Forty’s House from “You”

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Season 2 of You was pretty much a steady stream of stunning location after stunning location.  Anavrin grocery store . . . the party house . . . Candace Stone’s (Ambyr Childers) Victorian rental – talk about real estate envy!  One spot that eluded me for a while was the mid-century pad where Forty Quinn (James Scully) lived.  The stunning residence only showed up in one episode, “P.I. Joe,” and the view of the exterior was brief at best.  But one look at its sleek lines, wood façade, and decorative concrete screening, and I was completely taken!  I knew at first glance the residence had to be located somewhere in the Hollywood Hills.  Recalling that the Nichols Canyon neighborhood, specifically Nichols Canyon Road, boasts a plethora of handsome mid-century pads, I headed over there on Google Street View, plonked the little yellow man down at the top of the road, walked him south, and almost immediately found the right place at 3122 Nichols Canyon!  I ran out to stalk it just a few days later.

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The spectacular dwelling was designed by Edward H. Fickett, F.A.I.A. for building contractor Jack M. Weisskopf in 1959.  The architect constructed several homes for Weisskopf in the Hollywood Hills area.

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The sleek property boasts 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, 2,510 square feet, a central atrium with cement pavers dotting a pond, floor-to-ceiling sliding glass walls, a master bath with a standalone tub (my dream amenity!), a double-sided rock fireplace, a 0.19-acre lot with a large deck, a pool, a spa, a fire pit, a bonus side yard, and a carport.

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The residence has been remodeled a couple of times over the years, including in 1966 by architect Val Powelson.  The result is a mid-century home that retains a slew of original detailing, but with a thoroughly updated kitchen and baths.  You can check out some interior photos here.  The place is an architectural masterpiece  – a perfectly preserved 1950s time capsule.  I half expected to see Frank Sinatra sipping a martini by the pool in the images!

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The pad last sold in November 2018 for a whopping $3,180,000.  Per Dwell, the seller was none other than Jamie Dornan, of 50 Shades fame!  The real estate listing asserts, “Four bedrooms will accommodate all your envious friends who arrive but refuse to take the hint when it’s time for them to hit the road and leave you in peace in your amazing oasis,” which I think sums up the property perfectly!

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In “P.I. Joe,” Joe Goldberg (Penn Badgley) heads to the house in order to ask Forty to help him piece together what happened during their drug-infused evening the night before.

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The property’s actual interior also appeared in the scene . . .

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. . . as did the backyard, as you can see in the screen captures as compared to the MLS images above and below.

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Candance shows up at the house later in the episode to praise Forty on his recently-penned script.  It is at this time that she opens his eyes to the possibility that Joe is a killer.

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I would be surprised to learn that You is the only time the impressive home has appeared on the screen, but I was unable to dig up any other appearances.

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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: Forty’s house from You is located at 3122 Nichols Canyon Road in Hollywood Hills West.

Harry Bosch’s House from “Bosch”

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I contemplated chronicling the best movie and television productions I discovered in 2018 as my first post of the new year.  Had I done so (and I still might later this month), Bosch would have topped the list.  As I mentioned in my recent write-up on Demitasse café, the Grim Cheaper and I started watching the Amazon original series just a few months ago and were immediately hooked.  A police procedural with a sarcastic and fabulously deadpan leading man set in Los Angeles – what more could this crime-obsessed, L.A.-loving stalker ask for?  The locations used are seriously phenomenal, by the way – none more so than the cantilevered hilltop home of titular character Detective Hieronymus “Harry” Bosch (Titus Welliver).  The pad couldn’t be more quintessentially Los Angeles if it tried.  So I, of course, ran right out to stalk it shortly after viewing the first episode.

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Bosch is based upon a bestselling series of novels by author Michael Connelly.  I have never read any of the books, but have been able to piece together the various info written about Harry’s house in them thanks to a detailed forum on MichaelConnelly.com.  In the novels, Detective Bosch is said to live on Woodrow Wilson Drive in the Hollywood Hills, though his specific address varies from “next to” 7203 Woodrow Wilson in 2010’s The Reversal to 8620 Woodrow Wilson in 2018’s Dark Sacred Night.  Per a commenter on the forum, Connelly has apparently stated that Harry’s pad doesn’t exist in real life, but that the site where he placed it in his stories is a burnt-out foundation of a former cantilevered residence that the author stumbled upon in 1992.  Additional commenters did some massive legwork on the subject and surmised that the location of said foundation is 7207 Woodrow Wilson Drive.  And they’re right – I came across a video of Connelly showing the exact spot where he imagined the home (a still of which is pictured below) and compared it to Street View imagery of that address (again, pictured below) and, sure enough, it’s the spot!  You can check out some photographs of the foundation and the land it sits on here.

