Year: 2013

  • Robert Kardashian’s Former House

    Robert Kardashian's House (4 of 12)

    Last October, while I was knee-deep in my Haunted Hollywood postings, fellow stalker/prolific author E.J., of The Movieland Directory website, emailed me to let me know about his book Hollywood Death and Scandal Sites: Sixteen Driving Tours with Directions and the Full Story, from Tallulah Bankhead to River Phoenix, which he thought I might be interested in.  Well, one look at the tome on Amazon and I knew I had to have it!  When it arrived, I devoured the thing in two sittings and practically filled up my entire To-Stalk notebook with new addresses, the most exciting of which was the Encino home where Robert Kardashian lived in June 1994 and where O.J. Simpson supposedly stayed in the interval leading up to his arrest for the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman.  In fact, it was from there that O.J. left on the morning of his infamous slow-speed white Ford Bronco chase.  That day in Simpson’s life has always fascinated me as there are so many unanswered questions about it.  What led up to that infamous chase?  Where was O.J. coming from and where was he headed?  So, after reading the blurb about the house in E.J.’s book, I just had to run right out and stalk the place.

    [ad]

    According to a June 18, 1994 Los Angeles Times article, Kardashian leased the gargantuan contemporary dwelling, which sticks out quite a bit from the ranch-style homes which surround it, about a month prior to the murders, after the builders failed to sell the place.  I believe that Kardashian lived there, along with then fiancé Denice Shakarian Halicki, for only a very short time.

    Robert Kardashian's House (9 of 12)

    Robert Kardashian's House (11 of 12)

    As the story goes, on the morning of Friday, June 17th, 1994, O.J. Simpson was charged with the double murder of Ron and Nicole and was set to turn himself in to the LAPD at their headquarters in downtown Los Angeles.  His lawyer, Robert Shapiro, later changed the plan and asked instead for O.J. to be taken into custody at Kardashian’s home, where the football star had been hiding out from the media with his then girlfriend Paula Barbieri.  (It was a good hiding place, too – according to the same L.A Times article, none of the neighbors had any idea The Juice was there.)  When the police showed up, though, Simpson was long gone.  Sometime that morning, he had disappeared from the residence with his good friend and college roommate, Al Cowlings, and headed towards Orange County, either to visit Nicole’s grave at Ascension Cemetery in Lake Forest or to escape to Mexico, depending upon which version of the story you believe.  The LAPD issued an all-points bulletin for O.J. and Cowlings at 2 p.m. and, according to Wikipedia, about four hours later someone in the O.C. spotted the duo and notified police, who later found them driving north on the 405 freeway.  What followed became television history.

    Robert Kardashian's House (6 of 12)

    Robert Kardashian's House (7 of 12)

    Kardashian’s former home, which was originally built in 1957, but drastically remodeled shortly before he moved in, boasts five bedrooms, five baths, 7,104 square feet of living space, and a 0.40-acre plot of land.  The dwelling was last sold in 1997 for $830,000, but appears to have been put on the market again recently during which time it was described as a “fixer-upper.”

    Robert Kardashian's House (2 of 12)

    Robert Kardashian's House (5 of 12)

    Property records also show that some sort of movie shoot took place on the premises in March 2000, but I am unsure of what exactly was filmed.

    Robert Kardashian's House (8 of 12)

    Robert Kardashian's House (12 of 12)

    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 E.J., from The Movieland Directory website, for telling me about this location!  Smile  You can purchase his Hollywood Death and Scandal Sites book here.

    Robert Kardashian's House (10 of 12)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Robert Kardashian’s former home, where O.J. stayed before his infamous car chase and subsequent arrest, is located at 16254 Mandalay Drive in Encino.

  • My Favorite Pasadena Places – Part II

    Pasadena City hall (1 of 1)

    As promised, today’s blog is a continuation of my top ten favorite places in Pasadena. If you missed the first installment, you can check it out here. And now, on with the post! (Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for taking the above photograph of Pasadena City Hall. I swear, that guy takes THE BEST pictures. I was just telling him the other night that if I ever get rich, I am hiring him to take photos for my site fulltime. I’ll do the writing and he can handle the pics. We’d so be unstoppable! Winking smile)

    [ad]

    6. Old Town Pasadena Historic District – If there’s one thing this stalker loves almost as much as stalking, it’s shopping. I absolutely hate being inside, though, so when I first moved to Pasadena and discovered Old Town’s historic shopping district, I thought I had died and gone to heaven.

    Blo Out Lounge Pasadena (10 of 16)_thumb[2]

    Old Town Pasadena, which is comprised of blocks upon blocks of fabulous boutiques, restaurants and specialty stores (like The Soap Kitchen, which makes the best lip balm I have ever owned), features stunning architecture, spacious courtyards and lots and lots of brick. It is hands down my favorite place to shop in all of Southern California. And because I used to live about a mile from it, walking there daily provided me with my only form of exercise. See, shopping can be good for you! The area also has a bit of a celebrity twist. In the 1940s, Old Town Pasadena fell into serious disarray and became a haven for criminal and drug activity. Thankfully though, in the early ‘90s, the site’s potential was realized by several real estate developers and businessmen who set about revitalizing the district and wound up turning it into what is now one of L.A.’s most popular shopping and dining venues. One of the men who was involved in that revitalization was none other than producer Garry Marshall, although he ended up backing out after the project almost bankrupted him. He talks quite a bit about the venture in his fabulous book My Happy Days in Hollywood.

    Blo Out Lounge Pasadena (15 of 16)_thumb[4]

    The area also sees quite a bit of filming. In fact, just the other day I learned that the Urban Outfitters in Old Town was featured in the 2004 movie National Treasure, in the scene in which Benjamin Franklin Gates (Nicolas Cage), Abigail Chase (Diane Kruger) and Riley Poole (Justin Bartha) go shopping for new clothes.

    Blo Out Lounge Pasadena (14 of 16)_thumb[2]

    ScreenShot6966_thumb[2]

    The center of Old Town Pasadena is located at 1 Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena. You can visit the district’s official website here.

