The Old Man’s House from “Night of the Demons”

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Ah, how I love creepy old houses.  Horror flicks?  Not so much.  Which is strange, I know, being that I am such a fan of Halloween, all things scary, and movies in general.  I do absolutely love horror films that are done well, though (hello, Scream!), but find that the vast majority are pretty pointless (Phantasm, anyone?).  That being said, I will never stop stalking locations from them.  A couple of months ago, I came across this screen capture of a fabulously spooky old house from the 1988 slasher flick Night of the Demons on The Location Scout website and practically started drooling.  Though the capture was slightly blurry due to movement in the scene, the view of the home showed that it was nothing short of tall, dark, and looming.  I knew I had to see it in person and jotted down the address immediately.  I finally got out to stalk it a couple of weeks back while I was visiting L.A. and, though it has recently been fixed up and is no longer as spectacularly creepy as it appeared onscreen, the place did not disappoint.

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Originally built in 1898 as a single-family home, the 5-bedroom, 2-bath, 2,706-square-foot property was transformed into a duplex in 1942.

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As you can see below, the pad boasts two address numbers – 2833 and 2833 ½.

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The residence is located in the Menlo Avenue – West Twenty-ninth Street Historic District, an area of University Park that is comprised of a wide selection of architecturally significant homes that date back to the late 1800s.  The neighborhood, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, is comprised of more than fifty Victorian, Classic Revival, and Craftsman-style dwellings, each of them boasting unique detailing.  The Night of the Demons house was built in the Dutch Colonial Revival-style and features a pedimented front porch with columns and an elaborate tympanum (yeah, I had to look that one up, too), a gambrel roof, a Palladian window, and carved diamond insets.

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According to the neighborhood’s National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form from 1987, the home was built for Jennie V. Mitchell, one of the only African American women to own property in Los Angeles at the time.  Jennie, who never lived in the residence, is featured in the book The Negro Trail Blazers of California.  From 1902 to 1904, the pad was occupied by Bernard Potter, a lawyer who wrote 1950’s Los Angeles Yesterday and Today.

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In 2014, the property was sold, underwent a renovation, and today serves as student housing for the University of Southern California.  You can check out some interior photos of what it looked at the time it was on the market here and some images of what it currently looks like here.

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The residence appears twice in Night of the Demons.  It first pops up in the movie’s opening scene in which some teenagers harass the Old Man (Harold Ayer) – and I’m not being disrespectful here, the character’s name is actually listed as “Old Man” – while he is standing in front of his house on Halloween night.  The Old Man then proceeds to harass Judy (Cathy Podewell), a teen girl who happens by, before promising his revenge on all “damn rotten kids” while menacingly holding up razor blades and apples.

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The dwelling then pops up again in the movie’s closing scene, in which the Old Man walks outside to retrieve his newspaper the following morning.

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After grabbing the paper, the Old Man heads back inside, whereupon his wife serves him an apple pie she baked that morning using all of the leftover Halloween apples.  You can imagine what happens next.  Spoiler alert – it ain’t pretty!

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I was floored to discover that the actual interior of the residence was used in the filming of that scene.  As you can see below, the stairwell visible in the segment is a direct match to the staircase pictured in an MLS photograph of the home from 2014.

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Though the MLS photos did not feature a full image of the dining room area, the walls were visible in one of the pictures and, amazingly, they look to have been the same color pink in 2014 that they were when Night of the Demons was filmed in 1988!  As you can see in current images of the home, though, the walls have since been painted taupe, so that is no longer the case.

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

A big THANK YOU to The Location Scout for finding this location!  Smile

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Old Man’s house from Night of the Demons is located at 2833 Menlo Avenue in University Park.

New “L.A.” Mag Post and BIG NEWS!

Phantasm Hanging Tree (3 of 10)

Don’t forget to read my latest Los Angeles magazine article!  It’s my first Haunted Hollywood post of the season, about the Hanging Tree from Phantasm – one of the prettiest locations I have ever stalked!

