Tag: graumans Chinese theater

Celebrity Sightings at Madame Tussauds Hollywood

Imagine running into President Barack Obama in Hollywood.  Or for that matter, Wolverine.  Both encounters are just as unlikely in real life, but if you go down the rabbit hole into a very special place, these weird fantasies of yours just might come true.

Smack dab in the middle of all the touristy action, Madame Tussauds Hollywood Wax Museum opens August 1, 2009.  With an updated cast of wax figure characters, (thank goodness) the museum offers an experience you cannot have elsewhere, that’s for sure.  Photo ops galore, and the whole family can go.  The comprehensive website helps you plan your visit, and you never know what celebrity you might bump into…for real.  Tussauds works the Hollywood connection so well that the real-life models drop in to unveil their lookalikes.

Madame Tussauds Hollywood is at 6933 Hollywood Boulevard, right next to the famous Graumans Chinese Theater.

Get up close and personal

Get up close and personal

Hollywood for Families?

Hollywood Sign

Few places capture the spirit of California like Hollywood.  It is filled with stars, dreams and lots and lots of cameras.It is also filled with clubs, trash, costumed characters and unpleasant odors.  There’s something for everyone, and that means family fun!

The sidewalks along Hollywood Boulevard are themselves a destination, and make an interesting stop on any vacation.  The walkways are lined with the engraved stars of Hollywood’s biggest names.  However, unless there is a premiere, dedication or award show you’re unlikely to see anyone very famous.

The Kodak Theater, the current home of the Oscars, sits right next to the famous Grauman’s Chinese Theater (which has also hosted the Oscars).  The Chinese Theater is known for its collection of cement impressions which permanently display signatures and foot/hand prints of Hollywood’s biggest stars. Most tours of Hollywood sites and homes of the stars start here.It is also the area where you will find a collection of costumed “movie icons” ranging from Yoda to Jack Sparrow and three or four Spidermen.  These street performers will engage you for photo opportunities and they work for tips.

Across the street are the El Capitan Theatre and the home of ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel.   The El Capitan is a restored theater operated by Disney and is in itself worth a family trip to Hollywood.  Adjacent to the theater is the Disney Soda Fountain, with an array of tasty ice cream creations (and full menu).

Disney’s Soda Fountain and Studio Shop

Other venues of interest include the Hollywood Wax MuseumRipley’s Believe It or Not! and the Guinness World Record Attraction.

The streets in the Hollywood and Highland area tend to be very crowded and in addition to the costumed characters and street performers there are the proverbial prophets of doom and the occasional film crew.  It’s the kind of scene that can make parents, especially those with small children, a bit uncomfortable.  It’s loud and it’s overwhelming, but it is Hollywood and everyone needs that stamp in their passport.

Dining: There are plenty of places to eat.  The shopping area at Hollywood and Highland is the cleanest and has typical food court fare and a few sit down establishments.  The Disney soda fountain mentioned above is good and a blast for the kids, but be warned that it doubles as a store.

The Snow White Cafe (not Disney) is perhaps the worst restaurant I’ve ever been in. Don’t let the name fool you, it’s not charming or magical.

Parking:  Parking is available in lots accessible from the street.  I recommend the garage under the H & H (Hollywood and Highland) shopping area, especially at night, as it is well-lit, clean, busy and accepts validation from most establishments within walking distance.

Photos: Hollywood Sign /Disney Soda Fountain by Whit Honea

Thirteen of my favorite people, places or things in Los Angeles

From guest blogger Marsha Takeda-Morrison of Sweatpantsmom

It’s time for another Thursday Thirteen! I was driving around the other day, thinking about how much I love this city. Of course, that was before that lousy driver cut me off on the 405 Freeway and totally harshed my mellow, but that’s a blog post for another day. For now, here a few of my favorite things:

1. Pink’s Hot Dogs – To be perfectly honest, I’m not sure what makes Pink’s Hot Dogs so popular, but for some reason I just feel better knowing it’s there.

2. Guy who sells maps to the stars’ homes on Sunset Blvd. near Doheny – I’ve never actually bought one of these maps, but it’s nice to know that if I ever act on my urge to start stalking Will Smith, there’s somebody who can tell me how to find him.

3. Giant Chair Statue at Pacific Design Center – I love this humongous 30-foot chair, not only for its aesthetics but because we have a running joke: whenever I drive by it with my husband and kids, we always talk about how we’re going to somehow hoist the 10-year old up there and take a picture of her perched on its edge. It’s going to happen, I promise.

4. La Brea Tar Pits – Besides being a great place to take my kids, this place reminds me of my childhood. Also, I have friends who live in the area and have stories of (prehistoric!) tar bubbling up through cracks in their street, which is way more exciting than anything that ever happens on the block where I live.

5. Grauman’s Chinese Theater – Totally overrun with tourists, but where else can you get a close-up look at celebrities’ handprints? Nah, sneaking a look at Shia LeBeouf’s fingerprints at the LAPD isn’t the same.

6. Capitol Records Building – Because it was designed to look like a stack of records! Also, because they’re one of the first buildings every year to put up their Christmas tree made out of lights.

7. Book Soup – Absolutely the coolest book store in the city. Although it makes me sad to go there now, because the legendary Tower Records across the street on Sunset is no longer there.

8. Hollywood and Vine – This famous intersection provides some of the best people-watching in the city. Stopping at that traffic light for thirty seconds always makes me feel like I’ve stepped into a David Lynch movie.

9. Angelyne – I don’t really like Angelyne but she’s my favorite in more of a ‘fascinatingly hideous’ sort of way. Talk to ten different people, and you’ll get ten different Angelyne stories. I once saw her buying clothes at the drug store. She bought some pants, hopped into her pink Corvette and drove away.

10. Watt’s Towers –I urge everyone to get over your fear of driving into this area, and check out these amazing works of art, at least once. Personally, I think your life may be in more danger while trying to shop at Costco during the Christmas rush.

11. Self Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine – I know it sounds all new age-y and touchy-feely, but you should really check this place out. And don’t worry – you don’t have to have a religious bone in your body to appreciate it. A couple of walks around the serene path that winds around the lake and you’ll feel like a new person. If not, at least make yourself useful by feeding the ducks.

12. First Street, Little Tokyo – There’s nowhere else in the city that can say it’s home to my favorite spa, my favorite restaurant and my favorite coffee shop. I’d tell you about all these secret places, but then I’d have to kill you.

13. The Beverly Center – Yeah, it’s just a mall to most people, but it takes me back to my Sex And The City days, when I’d spend hours trolling the stores just to find a perfect dress to wear on a dinner date. Who has that kind of time anymore?

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