    Blo Out Lounge Pasadena (11 of 16)_thumb[2]

    7. The Starbucks at Lake & Green – Not the closest Starbucks to my former apartment, but my most-favorite one and easily the best in all of Pasadena. I would walk about a mile out of my way each day to visit this particular branch, that’s how much I love the place. At most Starbucks locations, the wait is atrocious and items are invariably out of stock – there is one in particular in the Pasadena area that shall remain unnamed (753 S. Arroyo Parkway) that is constantly out of whole milk and it drives me up the wall. This particular store, though, has GOT IT DOWN! I can honestly say that in the six years I frequented the place, I never had to wait longer than five minutes from the time I walked through the front door to the time I walked out, drink in hand. I love, love, love this Starbucks. The GC would often try to get me to stop at other Sbux outposts that happened to be on the way to wherever we were going on that particular day, and every single time he got his way and we ended up at another store, we would get stuck in some god-forsaken line and lose about ten minutes time. Men! I became such a regular at Lake & Green that when one of my favorite baristas, Eve, won Partner of the Quarter for her district, I was invited to the event, as were a few other customers. That’s just the way the Lake & Green store is. It is like the Cheers bar of Starbucks stores – where everybody knows your name. My favorite Starbucks is located at 82 South Lake Avenue in Pasadena.

    Starbucks Lake and Green (1 of 3)_thumb[2]

    8. Betty Nails & Spa – Anyone who lives in L.A. knows that most nail salons there are conveyor-belt type places that can be found on pretty much each and every street corner. Some are even downright skeevy. Not Betty Nails & Spa, though. As soon as I walked in for my first visit, I immediately felt comfortable and welcomed. The place was clean and laid-back, the stylists friendly and the prices extremely reasonable. What I liked best, though, was the fact that the manicurist took her time. In all of my visits there, I never felt like they were trying to rush through the process to move on to the next customer. They also never tried to upsell me. Quite the contrary, actually – the first time I asked for a callus removal (Cat, from the Pasadena Blo-Out Lounge, had told me how fabulous callus removals are and she was right!), I was told that I really did not need one. The best part about Betty’s manicures and pedicures, though, are the massages. Sigh! After I discovered Betty’s and became a regular, I recommended the place to my mom and she subsequently became a regular, too. When she moved to desert, she would often lament to me that she could not find a nail salon that she liked nearly as much that didn’t cost an arm and a leg – which doesn’t bode well for me now that I live there, as well. Needless to say, my nails – and hair – will be suffering due to my move. Sad smile Betty Nails & Spa is located at 766 East Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena.

    Betty nails Spa (1 of 1)_thumb[2]

    9. El Portal – Our favorite Pasadena-area Mexican eatery. El Portal is a family-owned and operated place that specializes in Yucatan cuisine and has been awarded Pasadena Weekly’s “Best Mexican Restaurant” more times than I can count. The Grim Cheaper has long been addicted to their shredded beef tacos and while I typically do not have a hard time sticking to my carb-free diabetic-friendly diet when dining out, whenever I am at El Portal I canNOT resist their cheese quesadillas! They are like my kryptonite. I do not know how one can make a quesadilla stand out from others (I mean, aren’t they just tortillas and cheese?), but no other quesadilla that I have ever sampled even compares to the ones at El Portal. They are that good! El Portal’s champagne, unfortunately, wasn’t, though. The restaurant used to serve a very sweet brand of sparking wine that I was not at all a fan of, so one day I decided to ask El Portal’s owner, Abel Ramirez, if he would ever consider stocking a different variety. I mentioned that the rather inexpensive Freixenet brand was one of my favorites (my best friend actually calls me “The Freixenet Girl”) and the very next week when we sat down at the bar, our favorite bartender popped a Freixenet split down in front of me! How incredible is that? I just about fell over I was so excited. The bartender also later told us that the restaurant has been selling quite a bit more champagne now since they made the switch, which I was over the moon about. For the best quesadillas in the world, head to El Portal, which is located at 695 East Green Street, inside of Arcade Lane, in Pasadena. You can visit the restaurant’s website here.

    El Portal Pasadena (1 of 1)_thumb[2]

    10. Our Former Loft – The GC and I have both long been obsessed with New York loft-style architecture, so when we toured the one pictured below while looking for our first apartment together in 2008, we signed the lease immediately. We absolutely LOVED living in what we took to calling “our perfect little loft”, despite the fact that it was only 750 square feet. And while we did end up desperately needing more space as the years went on, it was truly heartbreaking to leave the place and not a day goes by that I don’t miss it.

    Our loft (1 of 5)_thumb[2]

    Our loft (5 of 5)_thumb[3]

    Our loft (3 of 5)_thumb[2]

    Our loft (4 of 5)_thumb[2]

    Especially the floor-to-ceiling brick wall.

    Our loft (1 of 1)_thumb[2]

    One thing I will NOT miss about our loft, though, is the tiny closet, which I actually had to split with the GC! For a hyper-organized clotheshorse like myself, sharing such a small closet was miserable.

    Our loft (2 of 8)_thumb[2]

    As you can see, because the closet was so small and because I have so many clothes, the result was a rather disorganized storage system, which was enough to drive the Monica Geller in me crazy on a daily basis. I get an eye twitch just looking at the pictures below. Winking smile

    Our loft (4 of 8)_thumb[3]

    Our loft (5 of 8)_thumb[2]

    Our loft (6 of 8)_thumb[2]

    So when we decided to move to the desert, I stole a line from Carrie Bradshaw and told the GC, “Just get me a really big closet!” Which he did, and which my dad, who is quite the craftsman (he constructed the bookshelves, ladder and butcher block pictured in the above photographs of our loft), custom-built for me. The original closet, as it came with our new apartment, is pictured below.

