The “Punky Brewster” Grocery Store

Punky Brewster Grocery Store (11 of 21)

As I mentioned in my August 18th post about the buildings used in the opening credits of fave ‘80s television show Punky Brewster (which you can read here), one spot that remained a mystery was the grocery store where Punky Brewster (Soleil Moon Frye) offered to help patrons carry their bags in exchange for money.  I wondered in the post if the market might be located in Chicago, but fellow stalker Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, sent me an email that same day letting me know that he had tracked the site down – just around the corner from Shatto Place, where the majority of the Punky Brewster opening was filmed.  Sadly, he also informed me the grocery store was no longer standing.  I decided the location was still blog-worthy, though, and ran right out to stalk it two weekends ago while the Grim Cheaper and I were in L.A.

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The grocery store actually only appeared in the opening credits of Punky Brewster’s pilot episode, which was titled “Punky Finds a Home: Part I.”  All subsequent episodes featured a shortened version of the pilot’s credits.

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In one portion of the grocery store segment, several buildings are visible in the background.  It was those buildings that led Owen to the market’s location.  In his email, which included the mocked-up screen capture pictured below, he wrote, “In the attached image from the opening credits, the camera is looking east.  The building circled in red is 630 Shatto Place (the building is labeled “Retail Clerks Union” on Google Maps).  The white building circled in blue (the one with many windows) is 3075 Wilshire Blvd., at S. Westmoreland Ave.”

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He also included the east-facing, present-day, bird’s-eye view of those same buildings pictured below.

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And a 1980 aerial view from the Historic Aerials website, in which he circled the Punky Brewster market and its parking lot in green.  Owen said, “To the south of the grocery store you can see the slanted parking spaces along a wall, just like in the opening credits.”  He provided a corresponding present-day aerial view of the area, as well.

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He also dug up the 1968 image of the store pictured below on the USC Archives.  As you can see, he literally did all of my work for me on this one, so thank you, Owen!

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Because he did not know the market’s exact address, Owen suggested I check back-dated Los Angeles phone listings, saying, “Assuming the store was on the SE corner of W. 6th St. and S. Vermont Ave., I’m guessing you should look at addresses ~3190 W. 6th St. and 606 S. Vermont Ave.”  So, for my first attempt I searched the 1987 phone directory for 606 South Vermont and, lo and behold, there was a listing for a Kal’s Supermarket at that address, as you can see below!  Owen hit the nail right on the head!

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Today, 606 South Vermont Avenue is the site of the Wilshire/Vermont Station for the Los Angeles Metro, which, according to Gazette.net, boasts the longest escalators this side of the Mississippi.

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Punky Brewster Grocery Store (1 of 21)

The $136-million mixed-use station, which was designed by the architecture firm Arquitectonica, opened in 2007.

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The “transit village” consists of an upscale 449-unit apartment building and a whopping 36,000 square feet of retail space.  Such restaurants as Chipotle, The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf and Subway, as well as several boutiques, are located on the premises.

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Punky Brewster Grocery Store (13 of 21)

The two-panel mural that flanks the station’s southwest entrance was hand-painted by transmedia artist April Greiman and is titled “Hand Holding a Bowl of Rice.”  Greiman initially took the image with a video camera and then converted it into an oil painting.

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Punky Brewster Grocery Store (7 of 21)

Because of the way the Wilshire/Vermont Station is situated, I could not get a perfect photograph of the two buildings that Owen spotted in the Punky Brewster opening credits.  As you can see below, though, the picture that I was able to snap does match pretty closely what appeared onscreen in 1984.

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Punky Brewster Grocery Store (6 of 21)

  You can watch the opening credits from Punky Brewster’s pilot episode by clicking below.

For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter and InstagramAnd you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

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

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Kal’s Supermarket, the grocery store from the Punky Brewster opening credits, was formerly located at 606 South Vermont Avenue in Koreatown.  That site is now the Wilshire/Vermont Metro station.  The buildings that were featured in the Punky Brewster opening credits are located right around the corner on the 600 block of Shatto Place.  The brick building that Henry Warnimont (George Gaynes) first walked by was the Pierre Crest Apartments at 673 Shatto Place; the alleyway where Henry stepped over the sleeping homeless man is just north of 688 Shatto Place; the building that Punky skipped by was the Modena Apartments at 661 Shatto Place; and the site of Henry’s photography studio, which has since been torn down, can be found at 651 Shatto Place.

