Neve Campbell’s Former Haunted House

Neve Campbell's Former Haunted House (10 of 10)

I love a good haunted house, especially at this time of year.  One owned by a celebrity is even better.  One owned by the star of my favorite horror film of all time?  Well, I can’t think of anything more thrilling – or more perfectly suited to my annual October postings.  So when I came across a mention of a ghost-inhabited pad formerly belonging to the Scream Queen herself, Miss Neve Campbell, in the book Hollywood Death and Scandal Sites (written by my buddy E.J. Fleming, from the Movieland Directory website), I just about came unglued and promptly added the place to my To-Stalk List.  Identifying the residence in person wound up taking quite a bit of legwork once I finally got out there, though, thanks to a mysterious and misleading address placard.  But more on that in a bit.

[ad]

Per Berg Properties, Neve purchased the 3-bedroom, 4-bath, 2,347-square-foot home at 8875 Wonderland Avenue in 1996 for $745,000.  Upon moving into the dwelling with then husband Jeff Colt that summer, shortly after wrapping production on the first Scream installment, Campbell, a classically-trained ballerina, installed a dance studio on the premises.  Other amenities included a pool, a spa, a 0.17-acre lot, and plenty of privacy thanks to a large amount of foliage surrounding the perimeter.  Of the purchase, the excited actress told Detour magazine, “I just moved into my first house with Jeff Colt and we’re very, very excited.  It’s in the Hollywood Hills . . . all of a sudden I’m obsessed about houses and furniture.  I walk around the Party of Five set thinking, ‘That’s a nice table.’”

Neve Campbell's Former Haunted House (8 of 10)

Neve Campbell's Former Haunted House (7 of 10)

Things weren’t all sunshine and roses, though.  As author Elina Furman explains in her 2000 book Neve Campbell: An Unauthorized Biography, the star awakened one night “after sensing what she believed to be the presence of a young woman’s ghost.  Concluding that her new house was haunted, Neve dubbed her resident specter Madame X.  The story got even more interesting when she discovered that a twenty-two-year-old maid had been brutally murdered in the house in 1991.  The domestic was working for a mystery writer when a delivery man entered the home and committed the crime.  Years later, the furnace in Campbell’s house would turn off and on by itself and the lights would dim of their own accord.  Unwilling to be frightened out of her new home, Neve made friends with the spirit, much as her character in The Canterville Ghost had befriended Simon de Canterville.  She now considers the specter one of the family.  ‘She’s cool.  I’m cool.  We don’t bug each other, so it’s all right,’ she confirmed to Detour in March 1998.”

Neve Campbell's Former Haunted House (3 of 10)

Neve Campbell's Former Haunted House (4 of 10)

The actress also talked about the haunting during her 2011 press tour for Scream 4 (though she mentions living in the home with friends and not her ex-husband).  As she told Daily Mail, “I know that ghosts exist because I’ve seen one.  A few years ago I moved into a haunted house in Laurel Canyon, Los Angeles, with some friends.  It turned out that it was inhabited by the ghost of a woman who had been murdered there in 1991.  Doors would repeatedly slam, windows would open and ashtrays would fly off dressers.  Then there were times when the ghost would actually walk into the room.  After a while it felt normal.  I’d pass her in the hallway and casually wish her good morning.”

Neve Campbell's Former Haunted House (1 of 10)

Though I have no doubt as to Neve’s claims about the residence being haunted, I do question if a murder actually happened on the premises.  I cannot find a reference to such a killing anywhere – though searching for a homicide that occurred on Wonderland Avenue, or in the Laurel Canyon area in general, is admittedly difficult considering that almost every result kicked back has to do with the infamous Wonderland murders, which took place just down the street in 1981.  My hunch, though, is that the story is pure conjecture, a tale told to Campbell by a mischievous neighbor or perhaps a real estate agent with a penchant for the macabre.

Neve Campbell's Former Haunted House (2 of 10)

Though I can’t say for certain whether or not a murder occurred there, one definite odd element concerning the property is its address placard, which reads “8909.”  When I first showed up to the corner of Wonderland Avenue and Holly Place, where Neve’s former pad was supposed to be located per both Google and my GPS, I was thoroughly confused to see the 8909 number.  Figuring both map programs were off by a few hundred feet or so, I proceeded to walk up and down the block looking for 8875 Wonderland.  I came up empty.  I was further surprised upon returning to 8909 to discover that its address did not coincide numerically with its neighbors.  I surmised that the number had to have been changed at some point, snapped some photos of the place, and headed home to investigate the matter further.

Neve Campbell's Former Haunted House (1 of 1)

Searching Google and newspapers.com for “8909 Wonderland Avenue” and “8909 Holly Place” yielded pretty much nada.  So I headed over to the City of Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety website to look through old records.  An inquiry into that database for “8909 Holly” also yielded nothing.  But “8875 Wonderland” kicked back a treasure trove of info, all of which assured me that the house I took photos of was not only Neve’s former residence, but that it bears the address 8875.  As you can see in the permit below, filed in 1990, 8875 is noted as being on the corner of Holly and Wonderland, right where my GPS said it would be.

Screenshot-009018

Another permit I dug up from that same year featured a diagram of 8875 that perfectly matches the layout and placement visible in aerial views of the structure with the 8909 placard.

Screenshot-009020

Screenshot-009022-3

And a parcel map available on the Los Angeles County Office of the Assessor website also shows 8875 Wonderland in the exact spot where the 8909 placard is currently hung.  Why a different address number is displayed at the property is a complete mystery, but what I do know is that Neve Campbell’s former haunted house is most definitely located on the northeast corner of Holly Place and Wonderland Avenue.

Screenshot-009030

The actress sold the pad in February 2000 for $850,000 and it has not changed hands since.  I guess the current owner doesn’t mind having a phantom roommate, either.

Neve Campbell's Former Haunted House (6 of 10)

Neve Campbell's Former Haunted House (5 of 10)

Big THANK YOU to E.J., of the Movieland Directory website, for finding this location!  Smile

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

Neve Campbell's Former Haunted House (1 of 1)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Neve Campbell’s former haunted house is located at 8875 Wonderland Avenue in Hollywood Hills West.

Anthony’s House from Twilight Zone: The Movie”

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0360

Perhaps no film in the history of filmdom has been as mired in controversy as Twilight Zone: The Movie.  Bring up the 1983 thriller to anyone and talk will likely turn to the death of three of its actors in a harrowing and, what has been argued, completely avoidable accident.  On July 23rd, 1982 at Indian Dunes movie ranch in Valencia, while lensing the segment titled “Time Out,” star Vic Morrow carried two young children, Renee Chen and Myca Dinh Le, through a pond in a simulated Vietnam War battle.  A helicopter flying overhead during the shoot happened to get hit by one of the explosive special effects, causing it to crash to the ground, crushing Chen to death and decapitating Morrow and Le in the process.  Director John Landis and four other crew members were brought up on manslaughter charges following the disaster, but all were found not guilty at the end of the nearly ten-month trial.  The film has been shrouded in darkness ever since, though.  Considering my penchant for the macabre, surprisingly, up until just recently I had never watched Twilight Zone: The Movie or done any stalking of it.  That all changed when I came across a photo of the sprawling Victorian where Anthony (Jeremy Licht) lived in the “It’s a Good Life” portion of the film on the Then & Now Movie Locations website earlier this summer.  Fascinated with the massive structure, I added it to my To-Stalk List and headed right on out to see it in person shortly thereafter.