    Custom-built closet (1 of 1)

    I asked my dad to base the design on Emily Schuman’s closet (from fave website Cupcakes and Cashmere), which you can take a look at here. The result is pictured below and, while it is still not completely finished, I could NOT be happier with it. I feel like I’ve died and gone to closet heaven! I keep calling it my Barbie Dream Closet and literally can’t get enough of it. I think it is safe to say that I will be spending the vast majority of my time in there, just gazing around in awe. Smile

    Custom-built closet (2 of 4)

    Custom-built closet (1 of 4)

    Custom-built closet (4 of 4)

    Custom-built closet (3 of 4)

    Although two of my very favorite area locales, I purposely left The Huntington Library and the Walsh house from Beverly Hills, 90210 out of this post because both are featured quite prominently on My L.A. Must-Stalk List, which you can read here.

    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.

    Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

  • My Favorite Pasadena Places – Part I

    ScreenShot6967

    While the Grim Cheaper and I are absolutely loving our new apartment and desert locale, I am, of course, feeling quite nostalgic about Pasadena, the fabulous city that I called home for over thirteen years. There are so many things that I am going to miss about the place – even my former building’s Ugly Naked Guy. Well, I’m not going to miss him, per se – just the fact that my building had one and that I once shared that small similarity with the Friends gang. But that is a different story for a different time (and it’s a doozy, let me tell you!). For today and Monday, though, while caught up in memories of my beloved Rose City, I thought I would go a little off-topic by blogging about my ten favorite places in Pasadena. None have a filming or celebrity angle, necessarily, but I hope my fellow stalkers will enjoy this walk down memory lane nonetheless. So without further ado . . .

    [ad]

    1. Lula Mae Gift Shop – My very favorite store in the entire world! While planning for this post, I made a list of all of the places that I needed to take photographs of and Lula Mae was one of them. Then I realized that the two pictures below (which my dad took last year of me with Marci, Lula’s owner, and Julia, a longtime employee) perfectly encapsulate what the shop is all about. Walking into Lula Mae is like walking into a giant hug and what I love most about the place – besides the fabulous merchandise, which is truly one-of-a-kind – is the people who work there. There are honestly no words to describe how much I am going to miss Marci and Julia (as wells as Alison and Reyana). The Lula ladies have all become my good friends and saying good-bye to them was the hardest part of leaving Pasadena for me. I bawled for a full two blocks after I left the store that evening and still haven’t fully recovered. Ironically enough, Marci was the one who gave me the last push I needed to move. The GC and I had been going back and forth over the decision for weeks and one day Marci said, “Well, what are you going to regret more? Leaving Pasadena or not being with your parents?” We gave notice to our apartment building just a few days later. Marci is one of the most amazing people I have ever met – she is the absolute embodiment of Kathleen Kelly (Meg Ryan) from You’ve Got Mail. In fact, I am convinced that Nora Ephron met Marci one day while writing the screenplay for the 1998 flick and then based the character off of her.

    P1020198

    Lula Mae was where I would go whenever I needed inspiration, a good laugh, a cheering-up, some girl talk, or a fabulously unique gift. LA Weekly awarded the site “Best One-Stop Shopping” in 2011 and had this to say, “You know that friend of yours who always upstages the $10 bottle of wine you pull out of your purse when she shows up at parties with the most adorable, clever little trinket wrapped perfectly in a colorful vintage gift bag? Well that smug b*tch probably has been shopping at Lula Mae for years now.” That smug b*tch was me. Friends learned long ago to stop asking where I purchased a certain card or gift because the answer was invariably “Lula Mae”. When I told my parents we were moving to the desert, the first words out of my mom’s mouth were, “But what are you going to do without Lula Mae?” Not joking. The store was that much a part of my life. In fact, the GC asked if Marci factored our move into her 2013 revenue projections. LOL I honestly don’t know how I will survive without my weekly (oh, who am I kidding) daily Lula dose. Sad smile It’s the most adorable store I have ever visited in my life (the place even has a shop kitty!) and I cannot more highly recommend a visit. Lula Mae is located at 100 North Fair Oaks Avenue in Old Town Pasadena. You can visit the store’s website here.

    P1020197

    2. Vroman’s Bookstore – My very favorite bookstore. Because I love Vroman’s so much and shop there so often, I have written countless posts about the place over the years. Consequently, in the hopes of sparing y’all any redundancy, I will keep this blurb brief. Let me just say that Vroman’s is the type of place where you can walk in and say, “I heard about this book and I can’t remember the title or who wrote it, nor what it is even about. I know it has to do with a bookseller and that it takes place in a past era and the cover is a mustard yellow color and has a Sherlock Holmes-looking guy on it.” And they will know exactly the book you are talking about. I walked in the other day and said just that and, sure enough, it wasn’t two minutes before I had the novel I had so poorly remembered, The Shadow of the Wind, in my hands. The picture below was taken back in 2011 on a day when Parks and Recreation was filming at Vroman’s. You can read my post about that filming here. Vroman’s Bookstore is located at 695 East Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena. You can visit their website here. Be sure to check out their Special Events page as celebrity authors stop by regularly for signings.

    P1070419

    3. The Slaw Dogs – I discovered this place (thanks to Marci from Lula Mae) about two years ago and it became such a favorite that before long I was dining there a good four or five times a week. The eatery serves the. best. hot. dogs. ever. And this is coming from a true frankfurter connoisseur. The dogs are so good, in fact, that when I took my friends Beth and Kim, who were in town visiting from Ohio, they actually later dreamed about their meal! Yes, The Slaw Dogs has the power to enter your dreams! And the establishment even serves champagne! What more could a stalker ask for?

