Jackie Robinson Memorial Field

Jackie Robinson Memorial Field (6 of 35)

Lamenting to the Grim Cheaper that I have nothing to blog about holds about as much weight as claiming I have nothing to wear – yet sometimes I feel that way despite my huge stalking backlog.  One spot I have been back-burnering for a while now (due to the sheer detail the post required) is Pasadena’s Jackie Robinson Memorial Field, where my girl Miss Marilyn Monroe posed for a photo shoot with Chicago White Soxers Joe Dobson, Gus Zernial and Hank Majeski in 1951.  I originally wrote about the locale in early 2013, but, as you may remember, it was fenced in and undergoing some sort of maintenance at the time.  Despite that, I was elated to still be able to pinpoint the various spots where the shoot had taken place and vowed to return when construction was complete to re-create some of the images.  I then somehow forgot all about it until fellow stalker Phil Grishayev posted this picture of himself at the field posing à la Marilyn in March 2018.  I was thrilled to see that the site was accessible at last and headed there shortly thereafter, only to find it closed for construction again!  I kid you not!  I finally ventured back this past September (after first making sure the field was actually open) and was so ecstatic to be standing in MM’s famous footsteps that, though I snapped images of the rock wall surrounding the stadium where most of the shoot took place, I forgot to capture the ancillary buildings which were also featured.  So I had to go back!  Yes, again!  For those counting, that puts the total number of stalks of this particular locale at four!

[ad]

Jackie Robinson Memorial Field sits just south of the Rose Bowl in the north part of Brookside Park, which was established in 1912.  Originally known simply as “Brookside Baseball Diamond No. 1,” the stadium was renamed in honor of the MLB great, who grew up in Pasadena, in 1988.

Brookside-Park-Marilyn-Monroe-22-of-22

Brookside-Park-Marilyn-Monroe-19-of-22

The field underwent a significant upgrade in 1933 through Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Works Progress Administration so that it could be used by the Chicago White Sox for Spring Training.  Several improvements were made during the revamp, including the addition of a large multi-tiered rock wall surrounding the bleacher area.  The team began holding training on the premises that same year and, excluding 1943 to 1945 (at which time Brookside Park was being utilized as housing for World War II soldiers), continued to do so through 1950.  Though the South Siders actually trained in Palm Springs the following year, when Twentieth Century Fox organized a photo shoot with the organization that March for their new starlet, who was coming off small but memorable roles in Asphalt Jungle and All About Eve, it was set up at the Chicago White Sox Spring Training Camp at Brookside Park.

Brookside-Park-Marilyn-Monroe-9-of-22

Brookside-Park-Marilyn-Monroe-8-of-22

With photographer Phil Burchman at the helm, Marilyn, Joe, Gus and Hank were captured in various baseball-themed stances, largely staged in front of the rock wall installed by the WPA.

ScreenShot7357

Two of the most famous images from the series are pictured above and below.

marilyn_whitesox-wall

Peering through the chain-link fencing surrounding the field during my 2012 visit was particularly heartbreaking.  Though I could see the rock wall that figured so prominently in the shoot, I could not sit on it and pose as Marilyn did.  To finally be able to do so six years later was incredible!

MM Brookside Park 12

I also re-created the starlet’s batting practice pic, but large white boards were, unfortunately, being stored in the exact spot where it was taken, barring much of the rock wall from view.

Marilyn Monroe Brookside Park

It took everything I had not to move them out of the way!  Maddeningly, when I returned for my fourth stalk of Jackie Robinson Memorial Field several months later, the boards were still in place!

Jackie Robinson Memorial Field (13 of 35)

Despite the pesky boards, I was able to scour the visible rocks and compare them to the ones pictured behind Marilyn to figure out exactly where she posed and was shocked at how many are still in place!  Obviously some have been swapped out over the years for repair and what-not, but the vast majority remain!  I’ve mapped out a few of the intact rocks using corresponding numbers in the collage below.

MM Rock Wall Comparison

Here’s an unmarked version of that same collage in which the rocks are more clearly visible.

Marilyn Monroe Brookside Park 3

And, in the interest of being thorough, here are full-sized versions of the two images from the collage in which you can see the rocks even more clearly.

c0d9f3f468524a1d479b64f3ae30b791

Jackie Robinson Memorial Field (1 of 1)

How exhilarating that a spot where the World’s Most Famous Blonde posed almost seven full decades ago is so preserved!

MMBrooksidePark

I was so excited about the consistencies that I got a little collage-happy with this post and spent more time than I care to admit editing and lining up photos.

MMBrooksidePark2

But, oh, what fun I had!  (The image below comes from a Frolic Galerie & Memorabilia listing, hence the imprinted logo.)

MMBrooksidePark3

The photos of Marilyn sitting were taken just a few feet west of where the batting practice pics were captured.

MMBrooksidePark5

The shot below gives us a better glimpse of that area of the wall.  As you can see, an additional, higher-tiered rock wall runs perpendicular to the one MM is sitting on.  Today though, foliage blocks it from view.

