Weatherwolde Castle

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It is not everyday one comes across a mention of a random castle located on a sleepy residential street in Los Angeles.  So when I found out about Weatherwolde Castle in Tujunga thanks to this page on the Dupont Castle website a couple of summers ago, I took immediate note and started researching further.  The mini manor seemed to be shrouded in mystery, boasting quite a storied past.  It was even rumored to be haunted!  Knowing it would make for a fabulous October post, I jotted down its address and raced out to see it shortly thereafter – and then somehow forgot about it.  It was not until this past February, when Nick Carr, of the fabulous Scouting New York and Scouting Los Angeles websites, posted this Instagram photo of another highly unique residence located right down the road from Weatherwolde (which I stalked the same day as the castle) that I was reminded of the place.  So to the top of my Haunted Hollywood To-Blog List it went!

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Google “Weatherwolde Castle” and quite a bit of lore and legend will be kicked back.  That is in large part thanks to its former occupants – one set of occupants in particular.  As the Los Angeles Times stated in a 2005 piece on the home, “And then there’s the mystery factor.  None of the castle’s owners has welcomed neighbors inside — not even members of the historical society.  Much of its provenance is fortified by curiosity and rumor.”  The vast majority of that curiosity and rumor was propagated by William and Yvonne Kenward, who lived in the castle from 1974 to 1979.  During their five-year tenure, the duo was interviewed several times and seemed to love furthering the intrigue surrounding the place, claiming that the unusual pad was built by a French count whose wife was either pushed or jumped to her death from a second-story window during a party on the premises.  The two also asserted that the subsequent owners, a Dutch couple, disappeared without a trace shortly after moving in.  The next residents, they alleged, found the castle to be haunted by ghosts with, you guessed it, “thick Dutch accents.”

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The home’s actual history is much tamer.  It was originally designed by engineer/architect George J. Fosdyke for a New Orleans bookkeeper named Marcel Dumas in 1928.  At the time of its inception, the 3-story French Normandy-style property boasted 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2,535 square feet, a turret with a spiral cantilevered cement staircase, a stone fireplace with a chimney featuring a fleur-de-lis sculpting, a main hall, Gothic arches, a one-acre plot of land, landscaped gardens, and a crypt.  Marcel dubbed the dwelling “Chateau de Sales.”  Unfortunately, aside from the fleur-de-lis detailing, virtually none of it is currently visible from the street.

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Dumas (I swear I can’t read that name without thinking of this!) lost the home due to unpaid taxes in 1940, upon which it was snatched up by Jack Harris and his wife, Dixie Ann (though Jack falsely told anyone who would listen that he won the castle in a lucky game of poker).  Dixie Ann worked as a secretary to Selznick International Pictures head David O. Selznick.  As such, many Hollywood luminaries spent time at Chateau de Sales, including Boris Karloff, Orson Welles, Bela Lugosi, and Robert Mitchum.  The Harris family lived on the premises until 1974, when they sold to the Kenwards.  It was William and Yvonne who gave the pad the name Weatherwolde Castle, meaning “snug within from the weather.”  Though the duo sat for numerous interviews during their years of ownership, they remained rather secretive about their home.  A 1977 Los Angeles Times article (from which the photo below showing a rear view of the property comes from) stated, “The Kenwards have an unlisted telephone number and give interviews only on condition that the location of their castle will not be disclosed.”  Lucky for them IAMNOTASTALKER was not around in those years.  Winking smile

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In 1979, the Kenwards sold Weatherwolde to Hollywood producers/writers Michael Baser and Barbara Stoll.  The couple made several modernizations in the years that followed, including covering the original concrete flooring with hardwood and adding lots of white cabinetry and shelving.  Baser and Stoll put the pad on the market in 2005 and it wound up being purchased by developer Scott Anderson who found the three plots of land the structure stood on more attractive than the castle itself.  He made plans to raze it and build three new homes in its place.  The first part of the demolition process involved excavating the trees and foliage dotting the property, as well as demoing the rear patio, the front wall, and the stone crypt.  Doing so caused Weatherwolde’s façade to become visible to passersby for the first time in decades.  That’s it post-excavation below.  You can check out some additional photos of the place from around the same time here and here.

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Google Street View circa June 2008 also provides some good imagery of the castle post-excavation, as you can see below.  Neighbors who had long since forgotten about the estate began to take note – and action.  They did not want such a unique home demolished.  Bulldozers wound up being stopped at the very last minute thanks to the efforts of concert promoter/area resident Gina Zamparelli, who was contacted by the Crescenta Valley Heritage group at midnight the night before the razing was to take place.  Gina quickly penned a press release and sent it out to her many media contacts.  Her cries were heard loud and clear.  By 6 the next morning protesters were out in full force.  When the demo crew arrived on the scene, they took one look at the ruckus and left.  A judge stepped in and put an official stop to the entire construction project shortly thereafter.