    Slaw Dogs Pasadena (1 of 1)

    Pictured below is my regular order – a turkey dog with melted cheddar cheese and ranch dressing. I am salivating just looking at it right now! To stay diabetic-friendly, though, I don’t eat the bun. For those of you who aren’t diabetic, The Slaw Dogs serves a variety of carb-loaded options, including a Mac and Cheese Dog (with macaroni and cheese, bacon, grilled onions, and Dijon mustard), The Picnic Dog (with homemade potato salad, BBQ sauce, onion rings, and a dill pickle spear), and the TNT Super Dog, aka “The Good Timer” (with beer chili, cheddar cheese, bacon, pastrami, French fries, grilled onions, and a fried egg, all wrapped in a giant tortilla). There are also vegetarian options and salads, for those who prefer a healthier meal. If you’re in the area, skip Pink’s (the lines are long and the dogs just average) and hit up The Slaw Dogs instead. Several celebs have even been known to stop in on occasion, including Wentworth Miller, whom I once dined next to. The eatery has a few locations, but the Pasadena outpost can be found at 720 North Lake Avenue. You can visit The Slaw Dogs website here.

    Slaw Dogs (1 of 1)

    4. The Pasadena Blo-Out Lounge – I discovered this place in all of its white marble and pink-accented glory in June 2011 and never looked back. And while the GC likes to say, “You pay someone to wash your hair!”, what I am actually paying for is a professional blow-dry. Because the Blo-Out Lounge prices are so incredibly reasonable, I was able to buy a monthly membership and get my hair done every four or five days. (Yes, I know – I am spoiled!) The Lounge was a lifesaver for me because I have extremely curly and extremely thick hair. Blowing it out on my own takes a good two hours and is a huge pain in the butt, so, before discovering the Lounge, I would often just leave it curly and pull it back in a clip. After becoming a member, though, everyday became a good hair day. So much so that Miss Pinky Lovejoy, of the Thinking Pink blog, once called me up to ask if I had gotten a makeover at some point before meeting her. She had been going through my old celebrity photographs and, apparently, I used to be a hot mess. LOL My answer, “No, I just discovered the Blo-Out Lounge.”

    Blo Out Lounge Pasadena (3 of 16)

    Not only did the Lounge change my hair-life, but the stylists who work there all became my close friends. Even if I went back to wearing my hair curly, I would still want to visit the salon regularly just to hang out. I honestly do not know what I am going to do now that I live in Palm Springs. I can say this, though – the Lounge will be my VERY FIRST stop on every single visit back to L.A. And while I have my favorites [Noelle (who is pictured), Cat, Yvette, Arlyn and Dinga], ALL of the girls who work at the Lounge are fabulous and, in almost two years time, I have NEVER received a single bad blow-out. The Pasadena Blo-Out Lounge is located at 62 North Raymond Avenue in Old Town Pasadena. You can visit their website here.

    Blo Out Lounge Pasadena (5 of 16)

    5. Vertical Wine Bistro – Sadly, while the GC and I had dined once before at Vertical (I blogged about it here), we only just discovered the wonder that is their happy hour about six weeks prior to our move. I can easily say that Vertical Wine Bistro has Pasadena’s BEST happy hour, hands down! The prices are reasonable, the food spectacular and the servings huge. We love the place so much that it became our regular Friday night spot. It was also where we chose to eat dinner our last night in Pasadena. Because we had only been dining at Vertical habitually for a short time, we did not know any of the bartenders very well, but, amazingly, when one of them heard that we were moving the following day, she ended up purchasing our entire meal! She said that she and the other servers would often comment on how nice we were and how they wished more of their customers were like us! How AMAZING is that?!? It was the perfect way to spend our last night in Pasadena and made me love the eatery all the more. (Because I had blogged about the place before, I thought I had plenty of pictures of it and therefore did not take any new ones for this post. When I looked through my old photos, though, I realized that they had been taken on an iPhone and were of very poor quality. D’oh! So I had to “borrow” the one below off of the Vertical website.)

    ScreenShot6968

    While the GC LOVES Vertical’s Sliders (I have to say that I even like them and I am NOT a hamburger fan), I am absolutely addicted to the Sautéed Mushrooms side order (pictured below). It is literally one of the best things I have ever eaten in my life. The Fried Calamari is also amazing! I canNOT wait to go back there the next time we are in town. Vertical Wine Bistro is located at 70 North Raymond Avenue in Old Town Pasadena. You can visit their website here. The restaurant’s happy hour is offered Tuesday through Saturday from 4 to 7 p.m. and all day on Sunday.

    Blo Out Lounge Pasadena (16 of 16)

    Stay tuned for My Favorite Pasadena Places – Part II, which will be posted on Monday.

    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.

    Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

  • Lester Siegel’s House from “Argo”

    Lester's House Argo (3 of 6)

    Today’s post is the very first blog written from my new home in the desert. The Grim Cheaper and I moved last Wednesday (it took over 15 hours!) and are finally getting settled in to our Palm Springs pad. There is still quite a bit left to complete, though, and, while the hyper-organized/anal/OCD-side of me has a hard time doing anything while there are still boxes to be unpacked and rooms to be organized, I decided to do a little blogging today, regardless. My posts over the next couple of weeks will most likely be intermittent, though, while we continue to settle in. And now, on with the post! Another filming location from fave movie Argo that I found thanks to the fabulous Los Angeles Times article forwarded to me by Mike, from MovieShotsLA, was the home where Hollywood producer Lester Siegel (Alan Arkin) lived. And I just have to say here how desperate I am to stalk LA/Ontario International Airport, which masqueraded as the Tehran airport in Argo. I have a flight scheduled out of there in early March and, let me tell you, I canNOT wait! But I digress. Anyway, I dragged the GC right on out to stalk Lester Siegel’s mansion a few weekends ago, shortly before our big move.

