June’s House from “White Collar”

June's House from White Collar-1140768

Sometimes the work and detail that go into creating certain locations absolutely boggles my mind.  Case in point – the house belonging to June (Diahann Carroll) on the USA series White Collar.  The imposing residence is actually an amalgamation of three different places – a spectacular estate on New York’s Upper West Side, the rooftop terrace of an ornate Murray Hill building, and a studio-built set.  While in Manhattan last April, I stalked the estate, known in real life as the Schinasi Mansion, which is used in all of the establishing shots of June’s pad on the show.

[ad]

The sprawling Schinasi Mansion was originally built for Turkish-born cigarette magnate Morris Schinasi in 1909.  Designed by William B. Tuthill of Carnegie Hall fame, the spectacular French Renaissance-style residence, which boasts Turkish influences, is often touted as being New York’s only remaining stand-alone single-family manse.

June's House from White Collar-1140747

June's House from White Collar-1140744

Though undeniably striking, Schinasi wasn’t altogether impressed with Tuthill’s final product and refused to pay the architect his $5,655.65 fee, which resulted in a lawsuit.

June's House from White Collar-1140748

It’s hard to imagine what Schinasi found fault with.  The exterior of the 4-story, 41-by-73-foot structure, which sits overlooking the Hudson River on a plot of land boasting 3,400 square feet of gardens, is a masterpiece of white marble and green-tiled roofing.

June's House from White Collar-1140750

June's House from White Collar-1140751

The exterior pales in comparison to the interior, though, which is a virtual work of art.

June's House from White Collar-1140741

June's House from White Collar-1140756

The 12,000-square-foot home features 12 bedrooms, 11 baths, a teak-paneled library with a fireplace and built-in window seat, a smoking room with ceiling frescos and gold leafing, a formal wood-paneled dining room with stained glass windows, a drawing room with carved ceilings, an English basement, two kitchens, a hall made entirely of ornate Egyptian marble, and an entry hall with a sweeping grand staircase and an almost-unbelievably-intricate honeycomb ceiling constructed of wood.  The inside of the residence honestly has to be seen to be believed.  You can check out some fabulous photos of it here and here.

June's House from White Collar-1140752

When Schinasi passed away in 1929, his widow Laurette sold the mansion, at which time it became a finishing school known as the Semple School for Girls.  Upon headmaster Rosa Semple’s death in 1965, the property was bought by Columbia University and was transformed into a daycare facility named “The Children’s Mansion.”  Under Columbia’s ownership, the residence was also utilized as an Episcopal school and the offices of the Digest of Soviet Press.  In 1979, the site transitioned into a private residence once again upon being purchased by Columbia University law professor Hans Smit for $325,000.  Hans spent the next twenty years renovating the property, though when he put it on the market in 2006, the real estate listing noted that it still needed major rehabbing.

June's House from White Collar-1140757

Originally listed at $31 million, the pad, which is on the National Register of Historic Places and is a New York City Landmark, received no bites.  The price was slashed to $20 million in 2012 and the dwelling eventually sold for $14 million in 2013.  The new owners immediately set about revitalizing the structure.  The renovation was still in full swing when I stalked the place last Spring, as evidenced by all of my photos.

June's House from White Collar-1140774

June's House from White Collar-1140771

My dad has a saying he likes to use about people with uncanny good luck – “He could fall into a pile of sh*t and walk out with a brown suit.”  That pretty much sums up the character of con man Neal Caffrey (Matt Bomer) on White Collar.  In the series’ pilot, Neal is released from jail into the custody of the FBI’s White Collar division, where he is to act as a consultant, helping agent Peter Burke (Tim DeKay) catch art thieves and forgers in return for his partial freedom (though he is able to live on his own and move freely, he is forced to wear an ankle bracelet).  When Neal scoffs at the seedy apartment the FBI has secured for him, Peter informs him that the low class digs cost $700 a month and if he can find more suitable accommodations for the same amount, he is welcome to move.  While shopping for clothes at a nearby thrift store in the scene that follows, Neal meets a wealthy widow named June (Diahann Carroll) who is donating her late husband’s designer suits.  Neal and June strike up a conversation – and an unlikely friendship (turns out June’s late husband was a con man, too!) – that ends with Neal moving into the idyllic attic apartment (complete with a large rooftop terrace) of June’s massive mansion, said to be located at 87 Riverside Drive, for the bargain price of $700 a month.

