The “One Day at a Time” Apartment Building

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I am kind of a savant when it comes to old television theme songs.  Mention any show from the ‘70s, ‘80s or ‘90s and I can sing the opening instantly!  A Warner Bros. Studio tour guide discovered my superpower once on a trip through the lot and tried his darndest to stump me, to no avail.  Growing Pains, Perfect Strangers, Full House, Cheers, Punky Brewster – I knew them all!  One he failed to quiz me on, but that I would have been able to belt out all the same was “This Is It,” the catchy opening to One Day at a Time.  (Just reading those words puts the chorus right into your head, doesn’t it?  Just me?)  Even though the series, which aired on CBS from 1975 to 1984, was before my time, I watched it in syndication every day when I got home from grade school.  So ingrained in my childhood memories is the show that I can practically smell the steam from my regular afternoon Cup O’Noodles snack every time I catch an episode now.  So when my friend Owen informed me that he had found the apartment building where divorced single mom Ann Romano (Bonnie Franklin) lived with her two teenage daughters, Barbara (Valerie Bertinelli) and Julie Cooper (Mackenzie Phillips) – and regularly avoided the amorous advances of handyman Schneider (Pat Harrington Jr.) – on the pivotal series, I had to give it a stalk!

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As was typical of television shows of the era, the apartment building was not shown in establishing shots, but solely in the series’ opening credits, which you can watch here.

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Said to be at 1344 Hartford Drive in Indianapolis, Owen located Ann, Julie and Barbara’s complex at 656 South Ridgeley Drive in Los Angeles’ Mid-Wilshire neighborhood.  The hunt was a bit of a circuitous one.  Of the endeavor, he told me, “My first hunch all along was that the building would be close to where the studio was located or in or around Koreatown, since I saw quite a few apartment buildings that looked similar when doing Google Images searches.  Two studio locations were listed on IMDb, so I started looking within a mile or so radius of each, figuring maybe they didn’t venture far from ‘home’ to film the scene.  I came up with nada, but while researching the show a bit further I learned that it was originally taped at an address not listed on IMDb and moved shortly after its premiere.  Well, with this new address (7800 Beverly Blvd.) in hand, I resumed the search, using 3D satellite views on Google Maps.  I checked mostly north of the address and was about to call it quits, but then I was looking southeast of the address and noticed a few apartment buildings that shared characteristics (specifically the arched windows and the partial brick/partial non-brick façade) so I decided to keep at it.  I eventually spotted a possibility on Ridgeley, so I went to street view and — after a bit of hesitation — came to the conclusion that I had lucked into finding the right place, less than 1.5 miles from the studio.  I wasn’t 100 percent certain at first, but when I saw the third and fourth floors on street view, I thought — to borrow the opening line from a certain ‘70s theme song — this is it.”  See, I’m not the only one who knows their theme songs!

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Despite the passage of more than four decades, the building still looks much as it did on the show, though a portion of the second-floor brickwork has since been stuccoed over.  It is unclear when the change was made, as it pre-dates street view imagery.  Schneider must have worked overtime on that job!

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The March 1937 Los Angeles Times notification below, which denotes the building as the “Wilshire Ridgeley Apartments,” shows the pre-altered façade, as it appeared on the series.

One Day at a Time Collage

The handsome 4-story, 32-unit building was erected in 1929.

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Only its exterior was featured on One Day at a Time.  The interior of apartment #402, was, of course, just a set – built first at CBS Television City, as Owen mentioned, then Metromedia Square (now Helen Bernstein High School), and finally at Universal Studios.  Not only did Schneider get around, but so did the show!

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One Day at a Time co-creator Allan Mannings told the Indianapolis Star that he chose to set the series there because the city is “large enough to be meaningful, but not so large as to be overwhelming and not so small as to be overlooked.”  A quick look at area apartment buildings via Google Images told me the location managers did a fine job selecting the Ridgeley Drive structure as it does very much have a Railroad City feel thanks to its brick façade and arched windows.  (In an interesting side-note, Mannings created the series with his wife, the previously married and divorced Whitney Blake, who loosely based the storyline upon her own experiences as a working single mom.  She originally hoped her daughter could play Ann, but the pitch got stuck in years of development turnaround and, when One Day at a Time was finally produced, the lead, of course, went to Bonnie Franklin.  Don’t you worry about Blake’s daughter, though.  Meredith Baxter fared just fine, going on to star as Elyse Keaton on Family Ties, one of the most famous screen moms of all time!  And yeah, I know the words to that theme song, too!)