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And BIG NEWS that I have been waiting to share.  I recently taped a segment about Beverly Hills, 90210 filming locations for HLN.  It is going to be airing tomorrow, Friday, October 2nd, between 10 and 10:30 a.m. on The Daily Share.  Be sure to tune in!  For those who don’t get HLN, the segment will also be available to watch online.  I’ll post a link to it as soon as it is published.  🙂

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Fosselman’s Ice Cream from “Phantasm”

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When I was a little girl, my grandma would regularly take me out for an afterschool treat at our local ice cream parlor.  I cherished those trips, and now the memories of them, and was absolutely devastated when the parlor closed down about 15 years ago only to be replaced by a gift store.  So when I came across this Freddy in Space posting about an old time ice cream shop still in operation – one that is a filming location, no less – I just had to stalk the place.

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Fosselman’s Ice Cream Company was founded by Christian Anthony Fosselman at his family’s Waverly, Iowa bottling plant in 1919.  Christian’s father, who hailed from Germany, had established the brewery in the 18th Century, which Christian later took over.  Besides beer, the company also manufactured soda.  When the prohibition years halted the sale of alcohol, Christian began producing ice cream which he would freeze using blocks of ice from the nearby Cedar River.

Fosselman's Ice Cream Phantasm (7 of 26)

Fosselman's Ice Cream Phantasm (8 of 26)

Once mechanical refrigeration became more common, Christian decided to move the operation, as well as his family, to sunny Southern California.  They settled in Pasadena in 1924 and opened up the first West Coast Fosselman’s Ice Cream parlor on Fair Oaks Avenue.  Christian moved the store to South Pasadena’s Mission Street in 1936 and followed up with sister parlors, first in Alhambra in 1941 and then in Highland Park in 1946.  While the South Pas outpost soon became an area landmark, it was shuttered in 1974 when the building that housed it was set to be demolished.  (A plaque currently marks its former location at 1515 Mission Street.)  The Highland Park store was also closed around the same time, but the Alhambra Fosselman’s remains standing to this day – over seventy years after its inception!

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Fosselman's Ice Cream Phantasm (20 of 26)

The parlor is still owned and operated by the Fosselman family and all of the ice cream served is handmade daily on the premises.  While there are over 200 flavor variations in the Fosselman’s repertoire (from such staples as Cookie Dough, French Vanilla Bean and Strawberry to the more exotic Brown Butter, Lychee and Rum Raisin), “only” 48 are available on any given day.  From what I’ve been able to gather via online reviews, all are pretty darn fabulous.  In fact, The Guardian UK’s Killian Fox proclaimed that Fosselman’s serves the “Best Milkshakes” on the planet in his 2009 article The 50 Best Things to Eat in the World, and Where to Eat Them.

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Fosselman's Ice Cream Phantasm (17 of 26)

Apparently, the locals agree.  When the Grim Cheaper and I stopped by at around 11 in the morning on a recent Saturday, the place was jam-packed!

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We opted for a scoop of Coffee & Cookies – a Columbian coffee-flavored ice cream hand-mixed with Oreo cookies.  Because I am diabetic, I only had a couple of licks, but the small bit I did sample was easily some of the best ice cream I have ever tasted.

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Way back in 1979, Fosselman’s Ice Cream masked as Reggie’s Ice Cream in the horror flick Phantasm.  Well, sort of.  The parlor only appeared in a deleted scene – the scene in which Mike (A. Michael Baldwin) started an ice cream fight with his brother’s friend Reggie (Reggie Bannister).  I had yet to see Phantasm at the time that I stalked Fosselman’s and had to actually order a special edition of the DVD in order to watch the deleted scene.  Now having seen it, all I can say is: Egads, what a terrible movie!  I did enjoy the Fosselman’s scene, though.  As you can see below, little of the shop has changed since Phantasm was shot over 35 years ago.

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Fosselman's Ice Cream Phantasm (11 of 26)

I was thrilled to spot some signage featuring the Fosselman’s logo in the background of the deleted scene.

