Donna’s House from “La Bamba”

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I would be remiss if, in all my blogging of Cameron Woods (herehere and here), I did not mention the neighborhood’s most famous “resident,” especially since I am asked about it all.the.time.  Towards the southern end of the 6200/6300 block of Orion Avenue in Van Nuys sits the picturesque Cape Cod where Donna Ludwig (Danielle von Zerneck) lived in the 1987 biopic La Bamba.  I first learned about the locale thanks to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, who took me to stalk Cameron Woods way back in 2008.  I was recently reminded of the place while in the area taking photos of the house from the Season 2 finale of You just prior to my dad’s surgery and decided it was high time I dedicate a post to it.  So I wandered right on over to snap some more current pics.  (“Oh, Donna” stuck in your head yet?  ‘Cause it sure is in mine!)

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The picturesque one-story property, originally built in 1948, boasts 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1,931 square feet, original hardwood flooring, a brick fireplace, an open floor plan, a breakfast nook, French doors, a 0.44-acre lot, a pool, a hot tub, a BBQ, a detached 2-car garage, and what a former real estate listing describes as “an entertainer’s backyard.”  You can check out some interior images of it here.

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The residence last sold in 2013 for $715,000 and, per Zillow, is currently worth a whopping $1.3 million.

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Oddly, we are only given one semi-wide shot of the home in La Bamba.  In it, you can see how different the property is today.  Since filming took place 33 years ago (how is that possible?!?), the white picket fencing out front has been removed (which, per Google Street View, looks to have occurred in 2014) and four gable windows have been added to the roof.  Despite those alterations, though, the dwelling is still recognizable from its big-screen stint.

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Donna’s residence pops up several times throughout La Bamba . . .

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. . . but typically only in very tight shots, as evidenced above and below.

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We also get some glimpses of the houses to the immediate north . . .

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. . . and south of Donna’s in the scene in which Ritchie Valens (Lou Diamond Phillips) walks his love interest home for the first time.

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I was thrilled to discover while looking at MLS images of the property that the actual interior was also used in the movie!

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Its aesthetic was quite a bit different at the time, though!  (The angle of the MLS photo below is a little off as compared to the screen grab, but it does show the same room – sans wood-paneling and pink walls.  You can check out a better matching view of the space here.)

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I am not sure if the décor seen in La Bamba was that of the actual homeowners or set dressing, but I am guessing the latter.  Either way, it sure is fabulous!  Check out that mid-century kitsch!  The wall coloring, chandelier, ashtray, lamp, and rotary phone are perfection!

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Considering its idyllic qualities, Anywhere, U.S.A. appeal, and the fact that it is located on one of L.A.’s most oft-filmed blocks, I would have guessed that the house had been featured in other productions, but I was unable to dig up any additional cameos.

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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: Donna’s house from La Bamba is located at 6238 Orion Avenue in Van Nuys’ Cameron Woods neighborhood.  Many other filming locations can be found on the same street, including Mary-Kate and Ashley’s home from “The Case of Thorn Mansion” episode of The Adventures of Mary-Kate & Ashley at 6332 Orion, Pete’s (Brian Petsos) residence from Bridesmaids at 6309 Orion, and Joe Goldberg (Penn Badgley) and Love Quinn’s (Victoria Pedretti) new pad from the Season 2 finale of You at 6301 Orion.

Mary-Kate and Ashley’s House from “The Adventures of Mary-Kate & Ashley”