Screenshot-004632

June's House from White Collar-1140761

The exterior of the Schinasi Mansion was shown regularly in establishing shots of June’s palatial pad throughout White Collar’s six-season run.

Screenshot-004647

June's House from White Collar-1140764

The home’s actual interior was also utilized in several episodes, including the pilot (pictured below).

Screenshot-004637

Screenshot-004638

Neal’s fabulous attic apartment, unfortunately, does not exist in real life, but was a studio-built set.  You can see what the Schinasi Mansion’s attic area actually looks like here and here.

Screenshot-004649

Screenshot-004645

I’ve recently decided that if the Grim Cheaper and I ever buy a place and have the means to have it professionally decorated, we are so hiring a set designer rather than an interior decorator!  Ammiright?

Screenshot-004673

Screenshot-004644

While Neal’s uh-ma-zing terrace was also a studio-built set, I was thrilled to discover while researching this post that the patio scenes from the pilot were shot at an actual place – one of the penthouses at the Windsor Tower residential building, which is located at 5 Tudor City Place in Murray Hill.  You can see a photo of one of the actual Windsor Tower penthouse terraces here and a video of another one here.

Screenshot-004640

Screenshot-004641

The set re-creation of Neal’s terrace, which very closely resembles the Windsor Tower terraces (albeit a much smaller version), is pictured below.

Screenshot-004650

Screenshot-004652

White Collar is hardly the first production to make use of the Schinasi Mansion.

June's House from White Collar-1140758

June's House from White Collar-1140763

In the 1994 comedy Bullets Over Broadway, the dwelling masked as the home of actress Helen Sinclair (Dianne Wiest).

Screenshot-004658

Screenshot-004659

In the Season 3 episode of Damages titled “Your Secrets Are Safe,” which aired in 2010, the mansion was the site of the Tobin family’s Thanksgiving dinner.

Screenshot-004666

Screenshot-004667

It, along with another massive mansion, was used as the residence of Spencer Fisher (Kyle Bornheimer) in the Season 2 episode of Royal Pains titled “Spasticity,” which also aired in 2010.

Screenshot-004669

Screenshot-004671

In the 2014 thriller Innocence, the property portrayed the home of Tobey Crawford (Graham Phillips).

Screenshot-004655

Screenshot-004656

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

June's House from White Collar-1140760

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Schinasi Mansion, aka June’s house from White Collar, is located at 351 Riverside Drive on New York’s Upper West Side.

Peter and Elizabeth’s House from “White Collar”

Peter and Elizabeth's House White Collar-14

The Grim Cheaper and I have yet to watch the final season of White Collar, despite the fact that it aired almost a full two years ago.  We became hooked on the USA series back in 2011 after I attended a screening/Q&A with the cast – so hooked that we were devastated when its cancellation was announced and could never bring ourselves to watch the final six episodes.  Saying goodbye to loveable con man Neal Caffrey (Matt Bomer) and equally loveable FBI agent Peter Burke (Tim DeKay) would just be too sad.  We were absolutely floored, though, when, while walking to the subway after stalking Jules’ house from The Intern, we happened to find ourselves standing in front of one of White Collar’s most famous locales!  As fate would have it, the clapboard residence where Peter lives with his wife, Elizabeth (Tiffani Thiessen), and their dog, Satchmo, on the series is right around the corner from Jules’ pad.  While both dwellings were included on my NYC To-Stalk List, because I am so very bad with direction, I had no idea they were located in such close proximity to each other.

[ad]

Peter and Elizabeth’s relationship is #goals – and my favorite aspect of White Collar.  Their charming townhouse runs a close second, though.

Peter and Elizabeth's House White Collar-3

Said to be located at 4232 DeKalb Avenue on the series, the home can actually be found at 106 Cambridge Place in the Clinton Hill area of Brooklyn.