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The storefront used for the exterior of Reggie’s Ice Cream – which did make Phantasm’s final cut – is located about 140 miles south of Alhambra in the town of Julian.  In real life, it is known as Julian Café & Bakery.

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

Big THANK YOU to the Freddy in Space blog for finding this location!  Smile

Fosselman's Ice Cream Phantasm (25 of 26)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Fosselman’s Ice Cream, aka the interior of Reggie’s Ice Cream from Phantasm, is located at 1824 West Main Street in Alhambra.  You can visit the parlor’s official website here.  The exterior of Reggie’s Ice Cream is the Julian Café & Bakery located at 2112 Main Street in Julian.  You can visit the eatery’s official website here.

Harbor Steps Apartments from “The Ring”

Harbor Steps The Ring (10 of 11)

I am reaching deep into my stalking vault for today’s location.  I visited the Harbor Steps Apartments from The Ring during a trip to Seattle well over four years ago – shortly after being caught in a torrential downpour, which explains my hat in the above photograph – but somehow failed to blog about them.  Since the building’s appearance in the 2002 thriller was decidedly macabre, I figured what better time to write about it than during my annual Haunted Hollywood postings.  So here goes!

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The 734-unit Harbor Steps Apartments, which are situated overlooking downtown Seattle and Puget Sound, were completed in 2000.

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Harbor Steps The Ring (6 of 11)

The upscale complex, which consists of four high-rise buildings, features three fitness centers, a basketball court, a volleyball court, three Jacuzzis, a sauna, a climbing wall, an indoor pool, a business center, a media room/theatre, stunningly gorgeous views, and (my personal favorite) 24-hour concierge service.

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Harbor Steps The Ring (2 of 11)

The Harbor Steps Apartments sit directly across from the Seattle Art Museum and one of Jonathan Borofsky’s Hammering Man sculptures.  (There are several others situated throughout the world.)  The 48-foot-tall instillation was constructed in 1991 out of hollow-fabricated steel and, according to the City of Seattle’s official website, “celebrates the worker’s contribution to society.”

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Thanks to an electric motor, the sculpture’s arm makes a hammering motion every 15 seconds, 24 hours a day, every single day of the year.  Well, except each Labor Day, that is, when Hammering Man is programmed to take a rest – a fact which I thought was so incredibly cool.

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In The Ring, the Harbor Steps Apartments were where Rachel Keller (Naomi Watts) lived with her son, Aidan (David Dorfman).  According to the movie’s production notes, director Gore Verbinski chose to shoot the flick in Washington because, “The Pacific Northwest winter provided a seemingly perpetual overcast and cold, gloomy weather that only added to the story’s atmosphere of dread.  The lack of sun also lent itself perfectly to the soft light and lack of shadows that Verbinski and cinematographer Bojan Bazelli were employing to complement the story’s surrealistic moments.”  Production designer Tom Duffield based the film’s coloring on the paintings of Andrew Wyeth.  He says, “In Wyeth’s work, the trees are always dormant, and the colors are muted earth tones.  It’s greys, it’s browns, it’s somber colors; it’s ripped fabrics in the windows.  His work has a haunting flavor that I felt would add to the mystique of this movie, so I latched on to it. “

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He did a fabulous job, too, because, as you can see below, even moments after a downpour, the building is much more vibrant in person than Duffield made it appear to be in The Ring.

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Rachel supposedly lived in Unit 601 in the movie.

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But I am fairly certain that the interior of her apartment was a set.  You can check out a few interior photographs of some real life Harbor Steps Apartments here and here.

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The interior of Rachel’s unit seemed to be much larger and more open than those of the actual complex.

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

Harbor Steps The Ring (3 of 11)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Harbor Steps Apartments from The Ring are located at 1221 First Avenue in Seattle, Washington.  You can visit the complex’s official website here.

