Month: February 2018

  • Pico House from “My Sister Sam”

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    The name of my blog is (obviously) meant in jest.  I always feel a pang of guilt over having chosen it, though, when I think about Rebecca Schaeffer, the young actress who was gunned down in her doorway by a deranged stalker at the tender age of 21 in 1989.  My grandma and I religiously watched My Sister Sam, the CBS series she starred on, when it was on the air in the late-80s and were both considerably obsessed.  We were equally devastated when it was cancelled after a scant one and a half seasons and then again when we learned of Schaeffer’s murder a little over a year later.  While the show and its star have never strayed far from my mind in the years since, somehow I never though about tracking down the supposed San Francisco building where Schaeffer’s teenaged character, Patti Russell, lived with her older sister, Sam Russell (Pam Dawber).  Thankfully, in 2013, a reader named Vera Charles left a comment on my 2009 post about downtown L.A.’s Pico House, which I was reporting on due to its use as “Sacramento’s” CBI headquarters on The Mentalist, alerting me to the fact that the very same spot served as the My Sister Sam apartment!  I was floored over the news, but, for whatever reason, am only just now getting around to re-blogging about the historic site.

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    Constructed from 1869 to 1870, Pico House has the distinction of being Los Angeles’ first three-story building.

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    Commissioned by Pio Pico, the last governor of California under Mexican rule, the Italianate structure originally served as an 82-room hotel.  Not just any hotel, though – it was the city’s finest, featuring arched windows and doors at every turn, a grand double staircase, an aviary, 21 parlors, 2 courtyards, a French restaurant, restrooms and water closets for both sexes on each floor, a bar, and a billiards room.  Designed by architect Ezra F. Kysor, the lodging cost $48,000 to construct and a whopping $34,000 to decorate and furnish.  At the time of its opening, the most expensive rooms ran for $3 a night.

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    Though the property proved bustling throughout its first decade, Pio wasn’t the savviest when it came to finances and he wound up losing Pico House to foreclosure in 1880.  The site subsequently passed through several hands, continuing to function as a hotel, before being transformed into an inexpensive boarding house named The National in 1892.  It operated as such for the next three decades, growing more dilapidated as time passed.  Though the original moniker was restored in 1920, the building continued to deteriorate, becoming a mere shadow of its once grand self, and was eventually condemned in 1922.

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    It was finally acquired by the city of L.A. in 1953 and incorporated into El Pueblo de Los Angeles State Historic Monument.  Though it has remained vacant ever since (you can check out some images of the interior taken in 2006 here), the site has undergone several renovations in the ensuing years and is both a California Historical Landmark and a National Historic Landmark.  Today, it is utilized mainly as a special events venue and, of course, for filming.

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    Pico House has the fortunate and unique quality of boasting four rather diverse façades.  As such it has proved an extremely versatile landscape for filming.  The north and west edifices are both elaborately Italianate in style, with arched windows and doors and stuccoed exteriors fashioned to resemble blue granite.  Though similar, the north end (pictured below) stands alone facing El Pueblo de Los Angeles’ Old Plaza and bears the look of a 19th Century courthouse or city hall . . .

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    . . . while the west end (pictured below), which runs along North Main Street, is much wider and is adjacent to several buildings with Victorian detailing, giving it a very San Francisco feel.

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    The south façade, which is situated on Arcadia Street, boasts an Old West style and has a very Sacramento-ish look.

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    And the east side, which runs along Sanchez Street, features fabulous red brickwork as far as the eye can see.

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    It is the western end that masked as Sam and Patti’s apartment building on My Sister Sam, which, as I mentioned above, was said to be located in San Francisco.

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    Only the exterior of the building was utilized on the series.  The interior of Sam and Patti’s apartment was just a set constructed at Warner Bros. Ranch (then named The Burbank Studios Ranch), where the show was lensed.

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    In the Season 1 episode of Amazing Stories titled “Alamo Jobe,” which aired in 1985, the north side of Pico House masks as the site of the modern-day Alamo.

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    Martin Riggs (Mel Gibson) and Roger Murtaugh (Danny Glover) work patrol in front of Pico House’s north end at the beginning of 1992’s Lethal Weapon 3.

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    That same year, Pico House’s southern side masqueraded as Hotel Brian in 19th Century San Francisco where Lt. Commander Data (Brent Spiner) tried to secure lodging in the Season 5 episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation titled “Time’s Arrow: Part 1.”

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    The building situated adjacent to Pico House at 425 North Los Angeles Street also appeared as 19th Century San Francisco in the episode.

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    In real life, that structure (pictured below) houses the Chinese American Museum.

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    In the Season 1 episode of Criminal Minds titled “Machismo,” which aired in 2006, the south side of Pico House . . .

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    . . . . as well as the interior courtyard portrayed a police station in Allende Del Sol, Mexico.

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    Beginning in 2008, the south end of the site was utilized regularly as Sacramento’s CBI Headquarters on the television series The Mentalist.  Besides appearing in weekly establishing shots . . .