    [ad]

    In real life, Lester’s mansion actually belongs to actress Zsa Zsa Gabor and her longtime husband, Frederic Prinz von Anhalt, who seems to be a rather accident-prone individual – in October 2010, Frederic swallowed a bee that then stung him in the throat; in December 2010, after mistaking nail glue for eye drops, he accidentally glued his own eye shut; and in September 2011, he was hit by a car while walking in Beverly Hills. Yikes! Although there are quite a few conflicting reports about the property’s history online (many of which seem to have been propagated by Gabor and Frederic themselves), the fact of the matter is that the residence was originally built in 1955 for John and Gladys Zurlo. And while famous recluse Howard Hughes did rent the dwelling for a time in the 1960s (and apparently wore a hole in the carpet thanks to his notorious pacing), he never owned the place nor was it built for him. Gabor has also reportedly stated that she bought the pad directly from Hughes, but according to the Zurlos’ granddaughter, Barbara Yobs, the couple themselves sold the home to Gabor in 1973 for $250,000. For the record, it is further untrue that Elvis Presley ever lived on the premises, as Gabor has also claimed. Anyway, due to failing health and mounting medical bills, Gabor and Frederic put the property on the market in June 2011 for $15 million. It has yet to sell, though, so in the meantime the couple has been leasing the place out to film crews. HBO’s yet-to-be released Liberace biopic Behind the Candelabra also made use of the estate last year.

    Lester's House Argo (4 of 6)

    Lester's House Argo (5 of 6)

    Sadly, as you can see below, aside from the front gate, very little of the dwelling is visible from the street. Back in June 2011, fave website CurbedLA posted quite a few real estate photographs, though, which you can check out here. As stated in a Huffington Post article, the home “was built in the ‘50s and doesn’t look as if it has been redecorated since. It is lavish and sings old over-the-top Hollywood glamour.” Yep, that pretty much sums it up. The Hollywood Regency-style dwelling boasts seven bedrooms, seven baths, 8,878 square feet of living space (or 6,393 depending on which real estate listing you check), one acre of land, 270-degree views of downtown Los Angeles and the Pacific Ocean, a grand salon, staff quarters, a bar, a rooftop terrace, indoor and outdoor entertaining areas, and a pool. Supposedly, Zsa Zsa swam naked in said pool every morning (yuck!) and also entertained such luminaries as Queen Elizabeth, Bob Hope, Ronald and Nancy Reagan, Elizabeth Taylor, Kirk Douglas, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, Frank Sinatra, and Henry Kissinger on the premises.

    Lester's House Argo (2 of 6)

    Lester's House Argo (1 of 6)

    Quite a few areas of the house were used in Argo, including the front exterior;

    ScreenShot6944

    ScreenShot6957

    the circular entry-way (LOVE those red walls!);

    ScreenShot6945

    ScreenShot6958

    the formal living room;

    ScreenShot6946

    ScreenShot6960

    the bar;

    ScreenShot6949

    ScreenShot6961

    and the backyard and pool.

    ScreenShot6951

    ScreenShot6956

    A great aerial view of the house was also shown in the flick. Man, what I wouldn’t give to see the inside of that place!

    ScreenShot6948

    ScreenShot6964

    On an Argo side-note – for those interested in how much of the movie was actually true (and the vast majority of it was – even the part about the Iranian government hiring professional carpet-weavers to piece together documents and photographs that had been shredded by American diplomats just prior to the embassy being taken hostage!), you can check out a fabulous Slate.com article here.

    ScreenShot6965

    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.

    Lester's House Argo (6 of 6)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

    Stalk It: Zsa Zsa Gabor’s house, aka Lester Siegel’s mansion from Argo, is located at 1001 Bel Air Road in Bel Air.

  • The Canadian Ambassador’s Residence from “Argo”

    Argo Canadian Embassy (11 of 12)

    Last week, while scanning through Argo to make screen captures for my post on the Veterans Affairs Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center in North Hills, which stood in for the Tehran American Embassy in the flick, I got completely sucked in and had to force myself to turn the thing off.  Then, the Grim Cheaper and I wound up watching the entire movie over again for the second time just a few nights later.  Needless to say, I love, love, LOVE the film and cannot recommend seeing it enough!  Argo and Silver Linings Playbook are easily two of the best movies I have ever seen in my entire life, let alone this year.  So when Mike, from MovieShotsLA, managed to track down the supposed-Iranian residence where Ken Taylor (Victor Garber), the Canadian Ambassador, lived in the film, I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to stalk it.

    [ad]

    Surprisingly enough, the Canadian Ambassador’s residence from Argo can actually be found in Los Angeles’ affluent Hancock Park neighborhood – a place I never would have even thought to search.  Mike was able to find the site thanks to the Hancock Park Today blog which mentioned in a September 2011 post that the movie was shooting on Rimpau Boulevard “in a house made to look like the Canadian Embassy”.  Only the interior of the home was used in the filming, though.  The exterior gates and side doorway that were shown in the flick (pictured below) are located elsewhere, in what I am guessing is Istanbul, Turkey, where the cast and crew spent two weeks filming on location.

    ScreenShot6918

    ScreenShot6919

    For those who have yet to see it (and honestly, what are you waiting for??), Argo tells the story of six American diplomatic personnel – Bob Anders (Tate Donovan – who was FABULOUS), Cora Lijek (Clea DuVall – whom I once took an acting class with Smile), Joe Stafford (Scoot McNairy), Lee Schatz (Rory Cochrane), Mark Lijek (Christopher Denham – who looks exactly like Joel McHale in the movie), and Kathy Stafford (Kerry Bishe) – who hide out in the Canadian Ambassador’s Tehran residence for 79 days during the Iran hostage crisis of 1979.  I became just a wee-bit obsessed with stalking the Ambassador’s house thanks to a bit of behind-the-scenes info that was mentioned in this October 2012 Los Angeles Times article about the filming.  According to writer Richard Verrier, the shoot at the Hancock Park residence took over a month to complete and, prior to the start, Ben Affleck sequestered the actors playing the Houseguests (as they were called) in the home for seven days so that “they would get used to living in close quarters”.  How incredibly cool is that?  According to IMDB’s Argo trivia page, Affleck also shot the movie on regular film, later cutting each frame in half and then blowing up the images to two hundred times their normal size in order to match the grainy look of productions shot in the 1970s.   How was this guy not nominated for a Best Director Oscar again???  Like really, Academy?