[ad]

The immense Queen Anne-style pad was originally built in 1887 by prominent San Francisco architect Joseph Cather Newsom, who also gave us the Walker House in San Dimas, the Sessions House in Echo Park, and the Carson Mansion in Eureka.

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0339

Amazingly, per the Los Angeles Office of Historic Resources, the dwelling was initially located in Pacoima, but was moved – literally picked up and relocated – to its current home at 17410 Mayerling Street in Granada Hills in the 1970s.

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0353

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0351

The picturesque estate currently boasts 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, 3,842 square feet of living space, 11-foot ceilings, stained glass windows, hardwood flooring, 2 fireplaces, wainscoting, original moldings, beveled glass mirrors, a clawfoot tub (be still my heart!), an updated kitchen with granite counters and stainless steel appliances, a formal dining room, a den, pull-chain toilets (which seriously creep me out for unknown reasons), a glass-ceilinged conservatory, a 2-car garage, a wraparound porch, a vineyard, and a detached 1-bedroom, 1-bath guesthouse with a kitchen and a private yard.

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0338

The property last sold in 2015 for $849,000, which seems abnormally low to me considering the sheer size of the house, not to mention the land.

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0345

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0344

I mean, look at that backyard!  It’s huge.

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0355

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0356

You can check out some MLS photos of the pad from the time it was on the market here.

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0349

Though undeniably beautiful, it is not hard to see how the place wound up being cast in a horror/sci-fi film like Twilight Zone: The Movie.

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0352

There is just something about old Victorians that renders them downright spooky (read: the Smith Estate).

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0358

The “It’s a Good Life” chapter of Twilight Zone: The Movie centers around a misunderstood and rather disturbed young boy named Anthony who can create things with his mind.  As such, he conjures up a Victorian house based upon one featured in the cartoon Mouse Wreckers.  While segments of the actual 1948 cartoon classic were utilized in the film, the opening scene was altered to show a dwelling matching the Granada Hills pad.

Screenshot-008966

The true imagery featured at the beginning of Mouse Wreckers is pictured below.

Screenshot-008974

Anthony’s residential creation is a true house of horrors in which any family member who disagrees with him or tries to admonish him meets an unpleasant fate, like Ethel (Nancy Cartwright, aka the voice of Bart Simpson on The Simpsons) who gets banished to an evil cartoon world where she is terrorized by animated monsters after an unsuccessful attempt to escape from the home.

Screenshot-008965

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0341

Remarkably, the dwelling still looks almost exactly the same today as it did onscreen 35 years ago, excluding a change in paint color and the addition of the detached guest house on the property’s east side.

Screenshot-008960

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0342

A close-up view of the guest house is pictured below.

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0350

The area around the residence has changed considerably in the ensuing years, as you can see in the Google Street View image as compared to the screen capture below.  Though still rather rural in nature, the 17400 block of Mayerling Street has been built up a bit since Twilight Zone: The Movie was shot.

Screenshot-008964

Screenshot-008976

Only the exterior of the property was used in “It’s a Good Life.”

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0348

The inside of Anthony’s house, which bears no resemblance whatsoever to the home’s real life interior, was nothing more than a soundstage-built set at Warner Bros. Studio in Burbank.  Though the front doors were modeled after those of the actual dwelling . . .

Screenshot-008967

89_IG15246519_5_1447829670

. . . the stairs of the Mayerling pad are situated completely differently than those of its onscreen counterpart, as you can see in the screen captures below as compared to the MLS photo above.

Screenshot-008968

Screenshot-008970

The onscreen living room, which was designed to have a cartoonish feel, also looks nothing like the home’s actual living room.

Screenshot-008972

89_IG15246519_2_1447829669

P.S. Big Bang Theory fans, be sure to check out this great LAist article about the show’s locales that I was recently interviewed for.

Big THANK YOU to the Then & Now Movie Locations website for finding this location!  Smile

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

Anthony's House from Twilight Zone- The Movie-0347

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Anthony’s house from Twilight Zone: The Movie is located at 17410 Mayerling Street in Granada Hills.

Pasadena Central Library from “Foul Play”

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-9685-2

It’s my favorite day of the year!  No, it’s not Halloween already – it’s October 1st, which marks the start of my annual Haunted Hollywood postings and the beginning of the Halloween season (well, it marks the latter for most people, anyway – I started decorating for the holiday weeks ago!).  To kick things off, I thought I’d write about Pasadena Central Library.  I stalked the gorgeous book repository last month in preparation for my October blogs, figuring the place would be the perfect segue into the season thanks to its appearance in several scary productions, most notably the 1990 “thrill-omedy” Arachnophobia.  But as I only just learned thanks to a few knowledgeable chat room commenters, while the library was briefly featured in the film’s original theatrical run, apparently the footage shot there was not included in later releases – not in any versions available on DVD nor via streaming.  Because the site has numerous other connections to the chiller genre, though – namely a cameo in the 1978 mystery Foul Play – I decided to forge ahead with the post.

[ad]

The Pasadena Public Library was originally established as the Pasadena Library and Village Improvement Society in 1882, four years before the city itself was incorporated.  Its initial headquarters, built in 1884, was situated on Colorado Boulevard near Raymond Avenue (though it was known as “Raymond Street” at the time) on what was then the Central School campus.  Two years after it was constructed, the entire building was moved a few blocks south to 42 West Dayton Street.  When the need to expand arose in 1890, the library then set up shop in a dramatic turreted property on the corner of Raymond Avenue and Walnut Street.  A model of that site, made from stone taken from the actual building and currently on display in the Central Library’s Main Hall, is pictured below.  (Sadly, that structure was razed at some point after the current library was erected.  Oh, how I wish it had been left intact!  I mean, it couldn’t look more like a real life haunted house if it tried!  Can you imagine the Halloween fun that could be had there if it was still standing?)

Pasadena-Central-Library-from-Foul-P[1]

Pasadena-Central-Library-from-Foul-P[5]

In 1922, the Bennett, Parsons and Frost architecture firm was commissioned to oversee the development of a civic center for Pasadena set to include a city hall, a civic auditorium, and a new library.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2271

The firm held a design contest for the three structures in which ten architecture companies competed.  Myron Hunt (who also gave us Thornton Gardens, Occidental College, Wattles Mansion, the Langham Huntington Hotel, the Huntington Library, Art Collection, and Botanical Gardens and the Pasadena Elks Lodge) and H.C. Chambers’ proposal was chosen for the new library and construction on their Spanish Colonial Revival-style masterpiece began on May 19th, 1925.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2350

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2347

The structure was completed a little less than two years later and the building was dedicated on February 12th, 1927.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2348

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2346

The exterior of the three-story, U-shaped property is comprised of a central courtyard with a fountain, cast concrete friezes, Corinthian cast stone columns, paned arched windows, and outdoor reading alcoves.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2341

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2338

While undeniably impressive . . .

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2339

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2340

. . . the interior is the real sight to behold.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2282

Boasting intricate woodwork, spectacular coffered ceilings, pendant lighting, Italian marble flooring, oak shelving, and ornately carved doorways and hallways, the inside of the building is nothing short of breathtaking.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2303

The sweeping Main Hall is the library’s crown jewel.  Measuring 33 by 203 feet, the room features 45-foot ceilings, oak wainscoting and bookshelves, cork flooring (to mask the sound of footsteps), and a set of handsome dark wood and wrought-iron tables that run the length of the space.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2284

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2292

Each of the library’s many chambers can be reached via the Main Hall, including the Children’s Room . . .