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    . . . some location filming also took place on the premises, as was the case with Season 1’s “Bloodshot.”

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    The building’s east side was even used to portray a nightclub in that particular episode.

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    JLS shot their 2009 music video for “Everybody in Love” in Pico House’s courtyard.  You can watch the video here.

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    That same year, the courtyard situated just outside of Pico House’s north entrance appeared in the “ . . . if he’s not marrying you” vignette in He’s Just Not That Into You.  The bit contains one of my favorite lines from the movie – “The second you hear that, you just run to the store and get yourself some ribs and some ice cream, because you have been dumped!”  You can watch the hilarious segment here.

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    The Ghost Adventures crew investigates paranormal happenings related to an 1871 race riot in which 19 people were killed at Pico House in the Season 4 episode titled “Pico House Hotel,” which aired in 2011.

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    In the 2016 drama Live by Night, Pico House’s courtyard appears as the hospital where Joe Coughlin (Ben Affleck) recovers from a beating.

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    The Chinese American Museum also pops up in the movie as the spot where Joe and his crew rob card players during a high stakes poker game.

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

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     Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Pico House, aka Sam and Patti’s apartment from My Sister Sam, is located at 424 North Main Street in downtown Los Angeles.  The site is part of El Pueblo de Los Angeles State Historic Monument.  Several areas of the monument have appeared onscreen, including the Old Plaza, located just north of Pico House at 1 Olvera Street, and the historic Olvera Street outdoor marketplace, the entrance to which is just beyond the Plaza.  Union Station, another popular filming locale, can be found directly across the street at 800 North Alameda Street.

  • Book Soup from “Bewitched”

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    I am a total bookstore junkie – as I’ve mentioned numerous times on this site.  The rest of the world seems to be leaning in the opposite direction, though.  Still I was shocked – and saddened – to learn of the recent shuttering of the Barnes & Noble on the Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica, a place I patronized often during its 20-plus years in business.  Reading about the closure got me to thinking about another L.A. bookseller I regularly frequent, one that is thankfully still in business and is also a popular filming location – Book Soup.  I first visited the West Hollywood store for stalking purposes way back in October 2011 after seeing it in both Bewitched and Californication and intended on blogging about it shortly thereafter, but never got around to it.  Though I’ve been back countless times since, I still somehow have yet to dedicate a post to the site.  So I figured it was finally time to do so.

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    Originally established in 1975, Book Soup was the brainchild of UCLA graduate student Glenn Goldman.  Though the 24-year-old was studying arts management at the time, a lifelong appreciation of bookstores and a dream of one day owning his own led Glenn to change course.  Armed with $50,000 in seed money, he took action shortly after earning his degree and settled on West Hollywood as the home of his future shop.  As he explained to the Los Angeles Times in a 2000 article, “I really couldn’t contemplate a lot of places.  There had been a period of upheaval here in the ‘60s – of thought and ideas – and I felt that the people who lived in the neighborhood would and could really support a bookstore.”  Goldman enlisted his friend, architecture student David Mackler, to design the space.

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    Success did not come quickly, though.  In 1992 Glenn told The New York Times, “The store was an immense failure.  All this energy met with total indifference.”  He wound up so broke, he had to move into the shop, sleeping on a mattress upstairs.  It took years, but people did eventually find their way to Book Soup and its clientele grew exponentially, turning it into an area landmark.  By the late 1980s, the site had become so popular that Goldman decided to move up the street to a much larger space that still serves as the store’s home today.

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    Sadly, Glenn passed away rather unexpectedly in 2009.  The shop was subsequently purchased by Vroman’s Bookstore, another of L.A.’s most famous independent booksellers.  (Vroman’s should be familiar to those who read my site regularly.  You can check out a few of the myriad posts I’ve written about the place here, here, here, here, here, here, and here.)  Thankfully, little of Book Soup was changed following the acquisition and the shop is still going strong today.

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    One of Book Soup’s largest draws is its legendary book signings.  Just a few of the luminaries who the store has hosted over the years include Martin Scorsese, Howard Stern, Muhammad Ali, Shaquille O’Neal, The Doors, Mia Farrow, Mark Wahlberg, Ann-Margret, Ed McMahon, Jack Palance, and Annie Leibovitz.  Stars have also been known to shop onsite.  Drew Barrymore, Marlee Matlin, Nicolas Cage, Elton John, Madonna, David Bowie, Joni Mitchell, Paris Hilton, Faye Dunaway, Thora Birch, Leonard Nimoy, Ellen Pompeo, Alec Baldwin, Joan Collins, and Robert Downey Jr. have all been spotted perusing the stacks.

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    With such a vast celebrity clientele, it is not hard to see how Book Soup wound up on both the big and small screens.

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    In the oddly-shot 2000 drama Timecode, in which four frames of action are shown simultaneously throughout the entire film, Cherine (Leslie Mann) and Emma (Saffron Burrows) shop at Book Soup.  The scenes featuring the store are pictured in the top right corner of the screen captures below.

