The “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” Race Home Locations

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It’s five minutes until six and everybody’s favorite truant, Ferris Bueller (Matthew Broderick), has to beat his parents home lest they find out that he has cut school for the ninth time! (“I don’t remember him being sick nine times!”) So begins one of the most famous sequences in all of moviedom, the race home from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. Though said to take place in Chicago, Ferris’ race home – as well as the rest of the 1986 comedy – was shot in both Illinois and California. This past June I wrote about the film’s L.A. locales for Discover Los Angeles in honor of its 30th anniversary. While doing research for the column, I enlisted the help of my friend Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, to track down some of the movie’s unknown locations. Along the way, the two of us somehow wound up on a hunt to pinpoint the various Chicago- and Los Angeles-area spots featured in the race home sequence. It turned out to be the most exhaustive search of my entire stalking career – not to mention the most fun! Email conversations, complete with arrow-laden screen captures and comparison street-view images, went back and forth between us for days. Unfortunately, I was only able to chronicle the SoCal locales for Discover L.A., so our hunt proved rather anticlimactic. The other day it occurred to me that I should write a post about our finds for IAMNOTASTALKER. Since Owen was so instrumental in the hunt, I thought it only fitting that he add notes to the column. His commentary is featured in the pink-lined white boxes below. So, without further ado, we present to you a breakdown of the Ferris Bueller’s Day Off race home sequence filming locations from beginning to end.

Whoa. Hold on. Don’t put the kibosh on the ado. There is ado anew, from someone new. It’s my ado debut. When Lindsay needs help, I show up. Unlike the subject of a certain water tower, I have an exemplary attendance record. We made a fantastic team tracking down these locations. We were like Ferris and Sloane. Ooh, I take that back. There was nothing amorous between us during our dalliance with one of the highest-grossing movies of 1986, and I don’t want to give the Grim Cheaper the wrong impression and have him hunt me down. Actually, as we retraced a truant’s dash home, Lindsay embodied Ferris and I was Cameron incarnate. So now, without further ado, is our breakdown.

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Sloane’s House (340 South Westgate Avenue, Brentwood)

It is while standing in the picturesque backyard of his girlfriend Sloane’s (Mia Sara) house that Ferris discovers the late hour via a peek at her Cartier watch. He quickly kisses her and bids her adieu before rushing back to his own home. Owen tracked down Sloane’s American Colonial Revival-style residence (it’s known as the Preminger House in real life) thanks to a helpful crew member who told him to search in Brentwood in December 2014, long before I ever pitched the idea of writing about Ferris locations to my Discover L.A. editor. I ran out to stalk the place shortly thereafter. You can read my post on the 1925 pad, which was also featured in the movie’s swimming pool/hot tub scene, here.

Lindsay ran out to stalk it. I’m assuming she didn’t run as far as Ferris. If he had been wearing an anachronistic Fitbit, the battery in it would have gone all Samsung Galaxy Note 7, because according to a cursory calculation I did on Google, Ferris ran 6,965 miles. Puts Gump to shame, huh? Ferris > Forrest.

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Jeanie and Katie Bueller Begin Their Drive Home (2194/2210 Greenview Road, Northbrook)

“Do you know what it’s like to be pulled out of work to pick up your daughter at the police station?” So asks Katie Bueller (Cindy Pickett) while driving home from the station with her daughter, Jeanie (Jennifer Grey), who was taken into custody for making a phony 911 call. (Don’t even get her started on the Vermont deal!) Owen and I only realized we were missing this site when we sat down to write this article. Thankfully, an address number of “2210” was visible on a mailbox that Jeanie and Katie drive by in the scene on the Ferris Blu-ray. We were fairly certain from the foliage and terrain that the street was located in either Winnetka or Northbrook, the Chicago suburbs where other portions of the race home were shot. We started searching those areas and Owen found the right spot fairly quickly by matching the placement of a fire hydrant (denoted with a number 1 in the graphic below), a speed limit sign (2), and a unique picket fence (3 – though this element can best be seen via alternate street views) on a tree-lined block of Greenview Road in Northbrook to what appeared onscreen. In the scene, Jeanie and Katie are driving north on Greenview in front of the houses located at 2194 and 2210. (As is the case below, because neither Owen nor I live in the Chicago area, we were not able to take photographs of many of these locations and therefore utilized street-view screen captures for much of our imagery.)

The phrase “fairly quickly” may be hyperbole. I was searching rather aimlessly for some time and started to wonder if, like Jimmy Hoffa’s remains, this spot would remain unfound. The breakthrough came when Lindsay managed to make out the “2210.” Blu-ray deserves co-credit honors for this find. And now, Katie, about the Vermont deal…

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Jeanie Almost Hits Ferris (455/477 Berkeley Avenue, Winnetka)

Jeanie’s luck takes a turn for the better when she literally runs into Ferris during his race home. Well, nearly runs into him. While driving, she unexpectedly and accidentally almost hits her brother with her mother’s station wagon in between the houses located at 455 and 477 Berkeley Avenue in Winnetka. This spot looks a bit different today. In fact, the trees have grown so considerably that the residence visible behind Katie’s car (477 Berkeley) can no longer be seen from the vantage point from which the footage was lensed. After coming to a screeching halt and locking eyes with Ferris, Jeanie speeds south on Berkeley Avenue and turns right (west) onto Cherry Street, running a stop sign in the process.

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Ferris then jumps into the front yard of the house at 460 Berkeley Avenue. The Tudor residence seen across the street from him is 455 Berkeley. These locales were found by Owen many moons ago and have long been documented online thanks to him.

Everybody has a favorite part of the race home, right? The trampoline scene is popular, and the bikini-clad sunbathers don’t attract Ferris only, but my favorite moments both involve the girl who also goes by the name Shauna. First is the intense, determined expression on her tilted head when she hits the gas, right after she almost runs down her brother. Second is the exasperation she displays moments later as she pounds on the steering wheel and screams at her mom, “I can’t drive while you’re yelling at me!” Ferris receives the race home accolades — it’s his movie, after all — but Jeanie shines brightest in this iconic scene. To me, anyway.

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Backyard #1 (1215 Cherry Street, Winnetka)

In a race now against time and Jeanie, Ferris cuts through two backyards. The first is that of a traditional gray clapboard home at 1215 Cherry Street in Winnetka, just around the corner from where he was almost hit by his sister moments before. The rear side of the residence has been drastically remodeled since filming took place, which made identifying it rather difficult. Owen first zeroed in on the property after pinpointing another race location just a few doors down. (More on that one in a bit.) Thankfully, Bing’s bird’s-eye view still shows the back of the house in its original state, and Owen was able to match certain elements to the home that appeared onscreen, including a small A-line roof on the property’s east side (1), a central section that popped out away from the rest of the structure (2), and a covered porch on the dwelling’s west side (3 – though this can best be seen from alternate aerial views). We also matched several features of the brick property located next door at 1209 Cherry Street. That home’s unique trim and chimney layout (4 – these can also best be seen from alternate views) are briefly visible as Ferris first steps into the backyard of 1215.

The chimney is what cinched it for me. Thank goodness a portion of 1209 Cherry St. was visible in the scene, if only for milliseconds. It was a small detail and, ahem, if you don’t stop and look around — or next door — once in a while, you could miss it.

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Backyard #2 (1223 Cherry Street, Winnetka)

No camera trickery was utilized in this portion of Ferris’ race home. As was depicted in the movie, the two yards Ferris is shown skirting through are actually located next door to each other. Backyard #2 can be found just west of Backyard #1 at 1223 Cherry Street. Thankfully, this house has not been remodeled and we were able to confirm its use in the scene by utilizing aerial views to match much of the window and door placement (1 and 2), as well as a peaked-roof extension on the west side of the home (3), to the property that appeared onscreen. The trim and windows of the residence located just to the west at 1229 Cherry (4) also directly correlate to what was shown of the neighboring residence in the scene.

I’m confident in our stalking abilities, but still, it was a Hughes success tracking down this backyard and many of the other race home locales. It wasn’t always easy, but it was always fun. The experience was some kind of wonderful.

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Jeanie Runs a Second Stop Sign (Ash Street and Hibbard Road, Winnetka)

Determined that her parents catch Ferris in the act of cutting school, Jeanie puts the pedal to the metal as she races to beat her brother home. In doing so, she plows through a second stop sign located at the intersection of Ash Street and Hibbard Road in Winnetka. As she turns north onto Hibbard, she catches the eye of a policeman, who attempts to pull her over. Nothing is stopping Jeanie, though! This location was another of Owen’s early finds that has since been well-documented online.

