Insomnia Cafe – The Inspiration for “Friends”

IMG_2209

Oh, to be able to visit a coffee shop, order a steaming latte and sit in a secluded corner sipping away!  Hard to believe that is something unattainable right now.  These certainly are strange days we are living in.  When things do get back to normal, one spot I am itching to re-patronize is Insomnia Cafe, the Fairfax District eatery that served as the impetus for Friends.  I first learned about the place way back in 1995 via an interview with show co-creator Marta Kauffman that appeared in Friends: The Official Companion Book.  In it, she talked about driving by the Beverly Boulevard cafe, taking note of its unusual name and thinking it would make for an interesting setting for a series.  She and writing partner Kevin Crane penned the treatment for Friends (initially titled – you guessed it! – “Insomnia Cafe”) just a few days later.  When I moved to Los Angeles about five years after first reading that interview, I found myself sitting at a stoplight on Beverly directly in front of the locale and just about fell over!  I couldn’t believe I was in the same spot Kauffman was when she conceived of one of the most seminal shows in television history!  In the years that followed, I passed by the site numerous times and doing so always brought a huge smile to my face.  Somehow though, I never ventured inside.  It wasn’t until last September when my friend Owen emailed me this USA Today article, which stated that Friends set decorator Greg Grande also used Insomnia Cafe as the inspiration for the design of the series’ iconic Central Perk set, that the locale went straight to the top of my To-Stalk List!  And I headed right over there just a few days later.

[ad]

Insomnia Cafe was originally established in March 1992 at a small storefront located at 13718 Ventura Boulevard in Sherman Oaks.  Founded by former nightclub promoter John Dunn, the late-night coffee shop, open until 3 a.m. on weekdays and 4 a.m. on weekends (hence the name), served up strongly caffeinated brew, but no cocktails.  Per a 1995 Los Angeles Times article, Dunn stopped using drugs and alcohol in 1989 and “wanted to create a place that conformed to his own lifestyle.”  The bohemian-style coffee bar, which the Times described as being “decorated with cast-off sofas” (sound familiar?), became an immediate hit.  It also drew quite a bit of ire from nearby homeowners who claimed the leagues of patrons frequenting the eatery made constant noise and wreaked havoc in their neighborhoods in the early morning hours.  Regardless, the cafe remained insanely popular and Dunn soon opened a sister site at 7286 Beverly Boulevard.

IMG_4721

IMG_4735

The Sherman Oaks location, which you can see photos of here, was where it was really at, though!  Artists, screenwriters, and teens would pack the place, venturing in for espresso, open mic nights, and live music.  The cafe also boasted legions of celebrity devotees.  Just a few of the well-knowns seen hanging out at the coffee bar include Robin Williams, Mel Gibson, Sharon Stone, O.J. Simpson, A.C. Cowlings, Dwight Yoakam, Jerry Seinfeld, Daryl Hannah, Bobcat Goldthwait, Tim McGraw, Faith Hill, Leonardo DiCaprio, members of the Smashing Pumpkins, and Beck (who performed on the open mic nights before he was famous).

 IMG_4734

Sadly, area homeowners eventually succeeded in their fight to close the place.  The Sherman Oaks Insomnia Cafe shut its doors in 1996.  The Beverly Boulevard site remained open, though, and is still going strong today!

IMG_4729

IMG_4730

It, too, has a very bohemian vibe – and serves up some great coffee!

IMG_4723

Per the Original Insomnia Cafe Facebook page, the Sherman Oaks location was the spot that actually served as inspiration for both Kauffman and Grande.  A recent post on it states, “What is so funny and sad is the newer Insomnia Cafe we built in L.A., not the original one in Sherman Oaks, keeps claiming to be the inspiration for the TV show Friends.  But the truth will always be known – Sherman Oaks Insomnia Cafe was it!  The characters were based on the customers of the Sherman Oaks, California store.”  I had the pleasure of speaking with Dunn recently and he confirmed the info.  He also informed me that Kauffman and Crane actually wrote the seven-page treatment for the series at the Sherman Oaks site!

IMG_4732

Kauffman, though, has repeatedly recounted first noticing the Insomnia Cafe moniker at the Beverly outpost.  In a 2010 interview she and Crane did for the Television Academy, she said, “We were driving along – I think it was Beverly Boulevard – and we saw a place called the Insomnia Cafe.  And I remember we were talking about how that would be a cool place to have as one of our main sets . . . we liked the idea of something being overcaffeinated.”

IMG_4738

Writer Saul Austerlitz also starts off his book Generation Friends by saying, “One day in late 1993, a young television writer named Marta Kauffman was driving down Beverly Boulevard when she passed a funky coffee shop called Insomnia Cafe, located across the street from an orthodox synagogue.  Full of lumpy couches and garish chairs, strings of Christmas lights and towering bookshelves piled high with mismatched books, the place was a beacon calling to the artists and slackers of the Fairfax-La Brea area.  Something about Insomnia Cafe grabbed her attention, and she began to mull over an intriguing idea.   Could a comedy series set in a coffee shop appeal to viewers?  Kauffman and Crane had only recently moved to California from New York, and found that they missed their old crew of friends from Manhattan terribly.  They had spent all their spare time together, done everything together, served as a kind of surrogate family.  What if they put together a show about that?”  The rest, as they say, is history.

IMG_4728

In an incredible twist, longtime Insomnia Cafe fan Greg Grande was hired as the series’ set decorator.  He loved the eatery’s funky, but comfortable vibe.  In Generation Friends, Austerlitz says, “He would stop in to grab some coffee at Insomnia Cafe and would be inspired anew each time by the fabulously quirky décor inside.  When it came time to dress the set of the new show’s coffee shop, Grande thought again of Insomnia Cafe and wanted to model the set’s look on what he remembered.”  As Grande told EW magazine in 2019, “The idea was to have it feel like it was kind of a living room, hang out space.  You know, not your typical generic coffee shop with the computers.  What did they used to call them back then?  Internet cafes?  So the vibe that Marta [Kauffman] and Kevin [Bright] and David Crane wanted was, let’s make this feel like it’s truly a comfortable, casual living room.  I had mentioned to them that there was a place in West Hollywood, — I still think it’s around — it was one of the first interesting coffee shops in L.A. called The Insomniac [sic] Café and that was kind of, in my world, the inspiration for eclectic, old, classic pieces of furniture.  Nothing really matched, but there was collectible artwork on the wall, so I took that and kind of drove that point in.  I made what I like to refer to as the seventh character on the show.”   (As I mentioned in this post, Central Perk’s design was also partially inspired by Arnold’s Turtle in New York.)