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2278

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2281

. . . which was originally named the “Peter Pan Room” in honor of the Maud Daggett-sculpted fireplace that stands as the space’s focal point and depicts the story of the beloved children’s book;

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2280

the Reference Room;

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2313

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2306

the Centennial Room;

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2316

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2320

the Business Wing;

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2304

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2311

the Humanities Wing;

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2326

and the floors upon floors of book stacks.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2335

The city embarked upon an extensive restoration and “historically sensitive” renovation of the building between 1984 and 1990.  The result is nothing short of striking as the photos in this post attest to.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2290

Pasadena Central Library, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, is elegant, opulent, and grand.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2324

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2325

It is not at all hard to see how the site wound up onscreen copious times.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2334

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2327

It is also not hard to see how it ended up in so many productions of the spooky nature.  Though gorgeous, with its towering ceilings, dark woodwork, colossal size, and maze-like stacks, the space does lend itself quite easily to the macabre.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2299

I certainly wouldn’t want to be there alone after dark – like Gloria Mundy (Goldie Hawn) found herself in Foul Play.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2314

  In the flick, the interior of the Pasadena Central Library appears a few times as the inside of the supposed San Francisco-area Sarah B. Cooper Public Library where Gloria works – and is attacked by Whitey Jackson (William Frankfather) while on the job late at night.

Screenshot-008949

Screenshot-008948

Pasadena Central Library also pops up in the 1988 horror comedy Dead Heat as the spot where Roger Mortis (Treat Williams), Doug Bigelow (Joe Piscopo), and Randi James (Lindsay Frost) search through obituaries.

Screenshot-008952

Screenshot-008955

The venue portrays the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. where Lloyd Bowman (Ken Leung) decodes a threatening cypher from Francis Dolarhyde (Ralph Fiennes) in the 2002 thriller Red Dragon.

Screenshot-008933

Screenshot-008934

In the Season 5 episode of Ghost Whisperer titled “See No Evil,” which aired in 2009, a young student named Steve (Jerry Shea) is haunted by a vengeful specter while studying at Pasadena Central Library late at night.

Screenshot-008935

Screenshot-008937

I happened to visit the library during the filming of the scene, which took place on July 17th, 2009, and am happy to report that the crew could not have been nicer.  They even allowed me to snap some photos of the set while the cast was on a break.

 Pasadena Central Library from Arachnophobia-3066

Pasadena Central Library from Arachnophobia-3067

I am unsure of why the “hot set” tape was placed around the areas used in the filming, but I am guessing it was because producers had the space set up exactly as they wanted for the scene and did not want any elements disturbed.  There were also quite a few special effects involved in the segment, so if sections of the library were already rigged, that would explain the tape, as well.

Pasadena Central Library from Arachnophobia-3069

Pasadena Central Library from Arachnophobia-3070

For one effect, special lamp shades with X’s cut into them were utilized, as a crew member pointed out to me.

Screenshot-008959

Pasadena Central Library from Arachnophobia-3068

The library has cameoed in a plethora of non-scary productions, as well.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2276

Grace McQueen (Jessica Tandy) hosts a story hour in the Children’s Room at the end of the 1991 made-for-television movie The Story Lady.

Screenshot-008950

Screenshot-008951

  The site portrays the Harvard Law Library where Elle Woods (Reese Witherspoon) studies in the 2001 comedy Legally Blonde.

Screenshot-008945

Screenshot-008946

The locale masks as the Georgetown Law Library where Clifford Calley (Mark Feuerstein) secretly meets with Donna Moss (Janel Moloney) and begs her to set up a meeting with Josh Lyman (Bradley Whitford) in the Season 3 episode of The West Wing titled “H. Con-172,” which aired in 2002.

In the Season 3 episode of Cold Case titled “Beautiful Little Fool,” which aired in 2006, the property plays the Library of Philadelphia where Lilly Rush (Kathryn Morris) and Nick Vera (Jeremy Ratchford) research the Roaring Twenties while trying to solve a murder case.

Screenshot-008942

Screenshot-008943

Ray Drecker (Thomas Jane) meets with a new client at Pasadena Central Library in the Season 2 episode of Hung titled “Beaverland,” which aired in 2010.

Screenshot-008938

Screenshot-008941

Though countless websites claim that Matilda was shot on the premises, I have scanned through the movie numerous times and did not see it pop up anywhere.  The library supposedly appears in the 2002 crime thriller The Salton Sea, as well, but I also scanned through that film and did not spot it.

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2293

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2295

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

Pasadena Central Library from Foul Play-2273-2

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Pasadena Central Library, from Foul Play, is located at 285 East Walnut Street in Pasadena.  You can visit its official website here.

John Adams Middle School from “Heathers”

John Adams Middle School from Heathers-1110556

The Grim Cheaper is a celebrity magnet.  Literally everywhere he goes, he runs into someone famous.  It’s maddening because 90% of these encounters occur when I am not with him.  Like the time he stopped by a Starbucks while on his way to a business meeting and saw Keanu Reeves sitting outside.  Or the night he ate dinner at a table next to Harrison Ford and Calista Flockhart and then watched as the two flew off on their private plane from the airport situated adjacent to the restaurant.  And I won’t even get into that day he popped into a Circuit City (remember those?) to find Britney Spears perusing the CD aisle.  The encounter that was easily the most painful for me, though, was the time he spotted Christian Slater in a grocery store.  That one killed this ‘80s lover’s heart.  I was so bummed that as soon as he texted me about it, I hopped in my car and drove to the market to see if I could spot the actor.  Sadly, he was long gone by the time I got there.  That was years ago, but to this day, every time I am in that particular store, I can’t help but scan every square inch of the place for a possible Christian sighting.  Oddly, while I have always loved Slater, I never liked what is arguably his most popular movie, Heathers.  I did stalk one of its main locations, John Adams Middle School, a couple of years back, though, and figured what better time to blog about it than during my annual Haunted Hollywood postings.

[ad]

And no, I did not have a brain tumor for breakfast.  I am fully aware that Heathers does not exactly fit into the scary movie genre.  But as Horror Freak News stated in a 2015 article, “Heathers isn’t a horror movie (or even a horror comedy) but the irreverent film (released in 1988) has a body count to rival most teen-slashers.  And besides, for Horror Freaks who came of age during the 1980s, Heathers was essential viewing!”  Anyone who doesn’t feel the flick fits in with my Haunted Hollywood theme can go do you-know-what with a chain saw.  Winking smile

The movie’s fictional Westerburg High School (named for Paul Westerberg, the lead singer of The Replacements, Winona Ryder’s favorite band at the time of the filming), supposedly located in Sherwood, Ohio, is actually an amalgamation of a few different L.A.-area places.  Interior scenes, as well as a few exteriors, were shot at what was then Osaka Sangyo University Education Center (OSULA), but is currently Bridges Academy, at 3921 Lauren Canyon Boulevard in Studio City.  You can check out some photos of the inside of Bridges here.  As you can see, it looks much the same today as it did when Heathers was shot almost 30 years ago.  The lockers are even still green!

Screenshot-006456

Screenshot-006457

The most recognizable spot used to portray Westerburg, though, is easily John Adams Middle School, at 2425 16th Street in Santa Monica, which appeared in the vast majority of Heathers’ exterior school scenes.  John Adams’ rear parking lot, situated off of 17th Street in the northeast portion of the campus, popped up countless times throughout the movie.

Screenshot-006449

Screenshot-006466

But it is the site’s auditorium that should be most memorable to fans.

