Year: 2013

  • Kirk Douglas’ Former Palm Springs House

    Switzerland Group (1 of 1)

    The Grim Cheaper and I are finally home from a blissful two weeks in Switzerland. It was so hard to leave my best friend and his amazing family (pictured above) and the beauty of their country – especially being that when we returned to Palm Springs, temperatures were around 122 degrees! I will be sharing some pictures from our trip (and I took plenty – by ten days in, I had filled up an 8GB memory card!), as well as a few Swiss stalking locales that I visited while there, in the near future. But for today, I thought I would once again blog about a Behind the Candelabra-related location that I stalked prior to leaving for the Land of the Alps.

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    A few weeks ago, while doing some Behind the Candelabra research, I came across a The Guardian article in which Michael Douglas, who played the flamboyant pianist in the HBO biopic, talked about once meeting Liberace while visiting the desert home of his father, Kirk Douglas. Of the encounter, Michael said, “I met him once in passing. My father had a weekend house in Palm Springs and I remember driving out and we came to this cross-section and this Rolls-Royce convertible pulled up alongside. It was a sunny day and, my God, the reflections were bouncing off his gold jewelry and diamond rings and his hair was perfectly coiffed. Of course, we now know that he was wearing a wig.” Well, I, of course, immediately started itching to track down the house Michael was referring to in the article.

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (11 of 20)

    As it turns out, I had actually stalked the home (at least what I think is the correct home) – and blogged about it – once before, way back in March 2008. My research on this location is not exactly definitive. In a The Irish Times article, Michael said that his encounter with Liberace took place around 1956. As Murphy’s Law would have it, though, Kirk Douglas moved from his first Palm Springs residence to his second right around that same time. Michael also mentioned in a Daily Mail article that his father’s house and Liberace’s house were in the same vicinity. But as Murphy’s Law would further have it, both of Kirk’s former desert dwellings are situated about two miles from Liberace’s earliest Coachella Valley abode, which is located at 1516 South Manzanita Avenue. Because the book Explorer’s Guide Palm Springs & Desert Resorts states that the pianist did not move into that home until 1957, though, I am 99.9% certain that the house where Michael’s Liberace encounter took place is the one pictured below.

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (1 of 20)

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (3 of 20)

    Kirk’s original (and extremely nondescript) Palm Springs house, which he lived in for two years – from 1955 to 1957 – is located at 1069 East Marshall Way in the legendary Movie Colony neighborhood.

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (12 of 20)

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (18 of 20)

    That property, which was recently remodeled and just sold about two weeks ago for $639,900, boasts three bedrooms, two baths, 2,095 square feet of living space, a one-bedroom, one-bath casita, travertine flooring, a pool, a 0.26-acre plot of land, and mountain views. You can check out some interior photographs of the dwelling here.

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (16 of 20)

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (17 of 20)

    Kirk’s second desert house, which he owned for over four decades, is located at 515 Via Lola in the Old Las Palmas area of Palm Springs. The five-bedroom, five-bath, 3,790-square-foot abode, which sits on a 0.75-acre plot of land, was designed in 1954 by architects Richard Harrison and Donald Wexler. The modern post-and-beam residence, which originally featured four bedrooms, low ceilings, an asphalt and gravel roof, flagstone walls, and glass adornments, was commissioned by Robert Howard, the one-time owner of the Colony Palms Hotel, which I blogged about back in May. Howard put the property on the market two years after it was completed and it was subsequently purchased by Kirk and his second wife, Anne Buydens, in 1957. Upon buying the residence, the couple added a new façade, interior atriums, a three-car motor court, and quite a bit of square footage. They also transformed the garage into guest quarters. Kirk later bought an adjacent parcel of land on which he installed a tennis court, a gymnasium and a spa.

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (9 of 20)

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (10 of 20)

    According to the fabulous book Palm Springs Confidential, the couple entertained quite a bit during their tenure at the home. Just a few of the famous guests who visited over the years include Natalie Wood, Gregory Peck, Stanley Kubrick, Billy Wilder, Yul Brynner, Warren Beatty, Burt Lancaster, Robert Kennedy, Henry Kissinger, Lady Bird Johnson, and Lynda Bird Johnson. Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn even leased the house from Kirk and Anne for a summer getaway on two different occasions and Vincente Minnelli held the wedding reception for his marriage to Lee Anderson (his fourth wife) there.

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (7 of 20)

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (6 of 20)

    Kirk and Anne sold the home in October 1999 – for a cool $1.3 million – in order to move to Montecito to be closer to Michael.

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (8 of 20)

    To me, the residence exemplifies the Rat Pack-style of architecture that Palm Springs has become so synonymous with. I absolutely LOVE the two palm trees that are the focal point of the front yard.

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    Be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for even more stalking fun! And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

    Kirk Douglas Palm Springs house (2 of 20)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

    Stalk It: Kirk Douglas’ longtime former Palm Springs home is located at 515 Via Lola in the Old Las Palmas neighborhood of Palm Springs. His first desert home can be found just about a mile away at 1069 East Marshall Way in the Movie Colony.

  • Leaving on a Jet Plane

    Switzerland pics (1 of 7)

    The Grim Cheaper and I are heading to Switzerland this evening to visit my best friend, who lives there, for a two-week vacation. I have not been to the Land of the Alps since August 1995, when my parents took me there as my high school graduation present. I fell in love with the country and cannot wait to share its beauty with the GC.

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    The amazing photographs posted here are some that my dad took during that trip, almost 18 years ago.

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    That’s me and my best friend Robin circa 1995 in Switzerland on the left and circa 2010 at my wedding, at which he was my best man, on the right. We’ve come a long way since ‘95. Winking smile Since Robin comes to visit us in America pretty much every year, even though I am petrified to fly, we figured it was definitely our turn to head over there.