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In a tragic twist, at around the same time, locals, who figured the pad was going to eventually be razed, started looting, removing anything and everything from the premises including stained glass windows, doors, hinges, light switches, handles, and appliances.  The castle’s iron staircase railing was even pinched via a neighbor wielding a sledgehammer.  Within a matter of days, Weatherwolde went from being fully functional and in fabulous shape with gorgeous greenery and landscaping to completely barren, its interior utterly destroyed thanks to both the excavation and the pillaging.  Amazingly, one local preservationist, a musician named William Malouf, was still interested in purchasing and restoring the once grand home.  After quite a bit of negotiating, Anderson finally agreed to sell Weatherwolde and two of its plots of land to him in October 2005 for $650,000.  The developer held onto the third plot, situated just north of the castle, and constructed the rather unattractive 4-bedroom, 3-bath, 2,352-square-foot house pictured below, which he sold for $690,000.

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William got to work right away and, miraculously, was able to reclaim virtually all of the items that had been stolen – even the staircase railing.  His efforts to repair the castle, which became Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #841 in 2006, are a true labor of love.  You can listen to a fabulous 2014 speech he gave about the project and see photos of the restored interior here.  I was surprised to see when I arrived, though, that what is visible from the street remains a bit unkempt and that chain-link fencing still surrounds the place.  Malouf did mention in his speech that the area where Anderson built the new home pictured above was formerly the site of Weatherwolde’s driveway and entrance gates.  When the land was split, extensive work had to be done to add a driveway to the other side of the property.  I am guessing – and hoping – that at some point a new gate will be installed to replace the chain-link fence, as well.

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Per aerial views, the backyard still seems to be a work in progress, too.  I can only imagine how fabulous the place is going to be when the entire restoration is complete – not to mention how perfect it will be for trick-or-treating each October!  Here’s hoping Malouf is into Halloween!

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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: Weatherwolde Castle is located at 10633 Commerce Avenue in Tujunga.

The “Teen Wolf” Liquor Store

Teen Wolf Liquor Store

While out stalking in the San Gabriel Valley three Thursdays ago, on our way to visit Clark Magnet High School where Kris Witherspoon (my girl Shannen Doherty) went to school in the 1986 television series Our House (which I have yet to blog about), Mike, from MovieShotsLA, made a quick (pardon the pun) detour to Quick Stop Liquor, the very same liquor store that appeared in 1985’s Teen Wolf.  Mike had found this location years beforehand, while searching for locales from the 1986 thriller River’s Edge, which was also filmed in the area.  And even though I live fairly close to Tujunga, where the liquor store is located, for whatever reason I had never ventured out to stalk it.  So, since we were just around the corner, Mike insisted we stop by.  (On a side-note – I have been playing around with the colors and sizes of my photographs lately.  Would love to hear what my fellow stalkers think! Smile)

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Quick Stop Liquor, which was named Tony’s Liquor in the flick, shows up twice in Teen Wolf.  It first pops up in the scene in which Stiles (Jerry Levine), donning a trucker hat, sunglasses and a shirt that says “Obnoxious: The Movie”, tries to purchase a keg of beer from the store’s curmudgeonly owner (Harvey Vernon) before heading to a house party, the location of which I blogged about here.

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The liquor store’s real life interior also appeared in that scene.

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Quick Stop Liquor shows up once again a few scenes later when Stiles convinces his best friend/teen werewolf, Scott Howard (Michael J. Fox), to attempt to buy a keg, using a water gun as intimidation, from the same curmudgeonly shop owner.

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The shop’s real life interior was also used in that scene, as well.

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It is while there that Scott has one of his very first experiences as a werewolf.  After being denied the keg and being chewed out by the shop owner, Scott gets just a wee bit angry, his eyes turn red, his voice deepens quite a few octaves, and he utters the film’s famous line, “GIVE ME.  A KEG.  OF BEER!”

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While the exterior of Quick Stop Liquor is now pink (although I am not typically a fan of change, pink is my favorite color, so I have to say, “Yay!”) and the sign and store name have since been altered, the place looks pretty much the same as it did in Teen Wolf, despite the fact that almost three full decades have since passed.   So incredibly cool!

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Sadly though, a building has since been constructed in the area directly next to the liquor store, where Stiles and Scott parked their cars in Teen Wolf.