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    It is at Book Soup that Jack Wyatt (Will Ferrell) first lays eyes on Isabel Bigelow (Nicole Kidman) in the 2005 romcom Bewitched.

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    Jack subsequently follows Isabel to Book Soup Bistro, a café that was formerly located next door to the bookstore in the Carolco building, in a sunken space situated adjacent to the newsstand.

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    By the time I stalked Book Soup in 2011, while the newsstand was still intact, the restaurant had closed and the space that once housed it was vacant.

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    The “Book Soup Bistro” signage was still in place, though.

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    The former restaurant area has since been completely taken over by the Carolco building (which underwent a massive renovation in 2014 and currently serves as the West Hollywood headquarters of IAC) and Book Soup’s newsstand has been moved to the front exterior of the store, as you can see in the recent Street View images below.

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    Vincent Chase (Adrian Grenier) meets an amorous fan named Nicole (Lindsay Sloane) at Book Soup in the Season 3 episode of Entourage titled “I Wanna Be Sedated,” which aired in 2006.

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    In the Season 1 episode of Californication titled “The Whore of Babylon,” which aired in 2007, Hank Moody (David Duchovny) gets into a fist fight with director Todd Carr (Chris Williams) during a signing at Book Soup.

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    Though countless websites claim that Book Soup is also the spot where Hank first meets Mia Cross (Madeline Zima) in Californication’s pilot episode, that information is incorrect.  Hank and Mia’s initial encounter actually took place at the now shuttered Equator Books, formerly located at 1103 Abbot Kinney Boulevard in Venice.

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    In the Season 1 episode of The Layover titled “Los Angeles,” which aired in 2012, Anthony Bourdain chronicles exciting places to visit during a stopover in L.A., one of which is Book Soup.

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    The store pops up a couple of times in Netflix’s 2017 film Sandy Wexler as the newsstand that Sandy Wexler (Adam Sandler) – and Arsenio Hall (playing himself) – regularly frequents.

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

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    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Book Soup, from Bewitched, is located at 8818 West Sunset Boulevard in West Hollywood.  You can visit the shop’s official website here.

  • Happy Presidents’ Day!

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    Happy Presidents’ Day to all of my fellow stalkers!  I am taking today off, but will be back on Wednesday with a new locale.  See you then!

  • Art’s Delicatessen & Restaurant from “Beverly Hills, 90210: Exposed!”

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    They say you should always listen to your mother.  It’s good advice.  Case in point – about a decade ago, while stalking in Studio City, my mom, my dad, the Grim Cheaper and I passed by Art’s Delicatessen & Restaurant on Ventura Boulevard and decided to pop in for a bite.  During our meal, my mom encouraged me to take photos of the place as she figured it had likely been utilized for filming at some point or had a celebrity connection.  I spent the next couple of minutes bothering the staff with inquiries about shoots on the premises, but no one was aware of any.  I snapped a few pictures regardless, but never did further research on the subject.  Flash forward to last month.  On the advice of my good friend/fellow 90210 aficionado Mike, from MovieShotsLA, I ordered a copy of the book Beverly Hills, 90210: Exposed!, an authorized behind-the-scenes look at the series and its stars written by Bart and Nancy Mills in 1991.  When I got to the chapter on Jason Priestley and read the words, “He is all smiles and apologies as he arrives at Art’s Deli half an hour late because work had detained him,” I just about fell over!  Oh, how right my mom was!  Not only does the restaurant have a celebrity connection, but to my favorite show of all time, no less!  I was so thankful I had taken some pics of the place!  The only trouble was that when I went to locate the shots, they were nowhere to be found.  Fortunately, the GC and I had to head out to Burbank for an IKEA run last week, so we made a pit stop at Art’s while in the area.

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    Art’s was established by New York native Art Ginsburg, who moved to Los Angeles as a teen and spent his junior college years learning the ins and outs of sandwich-making while working at a deli owned by his cousin.  Armed with $3,000, a collection of family recipes, and the support of his then girlfriend/later wife Sandy, he purchased a small Studio City eatery boasting a scant three and a half booths and twelve counter seats and opened it as Art’s Delicatessen & Restaurant on June 22nd, 1957.

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    Art’s quickly developed into an area staple, popular with locals, tourists and celebrities alike who flocked to the deli in droves for its authentic Jewish delicacies, homemade soups, and spectacular sandwiches.  It is the latter that the site became most famous for.  Considering the restaurant boasts the tagline “Where every sandwich is a work of Art,” that is no surprise.  Los Angeles Times food critic Jonathan Gold had this to say about the Reuben:, “Sometimes I suspect Ginsburg studies the Reuben the way other great scholars parse the Talmud — adjusting proportions, strength of dressing and sharpness of cheese, crunchiness and ooziness, sweet and tart, until the sandwich speaks simply if profoundly on its own.  Art’s is a good deli, but after the Reuben, all else is commentary.”  I did not sample that particular offering while there, but instead opted for the Turkey Club (with turkey, bacon, lettuce and tomato on sourdough – along with added cheddar cheese) and it was honestly one of the best sandwiches I have ever had in my life.  I can count on one hand the delis I would travel great distances to visit and Art’s is now on that list!  (The others are Larchmont Village Wine, Spirits & Cheese in Windsor Square, Sweet Lady Jane in Santa Monica and Sherman’s Deli & Bakery in Palm Springs.)