Screenshot-006454

John Adams Middle School from Heathers-1110553

In Heathers, John Adams’ auditorium, which is located in the north portion of the campus along Pearl Street, masked as the exterior of Westerburg’s gym.

Screenshot-006452

John Adams Middle School from Heathers-1110551

The structure was featured several times in the flick.  It was in front of the auditorium that, in the immortal words of Heather Duke (my girl Shannen Doherty), Martha ‘Dumptruck’ Dunnstock (Carrie Lynn) “tried to buy the farm” by belly-flopping “in front of a car wearing a suicide note.”  Spoiler alert – Martha lives through the event in what Heather so eloquently describes as “just another case of a geek trying to imitate the popular people and failing miserably.”  (Heathers is nothing if not a wellspring of great one-liners!)

Screenshot-006450

John Adams Middle School from Heathers-1110555

Most notably, the auditorium was the site of Heathers’ infamously explosive climax in which Veronica (Ryder) thwarts J.D.’s (Slater) nefarious plan to “infect a generation” by blowing up a gym full of students during a pep rally.  Instead, J.D. winds up detonating the bomb on himself at the bottom of John Adam’s auditorium steps, while Veronica lights a cigarette using the ensuing flames.  Man, the movie is dark!  I had forgotten how much so until my latest re-watch, which had me shuddering.  Heathers is not just dark, it’s pitch black!

Screenshot-006465

John Adams Middle School from Heathers-1110552

Only the exterior of John Adams’ auditorium was used in Heathers (you can check out what the inside of the building looks like here) and, unfortunately,  I am unsure of where interior gym scenes were shot.  While the campus does boast a large gymnasium where I thought filming might possibly have occurred, as you can see in these photographs as compared to the screen captures below, it does not match the space that appeared in the movie.  Filming did not take place at Bridges’ gym, which you can see pictures of here and here, either.  And while several internet sources claim that the gym scenes were shot at Verdugo Hills High School, as you can see in this YouTube video, that does not appear to be the case.

Screenshot-006460

Screenshot-006461

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

John Adams Middle School from Heathers-1110551

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: John Adams Middle School, aka Westerburg High School from Heathers, is located at 2425 16th Street in Santa Monica.  The parking lot from the movie is situated off of 17th Street in the northeast portion of the campus and the auditorium can be found off Pearl Street in the northern section.

The Well from the Manhattan Well Murder of 1799

COS - One of the Nation's Most Haunted Spots-2944

Oh, do I love a good ghost story!  Back in 2014, my friend Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, sent me an article about a well in New York that was the site of an infamous 1799 murder.  The seven-foot by five-foot well, situated in the basement of a SoHo building that housed a restaurant for many years, but at the time of the article’s printing was being transformed into a COS clothing store outpost, was cited as one of the most haunted spots in the U.S.  With the clipping came a note from Owen, saying, “If you come to NYC, maybe you can get access to the basement for a future Haunted Hollywood post.”  As you can imagine, reading the blurb had my tongue wagging.  I immediately added the address to my Manhattan To-Stalk List and began researching the case, despite the fact that I had no plans of traveling to the Big Apple.  Flash forward to April 2016.  Shortly before the Grim Cheaper and I headed to New York for a last minute trip, I started madly combing through my list of area locales to compose a coherent stalking itinerary.  (Said itinerary was even color-coded!  I kid you not.)  One of the spots I, of course, looked into was the well.  By then, COS had opened and I was thrilled to discover, via countless photos on the boutique’s Yelp page, that the well was no longer located in an inaccessible basement, but in the men’s department on the shop’s lower level!

[ad]

For those not familiar with the case, here’s a brief breakdown.  On the evening of December 22nd, 1799, Gulielma Elmore Sands, or “Elma” as she was better known, walked out of the Greenwich Street boardinghouse where she lived, never to be heard from again.  Though she had informed her cousin, Catherine, that she was planning to elope with her rumored boyfriend, Levi Weeks, that night and the two were later spotted by several witnesses riding on a sleigh together, at some point things took a sinister turn.  When Elma failed to return home, Catherine asked Levi about the events of the evening, but he claimed not to have been with her.  It wasn’t until eleven days later that her body was discovered thanks to some boys who noticed a piece of clothing floating at the top of a Manhattan Water Company well near where they were playing and notified police.  Using grappling hooks, detectives probed the well and quickly uncovered Elma’s waterlogged corpse.  Her neck showed the telltale signs of strangulation.  Levi was charged with her murder shortly thereafter.  But the young defendant had a trick up his sleeve.  Thanks to his wealthy brother, Ezra, he secured Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr (yes, that Aaron Burr) as his legal counsel.  The two-day trial that followed, the first recorded murder trial in U.S. history, became a maelstrom of media reports and public scrutiny.  It was definitely the Trial of the Century – the 18th century.

  COS - One of the Nation's Most Haunted Spots-1140994

The case was considered a slam-dunk for the prosecution.  Not only was Levi reported to have been in a romantic relationship with Elma and the last person to see her alive, but Sands was rumored to be pregnant, which pointed to a motive.  Public outcry against Weeks hit the zenith point.  Hamilton and Burr were no slouches, though.  They painted Elma as a woman of highly questionable morals and fingered pretty much every other man in the county as possible culprits, creating a massive amount of reasonable doubt.  After just minutes of deliberation, the jury found Levi not guilty.  Sounds a lot like that other so-called Trial of the Century.  In fact, many articles about Elma’s murder refer to Burr and Hamilton as the “original Dream Team.”  The events that followed the verdict also parallel the O.J. proceedings, with Week’s lawyers faring about as well post-trial as their 1995 counterparts.  Hamilton was killed in a famous duel in 1804, shot by former legal partner Burr, which destroyed the one-time Vice President’s political career.  Rumor has it the judge who presided over the trial just up and vanished one day, never to be seen again.  And Weeks was so hated, he was forced to skip town.  Elma never found justice via the court system, but maybe karma stepped in on this one.  Amazingly, the case is still talked about today, more than 200 years after the fact.  That is in large part thanks to a restaurant named Manhattan Bistro.

COS - One of the Nation's Most Haunted Spots-1140992

In 1954, the four-story Federal-style building that had been erected on the site of the well in 1817 was purchased by the DaGrossa family, who opened up a Franco-American eatery on the lower level.  Manhattan Bistro became a local favorite and in 1980, the family decided to excavate the basement in order to create space for an office.  During the project, a large brick well was unearthed.  I am unsure of how its connection to Elma Sands was determined and, while some dispute its affiliation with the famous case (you can read their thoughts here and here), it did not take long for stories about the murder to spread once again.  Tales of the building being haunted by a woman followed and soon patrons were asking to be shown the well while dining.  The rest, as they say, is history.

COS - One of the Nation's Most Haunted Spots-2943

In 2010, the well was even detailed in an episode of the Travel Channel series Ghost Stories – Season 2’s “Elma Sands,” which you can watch here.

Screenshot-006438

Screenshot-006437

Restaurant manager Thomas King tells of many instances of hauntings in the episode.  One such tale, which was also chronicled in the book Ghosthunting New York City, had me shuttering.  As King tells it, one evening he ventured down to the basement to grab a bottle of wine from the large cage that contained the eatery’s liquor.  He unlocked the space, left the key in the lock, and stepped to the back wall to grab the bottle.  When he turned around a few minutes later, he saw that the gate had been locked behind him and the keys placed on a box just out of reach.  It was an hour before anyone noticed Thomas missing and headed downstairs to rescue him.

