The Willmore from “Rosewood”

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The Grim Cheaper and I became obsessed with a myriad of new shows this year, namely Blindspot, Quantico (though I think that one may have already jumped the shark), The Family, Limitless, The Grinder (those last three have, sadly, all been cancelled), and Rosewood.  Oh, how we love Rosewood.   The police procedural perfectly mixes comedy with drama, the writing is witty and smart, and Morris Chestnut, who plays the endlessly positive and charming titular character Dr. Beaumont “Rosie” Rosewood, Jr. is perfection, as is Jaina Lee Ortiz, who portrays his fiery cynical counterpart, Det. Annalise Villa.  My favorite aspect of the show, though, is that, while set in Miami, it is lensed largely in Los Angeles.  (Beaumont’s Magic City Lab is one of the few non-L.A. locales featured on the series – it can be found at 2043 North Miami Avenue in Miami).  One location that I recently became obsessed with identifying was the gorgeous Italian Renaissance-style building used in the episode titled “Aortic Atresia and Art Installations.”  And I have the GC to thank for tracking it down.

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In “Aortic Atresia and Art Installations” (try saying that one three times fast!), Rosie and Villa are led to the Willmore Hotel, said to be located at 315 Collins Avenue in Miami, via a clue left for them by a cryptic serial killer they have been chasing.  Not only was the name “Willmore” shown prominently in the killer’s clue . . .

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. . . but it was also visible above the front doors when Villa and Rosie arrived on the scene.  For whatever reason, though, I was quick to assume that the name and signage were fakes.  Thank goodness for the GC because when I paused the episode to ask him where he thought the building might be located, he said, “Looks like Long Beach.  I’m guessing the name is real, too.”  Though I doubted the latter, I figured his Long Beach hunch was correct, so I did a quick Google search on my phone for “Willmore” and “Long Beach” and was shocked to see that he was right!  Not only is the Willmore a real place, but it is indeed located in the LBC!  Nicely done, GC!  I am not ashamed to admit that he completely outwitted me on this one!

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Both the interior and the exterior of the Willmore were featured on Rosewood and, though shown only briefly, I was captivated by the place’s beauty.  The interior, which you can see some photographs of here, reminds me quite a bit of the Millennium Biltmore Hotel in downtown L.A.

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The Willmore was originally built in 1927 by the Stillwell Hotel Corporation.  At the time, it was operated as an upscale apartment hotel and was known as the “Stillwell.”

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The 11-story structure was designed by Fisher, Lake and Traver, the same architecture firm who gave us the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel.

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Shortly after its inception, the property’s name was changed to the Willmore in honor of William Erwin Willmore, one of Long Beach’s first developers.

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Today, the building, which was deemed a City of Long Beach Historic Landmark in 1986, is made up of individually-owned condominiums, like this loft-style unit which came on the market in February 2015.  Love the half-exposed brick!

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Rosewood is not the only production to have made use of the site.  First Congregational Church, Long Beach, the main location featured in License to Wed, is situated across the street from the Willmore and, as such, the building was seen several times in the background of the 2007 romcom.

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The Willmore’s parking lot, located on the western side of the property, was also used as the church parking lot in a scene.

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The building was also where Henry (Paul Rudd) lived in Over Her Dead Body.  Ironically, way back in 2010, a fellow stalker named Virginie sent me the addresses of a couple of filming locations from the 2008 comedy, one of which was the Willmore.  I had never seen the movie and, aside from adding the sites to my To-Stalk List, did not do any further research on them, which is why I did not recognize the Willmore when it popped up on Rosewood.  It was not until I started gathering my Long Beach addresses together shortly before heading down there for a stalking expedition last week that I realized the connection.  Thank you, Virginie!

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The interior of Henry’s apartment was not a real Willmore unit, but a set.

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A portion of the Willmore’s bottom level houses a popular Italian restaurant named La Traviota.

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It was there that Henry and Ashley (Lake Bell) dined – and discussed cats – in Over Her Dead Body.

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Thanks to the book Emergency!: Behind the Scene (which was written by fellow stalker Richard Yokley), I learned that the Season 2 episode of Emergency! titled “Peace Pipe” was lensed at the Willmore.  Richard was even nice enough to provide the screen capture below.  Thank you, Richard!

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And, according to Location Filming in Long Beach, Ally McBeal and Profiler also did some filming at the Willmore, but I am unsure of which episodes in particular were shot there.

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

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Willmore, from the”Aortic Atresia and Art Installations” episode of Rosewood, is located at 315 West 3rd Street in Long Beach.

Joe Jost’s from “Win a Date with Tad Hamilton”

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As I’ve mentioned countless times before, Win a Date with Tad Hamilton is one of my all time favorite movies.  And I have long been dying to stalk the restaurant which stood in for Lil’ Dickens, the Frazier’s Bottom bar where Rosalie (aka Kate Bosworth), Pete (aka Topher Grace), Cathy (aka Ginnifer Goodwin), and Tad (aka Josh Duhamel – sigh!) hung out in the flick.  In real life, that bar is named Joe Jost’s and it is actually located in Long Beach, California, a good 2,300 miles west of the real Frazier’s Bottom.  So, since we were in the area this past weekend, I just had to drag my fiancé right out to stalk the place.