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    Thanks to the restaurant’s massive popularity, it was not long before Art’s needed to expand.  The site has actually been enlarged four times throughout its sixty-year run, taking over five neighboring storefronts in the process, and its patronage only continues to grow.  Today, the deli seats 170 – and is typically packed at most hours.

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    Art’s has also undergone a complete reconstruction.  While it survived the Northridge earthquake of 1994 with only a cracked wall, it succumbed to a massive electrical fire caused by an aftershock early the following morning.  There was never any doubt that Ginsburg would rebuild, though.  As he told the Los Angeles Times the day after the blaze, “The sign has been up there since 1957; it’s still up there and it’s going to stay up there.”  It took nine months to bring the eatery back to life, during which time the surrounding stores felt the brunt of the closure.  According to a different Times article, “By some merchants’ estimates, business on the block is down 40% since Art’s 1,000 customers a day stopped walking off their meals by window shopping along Ventura Boulevard.”  When the deli’s doors re-opened on October 19th, patrons were lined up outside anxiously awaiting their reunion with the best sandwiches in town.  Art’s has been going strong ever since.  According to a 1999 LA Weekly article, each week the restaurant goes through 1,000 pounds of corned beef, 4,800 bagels, and 480 pounds of turkey!

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    Ginsburg himself was just as much a pillar of the community as his restaurant.  He not only founded the city’s business improvement district, but also sat on the board of the Los Angeles Valley College Foundation.  Even after retiring in 2010 due to health issues, Art would still pop into the restaurant on a daily basis to hold court with his regulars.  When he passed away in 2013, the entire neighborhood mourned.  Ginsburg’s son, Harold, carries on Art’s vision today, running the eatery with the same aplomb and conviction as his father.

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      Thanks to Art’s gregariousness and the restaurant’s proximity to a multitude of studios, the place has long been a celebrity haven.  Just a few of the luminaries who have been spotted dining on the premises include Delta Burke, Gerald McRaney, Tori Spelling, Leah Remini, Steve Martin, Rob Lowe, John Landis, Lew Wasserman, Ed Asner, Mickey Rooney, Richard Dreyfuss, Jaime Pressly, Ashley Tisdale, Sara Gilbert, Tom Green, Jonah Hill, Zoey Deutch, Lea Thompson, Howard Deutch, Sarah Silverman, and Justin Theroux.  Billy Wilder even hung out there in Art’s early days.  And in 2011, the deli was the site of an informal reunion for several St. Elsewhere cast members including Ed Begley Jr. and Abby Singer.

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    One of the most famous movies of the ‘80s was even born over breakfast at the deli.  One morning in May 1983, Ivan Reitman, an Art’s regular, met up with Dan Aykroyd at the eatery to discuss a futuristic sci-fi flick the comedian was writing about teams of men who fought ghosts in outer space.  As Ivan explained to The Hollywood Reporter of their talk that day, “I said, ‘Look, I love this idea that there are people whose job is to catch ghosts and act like firemen.  But it should have a contemporary setting, a big city that we know, like New York.  There’s something [better] about seeing apparitions in a context that we understand, like in our living rooms or on our city streets, rather than in a void in outer space in the future sometime.  He said, ‘That’s cool.’  And I said, ‘Actually, the story of their formation would be good.’  And I pitched this idea that these guys were paranormal investigators — like, looking at paranormal studies at a university in some kind of postgraduate study program.  They get in trouble, they get kicked out, and then they fortuitously set up a business.  That was what I pitched at this breakfast and he said, ‘That’s all cool.’”  The result of that meeting was, of course, Ghostbusters.

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    For his Beverly Hills, 90210: Exposed! interview, Jason Priestley chooses to meet with the authors at Art’s, a favorite deli of his that sits in close proximity to the studio where the series was shot.  While there, over a meal of matzo ball soup and a bagel with a pickle on the side, he discusses his journey to becoming a household name through his iconic role of Minnesota teen transplant Brandon Walsh.  The eatery is referred to by name several times in the book and figures prominently in the chapter on Priestley.  One passage reads, “Sitting in Art’s Deli on Ventura Boulevard in Los Angeles, Jason racks his memory to come up with a reason why he chose his life’s work while he still had his baby teeth.  To help himself think, he dunks his pickle in his soup.”  I find it so incredible – and fabulous – that the restaurant is still in operation thirty years after that interview took place!

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    As my mom suspected, Art’s is also a filming location!