MMBrookside Park 6

You can just see the edge of it below.  The perpendicular wall makes a hard turn to the north just before the tree and then continues along the back side of the stadium’s bleachers.

Jackie Robinson Memorial Field (1 of 1)

The ancillary buildings that sit just west of and behind Jackie Robinson Memorial Field were also featured in the shoot.

MM Brookside Park 8

Unbelievably, they, too, remain largely unchanged from when they were captured in 1951!

MM Brookside Park 8

I was practically giddy running around comparing things.

MM Brookside Park 9

The structures do appear to be undergoing some sort of maintenance, though.

MM Brookside Park 10

Here’s hoping the powers that be recognize the site’s pop culture prominence and don’t alter the exteriors in any way.

MM Brookside Park 11

While putting together this post, I came across images from the shoot of Marilyn doing some batting practice at home plate (you can check out another one here).  Unfortunately, because I did not know about the images prior to any of my four stalks of Jackie Robinson Memorial Field, I did not venture over to that area to snap photos.  Looks like this locale is going to require a fifth visit!

il_794xN.1737863517_ivwy

Excluding the above, all of the pics from the shoot were taken on the west side of the field, mainly against the rock wall pictured below and the buildings located just west of it.

Jackie Robinson Memorial Field (15 of 35)

Jackie Robinson Memorial Field (12 of 35)

The specific areas used are noted below.  The buildings where the walking photos were taken are situated just off frame.

Jackie Robinson Memorial Field (14 of 35)

And, once again for thoroughness, an aerial view of the stadium with the spots used denoted is below.

Screenshot-010769

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

Jackie Robinson Memorial Field (1 of 35)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Jackie Robinson Memorial Field, where Marilyn Monroe’s 1951 photo shoot with the Chicago White Sox took place, is located in the northern section of Brookside Park at 678 North Arroyo Boulevard in Pasadena.

Farralone – Frank Sinatra’s Former House

P1020204

While doing research on the Chaplin Court apartment complex, which I blogged about last Thursday, I came across some information about an oft-filmed-at Chatsworth-area estate formerly owned by Old Blue Eyes himself, Frank Sinatra, that, for some inexplicable reason, I had somehow not previously known about.  The mansion, which in most circles is known simply as Farralone, is a marvel of modern design that just came on the public market for the very first time in history a couple of weeks ago.  And, let me tell you, I took one look at the photographs featured on the real estate listing and became just a wee-bit obsessed with stalking the place.  So I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out there last weekend to do just that.

P1020206 P1020205

P1020201 P1020200

Farralone, or the “Great Glass Mansion” or the “Sinatra Compound” as it is also sometimes called, was commissioned by Chase-Manhattan-Bank-heiress Dora Hutchison in 1951 and was designed by Pereira & Luckman, the architecture firm who also gave us the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Transamerica Pyramid in San Francisco, the Theme Building (aka The Encounter Restaurant & Bar) at the Los Angeles International Airport, and, my personal favorite, the Disneyland Hotel.  Dora built the house to be used as a party pad and regularly hosted rousing soirees where she counted Ava Gardner, Lucille Ball, Judy Garland, and Vincent Minnelli as guests.  When Dora moved back to her native New York, she leased the property to none other than Frank Sinatra, who remained there for almost ten years.  Sadly though, as you can see above, not much of the property is visible from the street.

ScreenShot2443 ScreenShot2446

ScreenShot2447 ScreenShot2448

But that’s why God created real estate listings!  The estate, which was just put on the market earlier this month for a cool $12 million, boasts sweeping views, parking for over 200 cars, 10,000 square feet of living space, 4 bedrooms, 6 baths, 3 private offices, a conference room, a detached gym, a 50-foot swimming pool, 14 acres of land, a vineyard, a production studio, 16-foot ceilings, glass walls, and a 1,000-square-foot, 1-bedroom, 2-bath guest house (with its own separate pool) where my girl Miss Marilyn Monroe supposedly lived in for a time.

P1020202

Farralone has seen so much filming over the years that, according to a December 2nd, 2011 Forbes article, it not only nets up to $2 million a year in location fees, but also “comes with a property manager who acts as a liaison with the studios, paid for by the studios.”  The article further states that the “main house also boasts a lower level production studio equipped with conference room, edit bays, private office and a separate entrance, all paid for and maintained by the studios.”  Ironically enough, when we showed up to stalk the property some filming was actually taking place.  The super-nice security guard on duty informed us the the shoot was for a reality dating show of some sort, but she was unsure of the name.

[ad]

ScreenShot2399 ScreenShot2398

ScreenShot2401 ScreenShot2402

In the Season 4 episode of Californication titled “Lawyers, Guns, and Money”, Farralone showed up as the residence belonging to Stu Beggs (aka Stephen Tobolowsky), where Marcy Ellen Runkle (aka Pamela Adlon) made a house call to give Stu a “full Kardashian” body wax.