The American Cement Building from “Scream 3”

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While I am admittedly not a fan of MacArthur Park, there is a property situated on the border of it that I would absolutely LOVE to live in – The American Cement Building.  Mike from, MovieShotsLA, pointed out the dramatically stunning structure many moons ago during one of our very first stalks together and I have been obsessed with it ever since.  And while Mike also informed me that the edifice had appeared in the 2000 horror flick Scream 3, for some reason I never thought to blog about the place during my Haunted Hollywood postings.  That changes today!

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The American Cement Building was constructed in 1964 and originally served as the American Cement Company’s headquarters.  The Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall (DMJM) architecture firm designed the 13-story structure, which was, fittingly, manufactured out of reinforced concrete.

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American Cement Building Scream 3 (14 of 25)

The north and south sides of the building are covered in latticework comprised of 450 X-shaped pieces of precast concrete.  While the design adds beauty to the structure’s façade and is striking to look at, it serves a functional objective, as well.  According to the Los Angeles Conservancy website, “The primary purpose of the latticework is to provide external support for the structural system so the building’s interior can be free of columns.”

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American Cement Building Scream 3 (18 of 25)

The American Cement Building underwent a multi-million dollar renovation in 2002 during which time the office spaces were transformed into 71 live/work lofts.  You can check out some great interior photographs of the property here.  The units – and their views – are breathtaking!

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American Cement Building Scream 3 (24 of 25)

In Scream 3, The American Cement Building housed the office of horror movie producer John Milton (Lance Henriksen).

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At the time of the filming, the interior of the building was far less modern than it is today.

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I absolutely LOVE the fact that Milton had a diving board attached to his window in the flick.  Anyone care for a swim?  Winking smile

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The American Cement Building also appeared in Pharrell Williams’ music video “Come Get It Bae,” which featured Miley Cyrus.

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The building’s parking garage was where The Bride (Uma Thurman) learned how to wiggle her toe again in Kill Bill: Vol. 1.

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The Entourage movie also apparently did some filming at the building in March of this year.

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

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

American Cement Building Scream 3 (22 of 25)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The American Cement Building, from Scream 3, is located at 2404 Wilshire Boulevard in Westlake.  You can visit the building’s official website here.

“The Seventh Sign” House

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NOTE – This blog was supposed to post yesterday, but somehow did not, so it looks like I am a day late and a dollar short.  Sorry about that!  I would like to start off by wishing my fellow stalkers a very HAPPY HALLOWEEN!  I hope all of you have a fabulously spook-filled day.  Smile  And now, on with the post!  Way back in July 2012, Mike, from MovieShotsLA, and I embarked upon a stalking adventure in and around the Venice Beach area.  While there, he took me by an adorable little dwelling that was the main location used in the 1988 horror film The Seventh Sign.  I had never actually heard of the flick at the time, but Mike figured that the residence would fit in perfectly with my Haunted Hollywood theme.  And, as luck would have it, we happened to meet the longtime homeowner while we were stalking the place and he not only told us all sorts of behind-the-scenes information about the shoot, but invited us into the backyard where quite a bit of the filming took place!

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The Grim Cheaper and I ended up watching The Seventh Sign shortly after I returned home and I can’t say that I was a big fan.  As I mentioned in my post about the residence belonging to Heather Langenkamp (who played herself) in Wes Craven’s New Nightmare, I am not especially fond of sci-fi-style horror flicks.  It was very cool to see the house that I had just stalked a few days prior featured so prominently onscreen, though.  In The Seventh Sign, the two-story bungalow is where Abby Quinn (Demi Moore) lives with her husband, Russell Quinn (Michael Biehn), and their demonic unborn child.

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The Seventh Sign House (7 of 19)

According to the homeowner, whose parents owned the pad back in 1988 when The Seventh Sign was filmed, the property was chosen for the shoot because producers liked the fact that it was located on a corner, that it had an apartment above the garage, and that the main house and garage could both be captured onscreen in a single shot.  Due to a massive amount of foliage that has since grown, that is no longer the case, though, as you can see below.  Otherwise, the abode looks very much the same as it did onscreen, despite the passage of over 25 years.