Peter and Elizabeth's House White Collar-6

Built in the 1860s, the 20-foot-wide, wood-frame triplex boasts five bedrooms, two and a half baths, original moldings, parquet flooring, custom built-ins, a one-bedroom ground floor apartment, a large back garden, and a whopping eight fireplaces – three of them wood-burning!  I’d be ecstatic just to have one!  You can check out some photographs of home’s gorgeous interior here.

Peter and Elizabeth's House White Collar-7

In 2015, the pad was put up for sale for $2.89 million, but does not appear to have sold.  It hit the market once again shortly thereafter in early 2016 as a rental priced at $7,500 a month and does appear to have had a taker.

Peter and Elizabeth's House White Collar-8

The exterior of Peter and Elizabeth’s residence popped up regularly on White Collar.

Screenshot-001965

Peter and Elizabeth's House White Collar-1

I find it ironic that, though stated to be at 4232 DeKalb Avenue, the actual address number of 106 was clearly visible in all of the establishing shots.

Screenshot-001944

Peter and Elizabeth's House White Collar-5

The real life interior was also utilized in the pilot, as you can see in the screen captures and photographs (via Corcoran) below.  The areas that appeared in the episode include the master bedroom;

Peter and Elizabeth's House Master Bedroom

dining room;

Peter and Elizabeth's House - Dining Rom

and living room.

Peter and Elizabeth House - Living Room

Once White Collar got picked up, a set semi-based on that interior was built at Silvercup Studios East, where the series was lensed, for all subsequent filming.

Screenshot-001951

Screenshot-001964

I am absolutely in love with the décor of both the actual house and the set.

Screenshot-001959

Screenshot-001960

Is kitchen envy a thing?  If so, I have it.

Screenshot-001955

Screenshot-001963

Though the real estate listing states that Peter and Elizabeth’s house has been used in numerous other productions, unfortunately I was unable to dig up any specifics.

Peter and Elizabeth's House White Collar-4

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

Peter and Elizabeth's House White Collar-2

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Peter and Elizabeth Burke’s house from White Collar is located at 106 Cambridge Place in Brooklyn’s Clinton Hill neighborhoodJules’ house from The Intern is located right around the corner at 383 Grand Avenue.

Stuyvesant Square Park from “Sex and the City”

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-13

At the risk of this blog becoming solely Sex and the City-based, here I am yet again with yet another locale from the hit HBO series.  For those of you non-SATC fans out there, don’t worry, I will be chronicling NYC sites from other productions soon.  I will also be interspersing New York spots with ones in L.A., as well, to break up any sort of location monotony.  For today, though, it’s all about SATC and SJP.  I bring you Stuyvesant Square Park, a spot I have long wanted to stalk thanks to its appearance in the Season 5 episode of Sex and the City titled “Plus One Is the Loneliest Number.”

[ad]

In the episode, which originally aired in 2002, Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker) meets a cute author named Jack Berger (Ron Livingston) while at her publisher’s office on the eve of the release of her first book.  Her publisher suggests that Berger take Carrie under his wing and share with her the ins and outs of the book world.  So the two head out to a park to chat, McDonald’s sack lunches in hand.  I loved absolutely everything about the scene – Carrie and Berger’s chemistry and easy banter, the picturesque park surroundings, the McDonald’s meals (I’d take McDonald’s over a fancy restaurant any day!), and (especially) Carrie’s dress, shoes and hair.  So I, of course, became obsessed with tracking down where filming took place.

Screenshot-001765

Screenshot-001766

The endeavor turned out to be pretty easy thanks to a sign reading “Stuyvesant Square” that was visible in the background of the scene.

Screenshot-001768

In the episode, Carrie and Berger were sitting in the southwest corner of Stuyvesant Square Park, near the intersection of East 15th Street and Rutherford Place, in the general vicinity of the area pictured below.

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-11

After finishing their lunches, the two then exit the park through the gate located at East 16th Street and Rutherford Place . . .

Screenshot-001767

Screenshot-001769

. . . and proceed to walk south down Rutherford.  It is there that Berger drops the bomb on Carrie that he has a live-in girlfriend.