Amazingly, Central Perk is not the only television coffee shop modeled after the locale!  The Bold and the Beautiful’s Insomnia Cafe took not only design inspiration, but its name from the site!

screenshot-000384

screenshot-000385

And the eatery is also a filming location!

IMG_4731

It is there that Kevin (Michael Rady) and Laura (Abby Wathen) first meet in the 2013 romcom Random Encounters, which also starred Meghan Markle.

screenshot-000374

screenshot-000375

Insomnia Cafe is also a central location on the series Love Is -.

screenshot-000377

Kramer (Michael Richards) visited the Sherman Oaks outpost in the Season 4 episode of Seinfeld titled “The Trip: Part 1,” which aired in 1992.  Only the exterior of the café appeared in the episode, though.

screenshot-000371

Interiors were shot on a studio-built set.

screenshot-000372

screenshot-000373

In 1995, when MTV started airing My So-Called Life reruns, the network filmed a bunch of promos at the Sherman Oaks site, which resulted in teens popping by in droves in the hopes of seeing Claire Danes in person, as recounted in this article.  Unfortunately, I could not find clips of those promos with which to make screen captures anywhere.

IMG_4726

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

IMG_4737 -2

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Insomnia Cafe, the inspiration for both the television series Friends and its Central Perk set, can be found at 7286 Beverly Boulevard in Los Angeles’ Fairfax District.  The Sherman Oaks outpost of the coffee shop was formerly located at 13718 Ventura Boulevard.

The Urban Outfitters from “National Treasure”

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (2 of 2)

Today’s stalking venture is not only six years in the making, but a cross-country endeavor!  Way back in January 2013, as the Grim Cheaper and I were preparing to move from Pasadena to Palm Springs, I caught National Treasure on TV and immediately recognized the exterior of the Urban Outfitters in the flick as that of 139 West Colorado Boulevard, just a few blocks from where we lived at the time.  Seeking a reprieve from packing, I ran down there to see if the interior of the store had been used, as well.  Because it was an impromptu stalk, I did not bring screen captures or a clip of the scene to aid in the identification process, but what I saw when I arrived seemed to match what appeared in the film.  Being that I was in the middle of a move, the search went straight to the back of my mind as soon as I got home and did not get picked up again until I visited Philadelphia in September 2016.  During our stay in the City of Brotherly Love, I furiously researched locales from the 2004 adventure flick, largely shot in the area, and was shocked to come across a mention on Curbed LA that the Urban Outfitters from the movie was actually at 1627 Walnut Street near Rittenhouse Square.  Doubting my original find from three years prior, I dragged the GC right on over there, but it was obvious upon entering that it was not the spot where Benjamin Franklin Gates (Nicolas Cage), Abigail Chase (Diane Kruger) and Riley Poole (Justin Bartha) shopped for casual clothes mid-flick.  The Philly store, which you can see photos of here and here, has a very different feel to it than what was shown onscreen.  Somehow, upon returning home, I completely forgot about the locale yet again, though.  It was not until last month, when a fellow stalker named Wylen published a comment on my site letting me know that the Pasadena Urban Outfitters had appeared in an episode of My So-Called Life, that I was reminded of it.  So I headed right back out there, screen captures in hand this time, and am thrilled to finally be able to confirm that the Colorado Boulevard store is, indeed, the one from National Treasure.

[ad]

The Pasadena outpost of Urban Outfitters is housed inside a stately two-story brick structure in the heart of Old Town that is largely referred to as the “Wood & Jones building” in honor of its former longtime tenant, Wood & Jones printing company, established in 1907.  Founders Bert Wood and Fred Jones pinpointed Pasadena as the ideal place to headquarter their business after learning that the city had the highest per capita income in the country at the time.  The duo first set up shop in a space on Union Street before moving to Colorado Boulevard in 1909.

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (1 of 1)

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (2 of 32)

Early images of the printery, featured in a 2010 interview Huell Howser did with Wood’s granddaughter, Hanna, for KCET, are pictured below.  And you can check out a photo of the outside of the building taken in 1936 here.  It is amazing how little of the exterior has been altered over the years.

Screenshot-010210

Screenshot-010211

When Jones passed away in the 1940s, the Wood family took over full operation of the business and continued to run it through 1994, at which time it was sold to longtime employee J.J. Gish.  Per the book Historic Pasadena, the Woods held on to the Old Town building, though, and continue to own it to this day – its lineage honored by the company signage that remains present on its façade.

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (4 of 32)

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (11 of 32)

Wood & Jones vacated the building later that same year (it is still in operation just a few miles away at 2040 East Walnut Street, though it is now known as “Typecraft”) and Urban Outfitters moved in shortly thereafter.

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (24 of 32)

It has been going strong ever since.

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (25 of 32)

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (23 of 32)

Though the exterior of the store is shown briefly in National Treasure . . .

Screenshot-010320

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (3 of 32)

. . . it is on the second level that all of the action happens.

Screenshot-010328

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (32 of 32)

The stairs leading to the second level, which are visible at the beginning and end of the scene, actually served as my smoking gun, so to say, when it came to identifying the location.  Their general layout, railing, and the elevator door situated on the landing match that of the Pasadena store perfectly.

Screenshot-010327

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (16 of 32)

For the shoot, a cashier counter was set up in the southwest corner of the second floor, in the area pictured in my photograph below.

Screenshot-010329

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (1 of 1)

Unfortunately, I did not get great pictures of that exact spot as I thought filming had taken place a little east of where it actually did, but you can see it more clearly in the Yelp image from user Ghalya M. below.

Screenshot-010341

A display wall now cuts through the area where filming occurred, separating women’s clothing from lingerie and greatly limiting the view of the large steel girder that could be seen behind the prop cashier counter in the scene.  (That girder is denoted with pink arrows in the images below.)

Screenshot-010336

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (13 of 32)

The wall beams visible in the far background behind the group are also now covered over with display paneling, but are still partially evident.

Screenshot-010334

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (15 of 32)

It is not very hard to see how the Pasadena Urban Outfitters came to be used in the film.  With all of the exposed brick and ductwork, it definitely has a Philadelphia feel, much more so, ironically, than its Rittenhouse Square counterpart, which boasts a subdued, sleek, modern aesthetic.

Screenshot-010340

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (31 of 32)

 Per the Clothes On Film website, the Urban Outfitters segment was not an original plot element.  Author Lord Christopher Laverty explains, “Despite serving a worthwhile purpose in character development, the scene in which Abigail and Gates bond at an Urban Outfitters was actually a late addition to the script.  As the costumes had already been selected, [costume designer] Judianna Makovsky had to think of a store where the two protagonists could feasibly buy these clothes.  Urban Outfitters was within shooting distance [editor’s note – Jon Voight’s house from the film is nearby in South Pasadena] and so seemed like the logical choice.”  Interestingly, Abigail’s jacket was actually an Abercrombie & Fitch score, her sweater was designer, and her boots were from Barneys New York Co-Op, while Ben’s jacket was a Levi’s find.