Owen found this; Owen found that. Oh, Lindsay, you’re making me blush. Stop exaggerating. Then again, exaggeration is the greatest thing in the history of the universe.

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Backyard of the Man Barbecuing

Unfortunately, the backyard where Ferris pilfers a Pepsi (not a beer as is commonly reported) from a man barbecuing is the one location we are unsure of. After speaking with a helpful crew member, we know that this site is located in Winnetka in the same vicinity as the other area locales used. Because there is so little to go on, though, and because identifying backyards via aerial views is difficult, the hunt for BBQ Man’s backyard has proven rather tough and we have not, as of yet, located it. If anyone happens to have any idea where this spot is, please let us know!

Let us know, yes, but don’t claim to know if you’re not 100 percent certain. I know we live in a “fake news” era, but I’ll never understand all the filming location misinformation on the Internet. Do people not care about accuracy, about proof? If I wanted to spend time reading things that weren’t true, I’d open the e-mails I get from Nigerian princes.

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House with Red Jeep (1229 Cherry Street, Winnetka)

After stealing the Pepsi in BBQ Man’s backyard, Ferris runs down the driveway of a neighboring home, eventually tossing the soda can into a garbage bin situated on the front lawn. That house is located next door to Backyard #2 at 1229 Cherry Street. Owen found this spot pretty early on in our hunt while searching Winnetka properties that were in the vicinity of other race home locales. This particular residence had some unique design elements that were visible in the scene, including a semi-curved brick window trim (1), a white gutter (2), and an in-ground light fixture (3) posted near the steps (4) leading from the driveway to the front door. In searching street views, he found aspects matching all of those items at 1229 Cherry. Pinpointing the site is what ultimately led us to finding Backyard #1 and Backyard #2. Not much of the property has changed in the 31 years (!) since filming took place, as you can see in the photograph below, which comes from a 2004 real estate listing.

Back to BBQ Man for a moment, if I may. Does anyone know what actor played that soda-drinking, meat-grilling part? I’d love to get in touch with him, if he’s still alive, but he’s not listed on IMDb, and finding him is proving more difficult than the time I had to let my parents know I was adopted.

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Start of Tom Bueller’s Drive Home (Cherry Street and Locust Street, Winnetka)

Ferris’ race home wouldn’t be nearly as tense without his father involved, which is exactly what happens about halfway through. As Tom Bueller (Lyman Ward) begins the drive from work to the Bueller residence, he is shown heading east on Cherry Street before turning left (north) onto Locust Street in Winnetka. This is one of the first spots Owen tracked down during our hunt. He already knew that Jeanie almost hit Ferris with the car on Berkeley Avenue near Cherry Street, so he began poking around that same area for the white clapboard residence that is visible after Tom turns. He found it on the northwest corner of Cherry and Locust. This spot looks a bit different today because one of the houses seen behind Tom as he heads onto Locust has been razed and replaced, but the white clapboard dwelling is recognizable (despite a few alterations), as are the two adjoining trees in its front yard (though those cannot be seen in the screen capture below).

I forgot to mention why I was stoked to help Lindsay find all these locations. Of all the movies with the word “Ferris” in the title, this one is my favorite.

Start of Tom Bueller's Drive Home Collage

Backyard with Sunbathers (1310 Milan Avenue, South Pasadena)

Ferris wouldn’t be Ferris if he didn’t stop to introduce himself to some sunbathing beauties he passes while running through yet another backyard during his race home. That scene took place at 1310 Milan Avenue in South Pasadena, a good 2,000 miles away from the previous backyards that appeared in the segment. During our hunt, I managed to track down a very helpful crew member who worked on the L.A. portions of the movie. He checked his notes and told me that two homes on Milan Avenue, easily South Pas’ most oft-filmed street, were featured in Ferris, one of which was 1310. Despite the fact that we had been provided addresses, piecing together what was shot at each location required quite a bit of detective work. With this locale, we were able to use aerial views to match the window placement (1, 2, 3, and 4) and second-story balcony (5) of 1310 Milan to what appeared in the sunbathing scene (though you will notice in the graphic below that an addition was put on the house since filming took place and it looks a bit different than it did when Ferris was there).

Lindsay’s right — this location involved a lot of work. I knew we’d find it, though. We always finish what we sta

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Jeanie and the Police Pass by Tom (Glendale Avenue and Cherry Street, Winnetka)

While being pursued by the police, Jeanie speeds around her father’s car, which is stopped at an intersection at the corner of Glendale Avenue and Cherry Street in Winnetka. In the scene, Jeanie and the cop head south on Glendale, while Tom pauses at a stop sign to search for a Tic Tac in his glove compartment.

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Though much of this location has changed drastically in the three decades since filming took place (countless trees have been removed, the sidewalk has been altered, and the stop sign configuration has been modified), Owen managed to identify it a couple of years ago by matching elements of the house at 436 Glendale to the home seen through Tom’s windshield in the scene, namely the second-floor dormers (1), the two-car garage (2), and the large bay window (3). The big multi-branched tree on the other side of the street (4) is also a match to what appeared onscreen. (Though there were two trees in that spot at the time of filming, one has since been removed.)

SHAMELESS SELF-PROMOTION ALERT! I’ve written a couple of posts with a Ferris slant on my blog. You can read them here and here.

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Jeanie Finally Pulls Over (2117/2127 Glendale Avenue, Northbrook)

Many of the sites that appear toward the end of Ferris’ race home can be found in Northbrook, a Chicago suburb situated northwest of Winnetka. That includes the spot where Jeanie finally pulls over for the police. (“She got a speeding ticket – another speeding ticket – and I lost the Vermont deal because of her!”) In the scene, Jeanie and the policeman chasing her travel west on South Bridge Lane and then veer to the right (north) as it becomes Glendale Avenue. The two cars eventually stop in between the houses at 2117 and 2127 Glendale. Owen identified this locale a few years ago thanks to an address number of “2146” that was visible on a mailbox (1) in the scene. He searched 2100 blocks in both Winnetka and Northbrook for other elements that appeared in the segment, including a house with distinct half-brick, half-brown paneling (2), a “No Parking” sign (3 – though this can best be seen via alternate street views) and a fire hydrant (4) and, per usual, was successful in finding the right spot.

This location is a few blocks away from where Jeanie and Katie began their drive home, and it’s right around the corner from a few race home spots Lindsay will be writing about shortly. That’s a teaser, folks!

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Ferris Runs Down a Sidewalk (1326 Milan Avenue, South Pasadena)

For a very brief moment, Ferris is shown running down a leafy sidewalk. In John Hughes’ FBDO DVD commentary, he mentions that this scene always bothered him because a garbage can full of palm fronds is evident behind Ferris, tipping off eagle-eyed viewers to the fact that this portion of the movie was shot not in Chicago, but in Los Angeles. Armed with that bit of information (and in the interest of tracking down every single race home locale), I started searching on Milan Avenue for anything that might match the sidewalk shown in the short segment, namely what I thought was a “Neighborhood Watch” sign visible in the extreme background (1), a line of trees with odd trunks (2), and the overhanging branch that Ferris runs beneath (3). I wound up finding all three in front of 1326 Milan Avenue, just two houses south of the sunbathers’ backyard.

When I’m not busy helping Lindsay track down filming locations, I enjoy stealing “Neighborhood Watch” signs.

Ferris Runs Down a Sidewalk Collage

Tom Gets Caught Behind an Old Lady (2000/2100 Block Mallard Drive, Northbrook)

As Tom continues his drive home, he gets caught behind a slow-moving old lady who pulls out of a rather stately looking residence. The scene, as Owen discovered many years ago, was shot on the 2000/2100 block of Mallard Drive in Northbrook. Well, partially, at least. In the first two seconds of the segment, Tom is shown heading north on Hibbard Road in Winnetka before turning right (east) onto Oak Street. We can see a utility road leading into a park area and then the Winnetka Ice Arena outside of his car window before the scene magically segues to him turning right (south) onto Mallard Drive from Techny Road about five miles away in Northbrook. The old lady subsequently pulls out of the home at 2005 Mallard, and Tom proceeds to slowly follow her south before overtaking her in front of the house located at 2121 Mallard.