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    In the Season 5 episode of Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee titled “Happy Thanksgiving, Miranda,” which aired in 2014, Jerry Seinfeld takes Amanda Sings (Colleen Ballinger) for a Thanksgiving meal at Art’s Deli.  The exterior . . .

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    . . . and interior were utilized in the filming.

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    Chelsea Handler dined with members of ROMEO (Retired Old Men Eating Out) at Art’s Deli in the Season 1 episode of Chelsea titled “I Was a Ticking Time Bomb,” which aired in 2016.  Both the exterior . . .

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    . . . and interior of the place appeared in the episode.

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    Sandy Wexler (Adam Sandler) drives past Art’s in a very brief scene near the end of the 2017 Netflix original movie Sandy Wexler.

    According to our server, Guy Fieri also recently filmed something at Art’s, but I am unsure of exactly what.

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

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    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Art’s Delicatessen & Restaurant, where Jason Priestley’s interview for the book Beverly Hills, 90210: Exposed! took place, is located at 12224 Ventura Boulevard in Studio City.  You can visit the eatery’s official website here.

  • South Pasadena Public Library from “Say Anything . . . “

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    I was incredibly saddened to learn of the passing of John Mahoney last week.  Not only did I love the actor in pretty much every role he played, but his Hollywood story is such an unusual and admirable one.  After graduating from college, Mahoney tried his hand at a few different occupations including teaching English at a university and editing a medical journal.  Then at the not-so-tender age of 37, he switched gears and decided to follow his passion – acting.  He found quick success on Broadway, even winning a Tony for his performance in The House of Blue Leaves in 1986, before ultimately heading to Tinseltown where he hit the big time with memorable parts in such iconic productions as Moonstruck, Barton Fink, She’s the One, Primal Fear, Reality Bites, In the Line of Fire, and, of course, Frasier, among countless others.  It is extraordinary that Mahoney accomplished so much after such a late-in-life career shift.  What an inspiration – and proof that it is never too late to change course in order to pursue your dreams!  So today I thought I’d honor John by writing about South Pasadena Public Library – a locale from one of his early movies, 1989’s Say Anything . . .

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    Truth be told, South Pasadena Public Library did not actually appear in the final cut of Say Anything . . .  The building – or more accurately Library Park, which surrounds it – pops up in one of the flick’s alternate scenes that can be viewed on both the 20th Anniversary Edition and Special Edition DVDs.  In the scene, Diane Court (Ione Skye) asks ex-boyfriend Lloyd Dobler (John Cusack) to take her back outside of what is supposed to be the kick-boxing dojo where Lloyd works.  Though interior dojo bits were shot at the same North Hollywood spot used as the Cobra Kai karate studio in The Karate Kid, the segment taking place outside of the dojo was lensed on the western side of Library Park along Diamond Avenue, a good 15 miles away.

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    I recognized the locale immediately upon watching the alternate scene a couple of years ago while I was on a hunt for the house where Diane lived in the flick.

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    South Pasadena Public Library is a tough spot to forget.

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    The city’s original library was established in 1907 thanks to a $12,000 grant from steel magnate Andrew Carnegie.  Designed by architect Norman Marsh, the building, which Carnegie himself visited in 1910, boasted a Classical Revival style.  You can see an image of it from its early days here and here.  Sadly, virtually none of that structure remains.  After being expanded in 1916 via another grant from Carnegie (this one to the tune of $6,000), the facility was completely overhauled in 1930 and given a Mediterranean Revival motif, once again created by Marsh, along with architects D.D. Smith and Herbert J. Powell.  Their design still graces the site’s El Centro Street edifice today.

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    Formerly the library’s front entrance, the El Centro Street façade now serves as entry to the facility’s Community Room.

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    Constructed as the library’s main reading area during the 1930 renovation, the Community Room retains much of its original design, including a hand-painted beam ceiling, leaded glass windows, and wrought iron detailing.  You can see a 1946 image of its interior here and a current picture here.

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    Today, the Community Room hosts special city events and can be rented out for certain functions.

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    In 1982, South Pasadena Public Library again underwent a remodel and expansion, but this time only the property’s southern face, situated along Oxley Street, was touched.  That edifice, designed by architect Howard Henry Morgridge, is pictured below.

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    It now serves as the facility’s main entrance.

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    As you can see, it is quite a departure from the 1930 design.

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    The two varying faces of the library, which is South Pasadena Cultural Heritage Landmark #10, make for an interesting and striking piece of architecture.

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    Surrounding the site is Library Park, a lush 2-acre space overflowing with trees, sprawling lawns, and pathways.

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    The towering Moreton Bay fig that stands as the park’s focal point is nothing short of magical.

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    Though its origin is not entirely known, per the City of South Pasadena website, the tree was likely planted by Street Department employee Willem Garret Andries Kloezeman in 1930.

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    Library Park is one of South Pas’ most picturesque and serene spots.

