Skylark Hotel from “Palm Swings”

Skylark Hotel from Palm Swings-6550

One of the best parts of starting this blog is the many connections I’ve been able to make with people who share this unique predilection of mine.  I recently had the pleasure of meeting up with mid-century-modern-house-stalker George Smart, of the USModernist website, who was in town for Palm Springs’ annual Modernism Week.  He had some ideas about a couple of future collaborations between our two sites and also invited me to appear on his podcast USModernist Radio (aka the “Car Talk” of design podcasts).  We recorded the bit at the Skylark Hotel, a fabulous mid-century lodging at 1466 North Palm Canyon Drive that George and his team had taken over for the duration of their visit.  I was unfamiliar with the locale prior to showing up for my interview and was enthralled by the property’s sleek lines, bright colors, and retro touches.  I was even more intrigued when George informed me that the place is a filming location!  As he explained, Skylark Hotel appeared in the 2017 movie Palm Swings, which I had never heard of.  I, of course, streamed it the second I got home.  Sadly, the flick was not good.  At all.  Thanks to its gorgeous architecture, though, I figured the Skylark was still worthy of a blog post.

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Surprisingly, I was not able to dig up much of the hotel’s history online or elsewhere.  In fact, there was not a single mention of the place – past or present – in any of my Palm Springs history or tourism books.

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From what I was able to glean, the property was originally established in 1955.  I believe it initially operated under its current moniker, Skylark Hotel.

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Though I haven’t been able to verify it, according to several blurbs I came across online (here and here), the site was a major celeb hot spot in its early days with such stars as Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, Peter Lawford, Jayne Mansfield, and Marlon Brando all frolicking in the 9-foot-deep central swimming pool.

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Per an article in the San Bernardino Sun, by 1988 the hotel was being operated as the Palm Springs Canyon Inn.

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That same year, it was purchased by Fran and Bill Flesher, the owners of Treehouse Fun Ranch, a nudist camp in San Bernardino.  The couple renamed the site “Treehouse Too Hotel” and transformed it into a clothing-optional lodging.

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  They also added a clover-leaf-shaped spa to the grounds.

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As some point, the hotel was again transformed, this time into the clothing-optional gay resort Camp Palm Springs.  It was then that it began to fall into disrepair.

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By the time that hotelier Jesse Rhodes got his hands on the lodging in 2013, many of the original mid-century modern touches had vanished.  As he told Palm Springs Life, “Everything was covered up and painted very dark.  But when I walked into the property, I knew that under all that stuff they had covered up the original architecture would be there – and it was.”  So he set about rehabilitating the structure, which required a virtual gutting of each of the site’s 29 rooms.

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The result is nothing short of retro-fabulous, though that doesn’t come as much of a surprise being that restoring old hotels is old hat for Rhodes, who has also worked on such storied properties as New York’s Plaza Hotel and San Diego’s Hotel Del Coronado.

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Of the renovation process, he said, “I didn’t remodel the hotel, I restored it back to what it was.  There’s a book called Palm Springs Holiday and it has a photograph of the hotel from 1955 with a caption that says, ‘The long-vanished Skylark Hotel.’  Well guess what?  It didn’t vanish.  It’s reappeared exactly the way it was except for the fact that it has Egyptian cotton sheets, flat screen televisions, Wi-Fi, and dual-pane glass windows.  But if you look at that photo from 1955 and compare it to now, it looks the same.”

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One notable difference is the AstroTurf chaise lounge that now graces the hotel’s entrance.  While initially displayed at the Pepper Tree Inn (now Alcazar Palm Springs), the Blue McRight-designed piece, titled “Lawn Chair,” was relocated to the Skylark in 2013.

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Other modern amenities include Danish mahogany and walnut furnishings, custom-made pillow-top mattresses, and mountain and pool views.

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Clothing is also no longer optional, which means children are now welcome.  As Rhodes says of the resort, “Instead of it being straight-friendly or gay-friendly, we’re just friendly.”

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   Back to Palm Swings.  The racy flick (which plays much like a Lifetime Original Movie) revolves around Allison Hughes (Sugar Lyn Beard) and her husband, Mark Hughes (Jackson Davis), a young couple who have just moved to the desert.  As they quickly discern, their neighbors (and pretty much everyone else in the area) are swingers.  (Talk about a cliché.)  So the two decide to test the waters.  (When in Rome, I guess.)  Skylark Hotel shows up twice in the flick.  It first pops up very briefly in the movie’s opening montage in which Allison and Mark are shown driving their U-Haul into town.

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Skylark Hotel is later the site of the raucous annual “Palm Swings Weekend” swingers party, hosted by Ms. Cherry Bomb (Tia Carrere).  (See what I mean?  Come aawwwwnnnn!  Could the premise be any more ridiculous?)

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The Palm Swings Weekend party takes place mainly around Skylark’s pool.

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According to the Desert Sun, not only did Palm Swings utilize the hotel as a filming location, but the cast and crew stayed there during the three-week shoot, which took place in the summer of 2014.  (The fact that the movie was not released until over three years later, and then only digitally, is quite telling.)

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A rendering of the hotel also appeared on the flick’s poster.

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

Big THANK YOU to George Smart, of the USModernist website, for telling me about this location!  Smile 

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Skylark Hotel, from Palm Swings, is located at 1466 North Palm Canyon Drive in Palm Springs’ Uptown Design District.  You can visit the property’s official website here.

Arrowhead Pine Rose Cabins from “Veep”

Arrowhead Pine Rose Cabins from Veep-1200425

I often find myself thinking about how fabulous it would be if Instagram had existed back when Beverly Hills, 90210 was still on the air.  One of my most-loved down-time activities is perusing the feed of actors currently starring on shows I watch to see the various behind-the-scenes stories and photos they post.  Not only do the images provide a rare peek at the intimate goings-on of the production of a television series, but they’re an incredible source of filming location information.  Like I said, I can only imagine if the app was in existence during the 90210 days.  Perhaps then the world would know the location of Tal Weaver’s (Gabriel Macht) house, as well as the mansion where the infamous red dress photo shoot took place (two of my most-wanted yet-to-be-found spots).  But I digress.  One of the best IG accounts for production info is Julia Louis-Dreyfus’.  The Veep star regularly posts photos of the behind-the-scenes happenings of her hit HBO series – like this 2016 image showing the cast and crew during the filming of Season 5’s “Camp David,” which Julia states in the caption took place in Lake Arrowhead.  I was more than a little perturbed when I came across the pic one day this past March being that I had literally just returned home from a trip to the mountain town days prior.  Regardless, I quickly got to Googling to figure out exactly where filming had occurred and was thrilled to head back to Lake Arrowhead in September so that I could finally stalk it.

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A Google search of the words “Veep,” “filming,” and “Lake Arrowhead” led me to this 2016 Yelp review posted by user Stephanie B. in which she mentioned that the show had used Arrowhead Pine Rose Cabins, located at 25994 California 189 in Twin Peaks, to mimic Camp David shortly before her stay.  One look at images of the hotel online confirmed Stephanie’s assertion.  From there, I just had to figure out exactly which of the property’s 20 cabins were utilized in the episode.  Thankfully, the resort boasts quite an extensive website with numerous photographs of each bungalow, so that wasn’t hard to do.  But more on that in a bit.