Remember that teaser? Dying of curiosity? Well, now you know. This is one of the scenes that filmed near where Jeanie was pulled over — and it won’t be the last. Tom is creeping along Mallard Drive, which is a mere two blocks away from the road where Jeanie was stopped.

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Ferris Skids Around the Side of a House (1310 Milan Avenue, South Pasadena)

The friendly crew member we contacted explained that many different sections of the two Milan Avenue residences were utilized for the race home segment, including backyards, side yards and front yards, and that shots were angled toward the houses and away from them, creating the illusion of a blocks-long run in a much more confined area. So near the end of our hunt, when Owen mentioned that one of the only sites we had yet to find was the home that Ferris skids around, I had an inkling that one of the Milan pads might be the place we were looking for. Inspecting both properties from different angles, I quickly realized that Ferris races around 1310 Milan, the same spot where he introduced himself to the sunbathers moments before. In the scene, he heads west down 1310’s driveway and then cuts sharply to the right (cue skidding sound effects) before heading north across the front of the house, surprising two young women sitting on the porch.

I recall this find coming near the end of a stretch during which we were picking off missing locations left and right, pulling them out as if they were pencils in a big head of hair. And these weren’t easy finds, mind you. We had little to go on in our search for random backyards and stretches of sidewalk and what have you. Heck, we weren’t even sure what state we should be looking in some of the time. But we did it. Diligently. Tenaciously. Together.

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Tom Passes Ferris (2115 Butternut Lane, Northbrook)

During the home stretch of his journey, Ferris almost gets caught by his father when Tom pulls up next to him while he is running in the middle of a street. The two travel adjacent to each other for a moment before Ferris ducks away and into a house. Though Tom looks at his son briefly and has an inkling it might be Ferris, he doesn’t ultimately realize it is him. The bit was shot on Butternut Lane in Northbrook. In the scene, Tom and Ferris are heading north, in front of the home located at 2115 Butternut.

More teaser fulfillment! I did say Jeanie was pulled over near a few spots. This is another, and so is the next one. That’s five parts of the race home filmed within a mile of one another. And all of them are right by Glenbrook North High School, the alma mater of one John Wilden Hughes Jr. and the place where a trench coat-clad Ferris picks up Sloane.

Tom Passes Ferris Collage

Ferris Runs Through a House (2067 Butternut Lane, Northbrook)

“No, don’t get up. Smells delicious. Dinner’s ready.” So announces Ferris to a family as he runs through their house in order to avoid his father. To shoot the scene, a camera was set up on a track along the west side of the residence located at 2067 Butternut Lane in Northbrook. The camera panned from the front of the property, past three side windows, to the backyard.

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Amazingly, the deck that Ferris jumps from in the scene is still intact, as is evidenced by the real estate photograph below, which I snagged from a 2009 listing.

Ferris runs over fences, through bushes, inside homes, in backyards, past sunbathers and down suburban Chicago and L.A. driveways, sidewalks and streets. From the moment he says, “I’ll call you tonight” to Sloane as he dashes off to the moment he lands on terra firma following his slo-mo trampoline leap (more on that to come), exactly three minutes and 41 seconds have elapsed. It took Lindsay and me slightly more time to find all those fences, bushes, homes and so on.

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Trampoline Backyard (1230 Milan Avenue, South Pasadena)

The spot where Ferris hops over a tree, runs up the slide of a jungle gym, and then jumps on a trampoline, propelling himself into his own backyard, was the most arduous to prove. Though we had been told by our crew member friend that 1230 Milan Avenue in South Pasadena was used in the race home segment, we were unsure which portion of the scene was shot there. Thankfully, a small structure was visible behind Ferris for a fleeting moment before he ran up the jungle gym slide. The coloring and siding of the structure, which we knew due to its small size was a guest house or garage of some sort, matched the exterior of 1230 Milan, so we had a pretty good feeling that the trampoline segment had been lensed there. Verifying our theory was another story. Unfortunately, aerial views provided no confirmation, so we turned to other productions filmed at the residence. 1230 Milan has appeared onscreen countless times, in such productions as Bringing Down the House, The Mentalist, Jurassic Park III, The Whispers, xXx: State of the Union, and Honey, We Shrunk Ourselves. It also served as the Lawrence family home on the television series Family. Owen and I poured through virtually everything that was ever filmed on the premises and were finally able to substantiate our hunch thanks to the Season 2 episode of Family titled “An Endangered Species.” In the episode, a full view of the guest house that Nancy Lawrence (Meredith Baxter) lived in on the show was visible. It was an exact match to the structure visible behind Ferris. Danke schoen, Family!

This is the portion of the race home I was most excited to find. I figured the odds of us finding this backyard were the same as the odds of Ferris’ favorite team, the Chicago Cubs, winning the World Series. Oh, wait…

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Ferris’ Backyard (4160 Country Club Drive, Long Beach)

Though Ferris’ trampoline jump begins in South Pasadena, it ends a good 22 miles away in the backyard of the Long Beach pad that portrayed the Bueller residence in the movie. But I did not take that fact for granted during our hunt. Knowing that Hughes shot the race home sequence literally all over the place, I started having doubts that the backyard shown at the end was actually the backyard of the Bueller home. Thankfully, I was able to match the fenestration of the four second-story windows of the home next door at 4170 Country Club (1) to what was seen onscreen, as well as certain portions of the rear side of the Bueller dwelling. Though the back of the property has undergone some changes, a large portion of it remains untouched, namely the first-floor door (2), the window next to it (3), and the large second-story window (4).

Ferris' Backyard Collage

Both the interior and exterior of the stately Colonial-style residence were featured throughout Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, and despite the backyard alterations, the place is still very recognizable from its onscreen stint. You can see a library of photographs of the home, including some of the backyard, here.

I always assumed Ferris landed in the backyard of the Long Beach house and never really questioned it. I shouldn’t have done that. Lindsay’s work confirmed my assumption, though.

Bueller House Exterior

Well, Ferris is finally home, his parents are none the wiser, Principal Rooney’s cheese has been left out in the wind, and our work here is done. (Mostly done, anyway – we’re still missing that darn BBQ Man’s backyard!) As I said earlier, this hunt, though lengthy and exhaustive, was a blast from start to finish. Much like Ferris’ race, actually. I’m a bit sad that it’s over but am already anxiously awaiting my next joint stalking venture with Owen.

I echo Lindsay’s sentiments. I melancholily miss working with her on FBDO, but we’ll ride again someday. Perhaps in a 1961 Ferrari 250 GT California.

A huge THANK YOU to Owen for his partnership on both this hunt and this post. It is so thrilling to me that these locations have been identified, chronicled, and are now out there for other Ferris fans to enjoy!

Pfft. Your words are emptier than the seat on the bus next to the bespectacled girl with gummy bears. If you really want to thank me, use your filming location capabilities and connections to find the nursing home from the original Miracle on 34th Street. In all seriousness, thanks for letting me tag along, Cameron-style, on today’s post, Lindsay. I had so much fun retracing the race routes with you. Now, like the phony “Sausage King of Chicago,” I’ve gotta run.

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

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You’re still here? The article’s over. Go home. Go.

The “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” Police Station

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Once in a while a filming location comes along that blows my mind.  Today’s post is about one of those locations.  Recently, fellow stalker Chas, of the It’s Filmed There site, texted to let me know that he had just tracked down the police station from fave movie Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.  I was shocked to learn not only that the place still looks exactly the same today, almost thirty years later, but that it is located in L.A.!  (For those not in the know, Ferris was set in Chicago and, aside from a few SoCal locales, largely filmed in the Windy City.)  So I ran right out to stalk it while visiting L.A. two weeks ago.

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In real life, the site is not a police station at all, but the former Los Angeles headquarters of Hills Bros. Coffee.  The structure, which was built in 1929 and designed by architect George H. Kelham, housed both a warehouse and second floor offices for the java company.  It is those second floor offices that masked as the police station in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.

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Today, the property belongs to the Southwestern Bag Company.

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Sadly, I was not able to get inside to see the interior, but while doing research for this post came across these fantastic images online that were taken by location scout Nick Morley.  I contacted Nick to ask if he would allow me to use some of his photographs for this post and he wrote back right away giving me the go-ahead!  Thank you, Nick!  You can also check out another set of pictures that show the building’s first floor here.