    PicMonkey Collage-Robin

    I return from Switzerland on Friday, June 28th and will most likely resume blogging on Tuesday, July 2nd. So until that time, Happy Stalking! Smile

    Switzerland pics (6 of 7)

  • Frances’ House from “Behind the Candelabra”

    Frances House Behind the Candelabra (11 of 25)

    One Behind the Candelabra location that I was not able to stalk two weekends ago was the palatial Palm Springs abode belonging to Frances Liberace (Debbie Reynolds), the flamboyant pianist’s overbearing mother, in the 2013 HBO biopic.  So I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to do so this past Saturday morning.  And, as it turns out, the residence has quite a fascinating history.

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    The ornate Hollywood Regency-style dwelling was originally designed in 1962 by James McNaughton, a Palm Springs-area architect who initially got his start in set decoration.  In fact, he has the distinction of being television’s first set designer.  McNaughton won numerous awards during his stint in show business, including a Look Award, a Christopher Award, and a Peabody award, and he also received quite a few Emmy nominations.  I am fairly certain that the residence was commissioned by George Randolph Hearst, Sr. (the eldest son of publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst) and his wife, Rosalie.  If the couple did not actually commission the property, they were at least its first owners.

    Frances House Behind the Candelabra (1 of 25)

    Frances House Behind the Candelabra (3 of 25)

    After George’s passing in 1972, Rosalie held onto the residence.  It was there that Patty Hearst, George and Rosalie’s niece, hid out in 1977 while on probation awaiting an appeal for her bank robbery conviction.  In May 1991, Rosalie sold the house to Harvey and Lori Sarner for a whopping $1,650,000.  The Sarners still own the property to this day.

    Frances House Behind the Candelabra (6 of 25)

    Frances House Behind the Candelabra (8 of 25)

    The 7-bedroom, 4.75-bath, 7,557-square-foot house, which sits on a 0.62-acre plot of land, is quite eccentric.  According to an August 2012 MyDesert.com article, the dwelling was so lavishly appointed in George and Rosalie’s day that it was known as “Little Hearst’s Castle.”  From the looks of things, not much has changed since that time.  The place actually has a  very Liberace feel to it, ironically enough, and reminds me quite a bit of the pianist’s third desert home, which I blogged about here.

    Frances House Behind the Candelabra (7 of 25)

    Frances House Behind the Candelabra (9 of 25)

    As you can see below, the entire property is surrounded by double-sided Greek goddess statues, which, according to the Radiant Writing blog, are holdouts from the George and Rosalie days.  The Radiant Writing author describes the property, which she remembers from her childhood, as such, “This home was gaudy on a small scale and no doubt a son’s attempt at mimicking his father’s extravagant San Simeon Castle.  All it looked like to me was a morgue.  The home had lion statues guarding both sides of the front door and was surrounded by a wrought iron fence, reminiscent of the Haunted House at Disneyland.  The most haunting thing about the always dark house was the presence of the Romanesque goddess bust type statues placed within 3 feet of each other along the scary fence.  The goddess busts had 70’s style light globes on their heads.”

    Frances House Behind the Candelabra (12 of 25)

    Frances House Behind the Candelabra (14 of 25)

    The Hearst house appeared once in Behind the Candelabra, in the scene in which Liberace (Michael Douglas) and his boyfriend, Scott Thorson (Matt Damon), visited Frances in Palm Springs and listened to her complain about being lonely.  Only the property’s backyard was featured in the flick.  As you can see in the screen capture below, the home’s pool area is very reminiscent of the iconic Neptune Pool at Hearst Castle in San Simeon.

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    Amazingly enough, Behind the Candelabra filming in Palm Springs took place in August, the city’s hottest month of the year, during which high temperatures average 107 degrees!  Being that a one-minute segment can take hours upon hours to shoot, the cast and crew must have been absolutely miserable filming the scene in Frances’ backyard!  I mean look at the clothes they are wearing!  Ugh!

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    While stalking the house, I was floored to discover that the backyard is partially visible from a neighboring street.

    Frances House Behind the Candelabra (21 of 25)

    Frances House Behind the Candelabra (24 of 25)

    On a Behind the Candelabra side-note – I did not even recognize Debbie Reynolds in the role of Frances Liberace and, in fact, had no idea it was her until after I had finished watching the movie and was researching its locations online.  Talk about a fantastic make-up job!

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    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Frances House Behind the Candelabra (15 of 25)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Frances’ house from Behind the Candelabra is located at 701 West Panorama Road in the Little Tuscany Estates area of Palm Springs.  The backyard portion of the residence can be partially viewed from the intersection of West Vista Chino and North Via Monte Vista.  The world famous Kauffman House (which I blogged about here) is located right around the corner at 470 West Vista Chino.

  • Our Lady of Solitude Church from “Behind the Candelabra”

    Behind the Candelabra church (7 of 22)

    Another Palm Springs’ Behind the Candelabra location that the Grim Cheaper and I stalked recently was Our Lady of Solitude Church, where the funeral for Liberace (Michael Douglas) was held in the recently-aired HBO biopic.  This locale was especially interesting because in a case of art imitating life, it was where the flamboyant pianist’s actual 1987 memorial service took place.  But more on that later.