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    So it is no surprise that the park, along with the library itself, has found its way onto both the big and small screens in a myriad of other productions besides Say Anything . . .

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    In Rob Zombie’s 2007 horror flick Halloween, the exterior of South Pasadena Public Library briefly masks as Haddonfield High School.

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    Mike Chadway (Gerard Butler) schools Abby Richter (Katherine Heigl) on the importance of hair extensions while walking along a path on the western side of Library Park in the 2009 romcom The Ugly Truth.

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    Rebecca Harper (Emily VanCamp) catches her boyfriend, Justin Walker (Dave Annable), kissing his sponsee, Chelsea Yeager (Kaitlin Doubleday), on the library steps after an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting in the Season 3 episode of Brothers & Sisters titled “Owning It,” which aired in 2009.

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    In the Season 1 episode of Modern Family titled “Moon Landing,” which aired in 2010, Gloria Delgado-Pritchett (Sofia Vergara) brings Mitchell Pritchett (Jesse Tyler Ferguson) to Library Park to show him where she got into a recent car accident.

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    South Pasadena Public Library pops up several times as the Carson Springs Department of Social Services in the Season 5 episode of The Mentalist titled “Red John’s Rules,” which aired in 2013.

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    The interior of the Community Room also appears in the episode.

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    That same year, Dr. Daniel Pierce (Eric McCormack) attends a supposed Brooksville, Pennsylvania town hall meeting at the library in the Season 2 episode of Perception titled “Toxic.”

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    The interior of the Community Room was also utilized in the episode.

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

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    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: South Pasadena Public Library, from Say Anything . . . , is located at 1100 Oxley Street in South PasadenaKaldi Coffee and Tea, another frequent film star, can be found just across the road at 1019 El Centro Street.

  • Bookstar from “Beverly Hills, 90210”

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    I have certainly been revisiting the past lately, as evidenced here, here, and here.  Maybe it has something to do with nostalgia hitting me after our recent move.  Whatever the reason, here I am yet again with yet another redux.  Today’s locale is a favorite, one that I originally covered in May 2008 – Bookstar, a former-theatre-turned-Barnes-&-Noble in Studio City.  Back in 1991, when the venue was operating as Mann’s Studio Theatre, Dylan McKay (Luke Perry) took Brenda Walsh (Shannen Doherty) there for their first date in the Season 1 episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 titled “Isn’t It Romantic?”  While I have visited the unique book shop countless times over the years, it was not until last December when I came across this post on Scouting Los Angeles (if you are not familiar with Scouting Los Angeles or its sister blog Scouting New York, be sure to check them out – they are hands-down two of the very best location sites out there!) that I realized how much of the property’s original theatrical detailing remains intact.  So I decided I just had to re-stalk the place and do another, more extensive write-up on it.

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    Originally established as the Studio City Theatre by the Laurel Theatres company, the understated Streamline Moderne-style structure was designed by architect Clifford A. Balch of Magnolia Theatre fame.  The 65-foot wide, 881-seat, single-screen venue celebrated its grand opening on June 11th, 1938 with a showing of MGM’s Test Pilot.  You can check out a photograph of the movie house shortly before it opened its doors here and another photo here taken in 1946 by which point its ticket booth had been overhauled and made more ornate.

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    The arena hit a hiccup almost immediately.  Per the Los Angeles Movie Palaces website, Laurel Theatres sued Fox West Coast for excluding them from various distributions just a few weeks after the opening.  The lawsuit turned out to be rather ironic considering the fact that Fox (a division of the National General Pictures conglomerate) wound up managing the venue for many years after the Laurel Theatres group bowed out.  During Fox’s tenure, the site was known as Fox Studio City Theatre.  In 1973, when Mann Theatre Corporation took over the cinema portion of National General Pictures, which included the Studio City movie house, it was renamed Mann’s Studio Theatre.

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    Sadly, by 1990 the ever-growing popularity of multiplexes had caused patronage of Mann’s Studio Theatre to wane.  The company chose not to renew their lease and the venue was shuttered in February 1991.  Instead of selling to developers as many locals feared, the site’s longtime owners, the Rothman family, decided to bring in a tenant that would not only take advantage of the place’s history, but also preserve its aesthetic.   The Rothmans’ real estate broker Bruce Bailey told the Los Angeles Times that despite generous offers from several builders, “they won’t change the property unless it is falling down.  They are against mini-malls.  They like the look of Studio City.  They’ve had tenants ask if they could clear a portion and they won’t do it.”  Those words are absolute music to my ears!  I wish more Los Angeles building owners shared that sentiment.  The Rothmans wound up finding exactly what they were looking for in Bookstar, a division of Barnes & Noble that had refurbished San Diego’s Loma Theatre into a book shop the year prior.  The result of the company’s efforts is a fabulous amalgamation of cinema and print.  Though the theatre’s lobby appointments and auditorium seating are now gone, pretty much every other original detail remains intact.