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In Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, the police station is where Jeanie Bueller (Jennifer Grey) is taken after being picked up by the police for making a phony 911 call.  It is also where she meets “Boy in Police Station” (Charlie Sheen) and says one of my favorite lines in movie history – “Why don’t you put your thumb up your butt!”

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The scene was shot in the lobby area of the building’s second floor, right at the top of the staircase.  As you can see in Nick’s photograph as compared to the screen capture below, the space looks exactly the same today as it did in 1986 when Ferris Bueller’s Day Off was filmed.

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The office where Det. Steven Lim (Robert Kim) informs Katie Bueller (Cindy Pickett) about Jeanie’s fake 911 call is located adjacent to the second floor lobby area.  In Nick’s photograph below it is shown from an opposite angle than the screen capture pictured.

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It, too, looks much the same today as it did when the movie was shot.

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Oh, what I wouldn’t give to get into that building!  I would so love to pose for a pic on the stairs where Jeannie stood in the scene!

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Chas actually found this location thanks to its appearance in a couple of other movies.  While putting together a page about filming locations from Divergent a few months back, Chas tracked down the spot where Tris (Shailene Woodley) came into contact with her mother.  As it turns out, that was the Hills Bros. Coffee building.  Only the exterior of it was shown in Divergent, though.

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Then while watching the 1987 action-comedy Beverly Hills Cop II a couple of weeks ago, Chas realized that the shaping, sizing and paning of the windows of the “Detroit” police station where Axel Foley (Eddie Murphy) worked matched those of the windows of the building in Divergent.  So he went searching for interior photographs of the Hills Bros. building and came across Nick’s page of images.  Sure enough, what was shown in Nick’s pics matched the Beverly Hills Cop II police station.

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Upon closer inspection, he realized that the staircase and lobby area from the Beverly Hills Cop II police station were an exact match to those from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.   So he then compared screen captures from FBDO to Nick’s photographs and confirmed that the two places were one and the same!

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The Hills Bros. Coffee building has actually appeared in countless productions over the years.  The north side of it masked as a – yep, you guessed it! – police station in the 1988 thriller Jack’s Back.

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In fave movie License to Drive, which was also released in 1988, Les Anderson (Corey Haim) falls asleep during driver’s ed class and dreams about speeding around in a Ferrari with his crush Mercedes Lane (Heather Graham).  At one point, Les lights a cigarette for her, throws the match out the window and starts an explosion.  That bit was shot in the alleyway that runs along the western side of Hills Bros. Coffee.

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In 1990’s Child’s Play 2, Hills Bros. Coffee masked as the social services office where Andy Barclay (Alex Vincent) was sent after his foster father was killed.

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The interior of the building – as well as that famous staircase – was also utilized in the film.

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Hills Bros. Coffee served as a police station once again in 1992’s Unlawful Entry.

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Thanks to The Rockford Files Filming Locations blog, I learned that the building was used as the Bunker Hill Division of the Metropolitan Police Station in the series’ 1996 made-for-television movie “If the Frame Fits.”

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Hills Bros. Coffee masked as a police station yet again in 1998’s The Negotiator.

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In the Season 1 episode of Angel titled “She,” which aired in 2000, the building stood in for both an ice factory and a private security firm office.

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Hills Bros. Coffee regularly masqueraded as Ojai Foods on the television series Brothers and Sisters, which ran from 2006 to 2011.

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It also popped up in the 2011 movie The Muppets.

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And in the Season 1 episode of How to Get Away with Murder titled “Smile, or Go to Jail,” Hills Bros. was used extensively as the police station where both Annalise Keating’s (Viola Davis) new client, Paula Murphy (Ana Ortiz), and murder suspect Rebecca Sutter (Katie Findlay) were being held.

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The interior of the building also appeared in the episode.  There’s that staircase again!

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The building is featured as a Los Angeles police station circa 1932 on the HBO series Perry Mason.

Hills Bros. Coffee also apparently popped up in the Season 1 episode of Castle titled “A Chill Goes Through Her Veins” (though I could not track it down to make screen captures for this post) and in several episodes of CSI: NY (though I am unsure of which episodes specifically).

Ferris Bueller's Day Off Police Station (10 of 13)

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

Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Chas, of the It’s Filmed There website, for finding this location!  Smile

Ferris Bueller's Day Off Police Station (1 of 13)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Ferris Bueller’s Day Off police station is located at 635 South Mateo Street in downtown L.A.  The address of the building is also sometimes listed as 642 Mateo Street, but that address is incorrect and would be located across the street from where the building actually stands.

Sloane’s House from “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off”

Sloane's House Ferris Bueller's Day Off (6 of 8)

Once the pizza parlor from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off had been found, my friend Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, starting hunting for the home belonging to Sloane Peterson (Mia Sara) – one of the last unknown locations from the 1986 comedy.  We had known for a while, thanks to a helpful crew member, that the residence was not in Chicago, where much of the movie was lensed, but Los Angeles.  In looking for it, though, we always came up empty-handed.  Then last week, fellow stalker Chas, of the It’sFilmedThere website, contacted a different crew member who informed him that the dwelling was located somewhere in Brentwood.  Owen immediately started searching aerial views of the area and, voila, found the house fairly quickly.  So I ran right out to stalk it while I was in L.A. last week.  (I actually had to stalk it twice – the first time, it started pouring rain immediately after I showed up.  That is why some of my pictures depict rainy weather, while in others the sun is shining.)

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As it turns out, Sloane’s house is famous in architectural circles due to the fact that it was designed by Paul Revere Williams, the prolific architect who also gave us Johnny Weissmuller’s former home, the McGinley Residence, Perino’s Restaurant, and the Just Married mansion.  It was actually the first home that Williams ever designed in the Brentwood area.  The property is known as the Preminger House in real life, in honor of one of its early inhabitants, film producer Ingwald “Ingo” Preminger.  In later years, the American Colonial Revival-style pad was owned by another famous Hollywood producer, Harold Hecht.

Sloane's House Ferris Bueller's Day Off (4 of 8)

Sloane's House Ferris Bueller's Day Off (7 of 8)

In 1977, the Preminger House was purchased by Peter and Merle Mullin.  The couple still own it to this day.  Of possessing the residence for such a long period of time, Peter said in a 2012 article, “Every now and then, I think about leaving.  Then I look around . . . and I can’t.  I just love this place.”  At some point in time, Peter and Merle hired Gary Drake of Drake Construction to do a renovation of the U-shaped dwelling, during which the central patio was enclosed with a large glass atrium.  Drake also constructed a subterranean automobile museum to house Peter’s large collection of cars. The original garage was subsequently transformed into a guest home.  You can see photographs of the Preminger House post-remodel here, here and here.

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Sloane's House Ferris Bueller's Day Off (2 of 8)

The Preminger House, which was originally built in 1925, currently boasts five bedrooms, six baths, 5,726 square feet of living space and 0.55 acres of land.  Sadly, not much of the property is visible from the street, as you can see below.

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Sloane's House Ferris Bueller's Day Off (2 of 3)

The pad shows up twice in Ferris Bueller’s Day off.  It first appears in the scene in which Ferris Bueller (Matthew Broderick) and Sloane attempt to snap Cameron Frye (Alan Ruck) out of his stupor by taking him swimming.  You can check out a photograph of what the Preminger House pool looks like today here.  Thankfully, little of it has been changed since the movie was filmed almost thirty years ago.

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In John Hughes’ DVD commentary of the movie, he says of the pool scene, “We never identified where this was or whose house this was.  I always presumed it was just someone else’s house.  It wasn’t really Sloane’s house, it certainly wasn’t Matthew’s house, and it wasn’t Cameron’s house.  They just sort of stopped and used somebody’s Jacuzzi.”  I was surprised to learn this bit of info as I had always been under the assumption that the pool scene was supposed to have taken place at Sloane’s residence.  In hindsight, John’s explanation makes more sense, though, being that Sloane was wearing a negligee in the scene and later references having changed out of her clothes outside by the Jacuzzi.  Had she been at her own house, she would have worn a bathing suit and changed within the confines of her bedroom.

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In the screen captures below, you can also see that the trio’s clothes are scattered about near the pool, further alluding to the fact that they broke into a random house to swim.  Had they been at Sloane’s place, they all would have been able to change inside.