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One Hollywood factoid that always manages to shock me no matter how many times I hear it is that Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen are fraternal twins!  Though the women look – and have always looked – identical, they aren’t!  Don’t believe me – you can hear it straight from the horse’s mouth, so to speak, here.  I know, I know – it’s almost unbelievable!  As Catriona Harvey-Jenner stated in this 2016 Cosmopolitan article, “During one of my daily travels around the great expanse that is the internet, I stumbled across a piece of information so shocking, so life-altering, that it shook me to my very core.  Are you ready for this?  Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen, as in the identical-looking twins from our childhood TV movies, AREN’T identical twins.  It’s okay if you want to just take a moment to sit down after hearing that.  Practice some deep breathing and stuff.”  Equally as surprising, at least to those who know me and my MK & A obsession well, is the fact that I never watched The Adventures of Mary-Kate & Ashley, the girls’ 1994 mystery/musical video series.  Nevertheless, I was thrilled when fellow stalker Chris (who you may remember from this post) let me know the address of the house the twins called home in the pilot episode, titled “The Case of Thorn Mansion.”  As it turns out, it’s in Cameron Woods, the quarter-mile stretch of Van Nuys’ Orion Avenue that is one of L.A.’s most oft-filmed spots.  So I had to run by while I was in the area a couple of months ago.

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In real life, the traditional 1-story residence, which was built in 1947, boasts 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1,825 square feet, a fireplace, a 0.49-acre lot, and a detached garage with what appears to be an in-law unit.  You can check out some interior pictures of the place here.

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With its white picket fencing, large setback from the street, green and white color scheme, and dotting of tall trees, the dwelling, like all of the others in Cameron Woods, is extremely idyllic.

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Even the mailbox, fashioned to look like a house, is picturesque!

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So it is no surprise that the place is a favorite of location scouts!  I mean, look at that walkway!

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The stately pad pops up twice in “The Case of Thorn Mansion,” first at the beginning of the episode as the twins return home from a day at school.

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  Though we don’t get a full view of the residence, what is shown looks much the same today as it did when filming took place over 2 and a half decades ago.  (And yeah, I did the math – Mary-Kate and Ashley are currently 33!  How’s that for making you feel old?!?)

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The property also appears in the episode’s “B-U-T-T Out” musical number, which you can watch here.  (That’s a very young Elizabeth Olsen wearing overalls in the caps below.)

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Coincidentally, the house figured into another production featuring twins!  In the Season 1 episode of CHiPS titled “Green Thumb Burglar,” Officers Frank Poncherello (Erik Estrada) and Jon Baker (Larry Wilcox) pull over a set of identical twins in front of the residence, which I learned via IMDB.  But thanks to the large tree out front, little of the place can actually be seen.  I was thrilled to spot the two white benches that still flank the front pathway (denoted with blue arrows below), though.  “Green Thumb Burglar” aired way back in 1977, so those things have been in place virtually forever!

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The same property portrays the home of Elaine Spencer (Jessica Walter), said to be at 1227 Lakeview in Cleveland, in the 1993 thriller Ghost in the Machine.

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A digital version of the pad is even shown in the movie!

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And it pops up as the supposed Wisconsin-area childhood home of Alison Parker (Courtney Thorne-Smith) in the Season 2 episode of Melrose Place titled “The Two Mrs. Mancinis,” which aired in 1994.

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The actual interior of the home was utilized in the episode, as well.

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Thanks to fellow stalker Mimi, I learned that Meghan Trainor’s 2015 “Dear Future Husband” music video was also shot at the pad.

The dwellilng’s interior appeared in the video, as well.

Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Chris for telling me about this location!  Smile

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: Mary-Kate and Ashley’s house from “The Case of Thorn Mansion” episode of The Adventures of Mary-Kate & Ashley is located at 6332 Orion Avenue in the Cameron Woods neighborhood of Van NuysPete’s (Brian Petsos) residence from Bridesmaids can be found across the street at 6309 Orion, as can Joe Goldberg (Penn Badgley) and Love Quinn’s (Victoria Pedretti) new pad from the Season 2 finale of You at 6301 Orion.

