield Scott, a war hero who served as Commanding General of the United States Army from 1841 to 1861.

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Commissioned by wealthy banker Francis Palmer, the Georgian Federal-style estate was designed by the Delano & Aldrich architecture firm, who employed brick and Tuscan marble in the construction.  At the time of its inception, the five-story pad boasted a Mansard roof, a Juliet balcony, a library, a myriad of fireplaces, and a large formal garden courtyard situated on its west side.

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When Palmer passed away in 1926, his widow sold the residence to George F. Baker, Jr., the son of a well-to-do banker.  Baker snatched up three surrounding properties, as well, razed them and hired Delano & Aldrich to build a garage with servants’ quarters and a large secondary wing complete with a ballroom in their place.  The new structures were all situated around the garden courtyard, making it the focal point of the dwelling.

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In 1959, Baker’s widow sold the sprawling mansion to the Synod of Bishops (aka the administration of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia), who transformed it into their headquarters.  While the property underwent a few modifications to make it functional as a workplace, not much was altered, thankfully, and the changes that were made honored the original design.  As part of the transformation, the Synod opened up the large brick wall surrounding the central courtyard (allowing it to be visible from the street) and added a gorgeous wrought iron gate.  A towering Imperial staircase was also installed at the rear of the courtyard in order to grant easier access to the second floor.  Today, the site is comprised of an administration building and two churches, the Cathedral of the Icon of Our Lady of the Sign and St. Sergius Church.

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The Francis F. Palmer House was only utilized as Constance Billard School for Girls/St. Jude’s School for Boys during a portion of Gossip Girl’s inaugural season, first appearing in the episode titled “Poison Ivy.”

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The site’s 93rd Street exterior . . .

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. . . as well as its courtyard and stairwell made numerous appearances during Season 1 and should be immediately recognizable to GG fans.

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Eagle-eyed viewers undoubtedly know that a second school courtyard was also featured during Season 1 and throughout the end of Season 2.  That spot cannot be found at the Francis F. Palmer House, though.  It was actually just a set built on a soundstage at Silvercup Studios in Queens where the series was lensed.

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Most interior school scenes were also shot on a studio-built set at Silvercup.

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The inside of the Palmer House did pop up a few times as the interior of Constance Billard/St. Jude’s during Season 1, though, including in the episodes “Poison Ivy” and “A Thin Line Between Chuck and Nate.”

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“A Thin Line Between Chuck and Nate” was actually the last time the Palmer House made an appearance on Gossip Girl.  For whatever reason, beginning with the episode that followed, titled “The Blair Bitch Project,” the Museum of the City of New York started standing in for the gang’s school and the Palmer House was never to be seen again.

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Then, inexplicably, at the beginning of Season 2, locales shifted once again – this time to The Packer Collegiate Institute in Brooklyn, though establishing shots of the Museum of the City of New York were still often utilized.

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Despite the Palmer House’s rather brief stint on Gossip Girl, it is still, in my opinion, one of the most recognizable locations from the show, not to mention a gorgeous example of New York’s early 20th Century architecture.  I highly recommend a visit if you are in the area.

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The Palmer House also stands in for The Briarton School, where Jamie Burns (Matt Bomer) teaches, on the third season of The Sinner.

And it popped up as the home of Nicholas Endicott (Dermot Mulroney) in the Season 1 episode of Prodigal Son titled “Like Father . . . “

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!

Stalk It: The Francis F. Palmer House, aka the Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, aka Constance Billard School for Girls/St. Jude’s School for Boys on Gossip Girl, is located at 75 East 93rd Street on New York’s Upper East Side.  The other locations utilized as the gang’s academy on the series are the Museum of the City of New York at 1220 Fifth Avenue, also on the Upper East Side, The Packer Collegiate Institute at 170 Joralemon Street in Brooklyn, and Silvercup Studios at 42-22 22nd Avenue in Long Island City.