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    In February 1926, Banning resident Father Philip LaVies began working on plans to found and build a Roman Catholic church in the Palm Springs area.  The land for the parish was purchased from the Southern Pacific Railroad and temporary services were held there beginning in 1928.  LaVies commissioned Albert Martin, the prolific architect who gave us St. Vincent de Paul Church (which I blogged about here), St. Monica Catholic Church (which I blogged about here), Los Angeles City Hall, and the Million Dollar Theatre, to design the site.  The Spanish Revival-style structure was completed in 1930.  A rectory was added to the property in 1964 and a parish center in 1974.  Our Lady of Solitude, which was designated a Class One Historic Site on May 15, 1985, is currently one of the oldest churches still standing in Palm Springs

    Behind the Candelabra church (1 of 1)

    Behind the Candelabra church (1 of 22)

    Our Lady of Solitude has had a few brushes with celebrity in its past.  Apparently, President John F. Kennedy attended mass there whenever he was in town.  And Jackie Coogan (who just so happens to be the grandfather of Keith Coogan, my girl Pinky Lovejoy’s fiancé) must have as well, because the GC spotted the placard pictured below posted on one of the church’s pews.  So incredibly cool!  It is also rumored that Liberace was an Our Lady of Solitude parishioner, although I am unsure if there is any validity to that.

    Behind the Candelabra church (17 of 22)

    Our Lady of Solitude church popped up only once in Behind the Candelabra, in the movie’s closing scene in which Scott Thorson (Matt Damon) attended the funeral of his estranged lover, Liberace (Michael Douglas).

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    Behind the Candelabra church (5 of 22)

    In the scene, Scott parked in the lot located directly across the street from the church.

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    Behind the Candelabra church (12 of 22)

    The actual interior of Our Lady of Solitude was also used in the filming.

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    Behind the Candelabra church (15 of 22)

    As Scott watches the rather colorless ceremony, he starts to envision a funeral service that would be fitting of his flamboyant former lover.  In his imagination, the church altar lifts away to reveal a lit stage . . .

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    . . . complete with Mr. Showmanship himself wearing a pink bedazzled suit and flying off into the great beyond.

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    Behind the Candelabra took a few liberties with the scene, though.  The real story is as follows: Liberace passed away at The Cloisters, his Palm Springs home (which I blogged about here), at 2:05 p.m. on February 4th, 1987.  According to a Daily News Wire Services article published a few days later, his body was removed from the house within hours and taken directly to Forest Lawn Memorial Park in the Hollywood Hills.  A memorial service was held the following day, Friday, February 6th, at Our Lady of Solitude church.  It was not an actual funeral, as was portrayed in Behind the Candelabra, though, as the pianist’s body was not present.

    Behind the Candelabra church (6 of 22)

    Behind the Candelabra church (4 of 22)

    There seems to be quite a bit of confusion online about the Our Lady of Solitude service and which celebrities attended it.  According to Scott Thorson’s 1988 book, Behind the Candelabra, on which the movie was based, only two stars were present – actress Charlene Tilton, from the television series Dallas (who was one of Liberace’s Palm Springs neighbors), and, ironically enough, Michael Douglas’ father, Kirk.  And while the fabulous Findadeath website states that Debbie Reynolds, Donald O’Connor, and Robert Goulet were also in attendance, the truth of the matter is that two different public services were held to honor the pianist.  The first was the February 6th service at Our Lady of Solitude.  A second memorial was then held (after Liberace had already been entombed at Forest Lawn Memorial Park on February 7th) at St. Anne’s Catholic Church in Las Vegas on February 12th.  That service was the one attended by Goulet, Reynolds, and O’Connor, as well as Rip Taylor and Sonny King.

    Behind the Candelabra church (14 of 22)

    Behind the Candelabra church (19 of 22)

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Behind the Candelabra church (2 of 22)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Our Lady of Solitude Church, from Behind the Candelabra, is located at 151 West Alejo Road in Palm Springs.  You can visit the parish’s official website here.

  • The Ojai Valley Inn & Spa from “The Bachelorette”

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (32 of 33)

    I know I said yesterday that today’s post would be about a Behind the Candelabra location, but I wound up getting a bit distracted by a spot that I stalked well over two years ago – the Ojai Valley Inn & Spa which appeared on this week’s episode of The Bachelorette. So y’all will have to wait until Monday for more Liberace-related locales. In the meantime . . . in April 2011, the Grim Cheaper and I embarked upon a little stalking road trip up State Route 126. One of our stops along the way was the Ojai Valley Inn, which I had been absolutely itching to stalk as it was where guests had stayed the weekend of Jim Toth and Reese Witherspoon’s wedding just a few weeks prior.

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    And I am very happy to report that the hotel did not disappoint! The Ojai Valley Inn & Spa is often referred to as “majestic” and I honestly can’t think of a better word to describe the place.

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (18 of 33)

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (6 of 33)

    Originally opened in 1923 as a private country club, the Inn was founded by a wealthy Ohio glass manufacturer named Edward Drummond Libbey who wanted to built a winter retreat/golf course for himself and his friends. He commissioned gold course architect (I hadn’t been aware there was such a thing) George C. Thomas to design the course and legendary architect Wallace Neff -who was also responsible for the house where Amanda Woods (Cameron Diaz) lived in The Holiday, the estate belonging to Viola Fields (Jane Fonda) in Monster-in-Law, Brad and Jen’s former manse, and The Biggest Loser Ranch – to design the clubhouse. That clubhouse still exists to this day and is known as the Neff Lounge. Sadly, Libbey passed away in 1925, only two years after his Spanish Colonial-style retreat had been completed.

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (33 of 33)

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (1 of 33)

    In 1942, during the midst of World War II, the property was transformed into Camp Oak, a training center for the U.S. military that hosted over one thousand army troops. Just a couple of years later, in 1944, the site was converted to a rest and recuperation facility for the Navy. In 1946, shortly after the war ended, the 100-room hotel was purchased by a group of investors that included film star Loretta Young and her then husband Tom Lewis and an industrialist named Henry Crown. It was reopened as the Ojai Valley Inn and Country Club and quickly became a retreat for wealthy vacationers and show business elite. In 1983, the Crown family took over full ownership of the property and three years later began an extensive $35-million renovation that added more rooms, eight new tennis courts, a second pool, a gym, and a 4,800-square-foot, 550-seat conference center.