Pete’s House from “Bridesmaids”

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Speaking of Cameron Woods (in case you missed Monday’s post, you can read it here) . . . while wandering around the neighborhood recently I was reminded of a spot that I stalked long ago but had yet to blog about – the house belonging to Pete (Brian Petsos) in the 2011 comedy Bridesmaids.   As mentioned Monday, the quarter-mile stretch of Orion Avenue in Van Nuys that makes up Cameron Woods is easily one of the most charming and oft-filmed spots in L.A.  Per a 2012 Los Angeles Times article, the two-block idyll was the brainchild of William Buchner.  Between 1946 and 1952, the developer built a stretch of large picturesque New England and Cape Cod-style homes on the street’s 6200 and 6300 blocks.  Inspired by a road in Connecticut, he constructed the residences on oversized 100-by-300-foot lots, allowing for expansive front and back yards dotted with native walnut trees.  His vision was unfortunately cut short due to a disagreement with his partners and a change in zoning laws, so only a handful of properties wound up being built with the remaining lots sold off and subdivided.  The small idyll that Buchner did create, though, is a charming oasis seemingly far removed from modern life – so much so that it is commonly referred to as the “Leave it to Beaver block.”  And it is at a home smack dab in the middle of it that Annie (Kristen Wiig) shows up for a doomed blind date with Pete in Bridesmaids.

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In real life, Pete’s house, a charming 1950 residence, is much larger than it appears to be from the street, boasting 4,227 square feet, a whopping 7 bedrooms and 4.5 baths, a 0.60-acre lot, a sprawling backyard with a pool, a spa, a rock waterfall, an arbor, multiple patios, and parking for 12 cars!

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I was a little late to the Bridesmaids game, seeing it for the first time almost a year after it debuted via a SAG screener I received in early 2012.  The DVD featured the director’s cut of the movie, which included the blind date scene with Pete.  I had no idea until sitting down to write this post that the segment was initially left on the cutting room floor and was not part of the original film!  So if you saw Bridesmaids in the theatre or only have the original version on DVD, you’re likely reading this thinking “What blind date scene?”  In the bit, Annie arrives at the home of Pete, whom Becca (Ellie Kemper) has set her up with.  Instead of immediately heading out, Pete slips upstairs to make a call to his ex-wife and asks Annie to entertain his young son, Tyler (Blake Garrett), who quickly informs Annie that his mother is going to kill her.  Things only get worse from there.  Needless to say, Pete and Annie fail to make a love connection.

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It is obvious from the way the scene was shot that the actual interior of the house was utilized, though it has since been remodeled.  You can check out current photos of the inside here.

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The pad has a few other credits to its name, as well.

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I learned from a commenter named Andrew on the Streamline blog that the place portrayed the residence of Bobby Thompson (Tim O’Kelly) and his family in the 1968 film Targets, though it looked considerably different at the time.

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It also served as the home of a zealous Christmas decorator in the Season 2 episode of 9-1-1 titled “Merry Ex-Mas,” which aired in 2018.

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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: Pete’s house from Bridesmaids is located at 6309 Orion Avenue in Van Nuys’ Cameron Woods neighborhoodJoe Goldberg (Penn Badgley) and Love Quinn’s (Victoria Pedretti) new house from the Season 2 finale of You is right next door at 6301 Orion.

Joe and Love’s New House from “You”

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I apologize to those who don’t follow me on Instagram or Facebook for not posting updates about my dad here.  He was finally moved out of the ICU a couple of days ago, thank God, and is currently progressing in the right direction.  Unfortunately, the Wi-Fi and cell signal in the ICU were nil, to the point that I could not even use my cell phone as a hotspot, which explains my lack of new posts.  Now that I can get online again, my blogging schedule should return to normal.  And I figured what better spot to kick things off with than the house Joe Goldberg (Penn Badgley) and Love Quinn (Victoria Pedretti) moved into in the final episode of You’s second season, titled “Love, Actually.”

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One look at the place, with its traditional architecture, large set-back from the street and insane curb appeal, and I knew it was likely located in Cameron Woods, a highly photogenic neighborhood in Van Nuys that is used for filming all.the.time.  Situated at the southern end of Orion Avenue, the charming two-block enclave is a latticework of picket-fenced suburban homes, each one seemingly prettier than the last.  It’s like a studio backlot come to life!  An address number of 6301 was visible on the curb in the episode, so I promptly headed over to 6301 Orion on Google Street View and, sure enough, there was Joe and Love’s new pad looking back at me!