Screenshot-010333

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (27 of 32)

I am 99.9% certain that the dressing room where Ben and Abigail changed out of their formal wear was a set, for two reasons.  A, the space just looks like a set (due to privacy reasons, rarely are double-swinging doors utilized in dressing rooms and even more rarely are they as low as the ones featured in National Treasure) and B, the dressing room at the Pasadena Urban Outfitters does not look anything like what is pictured below.

Screenshot-010321

Screenshot-010324

Which is a shame as I so would have loved to re-create the moment below.

Screenshot-010326

As fellow stalker Wylen informed me, back in 1994, when the building still housed Wood & Jones, it served as the print shop owned by Patty Chase’s (Bess Armstrong) father, Chuck (Paul Dooley), in the Season 1 episode of My So-Called Life titled “Father Figures.”  Wylen’s dad actually worked on the premises at the time, which is how he knew of the filming.  In his comment, he stated, “I think in the episode they even named Patty’s dad’s company Wood & Jones, possibly because they may have had an establishing shot of the actual building, but that didn’t end up in the episode.”  Wylen is correct – the shop is referred to as “Wood & Jones” in “Father Figures.”  He is also likely right about the establishing shot.  What I did not realize until sitting down to write this post, though, is that, per IMDB, Chuck’s last name is actually “Wood ” –  obviously to match the shop’s moniker.  How fascinating that the real life signage of a building (one that never ended up being shown) not only informed the name of a company on the series, but also that of a character!  Wylen went on to say, “I remember Wood & Jones closed up shop the same year and my family helped move things out and a bunch of stuff that was in the background we ended up taking.  When I saw the episode my mom and I kept saying, ‘Hey, we have that!’”  So incredibly cool to not only have an artifact from My So-Called Life, but a piece of Pasadena history.

Screenshot-010349

Screenshot-010350

As I mentioned earlier, in 2010 Huell Howser filmed a brief segment for KCET in front of Urban Outfitters.  You can watch it here.

Screenshot-010208

Screenshot-010209

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

Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Wylen for informing me of this location’s My So-Called Life connection!  Smile

Urban Outfitters from National Treasure (2 of 2)-2

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Urban Outfitters from National Treasure is located at 139 West Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena.  You can visit the store’s official website here.

Rickie’s Alley from the “So-Called Angels” Episode of “My So-Called Life”

IMG_4473

As I have mentioned quite a few times in recent months, I just finished re-watching fave television series My So-Called Life from the beginning.  And I have to say that when I came to the final episode, it was a very bittersweet moment for me as it brought up all of the same sad emotions I experienced back in 1995 when the show was first cancelled.  Sigh.  The only bright spot in coming to the end of my re-watching of the series was the fact that I could then begin to watch the countless special features on the My So-Called Life: The Complete Series DVDs, including – count ‘em! – seven full-length commentaries of six different episodes.  And those commentaries did NOT disappoint.  There were two commentaries included on the Christmas-themed “So-Called Angels” episode – one with series creator Winnie Holzman and actor Wilson Cruz and a second with the episode’s director Scott Winant.  Thankfully, both Wilson and Scott dished the dirt on a few of the episode’s locations – most notably the alley featured in the opening scene, which I ran right out to stalk early last week.

ScreenCap760 ScreenCap759

ScreenCap761 ScreenCap762

In the opening scene of “So-Called Angels”, Rickie Vasquez (aka Wilson Cruz) is shown beaten and bloody, struggling to stand near the end of a snow-covered brick alley.

ScreenCap763 ScreenCap764

The camera then pans over to Angel (aka special guest star, singer Juliana Hatfield) who is sitting on the sidewalk out in front of the alley.  According to Scott Winant, a snow machine had to be brought in for the filming of the scene and, at the time, the weather outside was a whopping eighty degrees despite the fact that the episode was filmed in late October.

ScreenCap766 ScreenCap767

Later on in the episode, Patty Chase (aka Bess Armstrong) follows Angel down that exact same alley while looking for her daughter, Angela Chase (aka Claire Danes), who has gone missing.

IMG_4474 IMG_4475

IMG_4464 IMG_4472

Wilson Cruz mentioned in his commentary of the episode that the alley was located on Bagley Avenue in Culver City, just down the street from Sony Pictures Studios, so I immediately started searching aerial views of Bagley to see if I could find it.  As it turns out, though, Bagley is a residential street made up almost entirely of private homes – until it reaches Venice Boulevard, that is, where it turns into Main Street, a short one-block-long road with commercial businesses located on either side of it.  And, sure enough, right in the middle of Main Street was Rickie’s alley!  And while the shops located on either side of it (a pizza restaurant named LaRocco’s Pizzeria and a storefront that is currently vacant) have changed slightly over the years, the alley is still very recognizable from the episode.  Love it!

MSCL fire hydrant 2 MSCL fire hydrant

I just about died when I saw that the yellow fire hydrant which was visible in the background behind Juliana Hatfield in the opening scene was STILL there almost two full decades later!  So incredibly cool!

ScreenCap769 ScreenCap770

ScreenCap771 ScreenCap772

Scott Winant also mentioned in his commentary that the grocery store where Jordan Catalano (aka Jared Leto) ran into Rickie and offered him a ride was located right through the alley.  Sadly though, that grocery store is no longer.

IMG_4477 IMG_4491

A SUPER nice neighborhood business owner, who gave me all sorts of scoop on filming in the area, informed me that the former Balian Market was converted into a renal dialysis center a few years back.

 IMG_4488 IMG_4486

Thankfully though, the shop-owner also informed me that very little had been done to alter the exterior of the grocery store building since the dialysis center purchased it.  Yay!  The area which appeared in the “So-Called Angels” episode of My So-Called Life was the former market’s back entrance, the doors of which have since been changed.

My So Called Life grocery store ScreenCap775 

My So-Called Life grocery store 2 IMG_4483 

But, as you can see in the above photographs and screen captures, everything else matches up perfectly, including the cut-out decor elements of the cement wall located next to the door and the iron beams which hold up the awning.

[ad]

ScreenCap773 ScreenCap777

IMG_4482 IMG_4480

The buildings which appear in the background behind Jordan’s car in the scene also look very much the same today as they did when filming took place over seventeen years ago.

The super nice business owner also informed me that Rickie’s alley appeared in episodes of the television series Boomtown and Bones and in the yet-to-released music video for Kim Kardashian’s new single featuring Kayne West. 

