Showing posts with label North Hollywood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North Hollywood. Show all posts

The Toluca Lake Homes of Shemp Howard

Shemp Howard of The Three Stooges.

Toluca Lake, a tony neighborhood located partly in Burbank and Los Angeles in the San Fernando Valley, has long been a favorite place to live for Hollywood celebrities, including Bob Hope, William Holden, Frank Sinatra, Ann Sheridan and many others. Part of the appeal of Toluca Lake is the small town village feel. The primary commercial street in Toluca Lake, Riverside Drive, is like an Eisenhower era main street filled with little shops. The quiet tree lined residential streets look like they belong somewhere in Middle America, not minutes from the energy of Hollywood.

One of the best descriptions I've seen of Toluca Lake comes from Sandie Howard (granddaughter to Shemp Howard of The Three Stooges). In 2012, Howard wrote a post on the Los Angeles Times website in which she reminisces about growing up in Toluca Lake. Howard describes the shops, the homes,  and what life was like as a child in this celebrity hood. I thought Howard's description was a charming read. Here's what she wrote:
"Toluca Lake. I was born and raised as 3rd generation in our house. Born in 56' and resided there til 81. Grandparents, Babe and Shemp Howard bought this home at 4604 Placidia Ave. My grandpa was Shemp, the original of the Three Stooges. Our home was on the corner of Placidia and Sara St. They lived there from the 40's -mid 50's. They had chickens, a Victory Garden. My grandfather owned a gun only to use on pesty Gophers that would steel all the carrots. My dad bought the home shortly before I was born. We didn't have air conditioning nor a pool for many years. 
Click images to see larger.

Shemp Howard's home at 4604 Placidia Ave.
I recall the fwy being put in. Stayed cool by sprinklers, Water Wiggles, Slip and Slides. All the kids played together. Boys and girls, roller skating, riding bikes, having flour fights. We walked the back wall to get to friends houses regardless of being scratched or cut up by brush and bushes. Toluca Lake kids on Saturdays would spend much time on Riverside Dr. at Pop and Cork for a 'BigStick Popsicle then to The Five and Dime to play with all the open tables of toys. We'd walk through the T.L. Pharmacy where we were not allowed to touch anything. The T.L. Market where you could actually pick up the phone and order your groceries and have them delivered. Bob's Big Boy's car hops to see rollerskating waitresses. Patys for the big Pineapple and Marshmallow syrup. The Pancake House syrups. The Little Green Store on Camarillo. It was safe! Neighborhoods of Walnuts, Birch and Magnolias. 

4604 Placidia Avenue, Toluca Lake, CA.
The Rock on our lawn was the meeting spot for the kids. A mom would call and the friend would run home. I listened for the St. Charles Church bells at 6:00pm. T. Lake. Safe, quaint and well kept neighborhoods. Jill and I both had our weddings in our backyard. Doors of the house were only locked by Skeleton Keys. We had many varieties of fruit trees from Satsuma Plums to Kumquats. At 23, mom leased the house to Denzel Washington then sold it to him. I was crushed not to have an affiliation to that neighborhood anymore. I honestly thought someone in the family would be in that house, in Toluca Lake forever. I make a point to drive through the neighborhood still. I want to go inside to see my house but I don't have the nerve - yet. Toluca Lake is still quaint today. Still close with a couple of kids from the blocks. Many of businesses are still thriving. If you can raise a family in T.L. you are blessed."

10522 Riverside Drive, Toluca Lake, CA.

In addition to the home at 4604 Placidia Avenue, Shemp Howard also lived with his wife Gertrude in an apartment building at 10522 Riverside Drive. According to findadeath.com Shemp was living at this address at the time of his death. On November 22, 1955 Shemp had a heart attack on his way home from the fights. He died later on the way to St. Josephs Medical Center in Burbank. He was just 60 years old. I was once told that this apartment building, just like the house on Placidia Ave. was also later owned by actor Denzel Washington.