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In real life, the idyllic property, built in 1951 but recently remodeled, boasts 2,969 square feet, 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, a kitchen with Caesarstone counters, a butler’s pantry, countless built-ins, a laundry room, multiple fireplaces, hardwood flooring and wainscoting throughout, a pool, a pond, a motor court, a cabana, gorgeous landscaping, and a 0.58-acre plot of land.

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The stunning pad (you can check out interior photos of it here) last sold for $1,885,000 in January 2018.

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It is not hard to see how the place came to be used on You.  A quintessential slice of Americana, the home perfectly encapsulates the normalcy and traditionalism that Joe will never be able to subscribe to.  No amount of white picket fencing or manicured shrubberies can tame his obsessive and murderous ways.  Instead, the pad serves as a prison of his own making.  As he says upon moving in, “Not every Siberia is cold.  Some are 73 and sunny with eco-conscious landscaping.”

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Though one of the series’ most notable locales, the residence only appears in a single segment – “Love, Actually’s” closing scene.

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Along with the front exterior, the property’s backyard is also featured in the episode, as you can see in the screen capture as compared to the MLS image below.

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Considering Cameron Woods’ prolific filming history, it should come as no surprise that Joe and Love’s house has popped up in other productions.

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In 1984, it portrayed the home of Mother Blaisdel (Diana Douglas) in the Season 4 episodes of Dynasty titled “The Vigil” . . .

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. . . and “The Voice Part 3.”

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The pad’s interior also appeared in the episodes, but it looked very different at the time.

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The Dixie Chicks race through the house Ferris-Bueller-style in their 1999 “Ready to Run” music video, which you can watch here.

More recently, the property was featured as the home of a man who falls off his roof while installing Christmas decorations in the Season 2 episode of 9-1-1 titled “Merry Ex-Mas,” which aired in 2018.

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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: Joe and Love’s new house from the final episode of the second season of You is located at 6301 Orion Avenue in Van Nuys’ Cameron Woods neighborhood.

The “Lady Bird” House

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I know I am in the minority when I say I did not like Lady Bird.  Besides confusion over the name (up until I actually popped in the DVD and started watching, I thought the movie was a biopic about Lady Bird Johnson) and a storyline that seemed lacking, I found the main character, Christine ‘Lady Bird’ McPherson (Saoirse Ronan), utterly bratty.  She complains constantly about her hometown and claims she will do anything to go to college far away, yet she doesn’t take action to improve her grades, she cheats (on both a test and by lying to her teacher), lets her recently-out-of-work dad mortgage the family home (behind her mom’s back) in order to pay her out-of-state tuition, and throws tantrums on the reg.  I honestly could not find one redeemable thing about her.  Without a protagonist to root for or at least to sympathize with on some level, my investment in the movie felt like a waste of time.  I was intrigued by the locations, though.  While set and partially shot in Sacramento, I knew upon watching and recognizing the café where Lady Bird worked as Kaldi Coffee and Tea in South Pasadena that some filming took place in Los Angeles, as well.  I was fairly certain that the house where Lady Bird lived with her family – parents Marion (Laurie Metcalf) and Larry (Tracy Letts), brother Miguel (Jordan Rodrigues), and his girlfriend Shelly Yuhan (Marielle Scott) – could also be found in L.A.  So I set out to find it.

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One quick stroke of the keypad led me to an Architectural Digest article that stated the McPherson family home was located in Van Nuys.  An address number of “6701” was also visible behind Lady Bird in a scene, so I began searching blocks numbered 6700 in Van Nuys and came across the right spot within minutes.  Said to be on “the wrong side of the tracks” in SacTown in the movie, Lady Bird’s home can actually be found at 6701 Orion Avenue, just east of the 405.