    Argo Canadian Embassy (1 of 12)

    Argo Canadian Embassy (4 of 12)

    According to fave website Zillow, in real life the one-story property, which was originally built in 1964 and looks quite a bit out of place compared with the stately manors typically found in Hancock Park, boasts five bedrooms, six baths, 5,891 square feet of living space, a 0.46-acre plot of land, an “entertainment pavilion” with a second kitchen, a gym, a two-bedroom guest house, hand-painted ceilings and walls, parking for up to twenty cars (!), crystal chandeliers, a family room with a bar, a library, a breakfast room, and a pool.  And while property records state that the abode last sold in 1999 for $1,425,000, I believe it was also put on the market sometime in the last few years, but did not sell.  While researching the dwelling, I came across this real estate video on YouTube which shows the house as being vacant.  I am fairly certain that the place was also vacant during the Argo shoot, which is most likely how it came to be used in the production.

    Argo Canadian Embassy (5 of 12)

    Argo Canadian Embassy (8 of 12)

    The Canadian Ambassador’s residence was one of the main locations used in Argo and because the place boasts a very 1970s-style decor, not much of it had to be changed for the shoot.  As you can see in the interior photographs of the house below, which I got off of the real estate video, the pad is very recognizable from its onscreen appearance.  The areas of the property that were utilized in the filming include the living room (the mirrors that flank the sides of the fireplace were covered over for the shoot);

    ScreenShot6935

    ScreenShot6921

    the dining room;

    ScreenShot6932

    ScreenShot6939

    the game room;

    ScreenShot6930

    ScreenShot6926

    ScreenShot6936

    ScreenShot6940

    the kitchen (check out that wallpaper!);

    ScreenShot6933

    ScreenShot6915

    one of the bathrooms;

    ScreenShot6931

    ScreenShot6941

    and the pool/backyard area.

    ScreenShot6923

    ScreenShot6928

    Unfortunately, the real estate video does not show the area of the backyard that was featured in Argo, but you can see the columned pavilion that Tony Mendez (Ben Affleck) and Ken stood under in a few scenes in the aerial view pictured below.

    ScreenShot6942

    You can watch the home’s real estate video by clicking below.

    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

    Argo Canadian Embassy (7 of 12)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Canadian Ambassador’s house from Argo is located at 344 South Rimpau Boulevard in Hancock Park.

  • Martin Luther King Day!

    ScreenShot6943

    I will be taking a respite from blogging today in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. I will actually be spending the entire day with Mike, from MovieShotsLA – one last stalking hurrah before my move to the Desert on Wednesday. I do promise to be back tomorrow, though, with a whole new location – one from fave movie Argo.

    Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

  • Moving On Up . . .

    Over the next couple of weeks, I will only be blogging periodically due to my impending move.  Unfortunately, that means no new post for today, but I should be back on Monday with a whole new location.  Smile

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

  • The VA Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center aka the American Embassy from “Argo”

    Embassy from Argo (18 of 23)

    There are few things this stalker loves more than opening her mailbox to discover a slew of “For Your Consideration” screeners – something that happens each January shortly before the Screen Actors Guild Awards.  This year, the DVDs waiting in my mailbox were Silver Linings Playbook (my pick for best movie of the year), Les Miserables (which I have yet to watch) and Argo (which absolutely KNOCKED MY SOCKS OFF!).  I cannot believe that Ben Affleck was not nominated for a Best Director Academy Award.  The mere fact that he was able to shoot 90% of Argo, a movie that supposedly takes place in 1970s Tehran, in 2013 Los Angeles is astounding!  He deserves an Oscar for that alone.  Anyway, a few weeks back, Mike, from MovieShotsLA, sent me a Los Angeles Times article about the Southern California locations featured in Argo and, believe you me, when I read that the Veterans Affairs Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center in North Hills had masqueraded as the American Embassy in the flick, I immediately started chomping at the bit and dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to stalk the place shortly thereafter.

    [ad]

    The Veterans Affairs Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center (try saying that one three times fast!), which is absolutely ginormous, has quite an interesting history.  In 1952, Lester and Mary Gentry donated a 160-acre plot of land to the city so that a veterans hospital could be built.  The Sepulveda Care Center was the result of that generous donation and by 1993 the site was treating over 275,000 veterans each year.  Sadly though, much of the property was damaged during the 1994 Northridge earthquake, the main hospital building subsequently torn down, and the majority of the premises shuttered.  In a controversial move, the site was deemed “unsafe” to operate as a care center soon thereafter, yet it is constantly used by production companies for filming.  According to a 2009 Los Angeles Daily News article, the designation “was all a smokescreen, a chance for VA officials to save some money, downsize and gut Sepulveda.”  And while the property does currently house a working outpatient center, a pharmacy, a nursing home, an X-ray lab, a therapy pool, and a methadone clinic, the majority of the buildings remain vacant.  As you can see below, though, a restoration project is currently underway.  In February of last year, the city began gutting the interior of two of the dilapidated structures, with the plan to turn them both into housing for homeless vets.  In the meantime, the Center is still being used for filming.  And lots of it.

    Embassy from Argo (12 of 23)

    Embassy from Argo (17 of 23)

    According to the Los Angeles Times article about Argo, two locations were used to stand in for the American Embassy in the film.  The scenes that took place outside of the embassy walls (pictured below) were shot at a building in Istanbul, Turkey – one that I have yet to track down.

    ScreenShot6873

    The scenes that took place inside of the embassy walls were, of course, shot at the VA Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center.  The L.A Times article states, “A Veterans Affairs medical building in North Hills, with its institutional, red brick facade, turned out to be remarkably similar to the U.S. embassy in Tehran from which six Americans escaped and sought refuge in the home of the Canadian ambassador.  ‘It even had the same number of stories as the U.S. embassy in Tehran,’ said Chris Baugh, location manager for ‘Argo.’  ‘It was a huge stroke of luck.’”  You can check out some photographs of the actual former American Embassy in Tehran here and here.  As you can see, it does look quite a bit like the Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center.  Following the Iran hostage crisis in 1979, the embassy site ceased functioning as such and today is used by the Iranian government as a training facility for the Revolutionary Guards Corps.