Screenshot-001771

Screenshot-001770

Stuyvesant Square Park, also known simply as Stuyvesant Square, turned out to be quite the picturesque stalk!  The serene site, which is bisected by 2nd Avenue, is comprised of shaded benches, sparkling fountains and meandering pathways, surrounded by a bevy of handsome and historic New York buildings.  All that greenery and brick make for some glorious scenery!

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-4

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-6

The park has quite an interesting history.  The tract was originally part of an 120-acre farm owned by Peter Stuyvesant, the last Dutch Director-General of the New Netherland colony.  In 1836, Peter’s great-great-grandson, Peter Gerard Stuyvesant, sold a 4-acre parcel of the farm to the City of New York for $5 with the intention that it be used as a public park.

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-10

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-2

The land sat untouched for several years, though, causing Stuyvesant to file a lawsuit against the city to force development in 1839.  It still took quite a while, until 1847 in fact, for landscaping of the site to begin and Stuyvesant Square Park finally opened to the public in 1850.

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-8

In 1847, during the development process, a large cast iron fence was installed around the perimeter of the park.  Amazingly, it still stands today and has the distinction of being New York’s oldest cast iron fence.

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-19

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-18

In the 1930s, Stuyvesant Square Park was renovated by landscape architect Gilmore David Clark.  Though it was rehabbed once again in 1982 and is currently undergoing some restorations, the space looks much the same today as it did when Clark completed work on it in 1937.

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-5

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-15

Sex and the City is hardly the only production to have made use of the park’s beauty.

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-7

April Wheeler (Kate Winslet) – wearing an amazing white dress – walks by Stuyvesant Square Park after picking up travel documents in the 2008 drama Revolutionary Road.  The brief segment was shot on Rutherford Place, just north of East 15th Street.

Screenshot-001787

Screenshot-001788

It was at the park that Patty Hewes (Glenn Close) met with Patrick Scully (Jeff Binder) in the Season 5 episode of Damages titled “But You Don’t Do That Anymore,” which aired in 2012.  (I cannot get over how different the park looks during the winter when there are no leaves on the trees!)

Screenshot-001775

Screenshot-001777

A large portion of White Collar’s Season 5 storyline centered around a priceless stained glass window located at a church across the street from Stuyvesant Square Park.  As such, the park popped in a couple of episodes, most notably in 2013’s “No Good Deed,” in which Neal Caffrey (Matt Bomer) and Mozzie (Willie Garson) masqueraded as repairmen in order to steal the window.

Screenshot-001783

Screenshot-001784

Stuyvesant Square Park was also where John Reese (Jim Caviezel) took a cell phone call from Lionel Fusco (Kevin Chapman) and discussed the fact that all hell was breaking loose in the city in the Season 4 episode of Person of Interest titled “The Cold War,” which aired in 2014.

Screenshot-001773

Screenshot-001774

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

Stuyvesant Square Park from Sex and the City-16

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Stuyvesant Square Park, from the “Plus One Is the Loneliest Number” episode of Sex and the City, is located at 2nd Avenue and East 15th Street in the Gramercy Park neighborhood of New York.

A Q & A with the Cast of “White Collar”

P1000041

Last Monday evening, my good friend Mikey, of the Mike the Fanboy website, invited me, along with fellow stalkers Pinky, of the Thinking Pink blog, Duggan, and CB, to a SAG screening/cast Q & A of the USA Network television show White Collar featuring co-executive producer Mark Goffman and series’ stars Matt Bomer, Tim DeKay, and Willie Garson.  Well, as you can imagine, as soon as I heard that Willie Garson – who is best known for playing Carrie Bradshaw’s (aka Sarah Jessica Parker’s) BBF Stanford Blatch on fave show Sex and the City – was going to be there, I just about died of excitement and told Mikey to “count me in!”  My good friend Steffi, who lives in Switzerland, is just about as obsessed with SATC as I am, if not more so, so before leaving for the screening I printed up a still of Willie Garson and Sarah Jessica Parker with the hopes that I could get Willie to sign it.   I was so intent on getting that photograph signed for her that I was even willing to forgo getting a photograph with WG myself if worse came to worse.