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (5 of 33)

    ojai collage

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (30 of 33)

    The Inn underwent another restoration in 2004, this one costing $90 million. Today, the 220-acre hotel, which is still owned by the Crown family, boasts 308 guest rooms, a kids’ camp, five restaurants, two pools (a family pool and an adults-only pool), an herb garden, countless meandering pathways, an aviary, and an 18-hole championship golf course. The 31,000-square-foot on-site spa, Spa Ojai, features two additional pools, a 50-foot bell tower, numerous treatment rooms, a gym, a café, a Mind & Body studio for yoga and meditation, an Artist’s Cottage where art classes are offered, and an Apothecary where guests can create their own perfume. As you can see below, the place could not be any more charming or idyllic.

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (20 of 33)

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (31 of 33)

    The hotel also boasts a huge, centuries-old tree known as the Friendship Oak Tree . . .

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (9 of 33)

    . . . from which hang countless iron lanterns. I couldn’t help but think how gorgeous it must look at night, all lit up.

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (17 of 33)

    The other trees on the property are just as unique and stunning.

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (8 of 33)

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (3 of 33)

    The area of the hotel that I was most excited to see was Jimmy’s Pub, where Scarlett Johansson and Sean Penn very publicly canoodled the weekend of Jim and Reese’s wedding. Sadly, we could not grab a cocktail while we were there as we had a long drive home ahead of us.

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (11 of 33)

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (13 of 33)

    Besides ScarJo and Sean Penn, a few of the other stars who have vacationed at the AAA Five Diamond Ojai Valley Inn over the years include Walt Disney, Judy Garland, Clark Gable, Anthony Quinn, Joan Crawford, George Gobel, Jane Wyman, Rita Hayworth, Lana Turner, Joe DiMaggio, President Ronald Reagan and wife Nancy, President Gerald Ford, President Jimmy Carter, Jack Benny, Audrey Hepburn, Kate Walsh (who hosted her 2007 wedding reception at the hotel), Anthony Hopkins, Renee Zellweger, Kenny Loggins, Rebecca Romijn, Jessica Simpson, Drew Barrymore, Robert Pattinson, and Kristen Stewart.

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (7 of 33)

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (12 of 33)

    In the second episode of Season 9 of The Bachelorette, Desiree Hartsock took contestant Bryden Vukasin on a road trip up the coast of California, during which they visited the Ojai Valley Inn & Spa. John DiScala of the Johnny Jet website happened to be staying at the hotel during the filming and it was not a pretty experience. You can read his article about it, which I could NOT get enough of, here.

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    Quite a few areas of the hotel were utilized during the filming, including the main entrance;

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    the spa’s Herb Garden Pool, where the two shared a rather awkward first kiss;

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    and the Friendship Oak Tree, under which the couple ate a romantic meal. (As you can see, I was right – the tree is absolutely gorgeous all lit up at night.). It was during the meal that Bryden told Des about the car accident that he was in during his Freshman year of college in which he was badly injured. The accident, of course, made him the person that he is today and . . . “I actually just happen to have a couple of pictures of it that I can show you.” Um, OK. The episode was full of “tragic” backstories like this one, to the point that it became laughable and the GC and I could not stop making up our own stories that we dubbed in over the contestant’s dialogue while watching.

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    The Ojai Valley Inn & Spa has actually been a filming location since way back in 1952 when it was featured in Pat and Mike, in the scene in which Patricia ‘Pat” Pemberton (Katharine Hepburn) played golf with her fiancé, Mike Conovan (Spencer Tracy) in the beginning of the movie.

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    In the 1990 flick The Two Jakes, the Ojai Valley Inn was where J.J. ‘Jake’ Gittes (Jack Nicholson) played a very bad round of golf against Julius ‘Jake’ Berman (Harvey Keitel) for “twenty bucks a hole.”

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    The hotel’s front entrance was also shown briefly in the scene, although it has changed considerably since the movie was filmed. The Two Jakes did not mark Jack Nicholson’s first visit to the resort, though. Ironically enough, in November 1967, when he was a fledgling actor/up-and-coming screenwriter, Jack headed to the Inn for a drug-fueled scriptwriting session with director Bob Rafelson, producer Bert Schneider and The Monkees for what would become the 1968 flop Head.

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    The Ojai Valley Inn & Spa was featured in two Season 3 episodes of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills. It first popped up in “Uh Oh, Somebody’s Crying!”, in which Kim Richards decided to take the women to the resort for a peaceful, relaxing weekend getaway during which there would hopefully be no fighting and no drama. Ha! Fat chance of that, Kim! During their visit, the girls stayed at the resort’s private residence, Casa Elar. The gated, 10,407-square-foot, five-bedroom manse, which was built in 2005, boasts a pool, a spa, a separate entrance, four en-suite bathrooms, a golf cart, a private massage room, dry cleaning services, a library/entertainment room, an elevator (!), a fully-stocked pantry, and its own staff, including a Personal Estate Manager.

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    As you can see below, the pad is simply uh-ma-zing!

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    Especially the kitchen, which reminded me a lot of the kitchen belonging to chef Jane Adler (Meryl Streep) in the 2009 flick It’s Complicated.

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    In the episode, the group dined at Maravilla, the Inn’s signature restaurant, during which they drank complimentary Schramsberg rosé sparkling wine. Um, yes please! Some serious drama also went down during the meal, pretty much ruining Kim’s hopes for a peaceful weekend. Housewife Yolanda Foster’s commentary on the evening: “Where are these women from? What planet are they from? I mean, one doesn’t seem to wish the other one well on a book deal, one tells the other one “Shut the f*ck up!” I mean, it’s like the Wild Wild West on that dinner table, you know?” LOL

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    The resort was also featured in the following episode titled “Girls Gone Ojai ’ld”, by which time all of the drama had subsided – until the limo ride home, at least.