Screenshot-006443

Screenshot-006442

While Manhattan Bistro looks like it was a cute little spot, it was shuttered in 2013 after more than five decades in business for reasons I am not aware of.  Perhaps Elma cursed the place.  I mean, its Yelp reviews were downright terrible!  In May 2014, Schimenti Construction was hired to gut and reconstruct the building as a COS (short for Collection of Style) clothing store.  According to the article Owen sent me, though the overhaul was major, Schimenti was asked to preserve the site’s windows, façade, and infamous well.  The boutique opened its doors in December 2014.

COS - One of the Nation's Most Haunted Spots-1140947

COS’ head of communications Atul Pathak touted the site’s famous past in a 2015 The Village Voice article and described the lengths the company went to in preserving the well, saying,  “The historic prevalence of the space only adds to its appeal, as we are a brand that is committed to maintaining and restoring the original aspects and individual features of all of our buildings.  At COS, we appreciate the importance of incorporating our core aesthetic of modern, timeless, and functional design into our store interiors.  Prior to the store’s opening in December 2014, repairs were made to some of the bricks and mortar and the left side of the well, which was broken, was repaired.”

COS - One of the Nation's Most Haunted Spots-1140996

COS - One of the Nation's Most Haunted Spots-1140946

  What’s odd is that, for a company that went to such pains to restore the well, the employees could not have been less interested in speaking about it, to the point that they were downright rude.  When I first arrived at COS, I ventured up to one of the women working on the main level to ask if she could point me in the direction of the well.  She rolled her eyes and said it was downstairs.  I asked if she happened to know any tidbits about the restoration or why the company had been so keen on salvaging it and she told me she had no idea what I was talking about.  Still hopeful (I’m nothing if not an eternal optimist), I then ventured downstairs, where I happened to come across another employee and a manager of some sort.  They had just about as much interest in speaking with me as the woman upstairs and claimed not to have any idea why the well had been kept intact.  Their demeanor was rather surprising considering this sentence in The Village Voice: “Just like the diners of yore, the store, Pathak expects, will have some inquisitive customers — and he says COS is pleased to provide a setting where the structure can be a focal point of the store’s interior.”  Sadly, that was not my experience.

COS - One of the Nation's Most Haunted Spots-1140993

In fact, the employees were almost hostile in their attitude toward me, so much so that the Grim Cheaper, who literally never shops (especially at pricier places like COS – he didn’t earn that nickname for nothing!), had been looking at a blazer while we were there and was shockingly about to purchase it (had it in his hands and was heading to the counter) when he overheard my interaction with the manager.  As I walked over to him, he turned on his heel, returned to the rack, hung the blazer back up, and said, “No way I’m patronizing this place.”  Judging from the Yelp reviews, I am hardly the only one who has had a bad experience at the store.  Maybe Elma really has cursed the building, condemning any business that operates there to a lifetime of bad Yelp reviews!  Regardless of the rather unfriendly employees, I was still thrilled to see the haunting relic in person.

COS - One of the Nation's Most Haunted Spots-1140995

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

Big THANK YOU to Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, for telling me about this location!  Smile

COS - One of the Nation's Most Haunted Spots-1140945

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: COS is located at 129 Spring Street in New York’s SoHo neighborhood.  The well from the Manhattan Well Murder of 1799 can be found in the men’s department on the store’s lower level.

Rebecca’s Apartment from “Lights Out”

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3781

I am always tickled when I spot a location I have already stalked pop up in additional productions.  Amazingly, that happened twice in the past month with today’s locale, the former Highland Park branch of the Security Trust & Savings Bank.  I originally learned of the site thanks to its many appearances as the Battle Creek Police Department/FBI field office on CBS’ short-lived 2015 series Battle Creek, which was one of my and the Grim Cheaper’s favorites.  I ran out to stalk the building the day after the show was given the ax, just prior to writing this Scene It Before post for Los Angeles magazine.  Flash forward to earlier this month.  Not only did I spy the branch in a Season 1 episode of my and the GC’s latest obsession, Leverage, which we have been feverishly binge-watching on Netflix, but I also recognized it immediately as the apartment building where Rebecca (Teresa Palmer) lived in the 2016 horror movie Lights Out, the main house from which I blogged about on October 3rd.  So I figured that, even though I previously covered the building for LA mag, it was worthy of its own Haunted Hollywood write-up.

[ad]

The Security Trust & Savings Bank’s Highland Park branch was designed in 1923 by Parkinson & Parkinson, the father-and-son architecture team that also gave us Union Station (which I briefly blogged about here), Bullocks Wilshire (which I blogged about here), and Los Angeles City Hall (an oft-used filming spot that I somehow have yet to stalk).

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3786

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3788

Throughout the 1920s, Parkinson & Parkinson built a series of branches for the Security Trust chain, all of which boasted very similar brick and concrete Renaissance Revival-style façades.  While there were about a dozen of the structures dotting the L.A. landscape at one time, most have been lost to the wrecking ball.  But the Highland Park outpost still stands.

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3771

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3769

As does its sister branch and virtual twin, the former Security Trust & Savings Bank at 5303 Lankershim Boulevard in North Hollywood, which was erected in 1926 and currently houses The Federal Bar.  That property (pictured below) has appeared in everything from Perception to It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia to Parks and Recreation.  You can read my 2015 post on it here.

The Highland Park structure, Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #575, boasts 2 stories (plus a basement), 11,500 square feet of space, and a marble and granite interior.

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3791

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3779

I managed to snap a photo of that interior, which is really quite spectacular, through one of the building’s side windows while I was there.

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3784

I am unsure of the exact date that Security Trust & Savings shuttered the Highland Park branch or what the site was utilized for afterwards.  In recent years, though, the property has been the cause of much controversy, beginning in 2004 when City Councilman Ed Reyes started spearheading a campaign to transform it into a “constituent service center” that would provide office space to several municipal departments.  The only problem with Ed’s project, which was dubbed “Highland Park City Hall,” was that the building’s then owner, Dr. Richard Rutgard, wasn’t interested in selling – at least not for the price that was being proposed.  The original bid of $1,590,000, made on September 30th, 2004, was quickly denied.  In 2006, a higher offer of $2 million was introduced, but it was, again, declined.  The city continued to make offers up until March 2007, to no avail.  Then, the following month, a move was made to acquire the former bank branch via imminent domain.  Rutgard subsequently filed a lawsuit and, though he did lose the property, he was eventually awarded a settlement of $725,000 in 2009.

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3773

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3776

The Highland Park City Hall project never found its footing, though, and the former bank was left vacant and unused, except for the occasional filming.  And then things got really hinky.  Per the California Code of Civil Procedure, if a site is taken over via imminent domain, the city has ten years to either complete its plans with said site or propose a reauthorization of the existing stated public use.  If neither of those actions are taken, the property must be offered back to its original owner.  In this case, the city did not complete (or even begin) the renovation project within the decade.  And while a reauthorization was proposed, it was not done so by the ten-year deadline.  Regardless of that fact and over objections from Rutgard’s lawyers, according to The Eastsider website council members went ahead and approved the reauthorization.  What the wha?  Talk about shady!  Not to mention unethical and seemingly illegal (though I’m no lawyer, so what do I know?).  I am unsure of where this leaves the bank, but hopefully it will be rehabilitated and brought back to its original glory à la The Federal in the near future.