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

My So-Called Life alley map

Stalk It: Rickie’s alley, from the “So-Called Angels” episode of My So-Called Life, can be found directly north of LaRocco’s Pizzeria, which is located at 3819 Main Street in Culver City.  The former Balian’s Market, the grocery store where Jordan ran into Rickie, can be found just through the alley at 9432 Venice Boulevard in Culver City.  My So-Called Life was filmed in the market’s back entrance area, which is denoted with a pink arrow in the above aerial view.  Jordan’s car was parked in the spot that is marked with a pink “X”.

Los Angeles County Museum of Art from “My So-Called Life”

Urban-Light-LACMA-(35-of-41)

Since I spend the majority of my weekends dragging the Grim Cheaper out on various stalking adventures, this past Saturday, in honor of our first Valentine’s Day together as a married couple, I decided to create a scavenger hunt for him based on his many likes and hobbies.  I do have to admit that while most of our destinations were places that I had little to no interest in visiting, the hunt was not entirely an un-selfish endeavor on my part.  A few of our stops were, in fact, stalking locations – most notably the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, aka LACMA, which was featured in an episode of fave show My So-Called Life.  As I mentioned a few weeks back, I just recently started re-watching My So-Called Life from the beginning and I became just a bit obsessed with tracking down the museum where Angela Chase (aka Claire Danes) and the gang go on a field trip in the episode titled “Why Jordan Can’t Read”.  Because the series was filmed so prominently in the Pasadena area, I had a hunch that the museum used was the Huntington Library – a place where I just so happen to have a filming contact.  So, I emailed a few screen captures from the episode over to Dinah, my contact, to see if she could confirm or deny my suspicion.  As it turns out, though, my hunch was wrong – hey, it does happen!  Winking smile – Huntington was not the museum which appeared in the episode.  Thankfully though, Dinah knows her museums!  She informed me that she was 99.9% certain that filming had taken place at LACMA.  So, because the GC absolutely LOVES visiting museums, while I typically do not, I immediately added the place to his Valentine’s Day scavenger hunt and we headed out there this past Saturday morning.  And, let me tell you, once he found out that we would spending the day at a museum, he could NOT have been more excited.

ScreenCap419 ScreenCap420

ScreenCap421 ScreenCap432

In the “Why Jordan Can’t Read” episode of My So-Called Life, Angela and her classmates, Jordan Catalano (aka Jared Leto), Rayanne Graff (aka A.J. Langer), Rickie Vasquez (aka Wilson Cruz), and Brian Krakow (aka Devon Gummersall), spend the morning on a field trip at a supposed Three Rivers, Pennsylvania-area museum, during which Jordan is nice to Angela, as she says, “like out of nowhere!”

LACMA numbers 1 LACMA numbers 2

Because the museum has been remodeled in recent years and various artworks relocated to different galleries, it was quite difficult to pinpoint the exact spot where filming had taken place.  I had a few clues to help me out on my quest, though, most notably a set of numbers that was visible in the background of several scenes.  As you can see in the above screen captures, those numbers were all in the 200 range.

IMG_3891

Oddly enough, though, I could only find numbers like that in one area of the museum – on the third floor of the Hammer Building in the Art of the Ancient World section – yet those numbers were all in the 300 range, which left me completely puzzled.  As fate would have it, though, I happened to run into an EXTREMELY helpful and EXTREMELY friendly museum docent who became determined to assist me with my quest.  I had downloaded twenty or so screen captures from the “Why Jordan Can’t Read” episode onto the GC’s iPad – which he was gifted for Christmas from his boss and which is an absolutely AMAZING stalking tool – which I proceeded to show to my new friend.  After seeing those 200 numbers, he informed me that the third level of the Hammer building was actually known as the second level back in the ‘90s when My So-Called Life was filmed, and had only be re-numbered in recent years during the remodel.  Which meant that I was in the right spot!  Yay!

IMG_3895 IMG_3900

IMG_3918 IMG_3920

By looking at the screen captures, the docent and I were able to determine that all of the filming of the episode had taken place on the now third floor (former second floor) of the museum’s Hammer Building in the Charles E. and Flora L. Thornton Gallery and a few of the smaller galleries which surround it.

Wainscotting MSCL Wainscotting MSCL 3

As you can see in the above screen capture and photograph, the wainscoting on the gallery walls and the molding on the gallery entrances match up perfectly to what appeared onscreen.

ScreenCap423 IMG_3892

Once I figured out that I was in the right place, I then proceeded to go on a scavenger hunt of my very own to track down a few of the specific works of art that had appeared in the episode.  And, let me tell you, I had an absolute blast doing so!  In fact, it was quite possibly the most fun that I have had at a museum in my entire life!  A few of the works that I was able to locate include a Rembrandt portrait;

ScreenCap424 IMG_3893

a painting titled “Portrait of Cardinal Roberto Ubaldino” by Guido Reni;

ScreenCap427 IMG_3894

the sculptures that Angela, Jordan, and Brian looked at;

MSCL painting IMG_3908

the portrait that Angela and Jordan were standing in front of when he invited her to watch his band, the Frozen Embryos, rehearse;

ScreenCap431 IMG_3916

and the scary-looking sculpture that the camera panned in on towards the end of the museum scene.

ScreenCap433 IMG_3906

I was most excited, though, to spot the statute where Jordan and Angela first started talking in the episode.

ScreenCap434 IMG_3904

And I, of course, just had to re-create Jordan’s pensive stare after I found it, which the GC was NOT at all happy about.  Winking smile The statue is currently displayed on a much shorter base than it was when My So-Called Life was filmed, which is why it appears to be so much lower to the ground in my photograph than it appeared onscreen.

My So Called Life Sculpture IMG_3911

Sadly, the sculpture room where Sharon Cherski (aka Devon Odessa) and her boyfriend Kyle Vinnovich (aka Johnny Green) spent the majority of the field trip has since been dismantled.  Although I did manage to locate one of the sculptures which appeared in that scene.

ScreenCap430

Even sadder still was the fact that I could not for the life of me track down the display case where Rayanne inadvertently left Angela’s love letter to Jordan.

ScreenCap410 ScreenCap411

ScreenCap414 ScreenCap415

ScreenCap417 ScreenCap418

The very same area of LACMA also appears briefly in the 1991 comedy L.A. Story, in the scene in which Harris K. Telemacher (aka Steve Martin) roller-skates through a museum while his friend Ariel (aka Susan Forristal) video-tapes his exploits.

My So-Called Life picture

The “Portrait of Cardinal Roberto Ubaldino”, which appeared in My So-Called Life, was also featured in L.A. Story.

My So-Called Life statue

As was Jordan and Angela’s statue.  Love it!

ScreenCap438 ScreenCap440

ScreenCap441 ScreenCap442

LACMA was also the site of the black-and-white ball, to which superstar Cher wore red, in 1992’s The Player.