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Oddly, while Hughes did not intend for the pool scene to have taken place at Sloane’s pad, he did choose to use the Preminger House to stand in for Sloane’s residence at the end of the movie.  The back side of the dwelling showed up in the scene in which Ferris dropped Sloane off at home and kissed her goodbye.  You can see a photograph of what the rear side of the residence currently looks like here.  Though the addition of the atrium altered the property, it still looks much the same today as it did onscreen in 1986.

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In this photograph, you can see that the large tree and curved brickwork surrounding it that were visible behind Sloane and Ferris in the scene are still there today.

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

Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, for finding this location!  Smile

Sloane's House Ferris Bueller's Day Off (5 of 8)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Preminger House, aka Sloane’s house from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, is located at 340 South Westgate Avenue in Brentwood.

Regular Jon’s Pizza from “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off”

Regular Jon's Pizza Ferris Bueller's Day Off (2 of 4)

Fellow stalker Chas, of the It’sFilmedThere website, recently texted me to let me know he had tracked down a location that I had been curious about for what seemed like forever – the pizza parlor from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.  Thanks to John Hughes’ DVD commentary of the flick, I knew that the restaurant was once in Brentwood and was no longer in operation, but I still desperately wanted to find its former location.  So I was thrilled to receive Chas’ text and ran right out to stalk the site last week while I was in L.A.

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As it turns out, the pizzeria that made an appearance in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off was Regular Jon’s, formerly located at 11645 San Vicente Boulevard.  The eatery was originally founded by Jon Persoff in 1971 and was a Brentwood landmark for the twenty years that it was in operation.   Sadly, when Persoff’s lease expired in 1991, the landlord raised his rent considerably causing Jon to close up shop, much to the chagrin of the restaurant’s many regulars.  After Jon’s was shuttered, the space was completely gutted and turned into a Louise’s Trattoria.  When Louise’s closed, Yuzu Sushi Roll House & Sake Bar moved in.  Today, the site houses an organic eatery known as the Coral Tree Café.  Unfortunately, it looks completely different in its current state than it did when Regular Jon’s was still in operation.

Regular Jon's Pizza Ferris Bueller's Day Off (3 of 4)

Regular Jon's Pizza Ferris Bueller's Day Off (4 of 4)

The good news is that Regular Jon’s has a sister location, which Chas also informed me of.  When Persoff passed away on September 25th, 2010, a former regular and one-time employee named Steven Goldberg decided to make a pizza in the former Regular Jon’s-style in his honor.  He spent weeks trying to replicate the thin crust recipe that generations of Brentwoodians had fallen in love with over four decades prior.  He finally nailed it and posted a comment about his endeavor on his Facebook page.  Soon friends were clamoring for him to make them a Regular Jon’s pizza and an idea took hold – Steve would establish his own replica pizzeria.  He opened the new eatery, which he dubbed “Steve’s Un-Original Pizza,” in November 2013 inside of the MB2 Raceway at 1475 Lawrence Drive in Thousand Oaks.  I ventured out to stalk the place last week and had the pleasure of meeting Steve.  He could NOT have been nicer.  In fact, when I showed up to the parlor, it was not yet open for the day.  Figuring my chances were slim to none, but being that I had just driven an hour and a half, I decided to call the number on the website to ask if there was anyway I could come inside to snap some pics.  And what do you know, he invited me right in!

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Steve designed his pizzeria to be reminiscent of Regular Jon’s, with dark wood paneling and an old school brown and yellow menu board.

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He also has numerous photographs of his yearly childhood birthday parties, which all took place at Regular Jon’s, as well as a panoramic screen capture from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off on display.  I absolutely loved seeing it all!  You can check out some more of Steve’s old photographs on his Facebook page here.

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Regular Jon's Pizza Ferris Bueller's Day Off (2 of 8)

Steve answered all of my silly little questions about the filming of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off and filled me in on Regular Jon’s history.  While I was under the assumption that the Jon’s building had been torn down after the site closed in 1991, Steve informed me that was not the case.  He said that the Jon’s property originally consisted of a thin, one-story, rectangular building with a large L-shaped parking lot.  That original rendering is denoted with a pink arrow in the Historic Aerials image below.

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In the early ‘80s, Jon expanded the eatery by adding a second, larger attached rectangular building that was constructed in the side portion of the parking lot.  The two-part structure remains standing today, but due to the many changes in ownership and subsequent remodels, it, unfortunately, looks nothing like it did when Jon’s was in operation.

Regular Jon's Pizza Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1 of 4)

In Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, Regular Jon’s is where principal Ed Rooney (Jeffrey Jones) goes in the hopes of catching Ferris Bueller (Matthew Broderick) cutting school.  While an exterior of the pizzeria is not shown in the movie, the spot where Rooney parks his car before heading inside Jon’s is actually located just outside of Chicago, where FBDO is set.  Rooney parks where Chestnut Street intersects with Chestnut Court in Winnetka.

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Quite a bit of Regular Jon’s is shown in the movie, including the order counter . . .

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. . . and the eating area and small arcade –

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– where Rooney has an unfortunate encounter with a straw full of soda.  “Le jeux son faits!”

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Regular Jon’s also appeared in a couple of other productions.  In 1978, it was the spot where Cliff Barnes (Ken Kercheval) searched for clues while looking for Bobby Ewing (Patrick Duffy) in the Season 2 episode of Dallas titled “Kidnapped.”

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That same year, the pizzeria was featured in the pilot episode of the television series The Paper Chase as the restaurant where Harvard Law School student James T. Hart (James Stephens) worked.  For subsequent episodes of the series, a different location was used as James’ workplace.

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You can watch all of The Paper Chase scenes shot at Regular Jon’s by clicking below.

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

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Regular Jon's Pizza Ferris Bueller's Day Off (3 of 8)

Stalk It:  Regular Jon’s, from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, was formerly located at 11645 San Vicente Boulevard in Brentwood.  The space now houses the Coral Tree Café.  Steve’s Un-Original Pizza can be found at 1475 Lawrence Drive, inside of the MB2 Raceway, in Thousand Oaks.  You can visit Steve’s official website here.

Fig & Olive Restaurant from the 2012 “Matthew’s Day Off” Honda CR-V Super Bowl Commercial

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Ever since I first saw the ingenious “Matthew’s Day Off” Honda CR-V commercial that premiered during the 2012 Super Bowl on February 6th, I have been absolutely itching to track down the restaurant that appeared in it.  Especially since, a few weeks beforehand, I had stalked and blogged about L’Orangerie, the eatery that stood in for Chez Quis in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, the 1986 movie upon which the two-minute-and-twenty-five-second television spot was based.

Ferris Bueller's Day Off Super Bowl Commercial

Thankfully, this location was a fairly easy find.  While watching the ad, I had spotted the name “Chez Neuz” painted on the awning of the restaurant – “neuf” being French for “nine”, which is, of course, the number of times Ferris Bueller was absent from school in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. (“Nine times?”  “Nine times!” “I don’t remember him being absent nine times!”  LOL)  And while the establishment’s tongue-in-cheek moniker was obviously a fake, I figured that the other words – “kitchen” and the partially hidden “–ing bar”, which I guessed to be “tasting bar” – that were also visible on the awning were most likely real.  And I was right!

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Inputting the words “restaurant”, “Los Angeles”, “kitchen”, and “tasting bar” into Google led me to a website for a fairly new eatery in West Hollywood named Fig & Olive.  One quick scan of the photographs pictured there proved that it was a match to what had appeared in “Matthew’s Day Off”.  Yay!  So I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out there to stalk the place this past weekend.  Fig & Olive, which was originally founded on the East Coast and has several outposts in Manhattan, first opened its West Hollywood location in March 2011 in an 8,000-square-foot, two-story venue on the corner of Melrose Place and La Cienega Boulevard.  The bright and airy establishment features a 50-foot tasting bar, two patios, a lounge area and a Mediterranean-inspired menu that is brought to life each night by Executive Chef Pascal Lorange, a man who was once the personal chef to both singer Julio Iglesias and former President Bill Clinton.