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3775

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3777

Security Trust & Savings Bank’s Highland Park branch pops up a couple of times toward the beginning of Lights Out.  It is there that Teresa first sees – and gets attacked – by the shadowy being that has been tormenting her brother at night.  For those who have not seen the movie, the utterly creepy segment involves Teresa waking up to discover the specter at the end of her bed.  If you’re feeling brave, you can check out a portion of the scene via the movie’s trailer here.

Screenshot-006425

Screenshot-006428

The bank building is shown from both its Avenue 56 and Figueroa Street sides in the film.

Screenshot-006433

Screenshot-006432

Only the exterior of the site appeared in Lights Out.  The interior of Rebecca’s apartment was a soundstage-built set.

Screenshot-006427

Screenshot-006431

As I mentioned earlier, Security Trust’s Highland Park branch was also featured in an early episode of Leverage.  In Season 1’s “The Bank Shot Job,” which aired in 2008, the building portrayed the Imperial Valley Bank in Juan, California, where Nathan Ford (Timothy Hutton) and his team thwarted a robbery.

Screenshot-006419

Screenshot-006418

The structure’s real life interior appeared in the episode, as well.

Screenshot-006416

Screenshot-006417

As I also mentioned earlier, the former bank portrayed Battle Creek PD on Battle Creek.  Only the building’s Avenue 56 side was ever shown on the series.

Screenshot-006415

Screenshot-006414

The inside was not utilized, either.  The interior of the Battle Creek Police Department, as well as that of the FBI field office were sets.

Screenshot-006410

Screenshot-006413

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

Rebecca's Apartment from Lights Out-3789

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Security Trust & Savings Bank’s Highland Park branch, aka Rebecca’s apartment from Lights Out, is located at 5601 North Figueroa Street in Highland Park.

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

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190370-2

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.

[ad]

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.

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190388

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190389

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.

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190377

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.

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190361

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190373

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.

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190364

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190348

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.)

 Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190378

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190379

 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.”

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190360

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.”

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190359

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190355

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.”

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190380

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190386

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;

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190381

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

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190385

if they checked in themselves;

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190358

did they walk down this hall;

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190354

or that one;

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190356

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

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190384

if they sat by the fire;

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190350

hung out in the lobby;

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190357

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

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190374

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.

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190351

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.

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190387

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190382

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.

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190383

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.

Hilton Sonoma Wine Country from Scream-1190376

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.

High Tower from “Dead Again”

High Tower from Dead Again-1200499

I did not see Dead Again when it was first released in 1991 (at 14, I was too young for such an intense thriller), but I vividly remember my parents coming home from the theatre raving about how great it was and how much I would have loved a particularly disturbing scene involving cigarettes.  It was not until years later, after I met the Grim Cheaper, that I finally sat down for a viewing.  The flick was worth the wait.  Dead Again is honestly one of the most well-crafted crime dramas I have ever watched.  And my parents were right – that cigarette scene is horrifyingly fabulous.  The film also boasts one of the spookiest locations ever featured in a movie – High Tower, the striking Italianate campanile (a word I just learned today!) housing the elevator leading to Amanda Sharp’s (Emma Thompson) hillside home.  I first stalked the site shortly after seeing Dead Again and have been back many times since.  In fact, I used to take an acting class just down the road from it and would drive by on a weekly basis.  Each time I would marvel at how lucky I was to be living in such a magical city, where passing by historic and iconic locales is natural happenstance.  It randomly struck me recently that I had never blogged about High Tower, despite it being the perfect Haunted Hollywood spot.  So I am amending that situation today.

[ad]

Though there are a few differing reports floating around online, according to the Los Angeles Historic Resources Survey, High Tower was originally constructed in 1923.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200480

At the time, the hillside it flanks looked quite a bit different, as you can see in photos of the structure from its early days here and here.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200469

High Tower from Dead Again-1200471

The elevator was originally installed to service the dotting of homes on the tiny street of Alta Loma Terrace, situated just northeast of the tower.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200497

In 1935, over a decade after High Tower’s inception, architect Carl Kay began construction on a series of four Streamline Moderne duplexes cantilevered directly behind the campanile on Broadview Terrace.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200507

The complex, which Kay modeled after Positano, Italy and dubbed “High Tower Court,” was not completed until 1956.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200478

Today, the elevator solely services the four High Tower Court properties.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200479

The garages for the complex are situated at the bottom of the hill, a good five stories below the homes, and, amazingly, none of the residences have direct street access (moving must seriously be a b*tch!), making the conveyance an absolute necessity.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200484

 High Tower from Dead Again-1200483

Without it, residents would have to resort to climbing a haphazard tangle of staircases comprised of more than 200 steps in order to access their units.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200482

High Tower from Dead Again-1200486

Each High Tower Court unit pays $51 per month for use of the elevator, which, while costly, is well worth it in my book.  (However, there is something to be said for the fact that anyone who decided to save money and forgo the perk would easily have the best legs in town!)  Sadly though, the structure is off-limits to the rest of us.  Without one of the coveted keys doled out to homeowners, the gated tower can’t be accessed.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200493

High Tower from Dead Again-1200492

While researching for this post, I was floored to learn via a 1993 Los Angeles Times article that, while the elevator is private, High Tower Court is publicly accessible – as long as you’re willing to hoof it those 200 steps.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200491

I wish I had known that fact before my most recent stalk of the place.  I so would have ventured up the hill!  Can you even imagine the views?  For those interested in journeying to the top, Secret Stairs-LA put together a fabulous itinerary of a 2.6-mile trek that will lead you there.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200496

High Tower from Dead Again-1200498

High Tower Court has attracted quite a few notable residents over the years, including illusionist David Copperfield, author Michael Connelly (several of his books are even set at High Tower), musician Michael Feinstein, and actress Adriana Caselotti (aka the voice of Snow White in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs).

High Tower from Dead Again-1200489

Though some reports state that Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love also lived at High Tower in the early ‘90s (during the time that In Utero was written and Frances Bean was born), that information is incorrect.  The couple actually resided just behind the complex at 6881 Alta Loma Terrace.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200494

High Tower appears a couple of times in Dead Again.  In the movie, Amanda, an amnesiac, resides in the large white home situated directly east of the elevator.

Screenshot-006384

High Tower from Dead Again-1200504

As ‘Piccolo’ Pete Dugan (Wayne Knight) tells her after finally discovering her true identity, “You live at 1454 Hightower in the old Carl Kay house.  You know, the one with the elevator?”  In reality, the address of the pad used in the flick is 2182 Broadview Terrace.

Screenshot-006382

According to William A. Gordon in The Ultimate Hollywood Tour Book, “The location was deliberately chosen (and even included in the original script), because the producers wanted to show that Emma Thompson was literally cut off from outside help.”

Screenshot-006388

High Tower from Dead Again-1200509

The inside of Amanda’s apartment appears to have been a set as it does match the actual interior of 2182 Broadview, which you can take a look at here.  (While you’re at it, you can also check out the interiors of the other three High Tower Court duplexes – 2181 Broadview, 2185 Broadview, and 2189 Broadview.)

Screenshot-006385

Screenshot-006387

In real life, Amanda’s residence, which was built in 1936, boasts 2 bedrooms, 4 baths, 2,067 square feet, and a 0.10-acre lot.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200506

Dead Again is hardly the only production to feature High Tower.

High Tower from Dead Again-1200472

In the Season 2 episode of Naked City titled “New York to L.A.,” which aired in 1961, Franklin Maquon (Frank Sutton) confronts and kills Caldwell Wyatt (Martin Balsam) just outside of the elevator.