ScreenCap443 ScreenCap444

ScreenCap447 ScreenCap449

In the Season 4 episode of Melrose Place titled “Drawing Henry”, Brooke Armstrong (aka Kristin Davis) and Jack Parezi (aka Antonio Sabato Jr.) meet up at LACMA to discuss their burgeoning affair and wind up being spotted by Billy Campbell (aka Andrew Shue).

[ad]

ScreenCap409 ScreenCap406

ScreenCap405 ScreenCap408

Located in front of LACMA’s main entrance is the famous Urban Light display, which I blogged about back in April of last year after its appearance in a Vanity Fair photo shoot featuring the male members of the cast of Glee.  That very same light instillation was also used in the recently-released No Strings Attached, in the scene in which Adam (aka Ashton Kutcher) takes Emma (aka Natalie Portman) out on a Valentine’s Day date.  LACMA was also featured in Breaking All The Rules, Strong Medicine, Crocodile Dundee in Los Angeles, Born Yesterday, The Rockford Files, From the Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler and Now You See It, Now You Don’t.

IMG_3879 IMG_3880

LACMA also has a few celebrity connections, as well.  There is a statue titled “Michael Jackson and Bubbles”, which was designed by artist Jeff Koons in 1988, on display in the Broad Contemporary Art Museum building.

IMG_3881

I so love that Mr. Koons captured MJ’s ever-present loafer-and-white-sock-combination so perfectly!

IMG_3924

And there is also a Tiffany lamp from Barbra Streisand’s personal collection on display in the Ahmanson Building.

IMG_3923

IMG_3922 IMG_3921

Also in the Ahmanson Building is an extremely ornate rosewood mirror which boasts an intriguing history.  The massive mirror, which was designed by New York’s Herter Brothers interior design firm in 1873, originally belonged to Milton Slocum Latham, a former U.S. senator and governor of California, and was on display in his 50-room Menlo Park mansion, Thurlow Lodge.  Slocum went bankrupt shortly after construction on his mansion was completed and then passed away in 1882.  His former home was demolished in 1942 and the mirror was subsequently transferred to none other than the prop department of a Hollywood movie studio – although I am unsure of which one – where it remained until 1991, at which time it became the property of LACMA.   So incredibly interesting!  I am going to have to keep my eyes peeled from now on to see if that mirror pops up in any movies that were made between 1942 and 1991!

IMG_3884 IMG_3913

For those fellow stalkers who are also interested in seeing works of art as well as filming locations Winking smile, the museum features some amazing pieces, including paintings by both Monet and Picasso.

IMG_3876 IMG_3877

There is also a great view of the Hollywood sign which can be seen from the top of the Broad Contemporary Art Museum building.

Big THANK YOU to Dinah, from the Huntington Library, for finding this location for me!  Smile

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, from My So-Called Life and L.A. Story, is located at 5905 Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles.  You can visit the museum’s official website here.  Both My So-Called Life and L.A. Story were filmed in the museum’s Art of the Ancient World section, which can be found on the third floor of the Hammer Building, in the Charles E. and Flora L. Thornton Gallery.   The works of art that appeared in MSCL are spread out among the different galleries located on the third floor of the Hammer Building.

Angela’s Substitute Teacher’s Apartment Building from “My So-Called Life”

My So-Called Life address number

Well, it appears as if I am definitely on a My So-Called Life kick as of late because once I popped in my DVD of the series’ pilot episode last week, I have literally not been able to stop watching since.  The show has definitely withstood the test of time as it is still absolutely riveting to watch today, sixteen years after it originally aired, which is simply incredible to me!  Anyway, while watching the Season 1 episode of the series titled “The Substitute” earlier this week, I noticed an address number of “1008” in the background behind Angela Chase (aka Claire Danes) in the scene in which she goes to the apartment building where her substitute teacher, Mr. Vic Racine (aka Roger Rees), lives to confront him about deserting his family.  And while the outside of his building is never actually shown in its entirety in the episode – all that appears in the scene is a brick wall, a wooden fence, and a red door – I became rather obsessed with finding where it was located.  Not because I necessarily wanted to stalk it, but because seeing that “1008” was like a challenge, a little clue being dangled in front of my eyes, tauntingly daring me to track the place down.  As crazy as it may sound, for whatever reason, once I spotted that address number I was absolutely NOT going to rest until I found it!

[ad]

Railroad tracks - My So Called Life

I had also noticed railroad tracks in the background of the scene, so I was 99.9% certain that Mr. Racine’s apartment building was located in the South Pasadena area, somewhere in the vicinity of Andie’s house from the movie Pretty in Pink.  I immediately emailed my super-friendly and super-knowledgeable contact over at the South Pasadena film office to ask for her thoughts.  While waiting for a response, I decided to start searching aerial views of the the streets on either side of the city’s Metro Gold Line tracks and it wasn’t long before I came to a conclusion – Mr. Racine’s “apartment” was actually the side of the popular South Pasadena eatery Buster’s Ice Cream and Coffee Shop.  I emailed my contact once again to tell her my theory and to send along a set of screen caps from “The Substitute” episode and she wrote me back almost immediately saying that I was indeed correct – the scene had been shot on the side of Buster’s Coffee Shop.  YAY!  So, early yesterday morning I headed on over to South Pasadena to snap some pics.

ScreenCap058 IMG_3351

And let me tell you, I just about died upon realizing that the EXACT SAME “No Trespassing” sign that had appeared in the episode was still there in real life!  Seeing that sign literally gave me goose bumps, I was so excited!  SO INCREDIBLY COOL!  As you can see in the above photograph, the “1008” address sign was also there in real life, as well.

IMG_3357 IMG_3352

 IMG_3353 IMG_3350

The area looks quite a bit different today as the majority of it has been fenced off.

IMG_3347 IMG_3349

But you can kind of catch a good glimpse of the spot where filming took place if you head north across the train tracks.  And while it does seem like a VERY odd spot for a substitute to live, or anyone to live for that matter, it does appear that there is some sort of small apartment complex located behind the wooden fencing pictured above.

ScreenCap043 IMG_3354

The door pictured above is actually the side entrance to Buster’s and it still looks very much the same today as it did back in 1994 when “The Substitute” episode was filmed.

The Substitute Trees IMG_3352

The tree and telephone pole that appeared in the background behind Angela also still look very much the same.

ScreenCap064 IMG_3355

And the electrical meters which appeared in the scene are also still there in real life.