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Joe Jost’s was founded in 1924 by a man named, you guessed it, Joe Jost, who was born in a small town in Yugoslavia.  At only 16 years of age, after a four year apprenticeship in a barbershop, Joe left Yugoslavia and immigrated to the U.S.  He first settled in New York City where he continued his work as a barber for a few years before moving to the West Coast and setting up a home in Upland, California.  In 1920, Joe opened up the first Joe Jost’s, a combination barber shop/pool hall/bar/restaurant, in Newport Beach where he sold such goods as candy, cigarettes, and because prohibition was in effect, a non-alcoholic drink known as “near beer”.  In 1924, Joe moved his unique shop to its current location on Anaheim Street in Long Beach.  It wasn’t long, though, before the Barbering Commission closed down the barber shop portion of the establishment, claiming that cutting hair in close proximity to alcohol being served was not “safe”.  LOL  So, Joe abruptly removed his barbershop chairs and installed booths – the very same booths where Joe’s customers still sit today!  So cool!  🙂  Joe’s enjoyed immediate success as a restaurant and even managed to sustain itself throughout the depression years.  To date, the place has served over 5,000,000 Joe’s Special Sandwiches, over 7,000,000 pickled eggs, over 15,000,000 glasses of beer, and over 1,800,000 pounds of Marmion’s peanuts!  Joe’s is such an institution in Long Beach, in fact, that a term known as “josting” has been coined.  Josting refers to the act of taking a photograph of oneself in different locations all around the world while wearing a Joe Jost’s T-Shirt.  And, let me tell you, the T-shirts have been EVERYWHERE!  Joe’s walls are literally COVERED in such photographs and I can’t tell you how incredible it was to be looking at the hundreds upon hundreds upon hundreds of pictures of said patrons – always with their backs to the camera so that the Joe’s logo can be clearly seen – in such far off places as the Pyramids in Egypt, Heidelberg Castle in Germany, Namoto Island in Fiji, and the Arctic Circle (not kidding!).   Most amazing of all, though, were the numerous photographs of soldiers currently stationed in Iraq wearing Joe’s T-shirts. Incredible!  What an unbelievably cool tradition!!!  

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Because my fiancé and I were first-timers, we had to try one of everything on the menu.  And I have to say that even though I am a horribly picky eater, I LOVED it all!   The pickled egg (pictured above) – which sounds disgusting, I know – was incredible, the Marmion’s peanuts were de-lish!, and the Special . . . oh my god, the Special!  What can I even say about it except that it was simply A-MA-ZING!  Joe’s Special consists of a homemade Polish sausage (made from their own secret recipe), a pickle, a slice of Swiss Cheese, and mustard smacked in between two slices of rye bread.  And, oh my lord, is it good! 

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Because Lil’ Dickens is the regular hangout of Rosalie, Pete, and Cathy, Joe Jost’s shows up quite a few times in Win a Date.  The areas used include the main bar;

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and the billiards room, which was decked out with tables and chairs for the filming.

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Sadly, though, Pete and Rosie’s dart board was just a prop that was brought in for the filming and is not there in real life.  🙁

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Oddly enough, the area of the restaurant that I was most interested in stalking was the men’s bathroom, not so much because I wanted to see it in person, but because I wanted to verify if it was really there.  As I had suspected, though, the Lil’ Dickens bathroom, in which Pete confronts Tad telling him that if he breaks Rosalie’s heart he’ll tear him to pieces with his “bare hands or vicious rhetoric” LOL, is not the real Joe Jost’s bathroom.  Joe’s men’s room actually consists of one single room with a toilet and a sink (yes, I actually sent my fiancé in there to report back to me!), and because the scene called for a considerably larger restroom with actual stalls, a set had to be built.  Interestingly enough, though, according to Dan, one of the SUPER nice Joe’s crew members that I spoke with, the Lil’ Dickens bathroom set was actually built right there on the Joe Jost’s property, in the back area of the restaurant. 

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The crew even ended up using the real Joe’s men’s room door, after making some small modifications, as the door of the Lil’ Dickens men’s room set.  So cool!!!! 

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The crew also modified the real life Joe Jost sign, which is located in the pool hall area of the restaurant, into a Lil’ Dickens sign for the shoot.  Love it!  🙂

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Win a Date  is hardly the only production to film at Joe’s, though.  The restaurant is also where Kevin Costner took Whitney Houston on a date in 1992’s The Bodyguard.

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And where they danced to John Doe’s version of the song “I Will Always Love You”, which Whitney calls “depressing” in the scene.  LOL  

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The interior of Joe’s also stood in for the bar where Angelina Jolie worked in Gone in 60 Seconds.

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The exterior of that bar (pictured above), however, was a different location altogether.

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Joe’s showed up twice in the 2007 movie License to Wed, first as the site of Mandy Moore and John Krasinski’s pre-marriage group counseling . . .

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. . . and second as the spot where John and his friend, DeRay Davis, grab a drink towards the end of the movie.

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Producers definitely took some liberties when filming the exterior scenes for License to Wed, though.  In the flick, it is made to appear as if Joe’s is part of a tall building located underneath the L Train somewhere in Chicago.  In real life, though, Joe’s is a simple, small, one-story structure located on a busy Long Beach street corner.  I SO love how they incorporated the real life Joe’s storefront into the digitally altered Chicago-area establishing shots, though, rather than using a real Chicago location for the exterior.  So cool!  Joe’s has also been featured in the movies Madison, The Vanishing, and True Confessions and in episodes of Chance of a Lifetime, The ‘60s, Roswell, Boomtown, Clubhouse, and Classmates.  You can see a full list of Joe’s Hollywood credits here.

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Joe Jost’s is a VERY cool place and I honestly can’t recommend stalking it – or ordering up one of its Specials – enough! 

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

Stalk It: Joe Jost’s is located at 2803 East Anaheim Street in Long Beach.  You can visit their website here.