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Arrowhead Pine Rose Cabins was initially built in the early 1900s as housing for U.S. Forest Service rangers and staff.  It was not until Helen and Fred Dowd saw the site’s potential as a vacation destination in the 1950s that the property was transformed into a sprawling hotel.  The couple first leased the location, which they named “Arrowhead Road Resort,” from the Forest Service before eventually buying it outright in the ‘60s.  More cabins were added to the premises during their tenure, but sadly, many of the original cottages from the early 1900s no longer stand thanks to several fires that hit the area over the years.

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Arrowhead Pine Rose Cabins from Veep-1200447

Fred’s passing in 1989 caused Helen to consider retirement and she put Arrowhead Road Resort on the market shortly thereafter.  Four years later, Twin Peaks locals David and Tricia Dufour happened to visit some friends staying at the hotel and were given a tour of the vast property by Helen.  It was love at first sight.  The couple quickly snatched up the resort and re-named it Arrowhead Pine Rose Cabins.

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David, a general contractor, and Tricia, an interior designer, still own and manage the site to this day and have used their vocational talents to expand upon and improve the grounds and cabins, with David adding meandering streams and two large koi ponds to the premises and Tricia re-imagining the décor.

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Today, the sprawling resort features 6 forested acres of land, a swimming pool, a Jacuzzi, volleyball courts, ping pong tables, hammocks, log swings, a myriad of outdoor seating areas, a jungle gym, a fire pit (perfect for s’mores!), and, as I mentioned earlier, 20 individual cabins ranging in size from studios that sleep 2 to a 7-bedroom lodge that can accommodate 21 guests.

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During the month of December, each of those cabins is decorated for Christmas, which I think has to be about the coolest thing ever!

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Arrowhead Pine Rose Cabins truly is gorgeous in person.  It is not hard to see why David and Tricia fell in love with the place or how it came to be used on Veep.  Bonus – the employees are super friendly, as well!  When I first arrived at the hotel, I popped in to the front office to explain why I was there and make sure it would be OK to take photos.  The woman working at the desk told me to feel free to walk around and explore the grounds.  While she was unsure of exactly where filming had taken place, thankfully I had already hatched all of that out beforehand, so she kindly handed me a map of the resort to help me find my way to the appropriate spots!

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In “Camp David,” President Selina Meyer (Julia Louis-Dreyfus), her bagman Gary Walsh (Tony Hale), her ex-husband Andrew Meyer (David Pasquesi), his girlfriend Monica (Lauren Bowles), Selina’s daughter Catherine (Sarah Sutherland), and Catherine’s girlfriend Marjorie Palmiotti (Clea DuVall) head to Camp David for a “pre-Christmas Christmas celebration.”  Though the trip is supposed to be an outing solely for family, unbeknownst to the rest of the group Selina has invited her entire team along, as well as Chinese President Lu Chi-Jang (Tzi Ma), his aides, and Finnish stateswoman Minna Häkkinen (Sally Phillips) – or as Selina refers to her “that a**-burger salad” – in order to discuss the building of manufacturing plants in key states where Selina needs votes.  While three supposed Camp David cabins are shown in the episode, only two of the resort’s lodgings were utilized, with Fisherman’s Hideaway, aka Cabin #12 (pictured below), doing double duty portraying two different spots.

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The front of Fisherman’s Hideaway first pops up as Camp David’s Aspen Lodge, where President Meyer and her family stay in the episode.  In real life, the two-bedroom structure, which is Pine Rose Cabins’ most secluded unit, features a wooden deck with a BBQ, a full kitchen, a queen bed, a double bed, a foldout sofa, and a fireplace.

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Only the exterior of the cottage was used in the filming.  The interior of Selina’s cabin, which is much larger than Fisherman’s Hideaway’s interior, was a set built at Paramount Studios where the series is lensed.  As you can see in these images of the inside of the actual Aspen Lodge, the Veep set was designed to closely resemble the president’s real life country retreat.

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The north side of Fisherman’s Hideaway later pops up in “Camp David” as the cabin where Selina meets with President Lu Chi-Jang and the rest of the Chinese diplomats.

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As you can see below, some changes were made to the structure for the shoot.  Not only were the picnic table, bench swing, plastic storage compartment, utility box, and metal piping removed from the cabin, but a large pile of wood was added next to the door and the front porch area was digitally covered over with siding and a window to make it appear enclosed.

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It is in front of the Fisherman’s Hideaway’s north side door that Lu Chi-Jang learns that President Eisenhower is no longer alive . . .

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. . . and that Mike McLintock (Matt Walsh) inadvertently takes up chewing nicotine gum.

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The supposed interior of that cabin was also a studio-built set.

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Finally, Pine Rose’s Wild Bill’s cabin, aka Cabin #15, is where Selina’s team holes up in the episode.

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In real life, the one-bedroom Western-themed lodging boasts a fireplace, a full kitchen, a deck, a BBQ, a queen bed, and a day bed.

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Unlike Fisherman’s Hideaway, the interior of Wild Bill’s was utilized in “Camp David.”  You can see images of it here.

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The episode also made extensive use of Pine Rose Cabins’ beautiful grounds.

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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: Arrowhead Pine Rose Cabins, from the “Camp David” episode of Veep, is located at 25994 California 189 in Twin Peaks.  You can visit the hotel’s official website here.  The cabins that appeared in the episode are Fisherman’s Hideaway and Wild Bill’s, both of which are denoted in pink in the aerial view below.

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Hilton Garden Inn Arcadia from “Veep”

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It has been said that everyone has their own special superpower.  I don’t know if that is true or not, but if so, mine is definitely my brain’s ability to take note of small, seemingly insignificant and rather trivial details, and commit them to memory, completely of its own volition.  Case in point – I have stayed at the Hilton Garden Inn Arcadia on a couple of occasions over the years.  Though I did not spend much time on the premises during either of my visits (typically when in L.A., I am out and about stalking during all waking hours), last year, while watching the closing scene of Veep’s Season 5 premiere, “Morning After,” in which Jonah Ryan (Timothy Simon) attempts to check into a very crowded “Carson City” hotel, I immediately recognized the orange and pink ombré curtains visible behind him as those of the Garden Inn.  Had I scrutinized or taken particular note of the hotel’s lobby area during my stay?  No, not at all.  In fact, prior to viewing the episode, had you asked me about the HGIA’s curtains, I probably would not have been able to recall them.  But as soon as the draperies entered my eye-line during Veep, something in my brain clicked and I knew immediately where filming had taken place.  Because I had failed to snap any photos of the hotel on my visits and because it is one of the series’ more minor locations, I never blogged about it.  But when the Grim Cheaper happened to book us another stay there a few weeks back, I decided it was finally time I do so.