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    In the episode, the women were shown racing around the resort in golf carts (made by Bentley and Escalade, natch!);

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    playing badminton;

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    and partaking of some spa treatments.

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    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER. And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Ojai Valley Inn Bachelorette (24 of 33)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

    Stalk It: The Ojai Valley Inn & Spa, from Season 9, Episode 2 of The Bachelorette, is located at 905 Country Club Road in Ojai. You can visit the resort’s official website here.

  • Scully’s Bar from “Parks and Recreation”

    Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (24 of 28)

    I thought I would take a break today from Behind the Candelabra/Liberace locations to blog about a spot that I spent what seems like forever trying to track down – Clancy’s Crab Broiler in Glendale, the Irish-style bar that has appeared a couple of times on fave show Parks and Recreation.  I can’t actually take credit this particular find, though.  After several months of unsuccessfully cyberstalking pretty much every Irish pub from Pasadena to Santa Monica trying to identify the site, I finally managed to locate a P&R crew member a couple of weeks ago who told me where filming had taken place.  I could not believe that the bar wound up to be in Glendale – right in my own former backyard – and dragged the Grim Cheaper over there for lunch while in L.A. two weekends ago.

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    Clancy’s Crab Broiler was originally founded almost four full decades ago by Jack Williams and his son, Jeff.  While growing up in the San Fernando Valley, Jeff had helped his father out in the small Tujunga–area fast food eatery that he had owned since the early 1950s.  It was not until 1972, though, upon graduating from the University of Southern California with a degree in business, that Jeff decided to pursue a career in the restaurant world.  Jack’s partner had just gone bankrupt and Jack subsequently took over full ownership of the eatery.  Jeff stepped in to help his father out once again and wound up flourishing.  It was not long before he had his eye on a storefront on Brand Boulevard that he thought would be the perfect location for a seafood place.  Clancy’s opened its doors shortly thereafter in 1975 and at the time could seat 72 patrons and served mainly fish and chips.

    Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (28 of 28)

    Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (7 of 28)

    After a fire damaged the original Clancy’s in 1983, Jeff and Jack moved the establishment a couple of blocks west to a larger site on Central Avenue, where it still stands to this day.  The new location, which is run by a staff of 85 (!), seats 300 people, feature two full bars, a billiards area, and a banquet room!  The restaurant is actually made up of two parts – the large bar area which is named the Blue Whale Bar . . .

    Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (8 of 28)

    Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (17 of 28)

    . . . and the large sawdust-on-the-floor dining room.

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    Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (23 of 28)

    Today, Jeff, who was named Restaurateur of the Year by the California Restaurant Writers Association in 1999, and Jack own five area restaurants, including The Black Cow Café on Honolulu Avenue in Montrose, which was featured in fave movie The Wedding Singer.

    Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (19 of 28)

    Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (20 of 28)

    The GC and I grabbed lunch in the Blue Whale Bar and I have to say that it was phenomenal!  While I opted for the restaurant’s Cobb Salad, which was fabulous, I think I actually chose poorly, because the GC ordered a bowl of Clancy’s famous Boston Clam Chowder and I can honestly say it was one of the best things I have ever tasted in my life!

    Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (15 of 28)

    Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (16 of 28)

    Clancy’s Crab Broiler has popped up twice on Parks and Recreation.  It first appeared in the Season 1 episode titled “The Banquet” as the supposed Pawnee, Indiana-area Scully’s Bar where Tom Haverford (Aziz Ansari) and Mark Brendanawicz (Paul Schneider) went to “hit on chicks.”

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    It was then featured in the Season 3 episode titled “Ron & Tammy: Part Two” as O’Shay’s, where Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler) and Ben Wyatt (Adam Scott) threw a pizza party for local Pawnee policemen.  Both the interior . . .

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    . . . and the exterior of Clancy’s were used in that episode.

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    During lunch, our super-nice server filled us in on some of the other productions that have been lensed on the premises, including 2003’s American Wedding, in which Clancy’s stood in for the supposed Grand Rapids, Michigan-area pub where Jim Levenstein (Jason Biggs), Kevin Myers (Thomas Ian Nicholas), Steve Stifler (Seann William Scott), and Paul Finch (Eddie Kaye Thomas) regularly hung out.

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    On an American Wedding side-note – fellow stalker Mikey, from the Mike the Fanboy website, was an extra in the flick!  That’s him below.  Smile

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    Clancy’s was where Michael Scott (Steve Carell) took Holly Flax (Amy Ryan) for lunch in the Season 5 episode of The Office titled “Business Ethics” in 2008.

    In 2009, the site popped up in the Season 2 episode of Denise Richards: It’s Complicated titled “Funbags or Die”, in the scene in which Denise’s father, Irv Richards, shot a commercial for Clancy’s, one of his favorite restaurants.

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    Clancy’s was where Elizabeth Halsey (Cameron Diaz) posed as a journalist to meet with a standardized test worker named Carl Halabi (Thomas Lennon) in the 2011 comedy Bad Teacher.

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    In the Season 8 episode of Criminal Minds titled “Nanny Dearest”, which aired in 2013, Clancy’s masqueraded as the Seattle seafood restaurant (complete with rain!) where Tara Rios (Yara Martinez) worked.

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    In the Season 2 episode of Secrets and Lies titled “The Racket,” which aired in 2016, Danny Voss (Kenny Johnson) attempts to kidnap Melanie Warner (AnnaLynne McCord) from outside of Clancy’s.

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (25 of 28)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Clancy’s Crab Broiler, aka Scully’s Bar from Parks and Recreation, is located at 219 Central Avenue in Glendale.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here.