South Pasadena Mr. Racine's Apartment

While I was taking photographs yesterday, one of the Buster’s workers came outside and inquired as to what I was doing.  When I explained that an episode of My So-Called Life had been filmed on the premises over 16 years ago, he said, “Oh yeah, I know!  Wow, I haven’t thought about that in a REALLY long time!”  As it turns out, he was there during the filming of “The Substitute” episode, although he doesn’t remember much of what went on.  I thought it was still incredibly cool nonetheless – I mean he actually witnessed the filming of one of the most ground-breaking shows on television!  Love it!  The front of Buster’s Ice Cream and Coffee Shop is pictured above.  The purple arrow denotes where “The Substitute” was filmed.  Ironically enough, Michael Myers’ house from the original Halloween movie is located just across the train tracks from Mr. Racine’s apartment and is denoted with the pink arrow in the above photograph.

ScreenCap048

On a My So-Called Life side note – while watching the episode titled “The Zit” a couple of days ago, I was floored to discover that the department store where Angela and her mother, Patty (aka Bess Armstrong), shopped for make-up was none other than the former Bullocks Wilshire department store, now Southwestern Law School campus, near Downtown Los Angeles, which I blogged about back in December of 2009

ScreenCap055

The Mother/Daughter Fashion Show scene from that same episode was also filmed at Bullock’s Wilshire, in the former department store’s Louis XVI Room.

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Vic Racine’s apartment from “The Substitute” episode of My So-Called Life is located at 1008 Mission Street, directly behind Buster’s Ice Cream and Coffee Shop, in South Pasadena.  Michael Myers’ house from the original Halloween movie is located right across the train tracks from Buster’s at 1000 Mission Street.  And the former hardware store, now Radhika restaurant, where Michael Myers stole a mask and some knives in the original Halloween is also located across the street from Buster’s at 966 Mission Street.

The “My So-Called Life” House

IMG_3282

Since I blogged about the house which stood in for the Chase residence in the pilot episode of My So-Called Life yesterday, I thought I would write today about the house which was used in the remaining 18 episodes of the series.  I have actually blogged about this location once before, over three years ago when I first started this site (and I absolutely CANNOT believe that it has already been THREE years!), but because it has been so long I figured the property was worthy of a more in-depth re-post.  So, here goes!  I became obsessed with finding the Chase residence back in 2007, but unfortunately, at that time the location was not posted anywhere online and the only information I had to go on was an address number of “1110” that was visible in the background of a few episodes.  I had a hunch, though, that the dwelling was most likely located in South Pasadena, as the producers of My So-Called Life had filmed another one of their series, thirtysomething, primarily in that area.  So, one weekend the Grim Cheaper and I ventured up and down all of the 1100 blocks located in South Pasadena until we found the house.  And, amazingly enough, it didn’t take us long at all.   

IMG_3291IMG_3294

As it turns out, the property is located just a few blocks south of Mission Street at 1110 Glendon Way.  And I am very happy to report that even though over one and a half decades have passed since filming took place, the Chase house still looks very much the same today as it did onscreen.

ScreenShot049 ScreenShot045

ScreenShot047 ScreenShot048

The only real differences I noticed were that the exterior has since been painted a dark green color, while it was light blue on the series, and the French doors located just to the left of the front door have since been replaced by a large picture window.  Otherwise though, the property is completely recognizable from the show.

IMG_3292 IMG_3293

ScreenShot061 ScreenShot067

The house is actually owned by the City of South Pasadena and is currently vacant, so I was able to snap some pics of the interior of the property through the front windows.  As you can see, it doesn’t bear much of a resemblance to the interior of the Chase house that was shown on the series, which was, of course, a set that was modeled after the residence used in the pilot episode.

[ad]

ScreenShot056 ScreenShot050 

ScreenShot054 ScreenShot057 

The Chase house was also used as the childhood home of Michael Myers (aka Daeq Faerch) in Rob Zombie’s 2007 remake of the horror film Halloween

ScreenShot051 ScreenShot052

According to this website, the home’s real life living room and foyer appeared in Halloween, but the basement, bathroom, hallway, and bedroom scenes were filmed inside of a residence located at 2218 South Harvard Boulevard in Los Angeles.

IMG_3284

The house where Brian Krakow (aka Devon Gummersall) lived on My So-Called Life is located just across the street and two properties south of the Chase home. 

ScreenShot034 ScreenShot041

 IMG_3285 IMG_3287

Amazingly enough, it still looks very much the same today as it did when filming took place over 16 years ago. 

ScreenShot039

In the episode titled “Dancing in the Dark”, Angela and Jordan Catalano’s (aka Jared Leto’s) very unromantic first kiss took place in Jordan’s car which was parked just outside of Brian’s home.

ScreenShot037 ScreenShot040

ScreenShot035 ScreenShot036

And I am fairly certain that the real life interior of Brian’s house was also used in the filming of that episode.

ScreenShot031 ScreenShot032

IMG_3289 IMG_3290

The home located just across the street from Angela’s, which was pictured in the background of quite a few episodes, still looks pretty much exactly the same today, as well.

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Chase house from all of the episodes of My So-Called Life excluding the pilot is located at 1110 Glendon Way in South Pasadena.  Brian Krakow’s home is located across the street and two houses south of the Chase residence at 1115 Glendon Way.

The Chase House from the Pilot Episode of “My So-Called Life”

IMG_8339

Ever since fellow stalker Andrew tracked down the First Congregational Church of Los Angeles from the “So-Called Angels” episode of fave show My So-Called Life, I have been itching to re-watch the entire series from beginning to end as I have not seen it in years.  So, I immediately went out and purchased the most recently-released boxed set of the show and finally sat down to start watching it last night.  While doing so, I became a bit obsessed with locating the house where the Chase family – Graham (aka Tom Irwin), Patty (aka Bess Armstrong), Angela (aka Claire Danes), and Danielle (aka Lisa Wilhoit) – lived, because, as an astute fellow stalker named Somerset pointed out to me a while back, it was not the same property that was used for the other 18 episodes of the show

My So-Called Life Streetlights

Unfortunately though, there was virtually nothing for me to go on for this particular stalk – no house number, no visible street signs, not even a full view of the exterior of the property.  But then, all of a sudden, like a lightning bolt from the sky, I spotted a clue – a very important clue.  In the scene in which Angela waits for Rickie Vasquez (aka Wilson Cruz) to pick her up to go to Let’s Bolt nightclub, I noticed that the streetlights on Angela’s street were round.  And while I had seen those streetlights (pictured above) before, I had only ever seen them in one place – in one very small section of Pasadena.  The trees that lined Angela’s street also looked very familiar to me and I had an inkling that they might be the very trees that are located along Pasadena’s oft-filmed Madison Avenue. 

[ad]

IMG_3260

So, I began my search for the Chase home on Madison Avenue and, using Google Street View, found the property almost immediately!  YAY!  And I ran right out to stalk the place first thing yesterday morning.