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In “Morning After,” Jonah, Amy Brookheimer (Anna Chlumsky), Dan Egan (Reid Scott), and Richard Splett (Sam Richardson), along with a slew of other staffers from both the Selina Meyer (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) and Bill O’Brien (Brad Leland) presidential campaigns, descend upon Carson City, Nevada to head up a recount in the area.  While in town, the group stays at a local unnamed motel.  The exterior shown in the episode is a partial view of the Carson City Plaza Hotel and Event Center located at 801 South Carson Street, as well as the small strip mall situated across from it at 711 South Carson.  (Though I have actually been to CC, I do not have any photos of those particular spots, so you’ll have to excuse the Google Street View image below.)

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All actual filming of the “Morning After” hotel scene, though, took place at the Hilton Garden Inn Arcadia.  The view of the curtains in the shot below is what caught my eye while watching.

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After viewing the episode, I headed over to Google to pull up images of the hotel to confirm my hunch.  One look at pictures of the Hilton Garden Inn’s lobby, with its peachy curtains and uniquely-etched front doors, cinched things for me.

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Hilton Garden Inn Arcadia also popped up in the next episode of Veep, titled “Nev-AD-a.”   (Confused about that title?  This Veep clip should clear things up.)  Oddly, a different hotel exterior, that of the Carson Tahoe Hotel at 800 North Carson Street, was utilized for the establishing shot in the episode.  (Again, please pardon the Google Street View image below.)

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In “Nev-AD-a,” exes Dan and Amy head back to their hotel after their first day of re-counting votes . . .

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. . . and are shocked to discover that their rooms are located right across from each other.

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In the episode, Dan is staying in Room 129 . . .

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. . . while Amy is in 130.  Both of these rooms can be found on the Hilton Garden Inn’s first floor, directly off of the lobby.

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I am fairly certain that the interior of room 130 (or another of the property’s rooms) was also used in the episode.  Like a dolt, I did not take any photos of the room we stayed in, but as you can see in these images from the hotel’s website, the Garden Inn’s bed and lamps match what appeared onscreen.

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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: Hilton Garden Inn Arcadia, from the “Morning After” and “Nev-AD-a” episodes of Veep, is located at 199 North 2nd Avenue in Arcadia.  You can visit the hotel’s official website here.

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country – Where the Cast of “Scream” Stayed During Filming

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I typically begin compiling notes on a location and roughly outlining a post weeks before I hit publish.  Today’s article, about the Hilton Sonoma Wine Country, where the cast and crew of Scream stayed during the 1996 film’s 55-day shoot, is no different.  Sadly though, devastation struck shortly after I penned that preliminary edit.  I am extremely sorry to report that the Santa Rosa-area hotel was destroyed by the Tubbs Fire in the early morning hours of October 9th.  When I learned the news last Friday morning, just as I was sitting down to write this post, I felt like I had been punched in the gut.  I could not – and still cannot – believe the Scream hotel is gone.  I am heartbroken.  And yes, I do realize it is a bit silly to be heartbroken over the loss considering the fact that the property didn’t even appear in the movie, but, at the same time, it was such an important part of the production and has been talked about by the cast in so many interviews that it honestly feels as if a piece of history has been lost.  I am so thankful that I was able to stalk the Hilton last October during a trip up north and, even though it is no longer, figured I should still continue on with the post and share the many images I took of it for posterity.

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I learned about the Hilton and its role in the production of Scream from my friend Ashley, of The Drewseum website, who (as I’ve mentioned previously) was kind enough to share with me some call sheets from the flick that she has managed to get her hands on over the years.  Besides detailing scene, wardrobe, and prop information for a particular date, each sheet also notes both the pickup time and location of the various actors scheduled to work that day.  As indicated in the sheets, Neve Campbell, Drew Barrymore, Matthew Lillard, and the rest of the cast were picked up in the lobby of the DoubleTree Hotel located at 3555 Round Barn Boulevard in Santa Rosa prior to each shoot.

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At some point after Scream was filmed in 1996, the property was transitioned to a Hilton, though, according to my aunt who lives in the area, not much of it was altered during the changeover and, up until the fire, it still looked much the same as it did in the ‘90s.

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Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190375

Typically, a hotel where a cast and crew stayed during the filming of a movie wouldn’t have that much meaning to me, but, in this case, because of Santa Rosa’s small-town vibe, the Scream team spent much of their free time together on the property.  Unlike New York or L.A. or any other metropolis, where actors can step outside of their lodging and find a wide array of nightlife and activities at their fingertips, Sonoma County is a rather sleepy area.  So the group hung out together, entertaining themselves on the hotel grounds, which created a tight-knit family atmosphere that I doubt would have occurred (at least not to the same degree) had Scream been shot elsewhere.

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The Hilton was actually the location I was most excited about seeing during my NorCal trip, mainly because of an interview with Matthew Lillard that I watched years prior.  Unfortunately, I can’t find a clip of the interview anywhere online, but, in it, the actor talked about holing up with the rest of the cast in Neve Campbell’s hotel room after filming wrapped each day or night and watching horror flicks.  I love any and all behind-the-scenes tidbits like that and the thought of the cast huddled up watching scary movies together, while in the midst of shooting what turned out to be one of the most influential scary movies of all time, is pretty incredible.

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Matthew is hardly the only Scream cast member to have mentioned the hotel in interviews over the years.  In fact, I’ve found that, more than any other location associated with the movie, the Hilton is the one talked about the most.  In the 2011 documentary Still Screaming: The Ultimate Scary Movie Retrospective, Neve Campbell reminisces, “We were all staying in the hotel – in like a little motel – the whole crew and cast.  And we were just having a great time.  I think we kind of couldn’t believe we were getting paid to have fun like that.”  (Though the Hilton was actually quite large, because of the way it was laid out, with outcroppings of two- and three-story buildings dotted around the premises, it did have the feel of a small motel.)

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 That same year, in an Entertainment Weekly article, Jamie Kennedy also reminisced about the property, saying “We’d go home at night to the DoubleTree Hotel, and it was the first hotel I ever went to that gave you a cookie at night.”

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Neve spoke of the Hilton again in a 2016 Entertainment Tonight exclusive, stating, “The cast would hang out in the mornings because we would shoot all night.  We would get in cars and go back to our hotel and we would be covered in blood and there would be people going to work at 6 or 7 a.m. and they’d see me covered in corn syrup.  The look on those peoples’ faces was always humorous.  We would close all the curtains and hang out and have a drink.  We were sitting in one of our bedrooms and we were like, ‘Could you imagine if this was good enough that there might be a Halloween costume?’  And we were like, ‘No, that couldn’t possibly happen!’  And now it’s 20 years later and I still see the Halloween costume every year in all the shops.  It’s pretty amazing.”

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Just this past July, Skeet Ulrich, who played killer Billy Loomis, gave an interview to The AV Club in which he mentioned the Hilton.  He said, “I was fortunate in that the hotel suite they gave me had two rooms, so I used one just to sleep, and the other one . . . I was 26, I think, when I made it, and I was playing a 17- or 18-year-old, so I went straight to the mall and bought every hard-rock poster and black lights and everything, and I turned the other room into Billy’s room.  And I’d sit in there and just read about John Wayne Gacy and play the most satanic music I could find and just try and find him rather quickly in that environment.”