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Thanks to its trendy location, fab menu and chic interior, Fig & Olive became an overnight sensation and has served the likes of Amanda Seyfried, Robert Downey, Jr., Jennifer Aniston, Justin Theroux, Jason Bateman, Elizabeth Banks, Hilary Duff, Rebecca Gayheart, Julianne Hough, Ryan Seacrest, Jimmy Kimmel, John Stamos, Bob Saget, Ryan Gosling, Lea Michele, Ty Burrell, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Reese Witherspoon, Leonardo DiCaprio, Kevin Connolly, John Krasinski, Emily Blunt, Ryan Phillipe, Kellie Martin, Mila Kunis, Molly Sims, Zac Efron, Drew Barrymore and even President Obama.  Oh, and me and the GC Winking smile, who both absolutely fell in love with the place.  Before we arrived there, I had been convinced that Fig & Olive would be extremely snooty, but I am very happy to report that that was not at all the case.  The entire staff was BEYOND nice, especially our bartender who loved the fact that we were only dining there because of the “Matthew’s Day Off” commercial.  Smile

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Because the establishment is on the pricy side, the GC and I opted to only grab drinks and a cheese plate appetizer, all of which were uh-ma-zing!  I cannot wait to go back to there for a full meal sometime (ear muffs, GC!).

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Fig & Olive was featured three times in the “Matthew’s Day Off” commercial, which was directed by The Hangover’s Todd Phillips.  The tasting bar area first popped up in the scene in which Walter Linder, Matthew’s agent, is shown eating lunch in front of a TV that just so happens to be airing the parade in which Matthew is singing.

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Fig & Olive’s tasting bar is pictured above and, as you can see, the television set and the wall it was affixed to are not actually there in real life.

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The exterior of Fig & Olive then appeared as Chez Neuf, the restaurant where Matthew dropped off his Honda CR-V with a valet, who then, of course, made off with it.

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And the restaurant lastly popped at the very end of the commercial, in the scene in which Matthew reenacted his famous “You’re still here?” bit from Ferris Bueller.

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Our bartender informed us that an episode of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills was also shot at Fig & Olive, but I scanned through both Season 1 and Season 2 of the series earlier today and did not spot it anywhere, so I am guessing that the scene wound up on the cutting room floor.

“Matthew’s Day Off” Super Bowl Commercial Filmed at Fig & Olive in West Hollywood

You can watch the 2012 “Matthew’s Day Off” Honda CR-V Super Bowl commercial by clicking above.  Apparently, the team at RPA, the advertising agency that created the ad, hid over two dozen references to Ferris Bueller’s Day Off in the spot – some obvious, some more subtle.

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Here are a few that I spotted (and I swear I could sit here all day doing this!) – 1. In the commercial, Matthew’s agent is named “Walter Linder”.

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That same name was listed in the Chez Quis reservation book directly above “Abe Froman” in the movie’s iconic restaurant scene.

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2. The woman that Matthew spoke with using his CR-V’s built-in Bluetooth in the commercial was named “Grace” – a nod to Ed Rooney’s dimwitted secretary Grace, who was played to perfection by Edie McClurg in the film.

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3. In the scene in which Walter Linder spots Matthew driving, a man is pictured behind Walter playing a clarinet.

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Ferris also played a clarinet in the 1986 film.

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The trench coat that the clarinet player is wearing in the commercial is also a reference to the outfit Ferris wore when he picked up his girlfriend, Sloane Peterson (Mia Sara).

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4. In the commercial, the CR-V license plate reads “SOCHOIC”, which is a nod to Ferris’ line, “I must admit, I love driving it.  It is so choice.” about the pilfered Ferrari.  If you are not into searching for the ad’s many Ferris Bueller’s Day Off references, or “Easter eggs” as they are called, yourself, Entertainment Weekly scored a complete list of them from RPA, which you can check out here.

Chez Quis phone number - Ferrsi Bueller's Day Off

On a Ferris Bueller’s Day Off side-note – while making screen captures for today’s post, I happened to notice the number 652-9770 (as well as several other variations of it) on the phone Ferris used to call the police while at Chez Quis.  On a hunch, I typed that number into Google, adding an area code of 310, and, sure enough, (310)652-9770 was the actual former number of the now-shuttered L’Orangerie restaurant where that scene was filmed.  Oh, if only I had spotted those digits sooner, I not only would have bypassed countless hours of searching, but I also might have been able to stalk the place while it was still in business.  Ah well!  Hindsight is 20/20, as they say.

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Fig & Olive restaurant, from the 2012 “Matthew’s Day Off” Honda CR-V Super Bowl commercial, is located at 8490 Melrose Place in West Hollywood.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here.

L’Orangerie – aka Chez Quis Restaurant from "Ferris Bueller’s Day Off"

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Back in 2010, this stalker became just a wee-bit obsessed with tracking down the restaurant interior which was used as the fictional Chez Quis French eatery in the iconic 1986 movie Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.  I knew from listening to director John Hughes’ DVD commentary that the restaurant was somewhere in the Los Angeles area, but try as I might, I just could not seem to locate it.  Because I feared that the place had most likely long since closed down and, as such, any hope of finding it would be extremely difficult, I enlisted fellow stalker Chas, of the It’sFilmedThere website, to contact a few crew members on my behalf.  Amazingly enough, Chas was somehow able to get his hands on the email address of Jonathan Schmock, the actor who played the Chez Quis Maitre D’ in the movie.  Even more amazing, though, was the fact that Jonathan wrote him back almost immediately and let him know that the Ferris Bueller’s Day Off restaurant was none other than L’Orangerie in West Hollywood, an incredibly famous French eatery which had sadly closed it doors in 2006 and had been remodeled and re-imagined as Nobu shortly thereafter.  I cannot express how heartbreaking it was to learn this information as I had moved to LA in 2000, six full years before the restaurant, which I would have given my eye-teeth to stalk, closed down.  I added Nobu to my “To-Stalk” list regardless, with the hope that some remnant of L’Orangerie might still exist on the premises.  And this past Saturday evening, I finally, finally made it out there to investigate.

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Before arriving at Nobu, I was nervous that the place would be extremely hoity-toity and not allow photographs of any kind, but I am very happy to report that nothing could have been further from the truth!  The staff was not only exceedingly friendly and let me take all of the pictures that I wanted, but everyone that I spoke with was beyond excited to learn that their place of work was the site of the famous Ferris Bueller restaurant scene.  Upon leaving, the manager even told me that he could not wait to start informing people of Nobu’s famous cinematic connection.  AND, much to the Grim Cheaper’s delight, the eatery offers a very reasonable Happy Hour every single night (even Saturdays and Sundays!) in the bar and lounge area.  This obviously goes without saying, being that the restaurant is known for being a culinary giant, but the food there was absolutely incredible!  To say that the GC and I are in love with the place would be a gross understatement.  And the cherry on top of my evening was when I discovered that the main body and layout of Nobu is exactly the same as that of L’Orangerie, so the place is still somewhat (albeit very, very remotely) recognizable from Ferris Bueller.

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A couple of months back, I happened to find a Flikr photo album featuring pictures of L’Orangerie that a foodie blogger named Abby, from the Pleasure Palate website, had posted online.  I contacted Abby and asked if she would be willing to let me feature her photographs in this post and she not only wrote me back immediately, but graciously agreed.  A HUGE, HEARTFELT thank you goes out to her.  All of the pictures of L’Orangerie which appear in this post were taken by her, unless otherwise noted.

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According to the book Hollywood & the Best of Los Angeles Alive!, L’Orangerie was one of only two L.A.-area eateries that counted itself as a member of Relais & Chateaux, an extremely exclusive luxury hotel and gourmet restaurant group whose mission is to spread its “unique art de vivre across the globe by selecting outstanding properties with a truly unique character”.  Alive!, which was published in 2002, also states, “The only restaurant in Los Angeles that is more expensive than L’Orangerie is Ginza Sushi-Ko in Beverly Hills, a sushi place that is the most expensive restaurant in the US, at around $300 a person.”  Can you imagine if the GC and I had actually had a chance to stalk L’Orangerie when it was still in operation?  One glance at the menu and he would have had a full-blown heart attack on the spot!  L’Orangerie, which is French for “the orangery” – a beautifully-constructed greenhouse- or conservatory-type structure that was popular in Europe from the 17th to the 19th centuries and was used to house orange trees during the cold winter months – was originally founded in 1978 by native French couple Gerard and Virginie Ferry.  The restaurant quickly became one of Los Angeles’ most premiere and exclusive eateries and remained so until it closed on December 31st, 2006, at which point the Nobu Group took over and an extensive remodel was begun.