ScreenShot2403 ScreenShot2405

ScreenShot2407 ScreenShot2409

In the 2001 thriller Swordfish, Farralone was the house where Gabriel Shear (aka John Travolta) lived and where Halle Berry famously shed her top for the very first time onscreen – an act for which she was supposedly paid a whopping $500,000.  Thanks to some crafty CGI, the Sinatra compound was made to appear as if it was located in the heart of Downtown Los Angeles for the film, instead of Chatsworth.

ScreenShot2416 ScreenShot2417

ScreenShot2413 ScreenShot2415

Farralone was also the home where Jack Wyatt (aka Will Ferrell) lived and threw his post-divorce party in the 2005 romantic comedy Bewitched.

ScreenShot2424 ScreenShot2425

ScreenShot2426 ScreenShot2428

In 2006’s Dreamgirls, Farralone stood in for the residence belonging to pop star Deena Jones (aka Beyonce Knowles) and her music-producer husband, Curtis Taylor Jr. (aka Jamie Foxx).

ScreenShot2454 ScreenShot2455

ScreenShot2456 ScreenShot2457

In the Season 2 episode of Mad Men titled “The Jet Set”, Farralone was used as the supposed-Palm-Springs-area home where Joy (aka Laura Ramsey) took Don Draper (aka Jon Hamm) while he was visiting California.

ScreenShot2458 ScreenShot2459

ScreenShot2460 ScreenShot2461

In the 2002 flick The Salton Sea, Farralone was the home where Nancy Plummer (aka Shirley Knight) and Verne Plummer (aka R. Lee Ermey) lived.

ScreenShot2467 ScreenShot2474

ScreenShot2469 ScreenShot2471

In 2001’s Tomcats, the Sinatra Compound was where Kyle Brenner (aka Jake Busey) lived.

ScreenShot2433 ScreenShot2434

ScreenShot2436 ScreenShot2438

The real estate listing mentioned that Farralone had been featured in an episode of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation and I really have to pat myself on the back for this one because as soon as I read those words I knew immediately that the episode in question was Season 9’s “Kill Me If You Can”.  I was not even watching CSI regularly back in 2008 when the “Kill Me If You Can” episode aired, but I had caught it on TV at some point and when I saw CSI mentioned in the listing, my mind immediately flashed to an image of Lawrence Fishburne standing by the Farralone pool while investigating the death of an art dealer.  Why these random, useless bits of location information remain stored in my head is beyond me, but they do.  Smile

ScreenShot2449 ScreenShot2451

ScreenShot2450 ScreenShot2453

Thanks to commenter Becky on the Design Public blog, I learned that in the Season 1 episode of Six Feet Under titled “An Open Book”, Farralone stood in for the home belonging to the parents of Brenda Chenowith (aka Rachel Griffiths).

ScreenShot2462 ScreenShot2463

ScreenShot2464 ScreenShot2466

And thanks to the HGTV website, I learned that Farralone was where the Design Star contestants lived during Season 4 of the reality series.

ScreenShot2475 ScreenShot2476

ScreenShot2480 ScreenShot2481

Location manager Scott Trimble also let me know that Farralone was where Optimus Prime came out of the swimming pool in the first Transformers movie.

ScreenShot2482 ScreenShot2483

ScreenShot2484 ScreenShot2485

Fellow stalker Jason informed me that the estate also showed up as the party location at the very beginning of 2005’s Kiss Kiss Bang Bang.

ScreenShot2442 ScreenShot2440

ScreenShot2439 ScreenShot2441

Farralone also popped up in the 2004 music video for Usher’s hit song “Burn”.

Usher–Burn–filmed at Farralone in Chatsworth

You can watch the “Burn” video by clicking above.

ScreenShot2410

Several articles have also claimed that the home appeared in the 2001 biopic Ali, but I scanned through that movie yesterday and did not seen anything resembling it pop up onscreen, so I am fairly certain that information is incorrect.  I am thinking that the house might have instead been featured in the similarly-named television movie Ali: An American Hero, but because I have never seen it and was unable to find it anywhere online,  I cannot verify that hunch.  One rumor that I can put to rest is that the Farralone pool was not actually the site of Marilyn Monroe’s second-to-last photo shoot, as the real estate listing and several articles about the property have claimed.  Truth be told, that photo shoot was not really a photo shoot at all, but simply consisted of photographer Lawrence Schiller snapping some stills of the starlet while she filmed scenes for her very last movie, Something’s Gotta Give.  The shoot, which took place a few days before Marilyn’s death and featured her skinny-dipping while talking to co-star Dean Martin, was not actually shot on location, but on a set that was built inside of Stage 14 on the Fox Studios lot in Century City.

ScreenShot2423 ScreenShot2420

ScreenShot2421 ScreenShot2422

As you can see above, the pool from Something’s Gotta Give does not match the real estate listing photographs of the Farralone pool.

You can watch a YouTube video of the Something’s Gotta Give pool scene being shot, during which it is stated that filming took place on Stage 14 of the Fox lot, by clicking above.

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Farralone, the former Frank Sinatra estate, is located at 9361 Farralone Avenue in Chatsworth.  You can visit the home’s official real estate listing here and you can check out some fabulous interior pics of the property here.