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According to the AD article, Lady Bird’s production team scouted no less than fifty different properties before settling on the traditional 2-bedroom, 2-bath, 1952 ranch-style pad pictured below.

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Not much of the residence was altered for the shoot, as you can see below.

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Even the interior, which was utilized extensively, was a perfect fit for the production.  As director/writer Greta Gerwig said to The Sacramento Bee, “I was looking for very specific things and it’s so hard to find a home that’s not been renovated.  I had this vision of the kind of California home I wanted, like specific wide colorful tiles in the bathroom and kitchen.”

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Prior to securing locales, Gerwig took the production team to her childhood home to give them an idea of the look she was going for.  In a lucky and rather eerie twist, the Van Nuys house boasted that aesthetic naturally – and in spades.  As production designer Chris Jones explained to Architectural Digest, “It was really bizarre because the kitchen looks almost exactly like Greta’s kitchen growing up.   It’s an almost exact match, down to the yellow tiles on the wall.”  The space actually reminds me quite a bit of the Arnolds’ kitchen from the pilot episode of The Wonder Years.

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Per AD, while most of the furniture seen onscreen was brought in for the shoot, the faux wood paneling was another of the home’s authentic features.

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Jones calls the house “a great find” saying it became a “character in the movie.”

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The 1,607 square feet of living space did prove rather cramped for cast and crew, though.  Jones told Deadline, “Working in the house was tight.  Everyone was crammed in this small, square footage house.  Fortunately, that house had a back area, which actually ended up being the dorm rooms for when she goes to New York.  The whole yard was taken over by the film shoot for a week and a half.”  Lady Bird’s dorm is pictured below.  From Jones’ words, I am unclear if an actual room in the Van Nuys residence was utilized for the segment (with a New York cityscape splayed across the window) or if the space was a set constructed in the backyard or some other rear portion of the property.

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The Lady Bird house also popped up in the Season 6 episode of Californication titled “Blind Faith” as the residence belonging to Faith’s (Maggie Grace) parents.

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Quite a bit of the interior was also shown in the episode . . .

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. . . including Faith’s childhood bedroom, which was the same room utilized as Lady Bird’s.

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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 McPherson family home from Lady Bird is located at 6701 Orion Avenue in Van Nuys.

The Pit from “Parks and Recreation”

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As I mentioned in Monday’s post, this past weekend was an absolute whirlwind! It all started bright and early Friday morning when Mike, from MovieShotsLA, and I embarked upon what turned out to be a nine-hour stalking adventure across the greater part of Los Angeles. One of the stops on our trip – and the most exciting for me – was the Sullivan Street Pit, aka the Pit, aka Lot 48, from my new favorite show, Parks and Recreation. Fellow stalker Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, had given me the address to the Pit, along with the addresses of about twenty other P&R locations, a few years back, and when I finally started watching the series last month, I became just a wee-bit obsessed with stalking it. So I added the locale to Friday’s To-Stalk list and dragged Mike right on over there after the two of us grabbed some lunch.

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The story of the Sullivan Street Pit is as follows: Once upon a time in Pawnee, Indiana, a real estate developer purchased a plot of land, into which he dug a huge hole before subsequently going bankrupt and abandoning the property, leaving behind a giant pit. At some point afterward, a musician named Andy Dwyer (Chris Pratt) fell into the Pit, breaking both of his legs, causing his girlfriend, Ann Perkins (Rashida Jones), to complain about the abandoned site at a public forum. When overly ambitious Parks and Recreation Deputy Director Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler) learns of the situation in the series’ pilot episode, she makes it her mission to turn the property into a beautiful public park, and the storylines of Seasons 1 and 2 focus entirely on that (misguided) venture. The Pawnee Pit, which, in actuality, was a giant hole dug by the Parks and Recreation crew at an undeveloped lot in Van Nuys, was featured regularly during the series’ first two seasons.