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Nobu opened in the Spring of 2008 and, while the dark, sleek, modern design is completely different from L’Orangerie’s bright, white, terraced-look, the overall shape and layout of the structure remains exactly the same.  L’Orangerie was composed of four dining areas – the bar and lounge;

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the main dining room (the picture above is from Mariani’s Virtual Gourmet Newsletter, but I believe it originally came from the now-defunct L’Orangerie website);

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the outdoor terrace;

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and the central courtyard . . .

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which featured a retracting roof.

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Nobu is also comprised of those same four dining areas – the bar and lounge;

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the main dining room, which is on the northern side of the restaurant;

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the terrace, which has since been enclosed and is now where one enters the restaurant;

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and the central courtyard, which still features a retractable roof.  If you will notice above, the room has six curtained doorways which are in the same spot where the French doors which opened to the courtyard were located when it was L’Orangerie.  So incredibly cool!

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There is also an additional lounge area which links all of the rooms together.  That lounge area is the former L’Orangerie lobby, aka the spot where Ferris Bueller (aka Matthew Broderick) famously had his girlfriend, Sloane Peterson (aka Mia Sara), call Chez Quis to ask for Abe Froman, the Sausage King of Chicago.

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In Ferris Bueller’s Day Off , Ferris, Sloane, and Ferris’ best friend, Cameron Frye (aka Alan Ruck), dine at Chez Quis while playing hooky from school.  And while the exterior of the restaurant was actually the exterior of a private home located at 22 West Schiller Street in Chicago . . .

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. . . all of the interiors were shot on location at L’Orangerie.

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Including, I believe, the bathroom scene, in which Ferris delivers a long narrative to the camera while his father is, unbeknownst to him, using a nearby stall.  I am kicking myself right now that I did not send the GC into Nobu’s men’s room to see if at all resembled the shape and size of the Ferris Bueller bathroom.  Ah well, next time.

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Because L’Orangerie was so incredibly picturesque, it saw more than its fair share of filming over the years.  In the Season 1 episode of The Colbys titled “A House Divided”, L’Orangerie played itself as the spot where Sable Scott Colby (aka Beverly Hills, 90210’s Stephanie Beacham) had lunch with Zach Powers (aka Ricardo Montalban).  As you can see in the second screen capture above, the entryway area looks exactly the same in The Colbys as it did in Ferris Bueller. Even the podium is a perfect match. Love it!

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In the Season 3 episode of Hart to Hart titled “Blue and Broken-Harted”, L’Orangerie was where Jonathan Hart (aka Robert Wagner) and Jennifer Hart (aka Stefanie Powers) had lunch and ran into gossip columnist George Christy, who played himself.  While there, Jennifer confronts Jonathan about her fear that he is having an affair.  In 1982, when the episode was filmed, L’Orangerie did not have a front patio area, but one was later built, along with a large cement wall which surrounded it.

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In the “Blue and Broken-Harted” episode, Jonathan and Jennifer dined in pretty much the same spot where the Ferris Bueller gang dined.

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In 1982’s Bare Essence, L’Orangerie popped up as “the chicest restaurant in town” where clothing designer Matt Phillips (aka Joel Higgins) took New-York-newcomer Tyger Hayes (aka Genie Francis) for lunch.

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In the 1983 made-for-television movie Making of a Male Model, L’Orangerie stood in for the supposed New York restaurant where Kay Dillon (aka Joan Collins) met male model Tyler Burnett (aka Jon-Erik Hexum) upon his return to Manhattan.

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In 1985’s St. Elmo’s Fire, L’Orangerie stood in for the supposed Washington, D.C.-area restaurant where Kirby Keger (aka Emilio Estevez) and Dale Biberman (aka Andie MacDowell) went on a very brief date.

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In 1985’s Brewster’s Millions, L’Orangerie was where Montgomery Brewster (aka Richard Pryor) took hundreds of random people for lunch immediately after inheriting $30 million.

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In 2003’s Intolerable Cruelty, L’Orangerie was featured as the spot where Miles (aka George Clooney) met Marylin (aka Catherine Zeta Jones) for an introductory dinner.

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Most recently, L’Orangerie appeared in the Season 2 episode of The Closer titled “Aftertaste” as L’Amboise, the eatery where Walter LaSalle (aka Francois Giroday) was arrested and where restaurant critic Tom Newman (aka John Billingsley) confessed to the murder of Karen Bevis (aka Julie Wagner).

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I also spotted L’Orangerie pop up in a movie or television show that I watched a few months back, but, for whatever reason, I failed to write the information down in my stalking notebook and now, for the life of me, I cannot remember what it was.  I have been wracking my brain for the past two weeks trying to figure it out, all to no avail.  Ironically enough, while I had mentioned the movie or television show to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, back when I spotted it, he also cannot remember what it was.  He has spent countless (and I do mean countless) hours over the past few weeks trying to help me figure it out, though.  At one point, he texted me that he was looking through the 60th page of L’Orangerie search results on Google.  The 60th page!!!!!  All of the information in this post actually came from his extensive research.  So thank you, Mike!  All that work, though, and neither of us did ever figure it out.  L’Orangerie’s courtyard (a photograph of which – one that I got off of the EaterLA website, who in turn got it from the Relais & Chateaux website – is pictured above) is the room that I remember appearing in the production.  Does it look familiar to anyone?  I know the answer will come to me as soon as I stop thinking about it, and when it does, I will update this post.

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Fellow stalker Gilles in France also let me know that L’Orangerie was featured in both the pilot episode of L.A. Law and the 1982 Danielle Steele made-for-television movie Secrets, but unfortunately neither of those productions are available for rent or download anywhere, so I was unable to make screen captures of them for this post.

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I can say with certainty, though, that L’Orangerie was not the restaurant that appeared in Some Kind of Wonderful, as some websites have stated.  Some Kind of Wonderful was filmed just down the street at the former L’Ermitage restaurant, now Koi, located at 730 North La Cienega Boulevard.

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There have also been some online reports that The Blues Brothers was filmed at the same restaurant as Ferris Bueller, but, as you can see above, that information is incorrect, as well.  The Blues Brothers was actually filmed at Chez Paul, the legendary French establishment that was formerly located at 660 North Rush Street in Chicago, Illinois.  You can read more about that location on The Blues Brothers Central website here.

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Besides being a filming location, L’Orangerie was also a major celebrity hotspot.  Motley Crew’s Vince Neil and former Playboy Playmate Heidi Mark were married there on May 28th, 2000, as were Fred Savage and Jennifer Stone on August 7th, 2004.  Rob Lowe’s 40th birthday party was held at the restaurant.  Teri Hatcher and Ryan Seacrest once had a date there, Ronald and Nancy Reagan were regulars, and Brad Pitt and my girl Jen Aniston shocked fellow patrons by cuddling during a three-hour candlelit dinner just a few weeks after announcing their separation.  Brad also supposedly took Angelina Jolie to L’Orangerie for a meal during the filming of Mr. and Mrs. Smith, which I, of course, was not especially happy to hear.

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You can watch a video which shows the interior of the former L’Orangerie restaurant by clicking above.

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Big THANK YOU to Chas, from the It’sFilmedThere website, for finding this location and an even BIGGER THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for going above and beyond the call of duty (of both stalking and friendship) by spending countless hours doing research for me and reading through 60-plus pages of search results on Google while trying to figure out what movie it was that I had seen recently that had been filmed at L’Orangerie.

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And a HUGE thank you to Abby, of the Pleasure Palate website, for so graciously allowing me to feature her photographs of L’Orangerie restaurant on my website.  This post would not have been the same without her fabulous pictures!  You can read Abby’s write-up on her dining experience at L’Orangerie here.

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Nobu, aka the former L’Orangerie restaurant, aka the interior of Chez Quis from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, is located at 903 North La Cienega Boulevard in West Hollywood.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here.

Halloween 2010 at the Hotel Santa Barbara

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As I mentioned last week, this past Saturday morning the Grim Cheaper and I headed up north to the Central Coast of California to spend Halloween with our good friends who live in Santa Barbara, or the “American Riviera” as the seaside city is colloquially known.  For those who have never visited the area during Halloween, I must say that there is just simply no place better to spend the holiday.  For whatever, Santa Barbara has got some MAJOR Halloween spirit.  Downtown State Street turns into one big Halloween fest each and every October 31st, during which everyone – and I do mean everyone – dresses up for the occasion.  It’s an absolute blast and if you EVER have the opportunity, I HIGHLY recommend spending at least one Halloween there!