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All the anecdotes and tidbits I had heard about the hotel over the years enveloped me as I walked around the property.  I couldn’t help but wonder which room each cast member stayed in;

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if they were all grouped in the same area or spread apart;

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if they checked in themselves;

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did they walk down this hall;

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or that one;

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if they swam in the pool during their off-time;

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if they sat by the fire;

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hung out in the lobby;

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ate at the on-site restaurant – etc., etc., etc.

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Needless to say, my mind was buzzing.  And yes, I am fully aware that I have an unnatural obsession with anything and everything related to Scream.

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You can see some photographs of what the property looks like post-fire here, here, and here.  And you can read an interview with a man who was staying at the Hilton when the inferno struck here.  The hotel was actually one of the first places hit by the Tubbs blaze and, because it broke out so quickly, guests had virtually no warning.  Most were awakened by a knock on the door from security guards at around 3 a.m. on October 9th and told to evacuate immediately.  The man in the interview did not even have time to put on shoes.  I can’t imagine how scary that must have been.

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In watching this drone footage of the Hilton site, it seems that the three buildings surrounding the pool, on the western edge of the property, remain intact.  So at least a part of the location still stands.  A word of warning – watching the video clip is extremely disheartening.  The devastation that citizens of Sonoma County are facing is unfathomable.  My thoughts and prayers are with them.

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Big THANK YOU to my friends Ashley, from the Drewseum, for telling me about this location and Katie, from Matthew Lillard Online, for trying to help me pinpoint the interview in which Matthew talked about the hotel !  Smile

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: Hilton Sonoma Wine Country, where the cast of Scream stayed during filming, was formerly located at 3555 Round Barn Boulevard in Santa Rosa.  Sadly, the property was destroyed by the Tubbs Fire and no longer stands.

The Empire Hotel from “Gossip Girl”

The Empire Hotel from Gossip Girl-1140909

My friend Mikey, from the Mike the Fanboy website, always teases me for being a huge fan of “Hollywood randoms,” i.e. stars he has never heard of.  One of my favorites of the so-called randoms is Ed Westwick, who played Chuck Bass on Gossip Girl.  Out of all the male TV characters I’ve ever come across, Chuck is hands-down my most-loved.  (Jack Donaghy from 30 Rock runs a close second.)  The Grim Cheaper and I were obsessed with Gossip Girl when it was on the air, but haven’t seen the CW series since it wrapped in December 2012.  Out of the blue, he put on the pilot last night and I can’t tell you how great it was to once again hear that famous intro speech narrated by Kristen Bell.  You know the one – “Gossip Girl here – your one and only source into the scandalous lives of Manhattan’s elite.”  Watching the episode got me to thinking about the Empire Hotel, which was owned by Chuck on the series and which I stalked while in New York last April.  Somehow I had never gotten around to blogging about the place.  So here goes.

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The Empire’s history dates back to 1893 when construction began on a large 7-story lodging at the corner of West 63rd Street and Broadway on New York’s Upper West Side.  The Hotel Casa Alameda, as it was set to be called, was never completed, though, and the property went into foreclosure.  It was eventually sold, the construction finished and, in 1889, re-opened as the Empire Hotel.  Nine years later, the Empire was purchased by Herbert DuPuy, who had lofty goals for the site.  He had the building razed in 1922 and replaced it with a new, larger, 15-story hotel.  The re-imagined Empire opened to the public on December 5th, 1923.

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Its now iconic rooftop sign was erected at the same time.

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The Empire Hotel from Gossip Girl-1140870

Though Hotel Online states that the sign is “one of the first ever and longest standing neon billboards in the United States,” according to Curbed New York, it was actually replaced in the 1960s.  I am unsure which site’s information is correct, but, regardless, the “Hotel Empire” sign makes for some amazing photo opportunities, as you can see here and here.

The Empire Hotel from Gossip Girl-1140872

The Empire Hotel from Gossip Girl-1140873

In December 2003, the Empire was shuttered after being slated for a condominium conversion project, but the plan was halted by a group of permanent residents who filed complaints with the city.

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The Empire Hotel from Gossip Girl-1140884

Instead, the hotel underwent a massive 3-year renovation, re-opening in August 2007.

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The interior of the 413-room property was reimagined by interior design firm Goodman Charlton.

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The Empire Hotel from Gossip Girl-1140898

The result of their efforts is a very Old Hollywood-esque tapestry of golds, blacks, oranges, and the occasional zebra print.

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The sweeping two-story lobby is marked by swaying curtains, tall cushy sofas, and a massive staircase.

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It is not at all hard to see how the Empire wound up on Gossip Girl.  Its design is so very, very Chuck Bass.

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The site first showed up in the Season 3 episode of GG titled “The Lost Boy,” in the scene in which Chuck announces to his longtime girlfriend Blair Waldorf (Leighton Meester) that he has cashed in all of his Bass Industries stock in order to purchase the Empire.

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The hotel’s next appearance on the series was in “How to Succeed in Business,” also from Season 3, in which Chuck opens a speakeasy on the premises.

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The Empire then went on to be featured regularly in both establishing shots . . .

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. . . and in various on-location shoots throughout the remainder of the series’ 6-season run.

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The penthouse suite Chuck called home was just a set, though, located on a soundstage at Silvercup Studios East in Queens, where the show was lensed.

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According to a January 2010 CNN Entertainment article, the Empire saw a 5-10% increase in bookings and a 50% increase in website traffic due to the filming – at a time when most hotels were experiencing a decrease in numbers.  John A. Fox, a senior vice president at hospitality consulting group PKF, noticed the spike in bookings, but “had not thought to attribute it to the hotel’s guest appearance in a television show.”  Um, hello!  Thankfully, David Bowd, president of the hotels division of Amsterdam Hospitality, the company that owns the Empire, had more foresight.  Of his reasoning behind the decision to allow filming on the premises, he said, “I think that teenagers can dictate where their parents stay over vacation and we saw a lot of that over the Thanksgiving holiday and into the bookings for Christmas and New Year’s.”  Serious kudos to the Empire!  So many hotels, restaurants, and businesses I’ve come across consider filming a nuisance and aren’t too keen on broadcasting their onscreen appearances, which I’ve never understood as cinematic stints can be such a massive draw for potential customers.

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Gossip Girl is not the only production to have utilized the Empire.  In the 2010 flick Sex and the City 2, the after-party for the premiere of Smith Jerrod’s (Jason Lewis) new movie is held in the property’s lobby, though the hotel is not mentioned by name.  Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker) simply describes the place as “the VIP room at the after-party.”

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It is in the Lobby Bar that Carrie catches Mr. Big (Chris Noth) flirting with the Senior Vice President of the Bank of Madrid, Carmen Garcia Carrion (Penelope Cruz).

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As its name suggests, the Lobby Bar is located in a tucked-away corner of the Empire’s lobby.

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Lobby Bar Empire Hotel

In the Season 1 episode of Power titled “Not Exactly How We Planned,” which aired in 2014, James ‘Ghost’ St. Patrick (Omari Hardwick) and Tommy Egan (Joseph Sikora) met with Felipe Lobos (Enrique Murciano) at the hotel.