  • Palm Springs City Hall from “Behind the Candelabra”

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (30 of 32)

    The Behind the Candelabra location that I was most excited to stalk was Palm Springs City Hall, which appeared very briefly towards the end of the recently-aired HBO biopic.  When I first saw the locale pop up onscreen, in all of its retro glory, I was convinced that it was a set that had been fabricated for the shoot.  While I figured that set was most likely based upon what the actual Palm Springs City Hall looked like during Liberace’s era, never in my wildest dreams did I think the place would still bear the same façade today.  So imagine my surprise when I pulled up pictures of the structure on my iPhone via Google Images and discovered that it looks exactly like it did onscreen – 1950’s signage and all!  I, of course, immediately added the site to my To-Stalk List and dragged the Grim Cheaper right on over there this past Saturday morning.  And I am very happy to report that the building is just as fabulous in person!

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    Palm Springs City Hall was originally constructed beginning in 1952 and was designed by architects E. Stewart Williams [the mid-century modern marvel who designed the Kenaston residence from Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie’s infamous July 2005 W Magazine photo shoot, the Koerner House from Alpha Dog, and the 1951 remodel of Howard Manor (now the Colony Palms Hotel)], Albert Frey (the father of the desert modernism-style of architecture who designed a portion of the Burgess House from Alpha Dog), and Frey’s partners, John Porter Clark and Robson Chambers.

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (12 of 32)

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (8 of 32)

    The one-story, concrete block building took five years to complete.

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (32 of 32)

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (5 of 32)

    The eastern portion of the building houses the entrance to the City Council chamber and features a poured-concrete disc overhang with the words “The People Are the City.”

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (9 of 32)

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (14 of 32)

    The building’s main entrance boasts a corrugated metal canopy with a large circular cutout.

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (29 of 32)

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (27 of 32)

    That cutout is of the exact same diameter as the disc overhang in front of the City Council chamber, which brings a sense of symmetry to the building’s two entrances.

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (23 of 32)

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (25 of 32)

    The three palm trees that grow through the cutout remind me of the “twin palms” that are the focal point of Frank Sinatra’s former desert home, which was also designed by E. Stewart Williams.

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (4 of 32)

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (3 of 32)

    My favorite element of the building, though, has to be the bris-soliel (a term I just learned today) made of diagonally-cut aluminum piping, which not only provides an unusual design aesthetic, but morning shade to the structure’s interior.

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (22 of 32)

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (21 of 32)

    Palm Springs City Hall only showed up once in Behind the Candelabra, in the scene in which a Riverside County Health Department spokesman announced to the press that Liberace (Michael Douglas) had died from complications of the AIDS virus and not from heart failure due to an anemia caused by a watermelon diet (I don’t even understand that diagnosis!) as had originally been reported by his manager, Seymour Heller (Dan Aykroyd).

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    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Palm Springs City Hall Behind the Candelabra (11 of 32)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Palm Springs City Hall, from Behind the Candelabra, is located at 3200 East Tahquitz Canyon Way in Palm Springs.

  • Liberace’s House from “Behind the Candelabra”

    Liberace's House Behind the Candelabra (1 of 1)

    Two Sunday nights ago, I (along with the rest of the world) was glued to my television set watching Behind the Candelabra, the HBO biopic about legendary pianist Liberace (Michael Douglas) and his teenaged lover, Scott Thorson (Matt Damon).  I have to say that I was a bit disappointed when all was said and done, though.  As Melissa Maerz said in her review of the flick for Issue #1261/1262 of Entertainment Weekly magazine, “Liberace’s fans were actually mostly straight women, the older, blue-haired types.  And for better or worse, that seems like the target audience for this movie, a glossy story of love gone wrong and then (slightly) redeemed at the end, without a whole lot of deep pathos in between.”  While entertaining, I had expected more.  I did, of course, become a wee-bit obsessed with tracking down the film’s many locations, though, especially being that quite a bit of it was lensed right here in Palm Springs.  Mike, from MovieShotsLA, also got in on the hunt and managed to find Liberace’s desert home from the movie, so I ran right out to stalk it – braving 107-degree heat, mind you! – this past Saturday afternoon.

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    Mike was able to locate the residence thanks to the fact that a massive brown manse was visible in the background of the scene in which Scott went to visit Liberace on his deathbed.  Using aerial views and Google Street View, he matched up the angle of the manse shown in the movie to an address that was identified as 696 North Via Monte Vista in the Old Las Palmas neighborhood of Palm Springs.  Sure enough, it was the right spot.  Ironically enough, and unbeknownst to Mike, the hilltop mansion that he had spotted was none other than the house where Tom Rose (James Handy) lived in the Season 5 episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 titled “P.S. I Love You” (which I blogged about here).

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    Liberace's House Behind the Candelabra (8 of 19)

    In real life, the 5-bedroom, 4.5-bath, 2,772-square-foot dwelling, which was originally built in 1930, is known as Casa de Monte Vista.  The site boasts a 0.77-acre plot of gated land, vaulted wood-beamed ceilings, a rotunda entrance, a formal dining room, a library, a clay tile roof, a covered patio, a saltwater pool, lush landscaping including an organic herb and vegetable garden, mountain views, and four (!) guest casitas.  According to Zillow, the space last sold in May 1996 for $408,000.  It appears to have been put on the market once again in 2008 at a price of $1,695,000, but was later taken off.  The abode currently serves as a private residence/special events venue/vacation rental.  You can check out the home’s website here.