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The supposed Logansport home Ann, Barbara and Julie are shown moving away from at the beginning of the One Day at a Time credits is also in Los Angeles.  It can be found at 4954 Willow Crest Avenue in North Hollywood, looking much like it did when the segment was shot 45 years ago, as the Google Street View imagery below attests to.  (Thanks to Chas, from It’s Filmed There, for the info!)

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Though I don’t remember it being so in my childhood viewings, the show was considered groundbreaking.  The year it debuted, one newspaper critic, William E. Sarmento, showed his scathing disdain for it by opining, “One Day at a Time is about a newly-divorced mother and her two teenage daughters.  It is painfully apparent that at CBS the traditional family is all but extinct except on The Waltons.  In fact, I was wondering if enough of us wrote in, maybe the mother on One Day at a Time might not be introduced to Richard Castellano on Joe and Sons.  He’s a widower with two sons, and, who knows, together they might make their own hour-long weekly series.  The message on CBS seems to be that marriage leads either to an early death or divorce.  Maybe they’re right, but I think it would be nice to be reassured every once in a while that the whole country is not going to hell via CBS’s thinking.”  Yikes.  Audiences didn’t share the same sentiment, though, as One Day at a Time went on to enjoy a nine-year run, turning its four stars into household names and this stalker into a young fan.

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Big THANK YOU to my friend Owen for finding this location!

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: The One Day at a Time apartment building is located at 656 South Ridgeley Drive in Los Angeles’ Mid-Wilshire neighborhood

Robert Reed’s Former Home

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I (along with cutie Matt Lanter – sigh!) would like to start out today by wishing all of my fellow stalkers a very happy Valentine’s Day!  Smile And now, on with the post!

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A couple of weeks ago, while doing research on the Nanny and the Professor house, I happened to stumble upon an article on my friend Scott Michaels’ FindADeath website about Robert Reed, the Shakespearian-trained actor who is most famous for having portrayed architect/patriarch Mike Brady on the 1970s television sitcom The Brady Bunch. And, let me tell you, I almost fell right out of my chair when I read the portion of the article which stated that the star had lived the majority of his later years right here in Pasadena.  Come again, now?  How in the world had I not previously known this information??  Especially considering that The Brady Bunch is one of my favorite shows of all time!  I mean, why on earth is this data not posted right there on the homepage of the official City of Pasadena website, or on a plaque on the walls of City Hall itself??  It is a pretty major claim to fame – in my eyes at least!  Sheesh!  Do I have to think of everything?  Anyway, I was so excited about the news that I ran right out to stalk the place later that same week.

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According to Zillow, Robert Reed’s former home, which was originally built in 1947 and sits on almost half an acre of land, boasts 3 bedrooms, 4 baths, and 4,400 square feet of living space.  There seems to be a bit of a discrepancy somewhere, though, because the Property Shark website has a differing set of statistics which state that the abode measures 4 bedrooms, 5 baths, and 4,010 square feet of living space.  And, unfortunately, I am unsure of which information is correct.  Either way, I cannot express how incredibly cool I think it is that Robert Reed, who was a household name and an instantly recognizable star at the time, lived in a dwelling that was largely visible from the street.  Love it!

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According to his death certificate, which can be viewed on the FindADeath website, Robert Reed passed away at Huntington Memorial Hospital in Pasadena on Tuesday, May 12th, 1992, and not at his home as several websites have stated.  The actor was 59 years old at the time.  His funeral was held at All Saints Church in Pasadena, an oft-filmed-at location that I have yet to blog about, and he is buried at Memorial Park Cemetery in Skokie, Illinois.  According to a commenter named Rita on the FindADeath site, the home pictured above was not Robert Reed’s first Pasadena-area residence.  The star, who was born John Robert Rietz, originally purchased a property located at 1210 South Arroyo Boulevard sometime during the mid-sixties.  That gargantuan abode, which boasts 3 bedrooms, 5 baths, a whopping 9,218 square feet, and 0.84 acres of land, is, sadly, not at all visible from the street, though, so I did not attempt to stalk it.  Reed sold his original Pasadena residence sometime around 1985, at which point he moved about a half a mile east, into the sprawling Spanish-style home where he would live out the remainder of his years.

Big THANK YOU to Scott Michaels, from the FindADeath website, for finding this location!  Smile

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Robert Reed’s former house is located at 980 Stoneridge Drive in PasadenaThe Cravens Estate, from Commander in Chief and JAG, is located right around the corner at 430 Madeline Drive in Pasadena.