Screenshot-006379

Screenshot-006380

Like Emma Thompson, Philip Marlowe (Elliott Gould) calls 2182 Broadview home in the 1973 noir The Long Goodbye.

Screenshot-006396

Screenshot-006397

Unlike Dead Again, though, it really does look as if the actual interior of the property was utilized in the shoot.

Screenshot-006398

Screenshot-006403

The kitchen seen in the movie, where Marlowe’s poor tabby refuses his attempts at feeding him some non-Courry-Brand cat food, is pretty much a direct match to the kitchen pictured in 2182’s MLS photos.

The Long Goodbye Kitchen

High Tower was also featured in a video adaptation of the first chapter of Michael Connelly’s 2006 book Echo Park.

Screenshot-006391

Screenshot-006392

And the site portrayed the apartment of murder victim Sandy Boudreau (Alexa Davalos), said to be at 121 Bendix Avenue, in the pilot episode of Raines, which aired in 2007.

Screenshot-006393

Screenshot-006394

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

High Tower from Dead Again-1200495

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: High Tower, from Dead Again, is located at 2178 High Tower Drive in the Hollywood Hills.  Amanda’s house from the movie can be found just up the hill at 2182 Broadview Terrace.  Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love’s former residence is located just around the corner at 6881 Alta Loma Terrace.

The Smith Estate from “Insidious: Chapter 2”

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200593

Considering I’ve been stalking full-time for close to a decade and annually covering Haunted Hollywood locales for just about as long, you’d think I’d have the market on spooky sites cornered by now.  That is definitely not the case, though.  I am continuously discovering new-to-me spots, scary and otherwise, which speaks more to the vast history and landscape of Los Angeles than anything else.  There’s always somewhere fresh to be explored in this magical place we call LaLaLand.  One frequent horror film star that I only just learned about is the Smith Estate, a historic Highland Park Victorian so sufficiently looming and mysterious I fell in love with it upon sight.  The pad literally looks like it was ripped right off a scary movie screen – so much so that I couldn’t help but pretend to be screaming in my ubiquitous header photo.

[ad]

The Smith Estate was originally built in 1887 for David P. Hatch, a practicing judge who also wrote books on the occult (fitting, considering his home!).  I first came across information about the striking Queen Anne-style residence, which can be found at 5905 El Mio Drive, while researching the Finis E. Yoakum House, another Highland Park horror film regular that I blogged about here.

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200565

In the 1890s, the 4,528-square-foot, 6-bedroom, 3-bath pad, which sits on a 0.53-acre lot, was sold to Charles Smith, who ran the Los Angeles Railway’s Yellow Car trolley system.  The Smith family continued to live on the premises through the late 1950s, garnering the home the moniker it is still known by today.  (The house is also sometimes referred to as “El Mio,” after the street it is located on.)

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200567

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200576

In 1988, after a succession of different occupants, then L.A. deputy mayor Michael Gage and his wife, Lacey, purchased the Smith Estate, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument.

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200566

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200571

The Gages sold the dwelling to its current owners in 1997 for $290,000.  Zillow estimates the property’s worth at just over $2 million today!

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200577

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200572

Situated atop a towering butte, the Smith Estate seems to loom over the entire city.  As I got out of the car and walked up to it, all I could think was, ‘This is a real life house on Haunted Hill!’

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200570

Because of its elevated layout, the property can be viewed from all sides, which made for an unusual stalk.

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200582

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200583

The Grim Cheaper and I had a blast venturing 360 degrees around the structure snapping pics of every angle.

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200569

I absolutely love the photo below!  Spooktastic!

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200574

Toward the lower portion of the sloped lot, we came across what we believe to be the home’s original garage.  Because of the way it is situated, I am guessing that there is, or at least was at one time, some sort of underground passage leading from the garage to the residence.

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200581

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200580

At the front of the house is an adorable in-law unit situated above the property’s detached three-car garage.

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200560

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200559

I would so live there!

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200558

Due to its aesthetic, it is not hard to see how the home came to be a favorite of horror movie directors.

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200575

The Smith Estate’s most famous onscreen appearance is in 2013’s Insidious: Chapter 2, in which it portrays the residence of Lorraine Lambert (Barbara Hershey), where Josh Lambert (Patrick Wilson), his wife, Renai (Rose Byrne), and their children move after having to leave their own house due to the events of the first film.

Screenshot-006370

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200568

According to the movie’s production notes, director James Wan said of the property, “This was an amazing location.  It’s really cool because the house is situated on the top of a mountain and the surrounding neighborhood houses are literally underneath it, so it is an amazing vantage point for views around Los Angeles.”  The pad’s hill top locale truly does give its such a fabulously imposing presence.  It would have such a different feel to it if it was situated on flat land.

Screenshot-006366

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200573

The Smith Estate looks much the same in person as it did onscreen.  Not much set decoration is needed to give the place that chilling quality horror flicks require.

Screenshot-006373

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200561

The real life interior of the home was used in Insidious: Chapter 2, as well.  Shooting on the premises really helped Rose Byrne get into character.  In the production notes, she is quoted as saying, “These places they find are very eerie and weird, and dark and low-ceilinged, and that for me is very scary.  I just think, ‘How could you live in this house?’  It’s just my sensibility; I’m just way too sensitive for it.  Even more than the ghosts and all those sequences, it’s the houses that get me.”  Me, too, Rose.  Me too!

Screenshot-006367

Screenshot-006368

You can check out a video of the Smith Estate’s interior here.

Screenshot-006369

Screenshot-006374

In 1967’s Spider Baby, aka The Maddest Story Ever Told, the Smith Estate plays the role of the Merrye (pronounced “Mary”) House, home of the Merrye family, history’s only sufferers of Merrye Syndrome – “a progressive age regression” causing victims to retreat “beyond the prenatal level, reverting to a pre-human condition of savagery and cannibalism.”  Yeah, I know – sounds like a real winner of a movie.  Winking smile

Screenshot-006356

Screenshot-006358

The Smith Estate also portrays the mysterious residence that college student Scotty Parker (Rebecca Balding) moves into in 1979’s The Silent Scream, though the property is made to appear as if it is situated on the coast in the flick.

Screenshot-006361

Screenshot-006362

Unless the dwelling underwent a serious renovation after The Silent Scream was filmed, it seems that only its exterior was utilized in the flick.  As you can see in the screen captures below as compared to the video I linked to earlier, not only is The Silent Scream home’s main stairwell in a completely different place than that of the Smith Estate, but the two interiors just don’t seem to match at all.

Screenshot-006363

Screenshot-006364

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

The Smith Estate from Insidious Chapter 2-1200563

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Smith Estate, from Insidious: Chapter 2, is located at 5905 El Mio Drive in Highland Park.

The Mütter Museum of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia

The Mutter Museum-1180351

I am into some admittedly weird stuff – murders, hauntings, all things macabre.  But a place I learned about while planning my 2016 trip to Pennsylvania seemed even a bit too morbid for me.  As DK Eyewitness Travel Guide described, The Mütter Museum of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia exhibits “curious and unusual items, including preserved specimens and wax anatomical and pathological models.”  While the book’s photograph of The Mütter’s display of 139 real human skulls had me drooling, I feared the site might be a bit too disturbing.  But I added it to my Philly To-Stalk List nonetheless.   When I showed the Grim Cheaper info on the museum, he became pretty dead-set against visiting, though, and I did not attempt to sway him.  Then fate stepped in during our first night in the City of Brotherly Love.  While eating dinner at a fabulous sidewalk table at Devon Seafood Grill (another DK Eyewitness Travel suggestion), we happened to strike up a conversation with the couple next to us.  Our new friends, Philadelphia natives both, were excited to share local recommendations and, as it turned out, one of their favorite places in the area was The Mütter Museum.  They assured us we couldn’t leave town without a visit – which is how we found ourselves knee-deep in medical curiosities just a couple of days later.