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In The Seventh Sign, Abby and Russell rent out that garage apartment to a rather mysterious individual named David Bannon (Jürgen Prochnow) in order to make some extra income before their baby arrives.  Things don’t quite go as planned, though.

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Amazingly enough, while the landing is now different, the stairs leading up to the garage apartment look very much the same today as they did back in 1988.

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I was floored when the owner allowed me to pose for a photograph on the stairs, which Mike had told me played a significant role in the filming.  Smile

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The homeowner also informed us that an incredibly difficult-to-shoot scene was filmed in which Abby walked across a beam of light (in actuality it was a wooden bridge) from the main house to the garage apartment.  The scene was very labor-intensive, expensive, required countless retakes, took several nights to complete, and in the end wound up on the cutting room floor!  Ya gotta love Hollywood!

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Several areas of the residence’s real life interior were also used in the filming, including the living room;

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the kitchen;

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and the front room.  You can check out some more interior photographs of the property on an old rental listing here.

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In real life, the charming little cottage, which was originally built in 1916, is not a single-family dwelling.  It actually consists of three units – the main home, which features two separate apartments, one on each floor, and a third apartment located above the property’s detached garage, as was depicted in the movie.

The Seventh Sign House (5 of 19)

The Seventh Sign House (1 of 19)

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

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

The Seventh Sign House (4 of 19)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Seventh Sign house is located at 902 Palms Boulevard in Venice.

The Cobb Estate from “Phantasm”

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One locale that I came across (thanks to an article on Amoeblog) while doing research for my 2012 Haunted Hollywood posts was the former Cobb Estate in Altadena, the gates of which appeared in the 1979 cult horror film Phantasm.  And while I stalked the location shortly thereafter, for whatever reason I never got around to blogging about it last October.  I actually completely forgot about the site, in fact, until I sat down to write my recent post on Angeles Abbey Memorial Park, which was used in two installments of the Phantasm series – Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead and Phantasm IV: Oblivion.  Well, it is better to be late than never, as they say, right?

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The Cobb Estate is named after lumber magnate Charles H. Cobb, who, along with his wife, Carrie, purchased the then vacant 107-acre site in 1916.  Two years later, the couple commissioned a rambling Spanish-style mansion to be built on the premises.  When Charles, who was a Freemason, passed away in 1939, he willed the massive estate and its acreage to the Pasadena Scottish Rite Temple.  The brotherhood sold the site just a few years later and it subsequently went through a succession of different owners, including the Sisters of Saint Joseph.  Then, in 1956, the Marx Brothers (yes, those Marx Brothers) purchased the property as an investment.  It was left vacant while they debated what to do with it and became a popular hangout for miscreants who vandalized the once elegant grounds and mansion.  Sadly, in 1959, the Brothers decided to demolish the majority of the Cobbs’ former home.  Today, all that survives is the foundation, a few rock walls, some exterior stairwells, a long, twisting driveway, and the front gates.

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Cobb Estate Phantasm (5 of 15)

In 1971, after their plans to turn to site into a cemetery were thwarted, the Marx Brothers put the land up for auction.  Bob Barnes, a social studies teacher at nearby John Muir High School in Pasadena, caught wind of the sale and, fearing that it would be acquired and pillaged by developers, rallied his students to raise funds to save the property.  Miraculously, they did.  In nine days time – and thanks to a generous donation from art collector Virginia Steele Scott – the group garnered over $150,000.  According to this 2011 Pasadena Star-News article, when the auction was held, Barnes was outbid by $25,000, but he made a last-minute plea to auctioneer Milton Wershaw saying his was the “people’s bid.”  Wershaw halted the auction for five minutes so that the group could raise the extra funds and even chipped in $1,000 himself.  The money was gathered, at which point, in a heart-warming twist, one of the land developers stepped down, announcing, “I am with the people, I shall bid no more!”  Barnes wound up donating the 107 acres to the Angeles National Forest and, in my favorite part of the story, headed out to Hollywood the following day, purchased a map of the stars’ homes, rang Groucho Marx’s doorbell, and thanked him.  So incredibly cool!