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While stalking the place, Mike and I ventured inside to ask the woman working if we could snap some pictures.  And while she was reticent at first, once Mike showed her his Teen Wolf page on MovieShotsLA and she realized that Quick Stop had appeared in a film, she got pretty excited.  I so love it when that happens!  Smile As you can see above, while the interior of the store has changed a bit over the years, it is still pretty recognizable from the movie.

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The woman also confirmed for us that the store’s front counter had been shortened in recent years, which is such a shame!  I so would have loved to have seen the place in its original form!

“Teen Wolf” Liquor Store Scene Filmed at Quick Stop Liquor in Tujunga

You can watch the Teen Wolf “GIVE ME A KEG OF BEER” scene by clicking above.

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On a stalking side-note – fellow stalker Allen Fuqua, of the Movie Mimic website, recently contacted me to ask if I would like to reenact a scene from Fast Times at Ridgemont High with him.  I, of course, readily agreed and this past Sunday afternoon, the two of us, Grim Cheaper in tow, ventured out to Van Nuys High School to attempt a Movie Mimic.  The result is pictured above.  I had an absolute blast movie-mimicking and getting to meet Allen and the photograph he created far exceeded my expectations.  I highly recommend checking out Allen’s fabulous site, in which he travels to places ALL OVER THE WORLD (the guy has been EVERYWHERE, including London where he reenacted stills from my favorite movie of all time, Love Actually) and recreates iconic scenes from iconic movies.  Love it!  And, in an AMAZING twist, this past weekend The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences/The Oscars posted our Fast Times pic on their Facebook page.  PINCH ME!

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

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Quick Stop Liquor, aka the Teen Wolf liquor store, is located at 6670 Foothill Boulevard in Tujunga.

The “E.T.” House

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Although I consider myself somewhat of a master stalker (not as good as fellow stalkers Owen, Mike, from MovieshotsLA, or Chas, from ItsFilmedThere, of course), for whatever reason, up until this past weekend I had yet to visit one of the most famous movie locations of them all – the home where Mary (aka Dee Wallace), Elliot (aka Henry Thomas), Michael (aka Robert MacNaughton), and Gertie (aka Drew Barrymore) lived in the 1982 classic film E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial.  I am not sure how, or even why, I avoided the location for as long as I did, but my best guess is that it is due to the fact that it is located in Tujunga, which is kind of out in the middle of nowhere, far from the areas I usually drag my husband out to stalk.  In fact, up until this past Saturday afternoon, I had never actually set foot in the Crescenta Valley suburb, which is situated just north of Glendale and just east of Sunland.  But, this weekend, while on our way home from doing some stalking in the Valley, a light bulb went off in my head and I asked my fiancé to take a little detour on the 210 Freeway so that I could finally, finally stalk the E.T. house.

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It is absolutely amazing to me how iconic the E.T. home still is – almost thirty years after the movie was filmed!  As the Grim Cheaper and I drove up the hill where the residence is located and the property came into view, we both immediately recognized not only the actual house, but the cul-de-sac and neighboring residences which surround it.  Being that I haven’t seen E.T. in almost three decades (I only watched it once, when it first came out, and I became so hysterical when E.T. left Elliot that my parents had to drag me out of the auditorium kicking and screaming and I’ve never been able to re-watch it since), I find that to be absolutely amazing!  The long, sloped driveway, the cul-de-sac, the mountains in the background – for better or for worse, those images of the house are indelibly engraved in my memories.

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Thankfully, the residence still looks extremely similar today to how it appeared back in 1982 when E.T. was filmed.  The only real difference I noticed was the fact that the property is now dotted with large trees and shrubs, which wasn’t the case thirty years ago.  At the time of the filming, the house was newly-built and therefore had very little foliage surrounding it.  I cannot tell you how awesome it was for me to stalk a place I haven’t laid eyes on since 1982 and have it still look almost exactly the same now as it did then.  Love it!

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According to director McG’s DVD commentary, the house was also used in another Drew Barrymore flick – 2000’s Charlie’s Angels, as the residence where the character of Dylan Sanders falls after being shot by Eric Knox (aka Sam Rockwell).  I find it incredibly cool that McG decided to shoot a scene at this location!  Such a nice nod to the home’s iconic cinematic history. 

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The sliding glass door that Dylan knocks on in Charlie’s Angels can also be seen in several scenes in E.T.

For those who haven’t seen the above YouTube video, which chronicles most of E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial’s filming locations, you really need to check it out!  The video, which was put together by fellow stalker/filmmaker Herve Attia, artfully morphs clips of the movie with footage of how the locations look today.  It is simply amazing to watch!

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

Stalk It: The E.T. house is located at 7121 Lonzo Street in Tujunga.