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The Empire masked as the Wooster Hotel, where SVU detectives Odafin Tutuola (Ice-T) and Dominick Carisi Jr. (Peter Scanavino) investigated the rape of aspiring Olympic pole vaulter Jenna Miller (Kim Morgan) in the Season 18 episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit titled “Heightened Emotions,” which aired in 2016.

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The Empire was also supposedly featured in the Season 2 episode of The Equalizer titled “Solo,” which aired in 1987, but I could not find a copy of it anywhere to make screen captures for this post.

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

The Empire Hotel from Gossip Girl-1140874

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Empire Hotel, from Gossip Girl, is located at 44 West 63rd Street on New York’s Upper West Side.  You can visit the hotel’s official website here.

The Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport Hotel from “The Office”

Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport from The Office-1889

I typically have the memory of an elephant, but up until the Grim Cheaper and I recently started re-watching The Office over again from the beginning, I had honestly forgotten what a great show it is.  I had also forgotten that several locations from it remain unknown and/or undocumented.  One that I recognized immediately during our re-watch was the supposed Philadelphia hotel where Michael Scott (Steve Carell), Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson), and Jim Halpert (John Krasinski) stayed in Season 3’s “The Convention.”

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Filming of the episode actually took place a good 2,700 miles west of the City of Brotherly Love.  In reality, Michael, Dwight, and Jim checked into the Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport Hotel, a spot I originally visited in November 2011 when I met up with my friends/fellow bloggers Ashley, from The Drewseum, and Katie, from Matthew Lillard Online and Rumble Fish Online, for the very first time.

Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport from The Office-1934

Because that meet-up took place a good year or so after my initial viewing of “The Convention,” I did not recognize the hotel.  But as soon as I saw it onscreen for the second time, realization immediately hit and I ran right out to re-stalk the place shortly thereafter.

Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport from The Office-1896

Situated on 12 acres directly across the street from the Bob Hope Airport, the Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport Hotel boasts 488 rooms, 2 outdoor pools with cabanas and fire pits, a Jacuzzi, a fitness center, 45,000 square feet of meeting space, a coffee bar, and a business center.

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Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport from The Office-1898

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The property also features two onsite restaurants, the Daily Grill and an outdoor lounge named E.D.B. – Eat, Drink, Be.

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Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport from The Office-1895

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In “The Convention,” which aired in 2006, Michael, Dwight and Jim head to Philly to attend the Annual Northeastern Midmarket Office Supply Convention – or as Michael refers to it “a booze-fueled sex romp where anything goes.”  The Marriott Burbank Airport was used extensively throughout the episode.  Sadly, because the property has been remodeled twice since filming took place (first in 2008 and then again in 2015), it looks quite a bit different today than it did on The Office.  It is still recognizable, though.  Areas that were featured in the episode include the lobby;

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Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport from The Office-1905

the East Tower elevator bay;

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Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport from The Office-1918

the Convention Center (which you can see some photos of in my 2012 post about the Hollywood Show);

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a couple of rooms;

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a hallway;

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Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport from The Office-1923

the Daily Grill restaurant – which masked as the Scranton, Pennsylvania eatery where Pam Beesly (Jenna Fischer) went on a double date with Kelly Kapoor (Mindy Kaling), Ryan Howard (B.J. Novak), and Kelly’s neighbor, Alan (Robert Bagnell);

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and the exterior hallway leading from the lobby to the East Tower . . .

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. . . which, while enclosed at the time of the filming, was opened up during the 2015 remodel.

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Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport from The Office-1916

The Marriott Burbank also portrays the Antelope Valley hotel Jen Harding (Christina Applegate) and Judy Hale (Linda Cardellini) pop into for a “shower pit stop” in the Season 2 episode of Dead to Me titled “Between You and Me.”

Their room, the presidential suite, was just a set, though, I believe.

Jen and Judy also party at the hotel’s Daily Grill, which poses as Whispers and Winks bar, in the episode.

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

Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport from The Office-1936

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport Hotel, from “The Convention” episode of The Office, is located at 2500 North Hollywood Way in Burbank.  You can visit the hotel’s official website here.

The Waterfront Beach Resort from “Rosewood”

Waterfront Beach Resort from Rosewood-7672

It is such a shame when a favorite show jumps the shark.  If its latest episode, titled “Amparo & the American Dream,” is any indication, that fate seems to have befallen Rosewood, the FOX procedural currently in its second season.  While I was all in with the recent storyline centering around Captain Ryan Slade (Eddie Cibrian) donating his kidney to Dr. Beaumont “Rosie” Rosewood, Jr. (Morris Chestnut) and the complications that arose from that, as soon as the focus shifted to Slade possibly being a dirty cop, I completely lost interest.  The sudden addition of Detective Annalise Villa’s (Jaina Lee Ortiz) brother, Marcos (Manny Montana), has been another low spot.  He needs to go away, and fast!  While this week’s show might be a turnaround, considering how catastrophically bad “Amparo & the American Dream” was, I’m not holding out hope.  One bright spot in the episode was that I recognized a location – one that has appeared on Rosewood before (in my favorite episode of the series) and that I had stalked, but not yet blogged about – Huntington Beach’s The Waterfront Beach Resort.

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The 12-story Waterfront Beach Resort opened its doors in 1990.  At the time, it was known as “The Waterfront Hilton.”  It is still a Hilton property today.

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Waterfront Beach Resort from Rosewood-7678

The 285-room, Four-Diamond resort sits a short hop from the sand and boasts 21,000 square feet of meeting and event space, a heated pool and whirlpool overlooking the Pacific, a fitness center, a market/espresso bar, and an eatery named Shades Restaurant & Bar.

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Waterfront Beach Resort from Rosewood-7643

Stepping into The Waterfront feels like stepping onto a tropical island.  The Grim Cheaper and I popped by for a quick visit while in Orange County last month and I found myself seriously considering rearranging our schedule so that we could book a room for an immediate spontaneous stay.  Sadly, we couldn’t.

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Waterfront Beach Resort from Rosewood-7642

The hotel started undergoing an extensive $140-million, 18-month renovation and expansion in early 2016.

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During the project, a 9-story suites-only tower with a restaurant, a lounge, a pool deck, and an events lawn will be added to the property.  Many areas of the existing hotel are also being altered, including the lobby and pool.

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Waterfront Beach Resort from Rosewood-7648

In the Season 1 episode of Rosewood titled “Atherosclerosis and the Alabama Flim-Flam,” which is hands-down my favorite of the entire series, The Waterfront portrays the Coconut Beach Crown Plaza Hotel in Coconut Beach, Florida, where Rosie serves as a keynote speaker for the Forensic Pathology Organization of America’s Annual Convention.  During the conference, someone murders one of Rosie’s fellow pathologists, utilizing methods detailed in his speech.  So he calls on his East Miami PD colleagues, including Villa, to help solve the case and track down the killer.

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The episode was shot pretty much in its entirety on location at the hotel.  Areas used include the Grand Ballroom;

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several hallways;

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the pool;

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the Tides Ballroom,which masked as Surf and Turf restaurant, where Rosie and Villa carried out the “Wilma Illinois Screamer” scam on two suspects (and where Rosie professed his love for Villa, only to have her deny him moments later);

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Shades Restaurant & Bar;

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and the lobby, where Villa made a grand entrance wearing a “gift shop” dress.