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In Blue Neon Night: Michael Connelly’s Los Angeles, a special limited edition DVD released in 2004 in which, as Amazon notes, the author “provides an insider’s tour of the places that give his stories and characters their spark and texture,” a house located at 7143 Woodrow Wilson is shown to be Harry’s and Connelly describes it as such, “Bosch’s home was fourth from the end on the right side.  His home was a wood-frame, one-bedroom cantilever, not much bigger than a Beverly Hills garage.  It hung out over the edge of the hill and was supported by three steel pylons at its mid-point.”

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When it came time to start shooting the series in November 2013, producers found an even more perfect embodiment of that Blue Neon Night description at 1870 Blue Heights Drive in Hollywood Hills West.

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Sitting high atop a hill, the architectural stunner, which was built in 1958, boasts 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1,513 square feet of living space, and a 0.26-acre lot.

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Per Zillow, it is currently worth a whopping $2,130,000.

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The striking pad first popped up in Bosch’s pilot and has gone on to appear in pretty much every episode since.  It is the rear of the residence – its cantilevered side, which stands on a cliff overlooking the Sunset Strip, Culver City and beyond – that is regularly shown on the series.

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The street side of the house, which is much less spectacular than the rear, was featured briefly in Season 4’s “Devil in the House.”

While situated on a private cul-de-sac, that side of the property can be viewed from a portion of Blue Heights Drive that is open to the public – though there is not much to see.

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Harry Bosch's House (43 of 58)

Just west of the home’s front entrance, though, in an area that is also publicly accessible, is an open expanse of land where views matching those of Harry’s pad can be gleaned.

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And let me tell you, those views are absolutely incredible!

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I mean, come on!

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Last one, I promise.

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We know – thanks to this video – that the actual interior of the Blue Heights Drive residence was utilized in Bosch’s pilot.  And I am fairly certain that a few additional early episodes were shot on location inside the home, as well (quite possibly all of Season 1).  At some point, though, a set re-creation was built on a studio soundstage that has since been used for all subsequent seasons.

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How does a cop afford such a stellar pad, you ask?  Per the storyline of both the books and the series, Paramount made a movie based upon one of Harry’s cases, for which he was paid handsomely.

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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: Harry Bosch’s house from the television series Bosch is located at 1870 Blue Heights Drive in Hollywood Hills West.  The best views of the structure can be seen from the 1600 block of Viewmont Drive and the 8800 block of Hollywood Boulevard.

Gia Scala’s Former House

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I am embarrassingly ignorant when it comes to Old Hollywood.  So much so that when a fellow stalker named Alan tipped me off to a few celebrity death sites including that of Gia Scala via a comment on my Challenge Lindsay page in early 2017, I thought he was referring to the ‘70s supermodel who was the subject of an eponymous biographical film starring Angelina Jolie.  As soon as I inputted the name into Google, I realized my mistake – he was actually alluding to a raven-haired actress best known for her role in 1961’s The Guns of Navarone.  Upon researching further, I became quite a bit transfixed by the starlet’s mysterious death, as well as the pedigreed Hollywood Hills home where it occurred.  So I added the address to my To-Stalk List and headed on out there earlier this year.

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Born Giovanna Scoglio in Liverpool, London on March 3rd, 1934, Scala migrated to Italy with her parents at three months old.  At 15, she headed to the U.S., Long Island specifically, where she lived with an aunt and attended high school.  The acting bug hit her early and upon graduation, Gia moved to New York City, began studying under Stella Adler and worked as a reservations clerk at Scandinavian Airlines to make ends meet.  She landed a studio contract in 1954, a role in All that Heaven Allows with Rock Hudson the following year, and fame came shortly thereafter.