Minnie And Moskowitz (1971) - Film Locations


Minnie Moore (Gena Rowlands) is a quiet, highbrow, museum curator in Los Angeles who feels that the "movies are a conspiracy. They set you up to believe in everything. They set you up to believe in ideals and good guys and romance and of course, love." But, there are no guys like Clark Gable or Humphrey Bogart in real life. Those guys are only in the movies. "There's no Charles Boyer in my life" Minnie tells her friend Florence. Seymour Moskowitz (Seymour Cassel) is a loud, spontaneous, hippie who leaves New York for Los Angeles and becomes a parking attendant.  Seymour has no real goals in life. The only thing that he is sure of, is that when he meets Minnie, he's in love.

Minnie and Seymour are not your likely couple. She's sophisticated and attractive. He's a simple bohemian with a giant walrus moustache, but although Seymour is no Gable, Bogart, or Boyer, Minnie likes something about him. The one thing they do have in common is a wanting to belong to someone, to be a part of a loving relationship. 

John Cassavetes directs this delightfully real looking film about relationships, that is nothing like those in the movies that his characters talk about. What really makes the film work though are the engaging performances by Cassel and Rowlands. The two have created a couple of interesting characters that are believable and entertaining. For those that only know Cassel from his character parts in eccentric Wes Anderson films or Rowlands from contemporary films like The Notebook, will be interested to see these two actors in a film where each was just at the beginning of their long acting careers.

The film begins in New York but quickly jumps to Los Angeles when Seymour decides he needs a change. The first thing Seymour does is find an apartment. Although we don't get a good view of the exterior of the apartment building in the film, we can place the building's location from the view of the historic Alto Nido Apartments (the same apartment building seen in Sunset Boulevard) located across the 101 Freeway. We can also identify the building from the glimpses of the balcony and railing that are seen in the film. The address for the building is 2001 Ivar Avenue, Los Angeles.

Seymour in his new apartment. 2001 Ivar Ave, LA

The Alto Nido Apts can still be seen across the 101 freeway.

Seymour's apartment at 2001 Ivar Ave, Los Angeles

Minnie's apartment building is the Elaine Apartments located at 1245 Vine Street in Hollywood. Looking North on Vine from outside the apartment building you can see the Sunset Vine Tower in the distance.

Looking North from 1245 Vine Street in Hollywood.

Looking North from 1245 Vine. Sunset Vine Tower in the background.

Minnie enters the courtyard of the Elaine Apartments.

The Elaine Apartments as they appear today. 1245 Vine St.

Another view of Minnie in the Elaine Apt courtyard.

When Minnie meets Seymour for the first time its while on an unsuccessful date with the lonesome and boring Zelmo Swift (Val Avery). Minnie and Zelmo meet for lunch at a restaurant at the corner of Fountain Avenue and La Brea Avenue. The restaurant building has been replaced by a new building and a Mayfair Market that can also be seen in the background has now been replaced by another building. The yellow circles and the red square show two homes and an apartment building that can still be seen at the location.

Minnie & Zelmo in the restaurant parking lot on Fountain Ave.

Looking East down Fountain Ave near La Brea Ave.

Minnie & Zelmo exit the restaurant. 

Above Minnie and Zelmo can be seen leaving the restaurant. In the background is a Mayfair Market located on the corner of Fountain Avenue and La Brea Avenue opposite the restaurant. Below is an image looking West down Fountain showing the restaurant location on the right and the former Mayfair Market location on the left.

Both the Mayfair Market and restaurant have been replaced.

In the seen below, as Zelmo runs into the restaurant parking lot, in the red box we can see an apartment building located next to where the Mayfair Market once stood. That apartment building is still standing.

Apartment in red box across from the restaurant location.

The apartment in the red box is still standing.

The aerial shot below shows the intersection of Fountain Avenue and La Brea Avenue. The restaurant location can be seen in the lower left and the market location in the lower right. The two houses (see yellow circles) and the apartment building (see red square) are still standing. 

Aerial view of the restaurant location.

Minnie first meets Seymour in the parking lot of the restaurant where he is working as a parking attendant. Seymour rescues Minnie from her uncomfortable date and then drive off together and go on their own date. And where do they stop on their first date? The iconic Pinks hot dogs located at 709 N. La Brea Ave!