    Embassy from Argo (20 of 23)

    Because the VA site is so incredibly vast (there are over 18 separate, very similar-looking buildings) and so little of the exterior of the American Embassy was actually shown in Argo, the GC and I had quite a time trying to pinpoint the exact spot where filming took place.  Thankfully though, we ran into an extremely nice security guard who was all too happy to help.  According to him, a façade of the embassy was constructed in a parking lot on the premises during the shoot, and I am fairly certain that that façade is what is pictured in the screen capture below, as it does not match up to any of the actual hospital buildings.

    ScreenShot6875

    For some of the close-up angles of the embassy, the security guard informed us that Building 4 was used.  Because the shots were so tight, though, the structure is not very recognizable from the film.  In fact, the only recognizable element, besides the windows, is the brick wall situated at the front of the building.

    ScreenShot6898

    ScreenShot6897

    That brick wall is pictured below.

    Embassy from Argo (23 of 23)

    Embassy from Argo (21 of 23)

    The interior of one of the VA buildings (according to the security guard, Building 5) also stood in for the interior of the American Embassy in Argo.

    ScreenShot6877

    ScreenShot6876

    Building 4 also appeared in Rob Zombie’s 2007 Halloween reboot as Smith’s Grove Sanitarium, where a young Michael Meyers (Scout Taylor-Compton) was institutionalized after murdering his family.

    ScreenShot6883

    ScreenShot6886

    The real life interior of the hospital was also used in the filming.

    ScreenShot6885

    ScreenShot6887

    In fact, the very same room that stood in for the Visa Application office in Argo also stood in for the family visiting room in Halloween, as you can see below.  So incredibly cool!

    ScreenShot6888

    ScreenShot6876

    ScreenShot6884

    ScreenShot6877

    Building 4 was also where Brennan Huff (Will Ferrell) and Dale Doback (John C. Reilly) were beat up by kid bullies in the 2008 comedy Step Brothers.

    ScreenShot6889

    ScreenShot6890

    The north side of Building 4 (which I, unfortunately, did not get a picture of) was the main location used in Accepted.  In the 2006 comedy, the site stood in for the abandoned Harmon Psychiatric Hospital . . .

    ScreenShot6906

    ScreenShot6907

    . . . which Bartleby Gaines (Justin Long) and his friends turned into the fake South Harmon Institute of Technology.

    ScreenShot6911

    ScreenShot6910

    The location was so prominent in the filming that it was even featured in the movie’s poster.

    ScreenShot6899
    The real life interior of the building was also used in the filming.

    ScreenShot6908

    ScreenShot6914

    And a pool was even built in the courtyard area for the shoot.

    ScreenShot6909

    ScreenShot6913

    The exterior of VA Sepulveda’s Building 200, which is an actual working medical facility, is also used regularly for filming.

    Embassy from Argo (10 of 23)

    Embassy from Argo (7 of 23)

    As is the interior.  The building was closed when we showed up to stalk it, though, so I could only snap photographs through the front windows, unfortunately.

    Embassy from Argo (6 of 23)

    Embassy from Argo (5 of 23)

    Building 200 is most notably used on Grey’s Anatomy where it stands in each week for Seattle Grace Hospital.

    ScreenShot6900

    ScreenShot6905

    Because I have never actually watched an episode of Grey’s Anatomy (I know, I know), like a dork I accidentally took a picture of the wrong side of the building.

    Embassy from Argo (11 of 23)

    The south side of the building is the side used as Seattle Grace.

    ScreenShot6903

    While the majority of the interior of Seattle Grace is just a set, the lobby of VA Sepulveda also pops up occasionally on the show.

    ScreenShot6901

    ScreenShot6904

    The interior of Building 200 also masqueraded as a Geneva-area hospital in the Season 2 episode of Alias titled “Salvation”.

    ScreenShot6891

    ScreenShot6892

    The 1981 horror flick Halloween II was also filmed at the VA Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center, although I am unsure of which exact structure was used in the production.  I am guessing, though, that it was the main hospital building that was demolished after the Northridge earthquake.

    ScreenShot6893

    ScreenShot6894

    The Season 8 episodes of Falcon Crest titled “Ties that Bind” and “The Last Laugh” were also supposedly filmed at VA Sepulveda, but I could not find copies of either with which to verify that information.

    Embassy from Argo (1 of 3)

    Embassy from Argo (3 of 3)

    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.

    Embassy from Argo (15 of 23)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Veterans Affairs Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center, aka the American Embassy from Argo, is located at 16111 Plummer Street in North Hills.  Building 4 was used as the exterior of the embassy.  Building 200 serves as Seattle Grace Hospital on Grey’s Anatomy.  You can check out a map of the Ambulatory Care Center here.

  • Villa de Leon

    Villa de Leon (7 of 17)

    Back in September, while doing research on the Glendale Amtrak Station from Bulletproof (which I blogged about here), I came across a fabulous post on the Paradise Leased website about Villa de Leon – a huge Pacific Palisades-area estate that was also designed by architect Kenneth MacDonald Jr.  I quickly became entranced by the ginormous manse, which overlooks the Pacific Ocean, because not only is it an oft-filmed-at locale, but it is also one of the most consistently mis-identified buildings in all of Los Angeles.  In fact, until reading the Paradise Leased post, even yours truly had gotten this one wrong.  I had seen the dwelling countless times in the past whenever driving along the Pacific Coast Highway and had always assumed that it was the Getty Villa – as do most people, even native Angelinos.  It is an easy mistake to make, though.

    [ad]

    As you can see in the images below, Villa de Leon is situated directly above a sign for the Getty Villa, confusing tourists and residents alike.  In fact, even The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal have mis-identified the place, so I guess I am in good company.