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Sadly, her years in show business were marred by scandalous headlines and severe despondency, both largely stemming from the passing of her mother in 1958, a death which she was said to have never gotten over.  Gia attempted to jump off the Waterloo Bridge just a few months later while filming The Angry Hills in London.

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Scala found temporary happiness in 1959 when she married actor/stock broker Don Burnett.  The two settled into a picturesque 1940 Cape Cod home boasting two bedrooms, three baths, maid’s quarters, and a den at 7944 Woodrow Wilson Drive in Hollywood Hills West.

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The couple eventually separated in 1969, divorced the following year and Gia was given the residence in the settlement.  Following the dissolution of her marriage, she found herself disconsolate and the subject of tabloid fodder once again.  In May 1971, the actress was arrested for drunk driving and, during the subsequent hearing, she passed out in the courtroom.  The judge sent her to a psychiatric hospital for evaluation, which caused her to miss a different hearing for a different charge  – this one for assaulting a parking lot attendant the month prior.  Photos from that arrest are a far cry from images of the actress taken early in her career.  In July, Gia suffered injuries, including the loss of a portion of her index finger, after her car overturned on an embankment.  It took rescue workers 45 minutes to retrieve her from the wreckage.  In November, she was in court yet again for harassing her ex-husband who had since remarried.  Gia, Burnett claimed, had not only set his car on fire, but had kicked a hole in his front door.  Scala was not in a good place.

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Things came to a tragic end on April 30th, 1972.  As reported in the newspapers of the day, early that morning, Gia got into an argument with Larry Langston and three other “hippie-type” young men who were staying in her home.  The actress had apparently hired the men to do odd jobs around the property.  When Gia informed them the arrangement was no longer working out, an altercation occurred.  Langston and his friends, who claimed Gia had been drinking heavily and taking barbiturates, decided to leave.  They supposedly put her to bed at 6 a.m.  Langston then returned that evening at 8 p.m. to gather his belongings and say goodbye to Scala.  When he headed upstairs to her bedroom, he found her nude lifeless body sprawled on the bed surrounded by both liquor and prescription bottles – which all sounds rather suspicious to me.  Gia fires four men working in her home, an argument ensues and one of those men then finds her dead a short time later?  That’s a lot of red flags, especially considering some reports claim her body was bruised and her pillow stained with blood.  Coroner Thomas Noguchi (who also performed Marilyn Monroe’s autopsy) ruled the death accidental, though, caused by acute ethanol and barbiturate intoxication and advanced arteriosclerosis.  Gia’s good friend, male model William Ramage, thinks the latter explains her erratic behavior in the years leading up to her death.  As he said in a 2009 interview, “Her brain simply was not getting enough oxygen.”  It was a grim ending for someone with such potential.

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Shortly after the actress’ passing, her home was purchased by Sally Kellerman, aka Major Margaret ‘Hot Lips’ Houlihan from M*A*S*H, who proceeded to live there for the next four decades, initially with first husband, Rick Edelstein, and then with second husband, Jonathan D. Krane, and their two children, Jack and Hannah.  At some point, she also purchased the cottage next door at 7932 Woodrow Wilson.  Jack, who grew up on the premises, became convinced the two pads were haunted.  As he told People magazine in 2016, “I always asked if someone died in one of these houses, and my parents said no.  I have always felt something strange. That house is haunted, for sure.  I’ve had a few ghost stories over there.  It’s creepy.”  He didn’t elaborate on who exactly the spectral visitors were, but I wouldn’t be surprised if one was Gia Scala.

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Several years after moving in, Kellerman invited her friend Frank Gehry over for a meal.  The renowned architect took one look at the property and immediately suggested a renovation.  As Sally told the Chicago Tribune, “Frank Gehry came to dinner and he was like, ‘This is how you live, big movie star?  We can gut the upstairs, and change everything in every room, and add a three-story contemporary wing with a rooftop garden.’  So I have a combination Frank Gehry-Cape Cod house.”  (The three-story contemporary addition is pictured below.)

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Gehry completed his work on the pad in 1983.  During the renovation, he left many of the dwelling’s original, traditional elements intact, partially covering them with modern touches.  The result of his efforts is a home that looks much like Gehry’s own residence in Santa Monica.