Seymour and Minnie have a dog at Pinks.

Pinks hot dog stand, 709 N. La Brea Ave.

Seymour & Minnie on the sidewalk outside Pinks.

Looking North up La Brea Ave from Pinks hot dog stand.

Seymour and Minnie get into an argument while at Pinks and Minnie takes off running North on La Brea Avenue. Below Seymour follows Minnie up La Brea in his green truck.

Seymour looks at Minnie at the intersection of La Brea and Waring Ave.

La Brea and Waring Ave. as it looks today.

Looking at 811 N. La Brea Ave, Los Angeles


Looking at 811 N. La Brea Ave, Los Angeles.

Looking North near 817 N. La Brea Avenue.

Looking North near 817 N. La Brea Avenue.

Seymour turns his truck at 818 N. La Brea Ave.

818 N. La Brea Avenue, Los Angeles.

Seymour eventually talks Minnie back into his truck. The two drive around Los Angeles and pass a few landmarks. One of the landmarks which can be seen outside the truck window in the background is a glimpse of Grauman's Chinese Theater in Hollywood.

Seymour & Minnie pass Grauman's Chinese Theatre.

Grauman's Chinese Theatre, 6925 Hollywood Blvd

Seymour eventually drops Minnie off at work at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), located at 5905 Wilshire Boulevard.

Minnie gets dropped off at LACMA.

LACMA on Wilshire Boulevard.

On another date Seymour takes Minnie to another little food stand, Molly's Charbroiler located at 1605 Vine Street. Unfortunately, this little food stand which opened in 1929 as part of a Richfield gas station, closed after 82 years on June 30, 2011. Santa Monica based Pacific Ventures purchased the property and plans to build an eight-story office building on the site. When I first moved to Los Angeles I worked just around the corner from this place and would pass it frequently on my walks, but I never stopped to grab a bite. Now I wish I had at least once! I did however visit a bar called Daddy's that used to be located across the street, but that too was torn down to make way for the new W Hollywood hotel. This whole stretch of Hollywood has changed so much in the last decade.

Seymour and Minnie visit Molly's Charbroiler in Hollywood.

Minnie's Charbroiler, 1605 Vine Street.

Minnie & Seymour at the counter of Molly's on Vine St.

The W Hollywood hotel now stands in the background.

While Seymour and Minnie are driving they pass the Hollywood Ranch Market which used to be located on Vine Street between Fountain Avenue and La Mirada Avenue. The day that actor James Dean died, he had visited the Hollywood Ranch Market in the morning for coffee and doughnuts while he waited for his race car to be finished, which was being worked on at Competition Motors across the street.

Seymour and Minnie pass Hollywood Ranch Market.

Former site of Hollywood Ranch Market on Vine Street.

In another scene Seymour stops at a gas station in West Hollywood at the intersection of Santa Monica Boulevard and Sweetzer. On one corner, in the film, an old pool hall called Ye Billiard Den can be seen near where the Hamburger Mary's restaurant now stands and on the other a tall office building where the West Hollywood City Hall building now stands.

Seymour leaves a gas station at Santa Monica Blvd at Sweetzer.

Looking across Santa Monica Blvd from Sweetzer Ave.

An office building stands on the SW corner of Santa Monica Blvd and Sweetzer Ave where the West Hollywood City Hall building is now located.

West Hollywood City Hall at Santa Monica and Sweetzer.

In the next location, Seymour and Minnie visit the Palomino nightclub in North Hollywood, located at 6907 Lankershim Boulevard. This country music bar was made famous in the Clint Eastwood film, Every Which Way But Loose. The nightclub is now the site of Le Monge Banquet Hall a Russian and Armenian banquet hall. 

Seymour and Minnie in the Palomino nightclub parking lot.

Le Monge Banquet Hall, 6907 Lankershim Blvd, N. Hollywood.

Minnie and Moskowitz was released on DVD several years ago but I think it may be out of print now. It is currently available for streaming on Netflix. Recommended for romantics, fans of John Cassavetes, and for those who have seen Annie Hall way too many times and need something new.