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    That detailing includes the colorful exterior terrazzo flooring;

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    the gilded ticket booth;

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     the marquee and “Studio City” signage;

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    the ceiling lip above the former concessions stand, as well as the columns that flanked it (which you’ll see some screen captures of in a bit);

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    the movie screen;

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     the ceiling art;

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    and the projection booth, which, per Scouting Los Angeles, now houses the store’s offices.

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    Paying homage to its original incarnation, all of Bookstar’s signage boasts cinematic and Art Deco styling.

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     It is easily one of the most unique spots to shop in L.A.

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    Movie magic between the stacks!

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    Mann’s Studio Theatre pops up three times in “Isn’t It Romantic?”  At the beginning of the episode, Brenda tags along with her twin brother, Brandon (Jason Priestley), and his BFF Dylan for a showing of Animal Crackers at the venue.  Watching the show, you can really get a feel for how little the space has changed since Bookstar took over.  As I mentioned above, though the concession stand has been removed, the pillars that once flanked it as well as the curved ceiling lip above it remain in place.

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     Even the decorative outline carvings on the ceiling are still intact!

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     The staircase visible to the right of the concession stand in the scene also remains, but is now largely obscured by displays.

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    A better view of it is pictured below.

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    Later in “Isn’t It Romantic?”, Dylan, Brenda, and Brandon make plans to catch another Marx Brothers movie at Mann’s Studio Theatre, but Brandon gets sick, leaving Brenda to go out with Dylan alone, much to her father, Jim Walsh’s (James Eckhouse), chagrin.

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     While waiting in line for tickets, the two decide to, as Dylan says, “shine on the movie” and instead go back to his suite at the L’Ermitage, where they kiss for the first time.

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    Something I’ve always found amusing about the scene is that the establishing footage of the theatre shown in it is actually re-used from the third segment of the episode that takes place at Mann’s.  Though you don’t see her from the front, Brenda is visible pacing away from the camera in the fabulous navy and pink outfit she wears for her date with Dylan in the later scene.

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    In the theatre’s third “Isn’t It Romantic?” appearance, Dylan and Brenda make another date to see another Marx Brothers flick at the cinema, but, devastatingly, he stands her up, leaving her to pace in front of the venue for hours until the movie lets out.  Brenda is so upset over the experience that she stays home from school the following Monday.  Have no fear, though – it all works out in the end.  Well, until that little home-wrecker Kelly Taylor (Jennie Garth) steps in and ruins things in Season 3.  But I digress.

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     It is so amazing that despite the changeover from theatre to bookstore and the passage of almost thirty years, the locale looks pretty much just as it did when the episode was filmed.

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    Bookstar has popped up in a couple of other productions, as well.  It appears as the the theatre “near Olympic and Western” where Sergeant Joe Friday (Jack Webb) and Officer Bill Gannon (Harry Morgan) investigate a juvenile assault with a deadly weapon at the beginning of the Season 2 episode of Dragnet titled “The Grenade,” which aired in 1967.  Only the exterior of the venue was utilized in the scene.  Interiors were filmed on a set.

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    Thanks to fellow stalker Al, I learned that the site is featured in Wang Chung’s 1985 “Fire in the Twilight” music video, which you can watch here.

    The theatre is also seen very briefly in the 1988 comedy Earth Girls Are Easy in the scene in which Wiploc (Jim Carrey) meets some “Finland babes” while cruising Ventura Boulevard.

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    Jerry Seinfeld and Miranda Sings (Colleen Ballinger) briefly park in front of Bookstar at the end of the Season 5 episode of Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee titled “Happy Thanksgiving, Miranda,” which aired in 2014.

    According to commenter YMike on the Cinema Treasures blog, Mann’s Studio Theatre also appears in an episode of the 1985 version of The Twilight Zone television series.  I am unsure of which episode, though, and scanned through a copious amount of them in preparation for today’s post, but did not see it pop up anywhere.  If anyone happens to know, please fill me in!

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

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     Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Bookstar, from the “Isn’t It Romantic?” episode of Beverly Hills, 90210, is located at 12136 Ventura Boulevard in Studio City.  You can visit the shop’s official website here.

  • Kaldi Coffee and Tea from “Lady Bird”

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    The Grim Cheaper and I are almost all settled in to our new desert home, so I should be getting back to my regularly scheduled blog programing in the near future.  Thanks for bearing with me over the past few weeks.  For my first post-move locale, I thought I’d write about a spot I originally covered back in early 2010 – Kaldi Coffee and Tea in South Pasadena, which I was thrilled to see pop up numerous times while watching a for-your-consideration DVD of Lady Bird prior to the SAG Awards in early January.  Though I did not particularly like the Greta Gerwig-directed coming-of-age drama, Kaldi has long been one of my favorite San Gabriel Valley cafés, so I figured it was most definitely due for a re-post.  Because of our move, I was not able to venture out to South Pas to snap any additional photos of the place, but, thankfully, my parents happened to be in L.A. for a brief visit last week and, while there, my mom did some Kaldi stalking on my behalf.  Thanks, mom!