ScreenShot013 ScreenShot004

IMG_3258 IMG_3264

And while the full exterior of the house is never actually shown in the pilot episode of My So-Called Life, as you can see in the above screen captures and photographs, the location of the window to the right of the front door and the roof lines of the front porch match up perfectly to what appeared onscreen. 

ScreenShot011 ScreenShot012

IMG_3251 IMG_3254 

The house across the street matches up perfectly, as well.

ScreenShot006 IMG_3266

As does the house that is located at the end of Angela’s street.

ScreenShot005 IMG_8333

The tree that is visible in the background of the scene in which Brian Krakow (aka Devon Gummersall) and Angela are shown arguing also looks exactly the same today as it did onscreen.

ScreenShot007 ScreenShot029

IMG_8332 IMG_8341

And amazingly enough, the tree that Brian sits in at the end of the episode is actually there in real life and still looks EXACTLY the same today as it did in March of 1993 when the pilot was filmed!  SO INCREDIBLY COOL!

ScreenShot009 ScreenShot010

IMG_3273 IMG_3274

When Angela gets dropped off by the police at the end of the episode, instead of going directly home, she and Brian walk north on Madison Avenue to the corner of Madison and Alpine Street, where Angela spots her father talking to a woman who is not her mother.  That area also looks much the same today as it did during the filming.

ScreenShot024 ScreenShot025

ScreenShot026 ScreenShot027

And, according to the DVD commentary by series creator Winnie Holzman, director Scott Winant, and executive producer Marshall Hershkovitz, the interior of the property was also used in the filming of the episode.  Oh, what I wouldn’t give to see the inside of that house!

ScreenShot015 ScreenShot016

IMG_8334 IMG_8336

After the Grim Cheaper got off work yesterday evening, I dragged him back out to the house so that he could snap a picture of me reenacting that famous shot of Angela and Brian standing in the middle of the street.  Oh, I cannot tell you how long I have wanted to take that picture!  I was literally skipping to the car on the way there.  Sigh!

ScreenShot023 ScreenShot022

On a side note – the creators of My So-Called Life, whose production company is named “The Bedford Falls Company”, threw in quite a few references to their favorite film It’s A Wonderful Life in the pilot episode of the series –  including the scene in which Angela changes her clothes behind a bush a la Mary Hatch (aka Donna Reed) and a scene in which Brian wears a shirt with the number “3” on it, a la George Bailey (aka James Stewart).  Love it, love it, love it! 

ScreenShot018

It’s A Wonderful Life is also playing in the background of the scene in which Angela apologizes to her mother.

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Chase house from the pilot episode of My So-Called Life is located at 1025 South Madison Avenue in Pasadena.  The tree Brian sat in at the end of the episode is located in front of the house at 1014 South Madison Avenue.  Angela spots her father talking to the mysterious woman at the southeast corner of South Madison Avenue and Alpine Street.  And, finally, the famous shot of Angela and Brian standing in the middle of the street was filmed in front of 1014 and 1025 South Madison Avenue with the camera looking north on Madison towards Alpine Street.  The Mr. Deeds house is located just three doors down from the MSCL pilot house at 989 South Madison Avenue.  The house that was used as the Chase home in the other 18 episodes of the series is located at 1110 Glendon Way in South Pasadena.

The First Congregational Church of Los Angeles from “My So-Called Life”

IMG_2999

Fellow stalker/My So-Called Life aficionado Andrew recently went on a mission to try to track down the church that was used in the Season 1 Christmas-themed episode of fave show My So-Called Life titled “So-Called Angels”.  He had just picked up the most-recently released boxed set of the series, which came out in 2007, and was floored to discover that actor Wilson Cruz, who played Ricky Vasquez on the show, had recorded a commentary for the “So-Called Angels” episode and had described the location of the church as being on 6th Street close to Downtown Los Angeles.  Even with that detailed information, though, this locale proved to be a tough one to track down.  Thankfully, Andrew hit a stroke of luck, though, when he noticed that the doors of the church in the episode featured very intricate carvings.  He figured those doors had to be unique and, sure enough, they were!  Just type the words “carved doors”, “church”, and “Los Angeles” into Google and the very first entry that appears is for the First Congregational Church of Los Angeles, located on the corner of South Commonwealth Avenue and West 6th Street, about a mile from Downtown Los Angeles, right where Wilson Cruz had said it would be.  Yay!  So, once Andrew told me the good news, I immediately dragged my dad right on out to stalk the place – just in time for Christmas, too!

IMG_2828 IMG_2824   

The Gothic revival-style First Congregational Church of Los Angeles was constructed in 1932 by brothers James Edward Allison and David Clark Allison, the same architecture team that designed the Beverly Hills Post Office and UCLA’s Royce Hall.  Both the exterior . . .

IMG_2977 IMG_2979

IMG_2980 IMG_2982

. . . and the interior of the property are absolutely gorgeous in person.  In fact, I think it is safe to say that I have never seen a more beautiful place of worship in my entire life!  The church is literally breathtaking – especially decked out in all of its Christmas glory! 

IMG_2991 IMG_2988

IMG_2986 IMG_2987

The First Congregational Church of Los Angeles’ main sanctuary, which stretches 198 feet in length and reaches 76 feet in height, is home to the world’s largest pipe organ, features carved oak pews, and is dotted with countless stained glass windows which were designed by Judson Studios in Pasadena.

IMG_2822

IMG_2992 IMG_2993

The bronze doors that Andrew noticed in the “So-Called Angels” episode were designed in 1946 by artist Albert Gilles and, unbelievably, they measure three inches thick and weigh in at a whopping one thousand pounds apiece!  The doors were so heavy, in fact, that I could hardly open them when we went to leave!

[ad]

ScreenShot6470 ScreenShot6478 

 ScreenShot6479 ScreenShot6480 

In the “So-Called Angels” episode of My So-Called Life, the First Congregational Church of Los Angeles was the spot where Angela Chase (aka Claire Danes), along with the rest of the Chase family, and her friends Brian Krakow (aka Devon Gummersall) and Ricky wind up on Christmas Eve night after a heartbreaking course of events during which Ricky gets beaten up by his father and ends up first living on the streets and then in an abandoned warehouse.  I had actually forgotten how very heartbreaking the episode was until I re-watched it last week.  So incredibly sad!

ScreenShot6473 ScreenShot6474

IMG_2984 IMG_2985

The area where Patty Chase (aka Bess Armstrong) found Ricky lighting candles is located just to the left of the church’s main altar, although that area looks a bit different today.  There are no candles located in that particular alcove (which I was seriously bummed about as I had planned on lighting one), nor is there a visible stained glass window.  The red carpet has also since been removed.

