When I was a reckless youth roaming the midnight streets of Hollywood there were many places on the Boulevard that thoroughly intrigued me. One was the dilapidated old wooden Victorian house that belonged to the mysterious Janes Sisters.
Located on 6541 Hollywood Boulevard, it was way up on the dreary west end, away from the centralized touristy glitz. I used to love walking past it late at night because it looked exactly like a haunted Halloween house. It seemed so completely out of place on the Boulevard, a curious relic stubbornly remaining from a by-gone era.
A few dim lights glowed eerily from the windows, and every once in a while one of the ancient sisters would peak out from behind curtains and glare at me. It was almost as though I could actually feel her annoyance. Annoying them was never my intention. I was merely fascinated.
I had heard a few sketchy stories about the sisters and their peculiarities. I'd even heard that the house was haunted. I didn't learn the truth until many years later.
The only resident "ghosts" were the four siblings who lived there for many decades: Mabel, Mary, Carrie, and Donald Janes. By the time I became fascinated with the house, Mary and Donald were deceased. Only Carrie and Mabel remained.
After Mr. and Mrs. Janes died, the school fell upon hard times. It closed in 1926, but the four Janes siblings continued living in the house. Donald opened a gas station in the front yard, known as Janes Auto Service.
After Mabel died in 1978, Carrie moved into the kitchen and slept in a makeshift window box bed. Carrie is the one who would peer out the window at me. In 1982 Carrie was moved to a nursing home in the valley, where she died the following year at the age of 94.
Fortunately the Janes House didn't suffer the fate of demolition, like so many other historic Hollywood buildings. It was purchased in 1985. The new owners had the entire house moved to the back lot, away from the street. After extensive renovations it was used as a Visitor Center, then it became a restaurant called Memphis, and later a nightclub. So far as I know, it's now a 1920's style speakeasy.(written in 2015)
Although the radical transformation of the house has served varied - and mostly unsuccessful - purposes, it is at least securely preserved for posterity. The Janes sisters would certainly be amazed - and perhaps pleased.
The house is almost unrecognizable from when I knew it. It somehow looks smaller and benign, rather than like the foreboding, decaying oddity that it once was.
Here's an interesting fact:
The Janes House inspired author Harry Farrell to write a novel entitled Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? It later became a 1962 hit movie (and a cult classic) starring Bette Davis and Joan Crawford.
The name of the main character in the book, Baby Jane Hudson, was derived from the surname of the Janes sisters - and the name of a nearby street, Hudson Avenue.
Only in Hollywood.
copyright 2015, J. Varga
Note:
This is an old post and one of my favorites. I'm rehashing it for those who have never read it.
Cheers, Jon
Of course there will be doubtful and sour people - - scanning histories, praying fervently for errors so they can nail me to a cross and pierce my side.
Remember - - I was there.
You weren't.
I just found out that 6541 W. Hollywood Boulevard is no longer a valid street number. It was valid in 1911. π΅ πΎ Many innacuracies abound. It was never near 1727 Hudson , and Hudson and Hlywd. Blvd. do not come to a genuine corner.
The photo on Google which was supposedly taken in 1973, was DEFINITELY taken several years later. The house wasn't moved away from the street until 1985. I know this for an absolute fact. I was familiar with the house in the 70s, and at that time it was in its original place, near the street (Hllywd. Blvd.)
I believe you. Ahh yes, the movie, "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane" is still one of my favorites! Way ahead of its' time and impressively done!
ReplyDeleteThank you for re-posting this! : - D
Baby Jane is one of my very favorite movies, too. It's a classic and I never tire of it no matter how many times I see it.
DeleteBette Davis should have received the Oscar. She was brilliant. I think Anne Bancroft got it for The Miracle Worker.
I'm so glad you re-publish this annually, Jon. One of my favorites! Color me singing, "Hush, hush sweet Charlotte."
ReplyDeletePS - LOVE your final words!
This is definitely one of my favorite posts. It brings back many memories. I wish I had taken photographs, but there were no cell phones then. The entire house was gray and peeling, with a gray wooden fence around it. It hadn't been painted in fifty years at least.
DeleteI love my final words, too!!! Too many trolls trying to prove me a liar. Love me or hate, I always tell the truth.