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     The handsome brick building that houses Kaldi Coffee and Tea was originally constructed in 1903 as South Pasadena Bank, founded by George W. E. Griffith.

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    Designed by architect Thomas Preston in what this National Register of Historic Places Inventory calls “typical western storefront style,” the site has the distinction of being the city’s very first bank.

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    During its early years, the property also acted as a sort of unofficial city hall with its upper floor serving as office space for South Pasadena trustees.

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    Per the Historic Places Inventory, the building, which is South Pasadena Cultural Heritage Landmark #8, informed the architecture of nearby Mission Street, where most of the structures boast a similar two-story brick aesthetic.

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    The site’s ground-level corner space was transformed into Kaldi Coffee and Tea in 1995.

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    The café has been a South Pas staple ever since.

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    Though sold to new owners Susan and Chanho Park in December 2011, not much of the place has been changed over its two-plus decades in operation.  Kaldi still serves up fabulous coffee, espresso specialties, sandwiches, salads, and bakery staples in a bright, sun-filled atmosphere.

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    So it should come as no surprise that the café is pretty much always bustling, as evidenced in the photos above and below.

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    Regardless of that fact, Kaldi still makes for a peaceful, quiet spot to enjoy a cup of joe.

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    Masking as Sacramento’s New Helvetia Coffee Shop, Kaldi is featured numerous times throughout Lady Bird.  It first appears in the scene in which Christine “Lady Bird” McPherson (Saoirse Ronan) goes out with her new boyfriend, Danny O’Neill (Lucas Hedges), and some friends to hear a band play on Thanksgiving.

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    Lady Bird later gets a job at the café . . .

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    . . . where she gets into trouble for flirting on her first day.

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    Kaldi pops up in a few additional scenes, as well.

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    Lady Bird is hardly the first production to feature Kaldi.  In fact, the place is something of a South Pasadena filming landmark, which is not surprising considering its charming Anywhere, U.S.A. look.

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     Felix Bonhoeffer (Anthony Hopkins) has coffee at Kaldi with his friend Tracy (Lisa Pepper) at the beginning of 2007’s incredibly weird drama Slipstream, though not much of the space can be seen in the scene.

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    Kaldi pops up a couple of times as Danny (Paul Rudd) and Beth’s (Elizabeth Banks) local coffee shop in the 2008 comedy Role Models.

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    That same year, the office space directly above Kaldi portrayed a therapist’s office in the horror flick Prom Night, which I learned thanks to the Movie Locations and More website.  (South Pasadena’s oft-filmed Library Park – which is situated across the street and which I blogged about here – can be seen through the windows in the second screen capture below.)

    As was the case in Lady Bird, Kaldi masks as a Sacramento café in The Ugly Truth.  The locale is featured twice in the 2009 romcom – first in the scene in which Mike Chadway (Gerard Butler) begins to teach Abby Richter (Katharine Heigl) the way to a man’s heart.

    Later, Kaldi is where Abby shows off her new boyfriend, Colin (Eric Winter), to her best friend, Joy (Bree Turner).

    The coffee shop also pops up twice on the television series Brothers & Sisters.  In the Season 3 episode titled “Owning It,” which aired in 2009, Tommy Walker (Balthazar Getty) meets with Kent Barnes (Scott Klace) at Kaldi to discuss his scheme to buy a vineyard.

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    And in Season 5’s “Get a Room,” which aired in 2010, Kaldi masks as the coffee shop near Wexley University where Kittie McCallister (Calista Flockhart) meets and flirts with handsome, young barista Seth Whitley (Ryan Devlin).

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    Kaldi portrays Cup ‘N Cakes Cafe, where Gloria Delgado-Pritchett (Sofia Vergara) gets into not one, but two car accidents in the Season 1 episode of Modern Family titled “Moon Landing,” which aired in 2010.

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    The café plays Berkeley Coffee, where Jim Kazinsky (Mike O’Malley) works – and gets dumped by Sarah Braverman (Lauren Graham) – in the Season 1 episode of Parenthood titled “The Deep End of the Pool,” which aired in 2010.

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    In the Season 4 episode of Rizzoli & Isles titled “We Are Family,” which aired in 2013, Kaldi masquerades as Boston’s “College Café,” where Maura Isles (Sasha Alexander) spies on her sister, Cailin Martin (Emilee Wallace).

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    Kaldi Coffee and Tea also pops up in the pilot episode of Splitting Up Together, which aired in 2018 – only in an establishing shot, though.

    All actual filming took place at Habitat Coffee Shop and Cafe located at 3708 North Eagle Rock Boulevard in Glassell Park.

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

    Big THANK YOU to my mom for stalking this location for me and for taking the photos that appear in this post!  Smile

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    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Kaldi Coffee and Tea, aka New Helvetia Coffee Shop from Lady Bird, is located at 1019 El Centro Street in South Pasadena.