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In the Season 2 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “Kaboom”, the Pit gets filled in, thanks to the efforts of Leslie, Andy, and Ann, and that filled-in lot is then also featured in numerous subsequent episodes.

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I cannot tell you how absolutely incredible it was to see the Parks and Recreation Pit in person! The site is, hands down, one of the coolest locations that I have ever stalked in all my years of stalking. In fact, I think I am going to have to add it to my Los Angeles Must-Stalk List. And yes, I do realize that the place is basically just an overgrown, vacant lot, but, for some inexplicable and intangible reason, it seems to have a certain hold on people, including me. I think it has to do with the fact that the site played such an important role on P&R. As Owen said, the Pit is almost a character in and of itself. Add that to the fact that the the Pit was once an actual hole in an actual neighborhood and not some manufactured set piece and you have one must-see locale. Mike had never actually watched an episode of Parks and Recreation before Friday, but after stalking the Pit he went right out and bought Season 1 on DVD. And when I mentioned the place to my girl Miss Pinky Lovejoy, of the Thinking Pink blog (who could normally care less about locations), she said, “Now that’s one site I would really like to stalk.” See what I mean? The Pit just has a certain allure.

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As you can see below, the lot, which is absolutely HUGE in person (much larger than I had expected it to be), is currently completely overgrown and it does not appear as if Parks and Recreation has done any filming there in quite some time. Oh, how I would have loved to have seen the place back when it was still in pit form! You can see some fabulous aerial views of what the location looked like during the filming of Season 1 on fave website Virtual Globetrotting.

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According to the sign pictured below, the 1.16-acre lot is currently for sale for a whopping $4,999,999. The site has apparently already been permitted for the building of 26 townhomes, with expenses and fees paid, so I am guessing that the story told on P&R (that a developer purchased the land in order to build condos and then went bankrupt) is pretty much exactly what happened in real life, too. I am hoping against all hope that the property does not sell anytime soon. How fabulous would it be if it was indefinitely left its current state for all of us stalkers to enjoy?

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And while Ann’s house is, of course, located directly behind the Pit, I am actually saving that location for a separate post.

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On a side-note – I would like to send out a huge CONGRATULATIONS to the love of my life, Matt Lanter, who recently proposed to his longtime girlfriend, Angela Stacy. And while it really should have been me you proposed to, Matt, I guess I am just going to have to be the bigger person here! All kidding aside, here’s wishing you all the happiness in the world! Winking smile

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

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Be sure to “Like” IAMNOTASTALKER on Facebook here and “Friend” me on my personal page here. You can also check out the IAMNOTASTALKER About Me page here. And you can follow me on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.

Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

Stalk It: The Sullivan Street Pit from Parks and Recreation is located at the southeast corner of Hazeltine Avenue and Collins Street in Van Nuys. Ann Perkins’ house is located directly behind the Pit at 5655 Murietta Avenue in Van Nuys.

Erin’s Florida House from “The Office”

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I would like to start off today’s post by wishing my good friend and fellow stalker Lavonna a VERY HAPPY 50TH BIRTHDAY!  In honor of her big day, I decided that I just had to write about an Office-related locale, because not only it is Lavonna’s very favorite show, but she is actually the person who is responsible for getting me hooked on the series in the first place – for which I will always be grateful.  And while I do have a few Office locations in my back pocket, so to speak, as fate would have it, this past Sunday morning I received a timely email from fellow stalker Geoff, of the 90210Locations website, who wanted to let me know that he had just tracked down the supposed Tallahassee, Florida house where Erin Hannon (Ellie Kemper) lived in the Season 8 episodes of the series titled “Last Day in Florida” and “Get the Girl”.  So I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to stalk the place that very afternoon.

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The eagle-eyed Geoff tracked this location down thanks to a sign reading “Stagg Street” which he spotted in the background of the scene in which star-crossed lovers Erin and Andy Bernard (Ed Helms) finally kissed in the “Get the Girl” episode.  A quick Google search informed Geoff that Stagg Street was located in Panorama City, so he started looking through aerial views of the area and thankfully it was not long before he found the right abode.