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At one point in the evening, we even witnessed a flash mob dancing to “Michael Jackson’s Thriller”, in which ALL of the participants were dressed like Zombies.  So darn cool!  But I digress.

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Anyway, as I always do when planning a vacation, I set out to find a hotel to stay at that had some sort of Hollywood history or cinematic significance.  And find one, I did!  While doing some cyberstalking I came across an article on the Santa Barbara Conference & Visitors Bureau website titled “Movie Tourism is a Natural in ‘Hollywood North’”.  Besides doling out some fabulous area filming location information, the article also stated that in the 1920s the Hotel Santa Barbara, a place where I have actually always wanted to stay, was “the getaway for many of Hollywood’s brightest stars”, including actors Leo Carrillo, Clark Gable, and Carole Lombard.  So, I immediately booked the GC and I a room there.

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The 84-room, Mediterranean-style property, which was originally named “The Saint Barbara Hotel”, was established in 1916 and was one of the first hotels built by famed Santa Barbara hotelier Neal Callahan.  The original hotel building was destroyed during the June 29, 1925 earthquake and was rebuilt by Callahan the following year.  From the very beginning, the upscale hotel enjoyed a loyal following, housing vacationing starlets and wealthy tourists alike.  According to this October 2000 Los Angeles Times article, during Prohibition the property even boasted a hidden gambling room on its premises, where alcohol was indeed still served.  And while in later years the hotel degraded a bit in stature, it underwent an extensive $4 million renovation and restoration project in 1997 and is once again a popular upscale vacation venue.

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The hotel was very reasonably priced by Santa Barbara standards (most hotels in the seaside city are exorbitantly expensive and not very well maintained), especially considering the place’s centralized downtown location.  Lots of freebies, such as bottled water in the room, wireless internet, and a continental breakfast, were also included.  Our room, while small, was extremely cozy and very nicely appointed.

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And it also boasted a fabulous view of Downtown State Street and the Santa Barbara Mountains.  And even thought the staff there couldn’t tell me much about the history of the place nor about any of its celebrity clientele during the heyday of Hollywood, I honestly can’t recommend the Hotel Santa Barbara enough!  I’ve stayed in quite a few different hotels in the area over the years and not only was the Hotel Santa Barbara one of the nicest, it was also one of the least expensive, which, of course, pleased the Grim Cheaper to no end.  🙂

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As always, the GC and I looked to Hollywood for our costume inspiration this year and decided to dress up as Ferris Bueller (aka Matthew Broderick) and Sloane Peterson (aka Mia Sara) from fave movie Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.  My mom, whose help we enlisted to make Ferris’ leopard print vest, was convinced that no one would recognize us being that the movie is almost two and a half decades old.  I, however, knew that would not be the case.  I mean, hello!  Ferris and Sloane are iconic!  How could people NOT know who we were!  And sure enough, I was right – people recognized us pretty much everywhere we went that night.  🙂  Well, a few did refer to us as Ferris and “Simone”, but hey, that’s close enough.  😉

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

Stalk It: Hotel Santa Barbara is located at 533 State Street in the heart of Downtown Santa Barbara.  You can visit the hotel’s official website here.

Cameron Frye’s House

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Last Wednesday morning I almost fell out of my chair as I opened up my email account and saw an AOL news headline screaming out at me “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off   House For Sale!”  At first, I thought the article was talking about the Long Beach area home that stood in for Ferris’ in the film.  But, in reality, it is the ultra-modern glass and steel abode that belonged to Ferris’ best pal Cameron Frye in the film that just recently went on the market.  And, while I don’t usually like to blog about places that I have not actually visited myself, since I have received about a million emails this week about the cinematically historic home, I figured what the heck!  So, here goes.  🙂

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The house, which was built entirely out of steel, cedar, and glass, measures 5,300 square feet, sits on almost an acre of land, and boasts four bedrooms and four bathrooms.  The home was built in 1953 by prominent architect A. James Speyer for a prominent textile designer named Ben Rose, and his wife, Fran.  The famous garage – which is actually called “the Pavilion” or auto museum – is separate from the house and was not built until 1970.  It was designed by architect David Haid and, in line with how it was portrayed on film, was built to store Ben’s antique car collection.   The house had been featured in numerous architectural books and magazines long before Ferris Bueller was filmed and, apparently, it was through those magazines that location scouts discovered the house.  🙂  With its glass walls and simplistic design, the home reminds me quite a bit of the Stahl House in Los Angeles and the other Case Study Houses.  Cameron Frye’s home is selling for a cool $2.3 million, which I think is pretty low considering you’d be buying a cinematic and architectural landmark!  🙂  You can read a great article about the home and its original owners here

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Several memorable scenes from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off  took place at Cameron Frye’s home, including the “He’ll keep calling me, he’ll keep calling me until I come over.  He’ll make me feel guilty.  This is – uh – this is ridiculous!  OK, I’ll go, I’ll go, I’ll go, I’ll go, I’ll go, I’ll go.  Sh*t!” scene.  LOL

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I believe the real interior of the Ben Rose House was used in the scene when Ferris continually calls Cameron begging him to come over.  The walls of the actual home are built entirely out of glass and, as you can see in the above screen capture, so are the walls of Cameron’s room.

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But, of course, the most memorable scenes took place in the Pavilion and involved Cameron’s father’s 1961 Ferrari 250 GT California.  

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It is in the Pavilion that Cameron says to Ferris, “Less than 100 were made.  My father spent three years restoring this car.  It is his love, it is his passion . . .” to which Ferris replies. “It is fault he didn’t lock the garage.”  LOL  God, I love that movie!!!!

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It is also in the Pavilion that Ferris “runs the car in reverse” in the hopes of removing the mileage that was accrued during their “day off”.

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When that plan doesn’t work, Cameron flips out and ends up “killing the car”.  LOL To shoot that scene, producers had to not only replace the Pavilion’s real life windows with breakaway glass, but also build several fake cars out of fiberglass, complete with small bombs that made the car smoke upon impact.  I can’t even imagine being there to watch that scene be filmed!!!   It must have been so much fun for the owners of the house!!!!  Apparently, there is an entire wall of photographs from the filming of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off  on display in the Pavilion.  Love it!!!

You can visit the home’s real estate website and see photos of its interior here.

Until next time, Happy Stalking! 🙂

Stalk It: Cameron Frye’s house is located at 370 Beech Street in Highland Park, Illinois.

The “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” House

Ferris Bueller’s Day Off has long been one of my favorite movies. So I was completely floored when I found out that Ferris’ house from the movie was located in Southern California! Ferris Bueller’s Day Off was filmed almost entirely on location in Chicago, Illinois, but for some reason producers chose a house on the West Coast, in Long Beach, California, to use as the Bueller family home. As soon as I found the address, I immediately dragged my boyfriend (on his birthday, no less!) to go stalk it. This was quite a few years back and we took pictures of the house using a cell phone, so they aren’t the best. 🙁 You will immediately recognize the large colonial style home, though, and its circular driveway, as they look EXACTLY the same as they did over two decades ago when the movie was filmed. It was so much fun to see the house in person, and I really wanted to ring the doorbell to see if Ferris’ taped doorbell recording would play. 🙂

A couple of weeks ago, I was doing some cyber-stalking and found some interior pictures of the home on a movie location website. I was shocked to see that the interior of the real home matched the interior of the home from the movie, as I had always assumed that a set was used for the interior shots. But from what I can see from the pictures, the interior of the Long Beach home was obviously used for filming, as well. You can see the interior of the house here. You’ll recognize the staircase and the kitchen as almost a perfect match to Ferris’ house in the movie.

The Ferris Buehler house was also used in the Silence of the Lambs sequel Red Dragon and in Not Another Teen Movie as the house where the massive party is thrown.

A little bit of Ferris trivia – Cindy Pickett and Lyman Ward, the actors who played Ferris’ parents, met while filming the movie and ended up getting married after filming was completed. 🙂

Until next time, Happy Stalking! 🙂

Stalk It: Ferris Buehler’s house can be found at 4160 Country Club Drive in Long Beach. Many other homes in the same neighborhood have been featured in other movies and TV shows. Check out Seeing Stars, which does a great write up on this neighborhood and its famous homes.