    Liberace's House Behind the Candelabra (10 of 19)

    Liberace's House Behind the Candelabra (6 of 19)

    As you can see below, the property is absolutely gigantic!  According to the Casa de Monte Vista website, in the 1950s, the pad was owned by actor Robert Stack and then later, in the 1960s, became a frequent stomping ground of members of The Rat Pack.  And while the short-lived Casa de Monte Vista blog states that the home also once belonged to Lucille Ball (as well as the creator of the margarita), I am not sure if that information is correct.    The residence’s most recent brush with celebrity, besides the filming of Behind the Candelabra, took place on Sunday, May 26th when Debbie Reynolds, who played Liberace’s mom, Francis, in the flick, hosted a special viewing party on the premises.

    Liberace's House Behind the Candelabra (13 of 19)

    Liberace's House Behind the Candelabra (18 of 19)

    Casa de Monte Vista was featured twice towards the end of Behind the Candelabra.  The exterior of the house first popped up in the scene in which Scott went to say goodbye to Liberace at his Palm Springs residence after learning that he was gravely ill.

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    The real life interior of the residence, which you can see photographs of here, was also shown in that scene.

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    The exterior of the home showed up once again in the scene in which it was announced to the press that Liberace had passed away.

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    What was shown of the property in Behind the Candelabra looked so much like The Cloisters (Liberace’s real life former desert home) that I originally thought filming had taken place there.  When Mike informed me that was not actually the case, I couldn’t help but wonder why on earth The Cloisters hadn’t been used.  Then I passed by the place this past weekend and was shocked (and saddened) to discover that the exterior had been completely remodeled since I stalked it last and currently looks nothing like it did in Liberace’s day.  (I think the actual residence might have been left unaltered, but the fencing, front gate, foliage, and driveway area have, unfortunately, been rendered unrecognizable.)

    Liberace's House Behind the Candelabra (1 of 19)

    The photograph below is one I took of The Cloisters, from virtually the same angle as the above picture, back in April 2008 when I originally stalked the place.  You can read that blog post here and I will be writing another post on the location in the near future.

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    While not technically used as a location in Behind the Candelabra, The Cloisters, in its altered state, did pop very briefly up in the background of Liberace’s funeral scene.

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    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

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

    Liberace's House Behind the Candelabra (5 of 19)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Casa de Monte Vista, aka Liberace’s house from Behind the Candelabra, is located at 696 North Via Monte Vista in the Old Las Palmas neighborhood of Palm Springs.  You can visit the home’s vacation rental/special events venue website here.

  • Liberace’s Third Palm Springs House

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (21 of 23)

    Shortly after moving to the desert back in January, I took my dad to a doctor appointment and, while in the waiting room, happened to pick up the November 2012 issue of Palm Springs Life magazine.  It turned out to be a fortuitous choice because in it was an article titled “Living With Liberace” about a recently-remodeled Old Las Palmas-area residence that had once been owned by the legendary pianist.  The article, of course, piqued my interest, but, let me tell you, I just about fell out of my chair when I read that the property’s new owners, accountant Garth Gilpin and his wife, doctor Elizabeth Smalley, originally hailed from Pasadena, the city that I had just migrated from!  I decided I had to stalk the home as soon as possible – especially considering all of the hoopla that was then (and is still now) surrounding the recently filmed HBO biopic Behind the Candelabra (which finally aired this past Sunday) – and I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to do just that a few days later.

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    Liberace, who was born Wladziu Valentino Liberace and who was at one time the world’s highest-paid pianist, purchased the one-story desert dwelling on North Kaweah Road in 1968.  It was his third Palm Springs home.  Lee, as he was known to his friends, actually owned six Coachella Valley-area properties throughout his lifetime (including one that he purchased for his mother and another that he purchased for his brother).  Of his penchant for buying residences, he said, “Some people collect stamps, I like to collect real estate.  I am a firm believer in the good earth.”

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (9 of 23)

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (11 of 23)

    During Liberace’s years there, the four-bedroom, five-bath, 3,101-square-foot abode, which was originally constructed in 1952 and sits on a 0.33-acre plot of land, was decorated in a French Provincial style and boasted a Louis XIV room and a large fountain.  According to the Palm Springs Life article, Mr. Showmanship would play his piano nightly, much to the joy of his neighbors, and each Halloween, would pass out silver dollars, much to the joy of local trick-or-treaters.  Garth told the magazine that the man who formerly lived next door (he has since passed away), would share anecdotes of Lee’s time on North Kaweah, saying “He told us how Liberace would come over in the mornings, in his bathrobe, and go into his icebox and chow down on his fried chicken leftovers.  Then at night he’d hear him playing the piano.  It’s such a great Palm Springs story, isn’t it?  ‘I lived next door and got to hear Liberace playing the piano for free.’”

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (7 of 23)

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (17 of 23)

    Liberace purchased his final desert residence, which was named The Cloisters (you can read my blog post on it here), in 1967.  It was in disarray at the time and the pianist immediately began a long restoration process, to the tune of $136,000, while still living on North Kaweah Road.  He finally moved into The Cloisters in 1972, at which point he offloaded the Kaweah property.

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (6 of 23)

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (19 of 23)

    When the Kaweah house was put on the market in 2009, it boasted a price tag of $995,000 and was in quite a state, as you can see below.  There are quite simply no words for the monstrosity that the interior had become.  Wait, I take that back.  There are words.  Two of them, in fact.  Hot mess!

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    Shockingly, the extravagant décor was not a leftover from Liberace’s days, but was the brainchild of the home’s then owner who was apparently a huge fan of both Mr. Showmanship and Elvis.  You can check out additional photographs of the residence’s unique interior on its real estate listing here.