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Sadly, the lobby has already undergone the majority of its renovation, so, while the basic set-up remains the same, it looks quite a bit different today than it did onscreen in Rosewood.

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Waterfront Beach Resort from Rosewood-7653

I believe that several of the hotel’s actual rooms were also used in the shoot – either that or production utilized sets very closely modeled after The Waterfront’s accommodations.  You can check out what some of The Waterfront’s rooms look like here and here.

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In Rosewood’s “Amparo & the American Dream” episode, which is hands-down my least favorite of the entire series, The Waterfront masks as Miami Beach’s The De Leon Hotel, where Rosie and Villa track down a prostitution ring.  The resort was only featured briefly in the episode.  Areas used include the exterior;

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Waterfront Beach Resort from Rosewood-7644

the pool;

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a room;

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and several hallways.

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A couple of other productions have also been shot at The Waterfront.  Amanda Woodward (Heather Locklear) and boyfriend Bobby Parezi (John Enos III) stayed there in the Season 4 episode of Melrose Place titled “The Bobby Trap.”  In the episode, not only was an establishing shot of the exterior of the hotel shown . . .

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. . . but Bobby and Amanda dined by the resort’s pool.

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One of the hotel’s hallways was also utilized . . .

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. . . as was one of the rooms.

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It is also at The Waterfront that Jackie Dorsey (Christy Carlson Romano) takes a California vacation with some friends in the 2006 ABC Family movie The Cutting Edge: Going for the Gold.

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

Waterfront Beach Resort from Rosewood-7677

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Waterfront Beach Resort, aka the Coconut Beach Crown Plaza Hotel from the “Atherosclerosis and the Alabama Flim-Flam” episode of Rosewood, is located at 21100 Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach.  You can visit the hotel’s official website here.  The Hyatt Huntington Beach, which stood in for the Beverly Hills Beach Club on 90210, is located just down the street at 21500 Pacific Coast Highway.  You can visit the website for that hotel here.

Avalon Hotel Palm Springs from “The Hills”

The Avalon Palm Springs from The Hills-1030549

Sometimes I stalk places unknowingly.  Such was the case with Avalon Hotel Palm Springs, which I visited back in June 2013 when it was known as Viceroy.  I was quite taken with the property’s yellow-hued Old Hollywood Regency-style theme and took a myriad of photographs while there, though I did not plan on blogging about the site because I did not realize it was a filming location.  As it turns out, it is – from one of my favorite shows, no less!  Last week, my good friend Steffi, who lives in Switzerland, randomly messaged me to ask if I had ever stalked Avalon.  She thought I might be interested in doing so being that it was at the hotel that Justin Bobby famously gave his on-again/off-again girlfriend Audrina Patridge a diamond ring in the Season 4 episode of The Hills titled, “I Heidi Take Thee Spencer . . . “  I just about fell out of my chair upon learning the news.  I mean, how did I miss that one?  I immediately headed over to Hulu to re-watch the episode and, sure enough, there was Avalon!  So I decided it was high time I blog about the place.

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Avalon Hotel Palm Springs was originally built as the Estrella Inn in 1933.  Initially consisting of 13 standalone Spanish-style bungalows, several two-story Mid-Century-esque buildings were added to the property in the 1950s.  Though rather non-descript from the outside . . .

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. . . one step through the hotel’s main entrance and you are transported back in time to the days when Garbo, Gable and Gardner ruled Tinseltown.

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Avalon’s expansive grounds are characterized by red-roofed bungalows, sprawling lawns, and towering palms.

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And, as I mentioned earlier, a lot of yellow.

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The site’s distinctive Old Hollywood motif came courtesy of interior designer Kelly Wearstler, who purchased the Estrella in 2001 along with her husband, Brad Korzen, CEO/founder of Viceroy Hotel Group and The Kor Group.  (Kor also owns Avalon Hotel Beverly Hills.)  The couple re-branded and re-styled the inn, opening it as Viceroy Palm Springs in 2003.

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The Avalon Palm Springs from The Hills-1030565

Korzen left Viceroy Hotel Group in 2012, but continued to own Viceroy Palm Springs and three years later re-named the property Avalon Hotel Palm Springs.  Despite the name change, Kelly’s unique décor was largely left intact.

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The Avalon Palm Springs from The Hills-1030556

Today, the 3.5-acre site boasts 3 pools, meeting and event space, the award-winning Estrella spa (the name is a nod to the hotel’s history), and on-site restaurant Chi Chi.

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The Avalon Palm Springs from The Hills-1030563

The thirteen one- and two-bedroom bungalows feature fireplaces, full kitchens, private patios, and, my personal favorite, a “bungalow manager,” to take care of guests’ every need.  Sign me up!

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The hotel’s expansive gardens feature fruit trees, aloe and agave plants, and palms, which join the rose bushes and bougainvillea vines to create a green and pink oasis.

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The property has long been popular with the Hollywood set.  Back in the Estrella days, luminaries such as Clark Gable, Carole Lombard, Joan Crawford, Ann Miller, Bing Crosby, Tyrone Power, William Powell, Desi Arnaz, Lucille Ball, Orson Welles, Lupe Vélez, Elvis Presley, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and Errol Flynn were all known to check in.

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  In more recent years, such stars as Katharine McPhee, Becca Tilley, John Mayer, B.J. Novak, Whitney Port, Lea Michele, Hannah Simone, Stassi Schroeder, Ashley Benson, Troian Bellisario, Jesse Metcalfe, Katy Perry, and my man Matt Lanter have all been spotted on the premises (though many were there attending Coachella parties, not necessarily staying at the hotel).

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The Avalon Palm Springs from The Hills-1030571

In “I Heidi Take Thee Spencer . . . ,” which was The Hills’ Season 4 finale, Justin and Audrina headed to Viceroy for a “drama-free” vacay away from their friends.

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Though the scenes taking place at the hotel were short, as well as few and far between, quite a lot of the property was shown in the episode, including the front entrance, one of the bungalows, the courtyard, and the gardens.

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It is while seated next to one of Viceroy’s pools that Justin, in a seeming act of commitment, gave Audrina a gorgeous pavé diamond ring.  (The guy may be a total douche, but he sure has great taste in jewelry.)  The commitment didn’t mean much, though, obviously, as the two were broken up by The Hills’ Season 5 premiere.

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

The Avalon Palm Springs from The Hills-1030572

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Avalon Hotel Palm Springs, aka the former Viceroy from the “I Heidi Take Thee Spencer . . . ” episode of The Hills, is located at 415 South Belardo Road in Palm Springs’ Tennis Club neighborhood.

The Rum House from “Birdman”

The Rumhouse from Birdman-1140018

The Grim Cheaper typically could care less about filming locations, but he is absolutely obsessed with the movie The Godfather.  So I included a couple of locales from the 1972 Best Picture winner on the itinerary for our recent trip to the Big Apple.  One of those spots was Hotel Edison, a historic Theater District lodging that made a brief appearance in the flick.  While we were stalking the place, we happened to strike up a conversation with the super-friendly doorman who informed us that the property’s first-floor bar, The Rum House, had been featured in another Best Picture winner, 2014’s Birdman.  So we headed right on in to snap some photos of it.  As I’ve said many times before, stalking begets stalking.