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Sadly, Kellerman and Krane lost the property to foreclosure in 2014.  You can check out some photos of what it looked like around that time here.  It was then snatched up by flippers who gave the place yet another renovation before putting it on the market once again in 2015.  (Post-reno pics can be viewed here.)  The home, which today boasts 5 bedrooms, 6 baths, 4,412 square feet, a pool, a spa, beamed ceilings, a massive walk-in closet, gardens, and a 0.22-acre lot, was purchased later that year by One Direction’s Niall Horan for $4 million.  But its Hollywood pedigree doesn’t end there!  Per the 2015 real estate listing, at some point during his pre-acting days Harrison Ford did carpentry work on the residence.  Talk about some major Tinseltown connections!

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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 fellow stalker Alan for telling me about this location!  Smile

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Gia Scala’s former home is located at 7944 Woodrow Wilson Drive in Hollywood Hills West.

The House from Ben Affleck’s “Men’s Journal” Photo Shoot

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If I’ve said it once, I’ve said it a hundred times – I hate incorrect filming location information!  I recently encountered some erroneous reporting which led me to stalk a site that, come to find out, does not actually have any movie or television connections (at least, none that I could dig up).  Hmph!  Because the property has played host to a couple of celebrity photo shoots, though, and is an absolutely stunning example of 1960s architecture, I figured it was still worthy of a blog post.  So here goes.  Back in June, a fellow stalker named Manon emailed me a link to a house featured in an online film locations database asking me to identify it.  When I read in the description that the pad had not only appeared in the original 1960 Ocean’s 11 movie, but a James Bond flick from the same era, I just about hyperventilated.  Images of the place showing the property in all of its retro glory, with decorative wood screens, bright orange front doors and a rock-walled fireplace, only served to further my intrigue.  So I immediately set about tracking it down.

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Fortunately, finding this particular locale was a snap thanks to a street sign reading “Devlin Drive” that was visible in one of the images featured online.  I simply headed to Google Street View, inputted “Devlin Drive, Los Angeles,” and began scanning through the various houses located there.  I came across the right pad at 1344 Devlin Drive in Hollywood Hills West mere minutes later, promptly added the address to my To-Stalk List and visited it while in L.A. shortly thereafter, without doing any further research on the subject.

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It was not until I sat down to start penning this post that I discovered the home was not actually featured in Ocean’s 11 – or James Bond.

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Though the place would undeniably fit perfectly into either flick, I scanned through the original Ocean’s 11 TWICE and did not see it anywhere.

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I also scanned through every 1960s James Bond flick that did any filming in California (as it turns out there aren’t many) and did not see the house pop up at all, so I believe that information is also incorrect.

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I am still glad to have seen the striking pad in person nonetheless.  Originally built in 1960 by Bray Architects, the gorgeous mid-century-style residence boasts 2 bedrooms, 3 baths, 2,500 square feet of living space, a natural rock double fireplace, floor to ceiling glass windows, 0.37 acres of land, a terrace, and a garden.

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Some of the interior is visible through the massive front windows and I was practically drooling upon seeing it.

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The home is such a relic, I half-expected Don Draper to come waltzing into view casually sipping a martini.

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Considering its authentic retro aesthetic, I am fairly certain the pad has appeared in a production or two at some point, but, surprisingly, I could not find any cinematic ties to the place in all of my research.

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It has been the site of a few photo shoots, though.  Ben Affleck posed at the house for the cover of the December 2017 issue of Men’s Journal magazine.  The caps below come from some behind-the-scenes videos shot the day of the shoot which you can watch here and here.

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Laura Dern was also photographed there for the May 2018 issue of Rhapsody magazine.

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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 fellow stalker Manon for asking me to find this location.  Smile

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The house from Ben Affleck’s photo shoot for the December 2017 issue of Men’s Journal magazine is located at 1344 Devlin Drive in Hollywood Hills West.