[ad]

The Mütter Museum was originally established thanks to Jefferson Medical College professor of surgery Thomas Dent Mütter.  In 1858, the doctor donated $30,000 as well as his vast collection of more than 1,700 specimens to The College of Physicians of Philadelphia with the request that they build a fireproof gallery to house the artifacts, which he hoped would be added to over the years, and hire a curator.  The school obliged, constructing a two-story brick building at the northeast corner of Locust and South 13th Streets in 1863.  The bottom level comprised the original Mütter Museum and the second floor served as The College’s headquarters.  A third story was eventually added as more space was needed.  (Sadly, the structure was torn down in 1930 and the spot where it once stood is now a parking lot.)

The Mutter Museum-1180348

By the turn of the century, The College was in need of even more space and the Cope and Stewardson architecture firm was commissioned to design a larger headquarters at 19 South 22nd Street.  The stately New Beaux Arts-style building was completed in 1909 and still houses the school, as well as The Mütter Museum, to this day.

The Mutter Museum-1180354

The Mutter Museum-1180349

The handsome structure has a haunting Midnight-in-the-Garden-of-Good-and-Evil-feel to it, which was made even stronger by the rain that started to fall as we arrived at the site.

The Mutter Museum-1180353

The Mutter Museum-1180355

The Mütter, which today houses more than 25,000 relics all related to medicine, health and disease, is considered one of the finest medical history museums in the world.  Sadly, due to the fact that there are actual human bodies and body parts on display, none of the exhibits can be photographed.  While I typically hate a no-photography rule, in this case, I completely understood the site’s use of discretion.

The Mutter Museum-1180360

Only the main exhibit hall is off-limits to cameras, though.  Photography is allowed in other areas, including Hutchinson Parlor, a space near The Mütter’s entrance which reminded me of the Haunted Mansion at Disneyland.  I literally wanted to move right in, pour myself a glass of champagne, light a fire, and curl up with a good mystery novel in one of the cozy red armchairs.

The Mutter Museum-5751

Pictures are also allowed in the Thomson Gallery, the museum’s temporary exhibit space which was hosting Perfect Vessels: Works by David Orr at the time we visited.

The Mutter Museum-5759

The incredible installation consisted of massive round photographs of human skulls which had been digitally altered by artist David Orr to appear perfectly symmetrical.

The Mutter Museum-5757

As you can imagine, I was completely taken with the images.

The Mutter Museum-5755

I would LOVE to have each and every one on display at my house during Halloween.  Heck, who am I kidding?  I’d keep them up year-round if I could get my hands on them!

The Mutter Museum-5756

Sadly, Perfect Vessels ended its run in January, but you can read more about the exhibit here.

The Mutter Museum-5754

Situated just off the Thomson Gallery is the Sir John Templeton Veranda and Medicinal Herb Garden, another area open to photography.

The Mutter Museum-5763

And let me tell you, it is striking!

The Mutter Museum-5762

The Midnight-in-the-Garden-of-Good-and-Evil-feel of the property is continued out onto the terraced oasis . . .

The Mutter Museum-5767

. . . and made even more prominent thanks to the rather gothic-looking church that abuts it.

The Mutter Museum-5766

With its dramatic greenery and . . .

The Mutter Museum-5760

. . . and stunning brick façade . . .

The Mutter Museum-5768

. . . it is no wonder the garden has become an extremely popular wedding venue.

The Mutter Museum-5761

It literally looks like something out of a fairytale.

The Mutter Museum-5764

I think that’s Hansel and Gretel’s house right there!

The Mutter Museum-5765

The property’s interior is no less striking thanks to what Mütter’s official website describes as “a 19th-century cabinet museum setting.”  Handsome wood cupboards housing all manner of artifacts are positioned in every corner of the dramatic space.  Prior to my visit, I had never seen a museum laid out in such a way and loved exploring the myriad of displays, pulling out drawers and walking around 360-degree glass cases.  The site feels more like the ornate private library of a wealthy eccentric scientist than a public museum.  (The image below, which shows The Mütter’s main room, is a screen capture from an episode of the Anthony Bourdain series The Layover, but more on that in a bit.)

Screenshot-006346

Screenshot-006353

Just a few of the unique curios housed at The Mütter include the largest human colon on display in the world (the “Mega-Colon,” as the museum refers to it, which measures 8 feet, 4 inches when stretched, is pictured below with Anthony Bourdain), slides of Albert Einstein’s brain (his brain was 15% larger than the average brain!), the aforementioned collection of 139 skulls (which once belonged to Viennese anatomist Joseph Hyrtl), a death cast of the original “Siamese” twins Chang and Eng, a portion of John Wilkes Booth’s vertebra, actual shrunken heads, and the Soap Lady.

Screenshot-006348

Screenshot-006347

The Mütter is a somber place and the experience of visiting it quite sobering.  But it is also utterly fascinating.  I am typically not one for museums.  At all.  I find myself easily bored while wandering through exhibits, the display cards far too tedious and time-consuming to read.  My best friend loves to recount the time we visited the Guggenheim in Manhattan.  As he tells it (while making a circling motion with his finger), “While we were all still on the first floor looking at the artwork, here comes Lindsay, zipping down the ramp, heading for the exit.”  Yep, I had already ventured up to the sixth floor and back down again while my best friend, his girlfriend, his mom, my parents, and the GC were all still perusing the lowest level.  That’s typically my modus operandi at museums.  At The Mütter, though, I looked at every single exhibit and read through every single information card.  I was transfixed by each item on display.  I honestly cannot more highly recommend a visit.  Even the GC enjoyed himself and he had been so reluctant to go.

The Mutter Museum-1180350

Bonus – The Mütter is also a filming location!  The 2011 Quay Brothers documentary short Through the Weeping Glass: On the Consolations of Life Everlasting was not only shot on location at the museum, but details its many collections.

Screenshot-006351

Screenshot-006354

As I mentioned above, Anthony Bourdain shot an episode of The Layover at The Mütter, Season 2’s “Philadelphia,” which aired in 2012.

Screenshot-006344

Screenshot-006345

During his visit, Bourdain apparently declared The Mütter’s onsite gift shop “the best gift shop ever.”  He’s not alone in that assertion.  The store was named Best Museum Gift Shop by Philadelphia magazine in 2012.  And I wholeheartedly agree.  It’s like a Halloween wonderland!  I purchased quite a few things there, including the coaster pictured below which is hands-down my favorite souvenir that I picked up while in town.

The Mutter Museum-5820

In the Season 1 episode of Ozzy and Jack’s World Detour titled “Iron Mountain Men,” which aired in 2016, Jack Osbourne took father Ozzy on a private, after-hours tour of The Mütter Museum as a surprise for the Prince of Darkness’ birthday.

Screenshot-006332-2

Screenshot-006337

While The Mütter also served as the inspiration for the American Morbidity Museum on American Horror Story: Freak Show, which aired in 2014, no filming actually took place there.

Screenshot-006330

Screenshot-006331

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

The Mutter Museum-1180352

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Mütter Museum of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia is located at 19 South 22nd Street in the city’s Rittenhouse-Fitler Historic District.  You can visit the museum’s official website here.  The property is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.