The Darkroom from “The Big Picture”

The Big Picture Restaurant (9 of 19)

Sometimes I think Mike, from MovieShotsLA, and I are one brain living in two different bodies.  Case in point – one of my most beloved movies of all time is the little-known 1989 sleeper The Big Picture, which I saw with my mom shortly after it originally came out almost two-and-a-half decades ago.  In the years since, I had never met anyone who had ever even heard of the flick, let alone loved it as much as I did.  So imagine my surprise when, during one of our first stalks together in 2008, Mike and I drove by the historic Vista Theatre in Los Feliz and he mentioned that it had been featured in one of his favorite films of all time . . . The Big Picture.  Yep – one brain, two bodies.  It was not until last year, though, that the two of us decided to track down the many locales used in the movie, the most important of which (for me, at least) was the extremely unique Indian restaurant that appeared in one of the opening scenes.  The trek was far easier said than done, though.

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The Indian restaurant in The Big Picture boasted a very unusual, camera-shaped façade.  Figuring that an eatery matching that description would be an easy find, I did a quick Google search for every permutation of “Indian restaurant shaped like a camera” that I could possibly think of, but none yielded any sort of result.  I then ordered I Killed Charles Bronson’s Cat, a book written by The Big Picture’s location manager, Barry Gremillion, hoping it would provide a lead.  And while the tome did prove to be a fascinating read and proffered information about several of the movie’s locales, maddeningly not a word was mentioned about the Indian eatery.  My next step was to track down Barry himself, which I managed to do via Facebook.  I sent him a message asking about the restaurant location and, amazingly enough, he wrote back less than ninety minutes later!  Barry informed me that while the eatery was no longer in operation, the camera façade could still be found on Wilshire Boulevard.  From there, tracking it down was a snap.  And ironically enough, it was a place I had actually been to before!

The Big Picture Restaurant (5 of 19)

The Big Picture Restaurant (4 of 19)

The programmatic/Streamline Moderne-style camera-shaped storefront was originally designed by architect Marcus P. Miller sometime during the late 1930s.  (There seem to be differing reports about the exact year of construction everywhere you look online, varying from 1935 to 1936 to 1937 to 1938).  The site, not surprisingly, originally housed a photography supply store named The Darkroom.  Miller assembled the whimsical façade, which consists of a nine-foot-tall replica of a 35-millimeter Argus camera, complete with a shutter speed indicator, winder and dual rangefinders, out of black Vitrolite glass.

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The Big Picture Restaurant (3 of 19)

A porthole window comprises the camera’s lens, on which, according to the book Images of America: Los Angeles Art Deco, newsreels were at one time projected to passersby.  (I absolutely love the photograph below in which a reflection of Mike taking my picture is visible in the porthole.)  The Darkroom, the façade of a which is a Los Angeles Cultural-Historic Monument, became so iconic and synonymous with the Miracle Mile area of L.A. that it inspired replicas at Disney-MGM Studios in Florida, Disney Studios Paris, and Universal Studios Orlando, all of which you can see photos of on the Yesterland website here.  And you can check out a historic picture of The Darkroom when it was still in operation here.

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Sometime during the mid-80s, an Indian restaurant named Sher-e Punjab opened at the site.  It was during that time that The Big Picture was filmed.  In late 1999, the fine dining establishment La Boca del Conga, which was owned in part by Jimmy Smits, Jennifer Lopez, Paul Rodriguez, and Sheila E., moved into the space.  It was there that I attended a party back in 2000.  Today, the property houses a Tex-Mex restaurant named El Toro Cantina and it looks pretty much exactly the same as it did during the La Boca del Conga days, which explains why I did not recognize it.  Most of the façade has, unfortunately, been hidden behind foliage and a large awning and, as you can see below, has been rendered inconspicuous.  You can read an interesting story about what became of The Darkroom signage here.

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The Big Picture Restaurant (19 of 19)

In The Big Picture, budding filmmaker Nick Chapman (Kevin Bacon) dines at Sher-e Punjab with his girlfriend, Susan Rawlings (Emily Longstreth), and friends, Emmet and Jenny Sumner (Michael McKean and Kim Miyori, respectively), after winning a prestigious student film award.

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The interior of the restaurant was also used in the filming.

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That interior looks quite a bit different today.

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And for some odd reason, there is currently a fish tank covering the inside of The Darkroom’s iconic porthole window.

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Sher-e Punjab also made a very brief appearance in 1993’s Falling Down.  In the movie, William ‘D-Fens’ Foster (Michael Douglas) walks past the eatery before heading to the “Swap Meet” next door to purchase his daughter a snow globe.

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Be sure to check out more Big Picture locations on Mike’s website, MovieShotsLA.

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You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER. And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: El Toro Cantina, aka The Darkroom, aka Sher-e Punjab from The Big Picture, is located at 5370 Wilshire Boulevard in the Miracle Mile area of Los Angeles.  You can visit the Cantina’s official website here.