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As Geoff later pointed out to this directionally-challenged stalker, Erin’s Florida house is actually located directly behind Chandler Valley Center Studios, where The Office is lensed!

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In the “Last Day in Florida” episode of The Office, broken-hearted Erin decides that she will not be returning to Scranton, Pennsylvania once the Sabre “Special Project” has been completed.  She winds up being hired as a personal assistant/house cleaner to an “old lady” named Irene (Georgia Engel) and moves into her Tallahassee home.  In the following episode, “Get the Girl”, Andy drives out to Florida in order to profess his love to Erin in the hopes that she will quit her new job and return to Scranton with him.

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In person, Erin’s Tallahassee house looks much the same as it did onscreen in The Office, minus some Florida-themed foliage and the dolphin water fountain that Andy tried to fix in the “Get the Girl” episode.  In real life, the tiny dwelling, which was originally built in 1951, measures 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, and 1,040 square feet.  I have only been to Florida once, when I was about three years old, and do not remember much about it, but the GC spent quite a few of his childhood years in the Sunshine State, so I asked him if the abode looked like one that would be found there.  His answer, “No, not at all.”  LOL  (The building that is visible behind the house in the above photographs is Chandler Valley Center Studios.  Oh, what I wouldn’t give to live that close to where The Office is filmed!)

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I am fairly certain that the real life interior of the property was also used in the episodes.

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The intersection where Andy and Erin kissed is located a block and a half north of the house, but, unfortunately, I did not realize that at the time, so I did not take any photographs of it.

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On an Office side-note – I was beyond floored when I recognized that the supposed Tallahassee, Florida hotel where the gang stayed during the “Special Project” episodes (“Tallahassee”, “After Hours”, “Test the Store”, “Last Day in Florida”, and “Get the Girl”) was actually the Hyatt Regency Valencia, the very same hotel which appeared in the first Twilight movie and which I stalked way back in November of 2009.  Quite a bit of the property was used in the five episodes, including the front exterior;

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several rooms;

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the main lobby;

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and Vines Restaurant and Bar.

Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Geoff, from the 90210Locations website, for finding this location and a very big HAPPY 50TH BIRTHDAY to my good friend Lavonna!  Smile

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Erin’s “Florida” house from the “Last Day in Florida” and “Get the Girl” episodes of The Office is located at 7777 Cherrystone Avenue in Panorama City.  The home backs up to Chandler Valley Center Studios, where The Office is filmed, which is located at 13927 Saticoy Street in Van Nuys.  Erin and Andy kissed in the “Get the Girl” episode just up the street from the house at the intersection of Stagg Street and Cherrystone Avenue.  The “Tallahassee, Florida” hotel where the gang stayed during the “Special Project” episodes is the Hyatt Regency Valencia, which is located at 24500 Town Center Drive in Valencia.  You can visit the hotel’s official website here.

Barone’s Famous Italian Restaurant from “The Office”

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One location that I have been on the lookout for for quite a few weeks now is the Italian restaurant where the Dunder Mifflin gang hosted the annual Dundies Awards ceremony in the Season 7 episode of fave show The Office titled “Michael’s Last Dundies”.  I had an inkling that the eatery was most likely located somewhere in the Van Nuys area, near Chandler Valley Center Studios where the series is lensed, so one of my first lines of attack was to do a Google search for the terms “Italian restaurant”, “Van Nuys”, and “filming”.  My query kicked back numerous results, most of which pointed to an eatery in Valley Glen named “Barone’s Famous Italian Restaurant” and when I looked at an exterior image of the place on fave website LA Time Machines, I saw that it indeed matched up perfectly to what had appeared on The Office.  So I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to stalk the place and grab some lunch two Sundays ago.