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    Garth and Elizabeth wound up buying the property in May 2010 for $625,000.  Of their first tour of the dwelling – a viewing which rendered the couple “speechless” – Elizabeth says, “There were painted cherubs on the ceiling, a room that was Dalmatian and cow print, fake flowers, red velvet, gold, with Elvis and Liberace everywhere.  It was the most dysfunctional house we’ve ever seen.  Nonetheless, we thought, how can we not do this?”  Shortly after purchasing the residence, they hired designer Christopher Kennedy to help them “honor and respect Liberace’s original vision without, you know, recreating it” and “to make it feel Liberace without looking Liberace.”  You can see the result – which is fabulous – on the Palm Springs Life website here.  Hard to believe it’s the same house as the one shown in the photos above!

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (22 of 23)

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (20 of 23)

    Thankfully, subtle reminders of the pad’s famous former owner were left on the exterior of the property, as well, including music notes on the front gates.

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (18 of 23)

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (23 of 23)

    And a piano-shaped mailbox, which I fell in love with!

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (15 of 23)

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (13 of 23)

    The house is even named “Piazza di Liberace” and bears a sign informing visitors of that fact.  Love it!

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (12 of 23)

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (14 of 23)

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Liberace's Third Palm Springs House (10 of 23)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Liberace’s third desert home is located at 1441 North Kaweah Road in the Old Las Palmas section of Palm Springs.

  • Rent-A-Swag from “Parks and Recreation”

    Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (10 of 15)

    Back in early May, fellow stalker Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, emailed me to let me know that he had just tracked down Rent-A-Swag – the supposed Pawnee, Indiana-area high-fashion rental store for teenagers owned by Tom Haverford (Aziz Ansari) on fave show Parks and Recreation. So I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to stalk it – Starbucks in hand (but to be fair when do I not have a Starbucks in hand? Winking smile) – while visiting Los Angeles this past Memorial Day weekend.

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    While watching the Parks and Rec Season 5 finale, which was titled “Are You Better Off?”, Owen had spotted an address number placard with a missing digit (120-9) on the exterior of the Rent-A-Swag storefront. His eye was immediately caught by that missing digit and his interest piqued, so he decided to begin searching for the locale. Thankfully, the hunt was an easy one and he wound up finding the shop at 12059 Ventura Place in Studio City.

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    And while Owen and I had both assumed that the 5 had been removed during the Parks and Rec shoot in order to thwart the efforts of us stalkers, that does not appear to have been the case. As you can see below, the digit is missing in real life, too, which I was shocked to discover!

    Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (5 of 15)

    Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (6 of 15)

    In real life, the Rent-A-Swag storefront is vacant and looks to have been so for some time, which is probably how it came to be used on Parks and Recreation. The 4,000-square-foot space, which is currently divided into two separate units, most recently housed a branch of the US Postal Service. In January, EaterLA reported that the property was rumored to be the site of the future Valley outpost of the popular mid-city restaurant Joan’s on Third. And while Joan’s founder Joan McNamara did talk about opening a cafe in a former post office on Ventura Place in this April 2012 Los Angeles Times article, as you can see below, the site is still presently available for lease, so that venture appears to have fallen through.

    Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (2 of 15)

    Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (1 of 15)

    Unfortunately, the GC and I showed up to stalk the site on Sunday morning, smack-dab in the middle of the highly-popular Studio City Farmers Market which takes place directly in front of Rent-A-Swag, so I was not able to get the greatest of photographs.

    Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (3 of 15)

    Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (13 of 15)

    Rent-A-Swag first showed up in the Season 5 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “Pawnee Commons” and has been featured fairly regularly ever since.

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    In “Pawnee Commons”, Tom rents out a space, which he states in a later episode is located on Durham Avenue, to house his latest brainchild – a store in which he will lease his expensive threads to tweens. Of the new venture, he says, “I started a business where I rent my fancy clothes to teens so their parents don’t have to buy them nice things they’ll just grow out of. So if you see a 14-year-old kid wearing a Louis Vuitton cravat, you know who to thank – me . . . and Louis Vuitton, for making some dope-a*s cravats.” LOL In “Pawnee Commons”, Tom enlists his Parks and Recreation Department co-workers to help him get the space, which is in pretty dire straits, ready for the grand opening. The real life interior of the store, which you can see pictures of here, was also used in the episode, as well as in several episodes since.

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    The group’s first go at the renovation turns out rather dire, as well, so they wind up remodeling it twice in the episode.

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    The final result is pictured below.

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    In an odd twist, while scanning through Season 5 episodes of Parks and Recreation to make screen captures for this post, I discovered that the other side of the Rent-A-Swag storefront (as I mentioned earlier, the space is currently divided into two separate units) was used as the Pawnee VideoDome/XXX Adult DVD Emporium in the episode titled “Bailout”.

    Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (9 of 15)

    In “Bailout”, Councilwoman Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler) petitions the city council to declare Pawnee’s local video store, Pawnee VideoDome, a historical landmark to prevent its impending closure. Leslie succeeds, but the site winds up re-opening as a pornographic video shop – owned in part by the government. LOL

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    The real life interior of the space was also used in the episode.

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    I was shocked to learn, while doing research for this post, that the very same location was used in another of Owen’s favorite shows – Seinfeld. The Rent-A-Swag storefront popped up briefly in the Season 4 episode titled “The Trip (2)”, which aired in 1992, as the spot where Jerry Seinfeld (Jerry Seinfeld) and George Costanza (Jason Alexander) watched as two policemen arrested a man for attempted robbery. At the time, the space housed the Bicycle Shack bike store and looked quite a bit different than it does today. Although, structurally still the same, since the time that Seinfeld was filmed, a large awning has been added, significantly altering the look of the place.

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    The location also appeared in 1994’s Beverly Hills Cop III, in the background of the scene in which Det. Axel Foley (Eddie Murphy) jumps out of a car to escape from Jon Flint (Hector Elizondo).

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    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER. And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Big THANK YOU to Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, for finding this location! Smile

    Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (7 of 15)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

    Stalk It: Rent-A-Swag from Parks and Recreation is located at 12059 Ventura Place in Studio City.