Pete’s House from “Bridesmaids”

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Speaking of Cameron Woods (in case you missed Monday’s post, you can read it here) . . . while wandering around the neighborhood recently I was reminded of a spot that I stalked long ago but had yet to blog about – the house belonging to Pete (Brian Petsos) in the 2011 comedy Bridesmaids.   As mentioned Monday, the quarter-mile stretch of Orion Avenue in Van Nuys that makes up Cameron Woods is easily one of the most charming and oft-filmed spots in L.A.  Per a 2012 Los Angeles Times article, the two-block idyll was the brainchild of William Buchner.  Between 1946 and 1952, the developer built a stretch of large picturesque New England and Cape Cod-style homes on the street’s 6200 and 6300 blocks.  Inspired by a road in Connecticut, he constructed the residences on oversized 100-by-300-foot lots, allowing for expansive front and back yards dotted with native walnut trees.  His vision was unfortunately cut short due to a disagreement with his partners and a change in zoning laws, so only a handful of properties wound up being built with the remaining lots sold off and subdivided.  The small idyll that Buchner did create, though, is a charming oasis seemingly far removed from modern life – so much so that it is commonly referred to as the “Leave it to Beaver block.”  And it is at a home smack dab in the middle of it that Annie (Kristen Wiig) shows up for a doomed blind date with Pete in Bridesmaids.

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In real life, Pete’s house, a charming 1950 residence, is much larger than it appears to be from the street, boasting 4,227 square feet, a whopping 7 bedrooms and 4.5 baths, a 0.60-acre lot, a sprawling backyard with a pool, a spa, a rock waterfall, an arbor, multiple patios, and parking for 12 cars!

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I was a little late to the Bridesmaids game, seeing it for the first time almost a year after it debuted via a SAG screener I received in early 2012.  The DVD featured the director’s cut of the movie, which included the blind date scene with Pete.  I had no idea until sitting down to write this post that the segment was initially left on the cutting room floor and was not part of the original film!  So if you saw Bridesmaids in the theatre or only have the original version on DVD, you’re likely reading this thinking “What blind date scene?”  In the bit, Annie arrives at the home of Pete, whom Becca (Ellie Kemper) has set her up with.  Instead of immediately heading out, Pete slips upstairs to make a call to his ex-wife and asks Annie to entertain his young son, Tyler (Blake Garrett), who quickly informs Annie that his mother is going to kill her.  Things only get worse from there.  Needless to say, Pete and Annie fail to make a love connection.

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It is obvious from the way the scene was shot that the actual interior of the house was utilized, though it has since been remodeled.  You can check out current photos of the inside here.

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The pad has a few other credits to its name, as well.

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I learned from a commenter named Andrew on the Streamline blog that the place portrayed the residence of Bobby Thompson (Tim O’Kelly) and his family in the 1968 film Targets, though it looked considerably different at the time.

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It also served as the home of a zealous Christmas decorator in the Season 2 episode of 9-1-1 titled “Merry Ex-Mas,” which aired in 2018.

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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: Pete’s house from Bridesmaids is located at 6309 Orion Avenue in Van Nuys’ Cameron Woods neighborhoodJoe Goldberg (Penn Badgley) and Love Quinn’s (Victoria Pedretti) new house from the Season 2 finale of You is right next door at 6301 Orion.

The Majestic Downtown from “The Holiday”

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The Holiday has definitely been on my brain as of late.  I wrote about two of the houses used in the 2006 film for the December issue of Los Angeles magazine and recently got to tour Thorne Hall at Occidental College, the setting of one of its most poignant scenes.  So I figured it was only appropriate to dedicate a post to another of the movie’s locales, DTLA’s SB Spring building, more specifically its lower level former bank space known as The Majestic Downtown, which masqueraded as the supposed London office of The Daily Telegraph newspaper in the flick.  I have blogged about this spot twice before, once in 2010 for my own site and then again in 2014 for L.A. mag.  The last time I did some stalking of it, though, an event was being set up and the friendly security guard manning the front door happened to invite me inside for a closer look!  I have yet to share the photos I snapped that day, so I decided it was definitely time for a third go-round.

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SB Spring was originally erected in 1924 as the headquarters of the Hellman Commercial Trust and Savings Bank.

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Commissioned by Isaias Hellman at a cost of $2.5-million, the Beaux Arts-style structure was designed by the Schultze & Weaver architecture firm.