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Commissioned by Milton J. Kramer, the 26-story Hotel Edison was originally designed by Herbert J. Knapp in 1931.  Thomas Edison was enlisted to turn on the property’s lights (albeit via a remote control from his home in New Jersey) during the grand opening ceremony.

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Despite a few renovations that have taken place over the years, the hotel still appears to boast much of its original Art Deco detailing.  You can check out a postcard with vintage images of the property here.

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At the time of its founding, Hotel Edison featured three onsite restaurants.  Today, there is only one eatery/bar in operation on the premises – The Rum House.

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The Rumhouse from Birdman-1140007

The Rum House was originally established in 1973.  By the time its owners lost their lease in 2009, the place was in desperate need of a facelift.

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The Rumhouse from Birdman-1140019

Thankfully, a group of restaurateurs including Kenneth McCoy, Michael Neff, and Abdul Tabini took over the space in 2011 and began a renovation.  The threesome kept much of the watering hole’s original charm intact, while adding some updates, including a new bar, lighting, and tile flooring.  Of the redesign, McCoy stated in a 2015 New York Post article, “We wanted to bring back the feeling of a Times Square piano bar in the 1940s or ’50s.”  You can see what it formerly looked like here.

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The Rumhouse from Birdman-1140012

The renovated lounge quickly became a hit with New Yorkers, tourists, and celebrities alike.  Just a few of the stars who have been spotted there include Tony Danza, George Wendt, Jake Gyllenhaal, Molly Ringwald, and Jon Hamm.  Emma Stone and Bill Murray even tickled the ivories there together one night in 2014.

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The Rum House appeared twice in Birdman.  It first popped up in the scene in which Mike (Edward Norton) and Riggan (Michael Keaton) discussed their bad preview.

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The exterior of The Rum House was also featured in that scene.  Through a bit of camera trickery, the bar was made to appear as if it is situated next door to the St. James Theatre, where much of the film took place.  In reality, though, it is located three blocks to the north.

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Riggan returns to The Rum House to grab a drink in a later scene and winds up confronting theatre critic Tabitha Dickinson (Lindsay Duncan).

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According to the Post article, location manager Joaquin Prange chose The Rum House, which shut down for a week to accommodate the shoot, because of its old school aesthetic.  He says, “The place needed to fit with Michael Keaton’s character.  He’s a recovering alcoholic.  Just the fact that he’s taking a drink is a big deal, and the look of the place needed to reflect that.  Rum House is dark and woody, with a bit of a patina, like the kind of place where Riggan Thomson would go for a drink by himself.  This is not about drinking during the good times, but we also wanted a bar that looked classy, a place that could make you a good cocktail.  It was not about finding a dive.”  The cast and crew wound up liking The Rum House so much that an impromptu wrap party was held there the last night of filming shortly after the final scene was lensed.

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The Rumhouse from Birdman-1140011

As I mentioned earlier, Hotel Edison appeared briefly in The Godfather.  It popped up at the beginning of the scene in which Luca Brasi (Lenny Montana) headed to meet with Sollozzo (Al Lettieri).  In the segment, Brasi is shown walking through the Edison’s rear hallway, which can be reached via 46th Street.  (Sadly, that area of the hotel was closed for renovations when we were there so I could not photograph it.)  When Brasi turned the corner to head into the restaurant where he ultimately met his end, though, he was at a different location entirely – a much disputed location.  While it has been reported in several books and online that Sollozzo killed Brasi in Hotel Edison’s now shuttered Sofia Ristorante Italiano, according to Scouting NY the scene was actually shot at the Hotel St. George in Brooklyn.

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The same Hotel Edison hallway appeared in 1994’s Bullets over Broadway as the spot where David Shayne (John Cusack) argued with Julian Marx (Jack Warden) about hiring Olive Neal (Jennifer Tilly) for a role in his play.

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I was floored to discover while researching Hotel Edison for this post that the site’s now shuttered Café Edison was used in an episode of Sex and the City!  In Season 5’s “Anchors Away,” Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker) seeks shelter from the rain – and a bowl of matzo ball soup – at the eatery and winds up being seated next to a woman who has a penchant for lithium-laced ice cream.  Café Edison was a longtime Theater District staple that served meals onsite from 1980 through 2014 when its owners, unfortunately, lost their lease.  The space currently remains shuttered.  You can see some photos of what it used to look like here.

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The hotel’s Edison Ballroom also made an appearance in “Anchors Away” as the spot where Carrie and her friends party with the plethora of sailors in town for Fleet Week.  At the time, the space was known as Supper Club and, though it looks a bit different today, it is still recognizable from its SATC cameo.  You can check out some photos of what it currently looks like here.

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

The Rumhouse from Birdman-1140020

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Rum House, from Birdman, is located at 228 West 47th Street, inside of Hotel Edison, in New York’s Theater District.  You can visit the watering hole’s official website here.

Hyatt Regency Century Plaza Hotel from “The Ugly Truth”

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It has been said that Los Angeles has no regard for its history.  Today’s post is a testament to that assertion.  On March 1st of this year, the doors of the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza Hotel were closed in order for a massive remodel and renovation process to take place.  Though the building is set to re-open in 2018 as a condo/hotel hybrid, it will sadly have a completely different look and feel than its predecessor.  The property had long been on my To-Stalk List and was a place I had always wanted to book a stay at, but unfortunately that was never to be.  I did get to finally see it in person, though, a couple of days before its closure, and the site was just as grand as I had imagined, which makes the redesign all the more tragic.

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The Hyatt Regency Century Plaza Hotel first opened its doors to the public on June 1st, 1966.  At the time, it was known as The Century Plaza Hotel.  The curved, 19-story property was designed by Minoru Yamasaki, who also designed the World Trade Center in New York.  (Fellow stalker Michael, of of The Golden Spoon Café and Downtown Christmas Shopping District from The Brady Bunch fame, recently stayed at the hotel and was nice enough to share many of the photos he took for use in this post, including the two below.  Thank you, Michael!  Smile)

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The 726-room luxury hotel was situated on top of what was once the 20th Century Fox Studios backlot, which was sold off in 1961 after the film company found itself in dire financial straits due to a series of flops.  At the time of its inception, the property was run by Western International Hotels (in 1980, Western International became Westin Hotels & Resorts).

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The property was a celebrity magnet from the get-go with such stars as Bob Hope, Walt Disney, Tom Hanks, Muhammad Ali, Jimmy Stewart, Jon Voight, James Garner, Clark Gable, Whoopi Goldberg, Lucille Ball, Robert Duvall, John Ritter, and Loretta Young all spending time there.  In a great show of foresight, during the hotel’s construction, Western International representatives spoke with Secret Service personnel in order to ensure that the building would be assembled with the utmost security.  As such, The Century Plaza played host to every single United States president from Lyndon Johnson on.  Nancy and Ronald Reagan were such frequent guests that the press was apt to call the place the “Western White House.”