“The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet” House

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My knowledge of the Golden Age of Television doesn’t extend much beyond I Love Lucy, which I watched regularly with my grandma as a child.  I am so out of the loop when it comes to entertainment of that era, in fact, that up until recently coming across a blurb in my friend E.J.’s book Hollywood Death and Scandal Sites, I did not realize that The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet was based upon the exploits of the real life Nelson family – patriarch Ozzie, his wife, Harriet, and their two sons, David and Ricky – all of whom played semi-fictionalized versions of themselves on the ABC series, which aired from 1952 through 1966.  (The show has the distinction of being the longest-running live action comedy in TV history, though It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia will tie that record when its fourteenth season finishes airing in 2019.)  Not only that, but, as I also learned from E.J.’s book, the family’s actual Hollywood Hills West home was used in establishing shots of the clan’s residence in each week’s opening credits!  I had never before heard of such a case of art imitating life via a location like that and was immediately intrigued.  So I added the dwelling to my To-Stalk List and headed on over to see it in person shortly thereafter.

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Ozzie and Harriet purchased their picturesque 1916 Cape Cod Colonial-style pad, designed by Frank T. Kegley and H. Scott Gerity, in November 1941, shortly after relocating from New Jersey to California upon landing stints on Red Skelton’s radio show The Raleigh Cigarette Program.  The couple parlayed that gig into another radio show, this one based upon their lives, titled The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, which premiered on October 8th, 1944.  While the duo played themselves on the weekly series, child actors were hired to perform as their two young sons.  It was not until the show’s fifth season in 1949 that David and Ricky began portraying themselves.  The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet proved immensely popular with radio audiences and in February 1952, a 75-minute feature based upon it titled Here Come the Nelsons was produced to serve as a sort of test pilot for a television show.  The movie was a hit and the family’s TV series began airing in October of that same year.  The rest, as they say, is history.

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In a rather unprecedented move, Ozzie and Harriet decided to utilize their own home in the opening credits of the series’ early seasons, which you can take a look at here.  Miraculously, despite the passage of more than six decades, the pad still looks very much the same today as it did when the show originally debuted.

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Sadly though, a large fence was built around the exterior of the property at some point which largely blocks it from view.

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During my research for this post, I came across quite a few media reports (including this 2007 Los Angeles Times article) stating that a replica of the exterior of the Nelsons’ home was built by ABC for the series and that no filming of the real life residence ever actually took place.  I am 99.9% certain, though, that the Hollywood Hills West house did, indeed, appear in the early seasons’ credits and that the re-creation was built at some point after the initial seasons aired and was utilized for both the various openings from the series’ later years (one of those openings is pictured below) . . .

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. . . as well as in episodes which required the outside of the family’s house to be shown, such as Season 8’s “The Nelsons Decide to Move” (pictured below).

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The interior of the Nelsons’ home on The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet was, of course, just a studio-built set, but, from everything I’ve read, it was very closely modeled after the actual inside of the Hollywood Hills West house.

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Though the television series turned the entire family into icons, the Nelsons remained living in their rather approachable digs until 1975 when Ozzie passed away.  Harriet did hold on to the property through 1981, but resided mainly at a modest weekend home in Laguna Beach the couple had owned for years.  (That pad has since been torn down, unfortunately.)

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The residence’s Tinseltown connections doesn’t end there, though.  The property also served as the home of another famous small-screen family – that of Ari Gold (Jeremy Piven) and his clan during the first few seasons of Entourage.

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The real life interior of the dwelling was also utilized on the popular HBO series.  (That interior has since been drastically remodeled, but more on that in a bit.  You can see what it looked like pre-remodel here and here.)

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Amazingly, the pad has yet another small-screen connection!  In 2013, it was put on the market (for a cool $3,295,000) and the listing agent was none other than The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills’ Mauricio Umansky.  The property, which boasts 5 bedrooms (all of them en-suite), 6 baths, 5,283 square feet of living space, a 0.49-acre lot, a pool complete with a pool house, a 3-car garage, a whopping 3 fireplaces, a media room, a chef’s kitchen, and a master suite with his and her walk-in closets, was purchased by a development company that same year for $3,025,000.  The group completely renovated the place with interior designer Kishani Perera (you can see photos of what it looks like currently here and here) and sold it in October 2014 for $5,250,000 to Law & Order: SVU’s Christopher Meloni.  He still owns it today.  Talk about a house with a Hollywood pedigree!

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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 Nelson family home (both in real life and from The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet) is located at 1822 Camino Palmero Street in Hollywood Hills West.