P1000116

CB and I were the first to show up to the Leonard H. Goldenson Theatre in North Hollywood where the screening was being held and just a few minutes after we got there, who should walk up but Willie!  The two of us immediately ran up to him and after CB had him sign a White Collar poster, I gave him the picture I had made for Steffi.  I had put a post-it note on it reading “For Steffi” (a little trick that I learned from my good friend and fellow stalker Anushika which greatly increases the odds of getting a personalized autograph at these types of events), and Willie immediately signed it, writing “For Steffi – All the Best!  Willie Garson”.  I was SOOOOOO incredibly excited over getting that autograph that my hands were literally shaking for about ten minutes afterward!  I may love stalking more than just about anything else in life, but obtaining really special gifts for my loved ones ranks a very close second.  Smile

P1000040

Willie could NOT have been nicer and even though there were quite a few of us who wanted his autograph and/or picture, he was happy to pose with and sign for everyone who asked.  YAY!  What a complete and total sweetheart!

[ad]

P1000058 P1000056

P1000066 P1000065

The event got started right on time with a viewing of the Season 3 episode of White Collar titled “Where There’s a Will”.  Prior to that time I had never before seen the show and I have to say that I immediately fell in love with it!  The Catch Me If You Can-esque series centers around FBI agent Peter Burke (aka Tim DeKay) and his partner Neal Caffrey (aka Matt Bomer), a former con-man/art thief who has been given a reduced prison sentence in exchange for helping the FBI catch white collar criminals.  The series is one part caper mystery, one part crime drama, and one part comedy, and reminds me quite a bit, in tone at least, of The Mentalist.  The Q & A session got started immediately following the screening and the entire cast was absolutely hilarious!  At several times during the evening they all broke out into song.  Not kidding!  LOVE IT!  I could SO see myself hanging out with these guys!  Smile Of the many anecdotes told that night, my favorite was that people on the island of Manhattan, where the series is lensed, apparently get VERY testy when the filming of the show gets in the way of their daily life.  Matt Bomer said that he wishes the crew would put together a compilation video of the expletives that are yelled at them by angry New Yorkers on a daily basis.  He explained that a typical day involves the filming of a scene in front of an apartment building whereupon one of the building’s residents will invariably arrive home and want to get inside.  A crew member will ask them to wait until the current take is complete (which is usually only about 45 seconds to a minute), but without fail the resident will walk right through the scene, screaming, “I’m not going to &*$^#** wait for *#&$*& anything!”  Ah, you gotta love New Yorkers!

P1000071

SAG had once again set up a cocktail party immediately following the Q & A session and Matt Bomer and Tim DeKay were nice enough to attend.  The actors were ABSOLUTELY bombarded by people wanting pictures and autographs, which shocked me because, as I have explained before, most actors consider themselves above the whole fandom thing.  This particular crowd was made up of mostly teenage girls, though, (I am fairly certain that White Collar has a very large teenage girl fan base thanks to cutie Matt Bomer) and they all wanted to meet the stars.  Matt and Tim were SO incredibly nice, despite the hysteria surrounding them, and stuck around for HOURS taking pictures with and signing autographs for absolutely everyone who asked.  Thankfully fellow stalker Duggan, who is not only a complete sweetheart, but is built like a linebacker, got us right up to the front of the crowd and snapped the above photograph of me and Matt.  So cute!!!

P1000072

Because of a major camera fail on my part, poor Tim DeKay ended up having to pose for THREE different pictures with fellow stalker Mikey, but he was TOTALLY cool about it!!!  What an amazingly nice cast!!!!  As soon as I left the event, I got on the phone with the Grim Cheaper and told him that we HAD to buy Seasons 1 and 2 of White Collar on DVD, which we did that very weekend.  We are now about half-way through Season 1 and are absolutely hooked.  SUCH A GREAT SHOW!  If you have yet to see it, I highly recommend doing so!

Big THANK YOU to Mikey, from the Mike the Fanboy website, for telling me about this event!  Smile You can check out Mikey’s write-up of the evening, as well as some videos he took of the Q & A session, on his website here.

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: There is no stalking location for this one, but you can catch White Collar each Tuesday night at 9/8 Central on the USA Network.  You can also visit the show’s official website here.