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In 1984, a second building, this one a 297-room tower named The Tower at Century Plaza, was added to the property.  Sadly, it no longer stands.  In 1999, The Century Plaza and The Tower at Century Plaza were sold and the new owners chose to operate them as separate hotels, changing The Tower’s name to the St. Regis Los Angeles.  Though The Century Plaza continued to run strong, the St. Regis was shuttered in January 2005 and sold once again.  Although it was originally set to be renovated into a residential tower, it was ultimately demolished and The Century, Candy Spelling’s new digs, now stands in its place – which is rather ironic (and maddening) being that the St. Regis appeared in an episode of Beverly Hills, 90210.  Thanks to fellow stalker “Alexis Colby,” who commented on my post about Season 1’s epic “Spring Dance” episode, I learned that the St. Regis was the building featured in the establishing shot of the hotel where the West Beverly gang’s formal was held.  All actual filming took place at Sheraton Universal City, though.

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Ronald Reagan was The Tower at Century Plaza’s first guest in 1984.  In honor of his long history with the hotel, the building’s 8,000-square-foot penthouse, which encompassed the entire 32nd floor, was renamed “The Ronald Reagan Suite” in 1999.   An exhibit of photographs of the former president was displayed in a portion of the suite.  When the building was demolished, the exhibit was moved to The Century Plaza, where it was recreated in a second floor anteroom.  One of the employees was nice enough to show it to us while we were stalking the place.

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In August 2005, shortly after the St. Regis was sold, The Century Plaza was purchased by Sunstone Hotel Investors Inc., a renovation was begun, and the structure was renamed Hyatt Regency Century Plaza.  It was then sold once again three years later to the Next Century Associates development company and plans were quickly set in motion to demolish the historic structure and build two 50-story condominium buildings in its place.  Thanks to uproar from the community and efforts by preservationists and politicians (L.A. City Councilman Paul Koretz even went so far as to say the building would be demolished “over my dead body and even then I hoped my heirs would fight it”), those plans were thwarted and the hotel was instead set to be renovated, with two new 46-story towers constructed behind it.  The property closed its doors on March 1st to begin the process.

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We were there two days prior to that, on February 28th, and there was a definite feeling of nostalgia in the air.  Many of the hotel employees had worked on the premises for decades.  We spoke to quite a few during our brief visit.  Some wiped their eyes as they talked to us.  All were proud of The Century Plaza, wanting to show it off.  I found myself on the verge of tears several times while speaking with them.  You can read two great articles about a few of the long-time employees here and here.

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Hyatt Regency Century Plaza Collage

The renovation is said to be a “sensitive rehabilitation” of the historic property.  While I believe the exterior will be left untouched, the interior will largely be gutted.  (Thank you to Michael for the second picture that appears below.)

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The revamped structure will house 394 hotel rooms and 63 condominium units and is set to open in 2018.

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Sadly, the hotel’s legendary Los Angeles Ballroom will be a casualty of the renovation.

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The 25,000-square-foot room, which was remodeled to the tune of $1.3 million in 2012, was not only the site of both of Ronald Reagan’s presidential election victory parties, but is also where President Nixon hosted a celebratory welcome home dinner for the Apollo 11 astronauts on August 13th, 1969.

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Not only is the ballroom one of the most massive I’ve ever seen (not to mention sparkly) . . .

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. . . but the hall leading into it is pretty darn extraordinary in and of itself.

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I mean, that ceiling!

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The Century Plaza Hotel has been featured in so many productions over the years that it would be virtually impossible for me to chronicle them all here.  So for brevity’s sake (or is it too late for that at this point? Winking smile), I will only list a few of my favorites.

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The Century Plaza, playing itself, was where Mike (Gerard Butler) and Abby (Katherine Heigl) stayed while visiting L.A. in one of my all-time faves, the 2009 romcom The Ugly Truth.

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While I originally thought that one of the property’s curved hallways was utilized in the filming of the movie, upon closer inspection, now I am not so sure.  Though similar, there appear to be marked differences in the actual hallways from what appeared onscreen, most notably the ceiling, light fixtures, and recession of the doors.  I am now thinking that the hallway may have been a set re-creation, though that seems like a considerable amount of trouble to go through for the filming of such a short scene.  (Thank you to Michael for the photo below.)

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I am also unsure if an actual (but heavily dressed) suite at The Century Plaza was used in the filming or if a set based upon one was built for the shoot.

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Some recent photos of one of the hotel’s rooms are pictured below, once again courtesy of Michael.

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The Hyatt Regency Century Plaza was also where Phil (Ty Burrell) and Claire Dunphy (Julie Bowen) – or should I say “Clive Bixby” and “Juliana”? – celebrated Valentine’s Day in the Season 1 episode of Modern Family titled “My Funky Valentine.”  The couple started out their evening in the hotel’s X Bar.

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That bar had already been shuttered by the time we stalked The Century Plaza, but I was able to get a few photos of it through the glass entrance doors.

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After dinner, Claire (who is going “commando,” shall we say, underneath her trench coat) and Phil start to make their way up to their room, but trouble ensues when Claire’s coat get caught in the escalator.

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While stuck, she proceeds to run into pretty much everyone she knows, including her father and step-mother, Jay (Ed O’Neill) and Gloria Delgado-Pritchett (Sofia Vergara), who all ask the same question – why not just take the jacket off?  (Thank you to Michael for the escalator photographs that appear above and below.)

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The Los Angeles Ballroom was also featured in the episode as the spot where Jay and Gloria caught a comedian’s act.

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Despite the escalator issues from the year prior, Claire and Phil returned to The Century Plaza to celebrate the following Valentine’s Day in Season 2’s “Bixby’s Back.”  Once again, they started out their evening in X Bar.

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They then proceeded to head up, separately, to their room.  One of the hotel’s actual hallways was featured in the scene.

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Phil, though, accidentally grabbed the key card of the woman sitting next to him at X Bar, instead of the key card Claire left behind, and enters the wrong room, resulting in him almost being arrested.  Another Valentine’s Day down the tubes!  One of the hotel’s actual rooms was used in that scene.

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The Hyatt Century Plaza popped up yet again on Modern Family, as the hotel where Alex Dunphy’s (Ariel Winter) academic decathlon was held in the Season 4 episode titled “Mistery Date.”

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In the 1980 comedy 9 to 5, The Century Plaza was the hotel that Franklin M. Hart Jr. (Dabney Coleman) sent his wife Missy (Marian Mercer) to.

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Alex Munday (Lucy Liu) rides a horse and lassos a bad guy in front of The Century Plaza at the beginning of Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle.

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And in the Season 6 episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 titled “Nancy’s Choice,” Susan Keats (Emma Caulfield) wins a journalism award at The Century Plaza.

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

Big THANK YOU to Michael for letting me use so many of his fabulous photos in this post!  Smile 

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Hyatt Regency Century Plaza Hotel, from The Ugly Truth, is located at 2025 Avenue of the Stars in Century City.  The property is currently closed to the public and undergoing renovations.