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Cobb Estate Phantasm (10 of 15)

Today, the Cobb Estate is, as the sign on the gate will tell you, “A quiet refuge for people and wild life forever.”  The popular hiking area is apparently open 24 hours a day and after-dark walks are allowed.  Um, no thanks.  Winking smile

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Cobb Estate Phantasm (3 of 15)

At some point in time (and for reasons unknown to this stalker – and seemingly everyone else on the internet, although there have been some reported unexplained occurrences), the property gained the nickname the “Haunted Forest.”  (It is also known as the “Enchanted Forest.”)

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In Phantasm, the gates of the Cobb Estate masqueraded as the entrance to Morningside Cemetery, lair of The Tall Man (Angus Scrimm).

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Oddly enough, though, all of the scenes that supposedly took place behind the gates were actually shot about 400 miles away at the Dunsmuir Hellman Historic Estate in Oakland.

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

Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for making the Phantasm screen captures that appear in this post!  Smile

Cobb Estate Phantasm (7 of 15)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The gates to the Cobb Estate, from Phantasm, are located at the intersection of North Lake Avenue and East Loma Alta Drive in Altadena.

Heather’s House from “New Nightmare”

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Way back in April, after stalking the talking road condition sign location from L.A. Story (which I blogged about here) and Malibu Hindu Temple from Beverly Hills Ninja (which I blogged about here), Mike, from MovieShotsLA, took me to the Tarzana-area house where Heather Langenkamp (who played herself) lived with her husband, Chase Porter (David Newsom), and son, Dylan (Miko Hughes), in the 1994 horror flick Wes Craven’s New Nightmare.  And while I had not yet seen New Nightmare at the time, Mike thought the residence would fit in perfectly with my Haunted Hollywood theme – and he was right.  I’m not typically a huge fan of sci-fi-style horror flicks (I much prefer the Scream/I Know What You Did Last Summer/more realistic brand of scary movies), but I just watched New Nightmare and have to say that I actually enjoyed it.  That most likely has to do with the fact that the flick centers around the filming of a new installment of the Nightmare series, during which a grown-up Heather Langenkamp, the actress who starred as Nancy Thompson in the first and third A Nightmare on Elm Streets, has to deal with the fact that the character of Freddy Krueger (Robert Englund) has come to life and is stalking her son.  Y’all know me – anything having to do with the production of a movie and I’m in!

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Heather’s house was one of the main locations used in New Nightmare and the property shows up repeatedly throughout the movie – usually in nighttime scenes.

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Despite the fact that almost twenty years have passed since filming took place (How can that be, by the way???  That means that it’s practically time for my twenty-year high school reunion!!!), the residence still looks almost exactly the same today as it did then.

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Even the mailbox has been left unchanged!

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Had to do it!  Winking smile

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Heather's House New Nightmare (11 of 16)

In real life, the five-bedroom, five-bath residence, which was originally built in 1952, measures 4,512 square feet and sits on a 0.43-acre plot of land.  It last sold in November 1996 for $741,000.

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Heather's House New Nightmare (2 of 16)

As you can see, the dwelling is really quite idyllic and picturesque and not the type of place where one would expect a horror film to be shot, but perhaps that was the point – that nightmares can happen anywhere.

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Heather's House New Nightmare (15 of 16)

The real life interior of the home . . .

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. . . as well as the backyard, both of which you can see photographs of here, were also used in the filming.

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

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

Heather's House New Nightmare (7 of 16)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Heather’s house from Wes Craven’s New Nightmare is located at 5132 Calvin Avenue in Tarzana.

Evergreen Memorial Park & Crematory

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

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

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

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A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (17 of 48)

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

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A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (32 of 48)

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

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churned-up dirt;

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

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

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A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (8 of 48)

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

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

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A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (27 of 48)

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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A Nightmare On Elm Street Cemetery (28 of 48)

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

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

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

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