ScreenShot6476 ScreenShot6477

IMG_2989 IMG_2990

The pew where Patty and Ricky sat in the scene is located just to the left of the alcove. 

ScreenShot6471

 IMG_2825

The exterior of the church looks a bit different today than it did during the filming, as well.  The large potted plants which flanked the front of the church in the episode are no longer there, but I have a hunch that those trees were actually props brought in specifically for the filming and were never actually there in real life.

ScreenShot6481

IMG_2826

The street lamp that was pictured at the very end of the episode is actually there in real life, though, which I thought was just about the coolest thing ever!  Smile

ScreenShot6490 ScreenShot6493

ScreenShot6494ScreenShot6495

My So-Called Life is not the only production to have filmed at First Congregational.  The church also stood in for New York’s St. Thomas Episcopal where Wilhelmina Slater (aka Vanessa Williams) almost married Bradford Meade (aka Alan Dale’s) in the Season 2 episode of Ugly Betty titled “A Nice Day for a Posh Wedding”.

ScreenShot6482 ScreenShot6485

ScreenShot6486 ScreenShot6489

First Congregational was also where the funeral for Preston Blake (aka Harve Presnell) was held in the 2002 Adam Sandler comedy Mr. Deeds.

ScreenShot6510 ScreenShot6511 

ScreenShot6512 ScreenShot6513

It was also used as the church where Mary Jane Watson (aka Kristen Dunst) almost married John Jameson (aka Daniel Gillies) in Spiderman 2.

ScreenShot6496 ScreenShot6497

ScreenShot6498 ScreenShot6500

And it stood in for New York’s Trinity Church where the climactic final scene of 2004’s National Treasure took place.

ScreenShot6502 ScreenShot6509

ScreenShot6507 ScreenShot6508

Both the opening and one of the closing scenes from 2003’s Daredevil were also filmed at the church.

IMG_2975

The First Congregational Church of Los Angeles has also appeared in episodes of Californication, The Riches, The West Wing, Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Shark, The Closer, Bones, The Practice, Cold Case, Joan of Arcadia, Six Feet Under, Jag, and The X-Files and in the movies Nancy Drew and Into the Wild.  The church even has a page on its website which chronicles the many productions that have been filmed on the premises over the years (although My So-Called Life is ostensibly missing from the list).  So love it!

 IMG_2823

Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Andrew for finding this location!  Smile

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The First Congregational Church of Los Angeles, from the “So-Called Angels” episode of My So-Called Life, is located at 540 South Commonwealth Avenue in Los Angeles.  You can visit the church’s official website here and you can check out its extensive filming resume here.

My So-Called Weekend, Part II

This weekend, thanks to a few tips from my new stalking buddy Andrew (who posted a comment on my first MSCL post), I set out to do some more My So-Called Life stalking. The first location I stalked was the Burlington Arcade, a covered shopping colonnade located just off Lake Avenue in Pasadena. I knew from IMDB that MSCL had filmed on the Arcade, but I was unsure which scene was filmed there.

dscn0221.jpg

Andrew pointed me to this YouTube video – and sure enough there it was in the very first scene of the pilot episode in which Angela and Rayanne ask random strangers for change in front of a red phone booth. The phone booth is there in real life and the Arcade looks much the same as it did in the pilot episode. The street the girls run down at the end of the scene is Lake Avenue.

img_1894.jpg

From the Burlington Arcade, I headed to the west side of LA – Santa Monica to be exact – to Claire Danes’ former condo. This is the condo she lived in before permanently relocating to Wooster Street in Manhattan.

img_1895.jpg

My final MSCL location (at least for this post!) is Claire’s parents’ Santa Monica home. When Claire first landed MSCL, her parents moved from New York to Santa Monica. The home they lived in at the time is located on Marine Street in a very funky, hip, bohemian part of town. It’s easy to imagine Claire living in this neighborhood! Her house is extremely tiny. But don’t go thinking you can pick it up for a bargain – according to Zillow, this 758 square foot home is worth $968,000!

Until next time, Happy Stalking! 🙂

Stalk It: The Burlington Arcade is located at 380 South Lake Avenue in Pasadena, in between Del Mar Blvd. and California Blvd. Lake Avenue is a local favorite – a great place to shop and eat! Claire’s Santa Monica condo is located at 1011 Euclid Avenue, in between Washington and California Avenues. Claire’s childhood home can be found at 601 Marine Street, also in Santa Monica.

My So-Called Weekend

Uni High

I know My So-Called Life has been off the air for over 8 years now, but I am still slightly obsessed with it.  When one of my co-workers told me that MSCL was filmed at his high school, University High School in West LA, I set out to have a My So-Called Weekend!

University High School, aka Uni High, is located at 11800 Texas Avenue.  Although the front of the high school is quite impressive, it was the back staircase that was actually used as Lincoln High in MSCL.  Uni High has a pretty impressive filming history – it was also used in Seventh Heaven, Drillbit Taylor, and Lizzie McGuire – just to name a few.

Staircase

As soon as I came to the bottom of Uni’s back staircase, I immediately recognized it as Angela Chase’s alma mater.  You might remember the staircase from the Halloween episode, when Rayanne spent a great deal of time waiting for Angela at the flagpole located at the top of the stairs.

dscn0195.jpg

cap0028.jpg

Now it was time to find the Chase Home.  I had a hunch the house was located in South Pasadena, as the producers of MSCL were also the producers of thirtysomething – which was filmed primarily in South Pas.  I knew that the address number of the MSCL house was 1110, thanks to the website www.mscl.com – which had several pictures of the real home used in the filming.  So – armed with a pretty big hunch that the house would be in the same vicinity as the thirtysomething houses – my boyfriend and I drove up and down South Pasadena streets looking at every single home with a 1110 address until we located the house.

dscn0196.jpg

cap0014.jpg

Success came pretty quickly when we found the home at 1110  Glendon Way.  The home has been painted since MSCL aired and looks a lot different, but it was still exciting to be there, standing in Angela Chase’s footsteps.  And I just had to take a picture mimicking that famous screen shot from the end of the pilot episode when Angela is standing in the middle of the street with her new red hair.  🙂

Stalk It: I would recommend visiting Uni High on a weekend because soccer games are held on the campus on weekends, and one is allowed to walk around without being bothered.  Uni High is located at 11800 Texas Avenue in West Los Angeles.  The Chase Home is located in South Pasadena at 1110 Glendon Way, just off Fair Oaks Avenue.  While you are in the neighborhood, stop by the Fair Oaks Pharmacy at 1526 Misson St. for an ice cream Sundae.  The Fair Oaks Pharmacy opened in 1915 and is an old time pharmacy with a real soda fountain – and it just happened to be used as a filming location in the movie Mr. Deeds.