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Featuring an Indiana limestone façade with sweeping arched windows and doors and terra cotta carvings, the 12-story building originally housed offices on the upper levels . . .

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. . . and a two-story Spanish Revival-style bank on the ground floor boasting 40-foot-tall hand-painted coffered ceilings, marble columns, stairs and flooring, intricate bronze chandeliers, and a large mezzanine.  You can check out a photo of what the grand space looked like during its early days here.

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The Majestic Downtown from The Holiday (1 of 34)

Soon after construction of the property was complete, Hellman Commercial merged with Merchants National Bank and then was taken over by Bank of America shortly thereafter.  The 250,000-square-foot structure became the financial institution’s Los Angeles headquarters and, as such, was known largely as the “Bank of America Building.”

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When B of A moved its headquarters to a new location on Flower Street in 1972, the upstairs offices of the Spring Street building were leased out to various companies.  The ground floor bank, however, remained in operation until its doors were finally closed due to a decline in business in March 1988.

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Developer Barry Shy purchased the structure in 2009 and converted the upstairs offices into a 174-unit loft-style apartment building known as SB Spring.

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Thankfully, the bank space, now a special events venue known as The Majestic Downtown, has been left largely intact over the years, making it the perfect spot for filming.  And locations scouts have definitely taken note!

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In The Holiday, The Majestic Downtown is where Iris Simpkins (Kate Winslet) works as a newspaper writer.

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It is during the paper’s Christmas party at the beginning of the film that Iris learns her total cad of an ex-boyfriend, Jasper Bloom (Rufus Sewell), has proposed to the girl that he cheated on her with.

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SB Spring has appeared in countless productions in addition to The Holiday.  So many, that it would be impossible to chronicle all of its onscreen appearances here, but below are a few of my personal favorites.

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Sam Wheat (Patrick Swayze) has Oda Mae Brown (Whoopi Goldberg) fill out a signature card under a fake name at the bank in 1990’s Ghost.

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The Majestic Downtown masks as the Fourth Reich Bank of Hamburg where Harris K. Telemacher (Steve Martin) provides his financial records in an attempt to secure a dinner reservation at L’Idiot restaurant in the 1991 comedy L.A. Story.

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The site portrays Edge City Savings & Loan, where Stanley Ipkiss (Jim Carrey) works, in the 1994 comedy The Mask.

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Robbie Hart (Adam Sandler) applies for a job there in the 1998 romcom The Wedding Singer.

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In 2001’s Heartbreakers, Max Conners (Sigourney Weaver) and her daughter, Page Conners (Jennifer Love Hewitt), attempt to withdraw money from their accounts at the bank, but are thwarted by the IRS.

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Jenna Rink (Jennifer Garner) saves a party at The Majestic Downtown by performing the Zombie Dance from Thriller in the 2004 comedy 13 Going on 30.

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And, yes, I did, of course, imitate Jenna doing a Thriller move while I was there, but unfortunately the lighting in the building was extremely low, so my photo did not come out.  (Many of the images I took that day suffered the same fate, unfortunately.)

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The exterior of SB Spring masquerades as Belle en Blanc bridal salon in the 2011 comedy Bridesmaids.

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Me doing my best Helen (Rose Byrne) out in front.  Too bad the shop’s ornate intercom isn’t actually there in real life.

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Though the interior of the salon was a studio-built set, it is outside of SB Spring that the scene’s most memorable moment took place.

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It is there that Lillian (Maya Rudolph), ahem, loses her sh*t in the middle of the street.

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Had to do it!  (Though I accidentally posed a bit too far to the north.)

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SB Spring plays Capitol Trust Bank, where Jake Peralta (Andy Samberg) and the gang attend a Homeland Security counterterrorism drill, in the Season 2 episode of Brooklyn Nine-Nine titled “Windbreaker City,” which aired in 2014.

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In 2018, the exterior of the bank popped up in the music video for the Lil Dicky/Chris Brown song “Freak Friday,” which you can watch here.

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And E.B. Jonathan (John Lithgow) unsuccessfully attempts to secure a loan there in the hopes of saving his practice in the Season 1 episode of the new HBO series Perry Mason titled “Chapter 4.”

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 Majestic Downtown, aka The Daily Telegraph newspaper office from The Holiday, is located at 650 South Spring Street in downtown Los Angeles.  You can visit the venue’s official website here.