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Barone’s Famous Italian restaurant was originally founded way back in 1945 by brothers Tony, Frank, and Mike Arpaia, all of whom had just returned home after finishing a stint in the Air Force during World War II, and their sister, Josephine Barone.  The siblings purchased a defunct eatery named Barto’s at the corner of Beverly Glen and Ventura Boulevard in Sherman Oaks and, in order to to save a bit of money, simply dropped the “T” and added an “N” and an “E” to the former restaurant’s exterior signage, thus creating “Barone’s Famous Italian Restaurant”.  The establishment became so popular that just four years later the family was forced to move it to a larger space located at 14151 Ventura Boulevard, where it remained until 2006, at which time it was moved to its current home on the corner of Oxnard Street and Mammoth Avenue in Valley Glen.  It was that Valley Glen location that I set out to stalk two weekends ago.

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Barone’s Famous Italian restaurant, which has served such luminaries as Huntz Hall, Leo Gorcey, Lucille Ball, John Wayne, and Jane Russell, is still family-owned and operated to this day, 66 years after its inception.  The eatery has long been known for its rectangular-shaped pizzas, an idea which was born out of a need to fit more pies into the restaurant’s tiny oven, but because I am diabetic and have to stay away from carbs, the GC and I were unfortunately not able to sample any.  I instead opted for the Chicken Marsala entree, while the GC sampled Barone’s “Famous Stuffed Mushrooms” and a Caesar salad, and, sadly, I have to say that none of it was especially tasty.  Sad smile I had such high hopes for the place, too!  Being that we saw no less than thirty pies make their way out the door for delivery in the short time that we were dining there, though, I am guessing that it is the pizzas that have kept people coming back to this place time and time again for over six decades.

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In the “Michael’s Last Dundies” episode of The Office, Michael Scott (aka Steve Carell), Deangelo Vickers (aka Will Ferrell), Pam Beesly (aka Jenna Fischer), Jim Halpert (aka John Krasinksi) and the rest of the Dunder Mifflin Scranton Branch employees gather at the supposed Scranton, Pennsylvania-area Louis Volpe’s Italian Restaurant to celebrate the 2011 Dundie Awards.  Chaos, of course, ensues and they all end up getting kicked out of the establishment by the restaurant’s manager after Deangelo screams out the word “vomit” numerous times during his acceptance speech.

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Upon entering the restaurant, though, I was shocked to discover that it looked NOTHING at all like what had appeared on the show.  From what I was able to discern after talking to the restaurant’s super-nice hostess, while the “Michael’s Last Dundies” episode did use the exterior of Barone’s for some filming, all of the interior scenes were filmed elsewhere – at a location that I am unfortunately still on the hunt for.  UPDATE – fellow stalker Owen recently tracked down one of the series’ crew members, who informed him that the interior of Louis Volpe’s was in actuality just a set that was built at Chandler Valley Center Studios.

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Some filming has taken place inside of the Barone’s space over the years, though.  The eatery was the spot where Mark “Rat” Ratner (aka Brian Backer) took Stacey Hamilton (aka Jennifer Jason Leigh) out on a date, for which he forgot his wallet, in the 1982 movie Fast Times at Ridgemont High.  At the time, the restaurant was a German establishment named Hoppe’s Old Heidelberg, which was originally founded in 1958.

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Thankfully, as you can see in the above screen capture and photograph, even though the establishment has gone through several ownership changes throughout the years, very little of the interior has been altered since Fast Times at Ridgemont High was filmed almost three decades ago.  So incredibly cool!

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In 1995, Hoppe’s Old Heidelberg was sold to a new owner, Switzerland native and Chef-of-the-Year-awardee Ueli Huegli, who renamed the place Matterhorn Chef and gave the menu a Swiss flair.  In 2005, the restaurant was featured in the Billy Bob Thornton movie Bad News Bears.

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Barone’s Famous Italian Restaurant, which served as the exterior of Louie Volpe’s restaurant from the “Michael’s Last Dundies” episode of The Office, is located at 13726 Oxnard Street in Valley Glen.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here.