This is definitely one of my favorites. So glad you published it again...esp. for this time of year! It's too bad they couldn't use the original house in the movie. It certainly ticks all the boxes. https://www.movie-locations.com/movies/w/What-Ever-Happened-To-Baby-Jane.php
ReplyDeleteOh, and screw the nailers of the cross and side piercers. YOU WERE THERE as they were too busy trolling people.
Paranormal John
I always think it's a good time of year. It used to be titled Hollywood Boulevard Haunted House, but that was too misleading. That house would be great in the movie - - but it would be difficult filming on Hlywd Blvd, and I doubt that the Jane Sisters would have allowed it.
DeleteBe damed to trolls.
Very good news for my wound care. My next post will tell all. Perhaps I can go home!! ππΈππ
I guess it's damned, not damed - - rotten speller.
DeleteAlways enjoy reading this spooky post Jon, I remember watching Whatever happened to Baby Jane it kept me in the edge of my seat !
ReplyDeleteJo
Whatever Happened to Baby Jane is a classic and I never tire of watching it. The more I see, the more I learn.
DeleteThe teenage girl who lives next door to Baby Jane is the real daughter of Bette Davis - - Barbara Davis Hyman (you probably know this).
I've read this several times, and I enjoy it a lot. Thanks for sharing with us. Hope you are doing better. I bet getting decent food has helped!! Take care Jon- hugs, Louise
ReplyDeleteI love the deli food and will order more tomorrow. I've had good news from the wound care staff. More updates soon.
DeleteLouise again... I googled the address 6541 Hollywood Boulevard and the latest photo they have is a street view taken June 2024. I couldn't find the house, but of course I wasn't certain what I was looking at.
ReplyDeleteI just Googled 6541 W. Hollywood Blvd. I enlarged the tiny photo. Everything is completely unrecognizable. I think I see part of the house behind the buildings and fences. The June, 2024 photo won't enlarge.
DeleteIt's a completely different world from when I knew it. A large timeworn gray shack at the edge of the street, surrounded with a grey wooden fence.
I just found out that 6541 is no longer a valid street number. π
DeletePlease see my latest update after my post. πΊ
DeleteI remember this post, Jon, and it was and remains fascinating. Certainly as someone who was there, you remember the details. Stories of days gone by and history always interest me. Thanks for the re-post and updates too.
ReplyDeleteThis was always one of my favorite posts. I'll try to post some more Halloween- oriented reruns this months. Thank you, Dorothy. π€
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteGreat only in Hollywood story ! :)
ReplyDeleteThe stories many old houses could tell.
Reminds of the time me and a cousin bussing at an old bar near Gower Street.
Down the street was a dilapidated apartment building where a ghoulish looking man would sit looking out from a second floor window for hours on end even at night like from the movie The Sentinal.
This was in the 1980’s when we had the nightstalker, the night strangler and the freeway killer prowling LaLa Land, talk about being scared when we worked the night shift !
Most of our bar customers were older folks who had worked for the film and tv industry. Could they tell some tales ! :)
And what a great tie in the house had to the film Whatever Happened to Baby Jane. I remember that film playing on tv back in the 1970’s.
My favorite scene was when Jane calls the liquor store to make an order and has to mimic Blanche’s voice to get her booze fix. Another when Blanche tells Jane they may have to sell the house.
Jane points right at Blanche and warns her point blank “you’re not evah gonna sell this house and you’re not evah gonna leave it!” And of course Jane’s specialties from the kitchen. :)
Luv your Hollywood stories, memories of how it really was. Now it’s being gentrified and they want highrises galore despite the streets being totally incapable of handling the traffic. :(
Even an old stucco Hollywood bungalow my grandfather lived, he bought it in the 1960’s for $15000, has been torn down for luxury condos that rent at $3500 a month.
-Rj
I always enjoy hearing your stories. You always knew many of the same places I knew. I was very familiar with Gower Street. I knew somebody who lived there. I often parked my car on Gower, while I spent the night roaming the nearby streets.
DeleteYea, I love that scene where Baby Jane calls the liquor store and imitates Blanche.
Bette Davis should have won the Oscar for that role. I think Anne Bancroft won it for The Miracle Worker.
Well it should have been a tie!