    Villa de Leon (9 of 9)

    Villa de Leon (16 of 17)

    In actuality, the Getty Villa sits hidden from the road, directly behind and just north of Villa de Leon.  As you can see below, both buildings are also Mediterranean in style and quite significant in size, which only furthers the confusion.

    ScreenShot6843

      And while the Getty Villa is, I’m sure, spectacular (I’ve never actually been there), Villa de Leon is a masterpiece in and of itself – easily one of the most stunning properties that I have ever laid eyes upon.  The 35-room Beaux Arts/Mediterranean-style estate was built for a wealthy wool magnate named Leon Kauffman and his wife, Clemence, in 1927.  The three-story structure took over five years to complete and cost a whopping $1 million to construct – about $12 million today.  At the time that the Villa was built, it was the only residence in the area.  In fact, even the Pacific Coast Highway had yet to exist.  Access to the beach from the home was made possible thanks to a funicular (yeah, I had to look that one up, too).

    Villa de Leon (8 of 9)

    Villa de Leon (5 of 9)

    Sadly, Clemence Kauffman passed away in 1933, only five years after the house was completed, and Leon followed soon after in 1935. The Villa remained unoccupied, except for a caretaker, for the next twenty years, until it was finally put up for auction in 1952, where it sold for the unbelievably-low price of $71,000.  The property then went through a succession of different owners and was last purchased in 2007 for $10 million.

    Villa de Leon (2 of 17)

    Villa de Leon (10 of 17)

    The massive Villa de Leon boasts ten bedrooms, ten baths, 10,277 square feet of living space, a one-acre plot of seaside land, a 67-foot tall entry hall, a library with coffered ceilings, a master suite with mahogany-paneled walls, a spiral staircase, a living room with a 35-foot tall hand-stenciled ceiling, a circular-shaped formal dining room with ocean views, a seven-car garage(!) with its own car wash (!), formal gardens (many of which have been destroyed over the years due to landslides), a working elevator, two vaults, a central vacuum system (one of the first to ever be built), and several terraces.  You can check out some fabulous photographs of the mansion’s interior here.  What I wouldn’t give to go inside that place!

    Villa de Leon (3 of 17)

    Villa de Leon (5 of 17)

    Thankfully, unlike most Los Angeles-area mega-mansions, this one is quite visible from the road.

    Villa de Leon (4 of 17)

    Villa de Leon (11 of 17)

    As I mentioned above, Villa de Leon has been featured in countless productions over the years, most notably photo shoots.  I actually dragged the Grim Cheaper out to stalk the location twice as, on our first visit, I was not able to get any faraway photographs.  Amazingly enough, there was something being shot on the premises BOTH times that we were there, as you can see below.

    Villa de Leon (7 of 9)

    Villa de Leon (6 of 17)

    The exterior of Villa de Leon was featured on the cover of Procol Harum’s Grand Hotel album in 1973.

    ScreenShot6838

    In 2008, Victoria Beckham did a photo shoot for Harper’s Bazaar Indonesia at the mansion.

    ScreenShot6846

    ScreenShot6847

    Villa de Leon was one of two estates used in the music video for Lady Gaga’s 2009 song “Paparazzi”.  While the majority of the video was filmed at 10425 Revuelta Way in Bel Air (which was also the location of this week’s group date on The Bachelor), portions of the Villa were featured, as well, including the back patio area . . .

    ScreenShot6820

    ScreenShot6824

    . . . and parts of the interior.

    ScreenShot6822

    ScreenShot6823

    ScreenShot6826

    ScreenShot6828

    You can watch the “Paparazzi” video by clicking below.

    Also in 2009, the home appeared in Michael Bay’s “A Thousand Fantasies” commercial for Victoria’s Secret.

    ScreenShot6844

    ScreenShot6845

    Villa de Leon was the site of Heidi Klum’s photo shoot for the February 2010 issue of InStyle magazine, although very little of the property can actually be seen in the final spread.  (The stills below came from a behind-the-scenes video of the shoot posted on the InStyle website.)

    ScreenShot6861

    ScreenShot6862

    Robert Pattinson shot the (extremely NSFW) cover story for the March 2010 issue of Details magazine at Villa de Leon.

    ScreenShot6858

    ScreenShot6857

    Angelina Jolie posed for the cover of the December 2010 Vogue there.

    ScreenShot6860

    ScreenShot6859

    Reese Witherspoon’s spread for the October 2011 issue of Marie Claire also took place at the Villa.

    ScreenShot6852

    ScreenShot6853

    The promotional pictures for Britney Spears’ 2011 album Femme Fatale were shot on the premises.

    ScreenShot6855

    ScreenShot6856

    The estate appeared in the music video for Foster the People’s 2011 song “Call It What You Want”.  Both the exterior . . .

    ScreenShot6830

    ScreenShot6835

    . . . and the interior of the house were used extensively in the video.

    ScreenShot6829

    ScreenShot6836

    You can watch the “Call It What You Want” video by clicking below.

    Robert Downey Jr. did a photo shoot for the May 2012 issue of Esquire magazine at Villa de Leon.

    ScreenShot6850

    ScreenShot6851

    As did Freida Pinto for the July 2012 issue of Flaunt Magazine.

    ScreenShot6848

    ScreenShot6849

    Rod Stewart’s 2012 Christmas special, Rod Stewart: Merry Christmas, Baby, was also filmed at the estate.

    ScreenShot6839

    ScreenShot6841

    The Kardashians, Maria Menounos, Katy Perry, Ginnifer Goodwin, and Justin Long have also done shoots at the house – all of which you can see photographs of here.

    Villa de Leon (12 of 17)

    Villa de Leon (13 of 17)

    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.

    Villa de Leon (4 of 9)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Villa de Leon is located at 17948 Porto Marina Way in Pacific Palisades.

  • Packing, Packing and Packing Some More!

    ScreenShot6832

    While I did manage to do a bit of stalking this weekend, most of my time was spent packing up our apartment (we are moving in nine days – yikes!), so I did not have time to write a new post for today. But I will (hopefully) be back tomorrow with a whole new location!

    Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile