Rivera, now sure Howard Mason is the blackmailer, plots a way to dispatch him. He gets Sheila to invite him to her home at night on a pretense of signing a document. She will signal his departure to Rivera, waiting outside with a gun, in time for him to do the dirty deed. Although she detests the man, she turns on the charm when he arrives ...
Then ... From her upstairs window, Sheila watches Mason drive off. She opens the curtains and Rivera, at the top of the hill, sees the signal.
... and Now, here's the same Baker Street block viewed from street level at her home at 2898 Broadway (described in an earlier post).
... and Now, The only vantage point where Rivera could see the house would be the top of the block, at Baker and Pacific (map, blue marker, with the house at the red marker). This recent view from that junction looks to Sheila's home, marked by the arrow. This is the block the movie should have shown, but it didn't (... duh).
Instead, looking back with Rivera through his car's rear window we see Mason's car approaching up a totally different block. CitySleuth hasn't found it yet; fellow San Francisco sleuthers are invited to seek it out.
Rivera fires at Mason as he drives by but narrowly misses. The intended victim, badly shaken, returns to Sheila's place only to realize that she and Rivera were behind the attack. Enraged, he is about to strike her with a poker when Rivera arrives and fires again, this time right on target.
Re the title of this post - yes, CitySleuth is a diehard Beatles fan.
Back to the movie - the newlyweds visit a number of popular Bay Area destinations as Myra proudly shows off her home town.
Then ... They stroll down a trail through a grove of tall redwoods past the snapped-off tip of a tree impaled in the ground.
... and Now, this is Cathedral Grove at Muir Woods, a national monument since 1908, one of the few remaining stands of old growth coastal redwoods remaining in the Bay Area, just 12 miles north of San Francisco in Marin County (map). Today, the trail is lined by fences but the tree tip is gone - the arrow marks the exact spot where it used to be.
... a vintage photo ... How did CitySleuth find this exact spot? Well, during a visit to Muir Woods he came across this undated photo in the Visitor Center bookstore. Wouldn't you know it, this is the same tree tip, photographed from the opposite direction. It was in the Cathedral Grove next to a plaque honoring the memory of Franklin D Roosevelt.
... and Now, the plaque is still there but the tree tip has been removed, perhaps because it was in the middle of the trail (never mind that the tree tip was there first). The arrow marks the spot.
For those inclined to visit, Cathedral Grove is indicated on the park map below (click image to enlarge).
Then ... They drive up to the best of the City's vista points - Twin Peaks - to take in the evening glitter looking down Market Street to the Bay (map). A year earlier this same vista was used in the movie The House On Telegraph Hill.
... and Now, a recent view from the same lookout is even more impressive. The glowing dome of City Hall to the left and the illuminated suspension cables of the Bay Bridge were unseen at night sixty years ago. The rapid growth of the Oakland waterfront across the bay over the last sixty years adds to the glittering chiaroscuro.
Then ... They next visit the Golden Gate Bridge, shot here from halfway up the north tower looking towards San Francisco.
... in 1935 ... it's interesting to see the same view while the bridge was under construction, taken from higher up on the bridge's tower. The huge parade ground of the Presidio military base is clearly visible in the upper left and the dark strip above the Presidio is Golden Gate Park bifurcating the Richmond and Sunset districts.
... and Now, a recent photo on a foggy day. The bridge, enshrouded by fog about half of the time, requires constant repainting.
Then ... Lester and Myra lean over the bridge's railing perhaps thinking of the two sad souls per month on average, year in year out, who climb over it on their final journey. The real railing however, though still controversially low, isn't quite as bad as this.
... and Now, this is the real railing. Look at the movie railing above - it's lower, has no rivets at the rail tops and has a different width to spacing ratio. The movie footage was filmed in a studio using a background projection of the waters of the bay. Below, Angel Island and part of Belvedere and Tiburon are in the distance and Horseshoe Bay's Presidio Yacht Club marina is closer in on the left.
The movie opens to the wail of a siren from a police car passing beneath an overpass.
Then ... Behind the police car a neon restaurant sign can just be made out - 'Spenger's Grotto'.
... and Now, the overpass is where University Avenue crosses over the Amtrack rail tracks and the Highway 80/580 freeway in Berkeley, across the bay from San Francisco. The restaurant and its sign are still there but the overpass has been beefed up, a wise move in shaky California.
The red marker on this map shows Spenger's location.
Here's a recent look at Spenger's. Built in 1933 on the site of its first incarnation, an 1890 clam stand, it has become a city institution; a must-eat-at for locals, tourists and UC Berkeley students. (Read about its history here).
Then ... The black-and-white pulls up in front of a train station and two cops haul Joey Evans (Frank Sinatra) out. Joey protests his innocence as they remind him he just bedded the underage daughter of the Mayor and proceed to throw him on the waiting Southern Pacific train with a one-way ticket out of town.
... and Now, the location in the movie is 'Gold City' (wherever that is), but we know by now that this was filmed in Berkeley. The station building is still there (see the blue marker on the map above). Comparing Then and Now, note that the train above was on an old spur track which has since been removed and concreted over (below), leaving two of the original tracks still in use.
But the landmark 1913 Southern Pacific station, pictured recently below, has been a restaurant since 1975 - originally China Station, then Xanadu, and currently Brennan's which took over in 2008. Berkeley's station today is now beneath the overpass at left, one of 73 California stations served by Amtrack.
Cathy drives to the waterfront to pick up her boyfriend Blake for a dinner date. The scene was filmed on a pier at Fisherman's Wharf that no longer exists.
This 1950s aerial photo looks west across Fisherman's Wharf in the lower half and Hyde Street Pier above it. In it, we see the pier, an extension from what is now called Al Scoma Way, before it was removed.
... in 1951 ... here's another aerial photo, this one looking north, showing a closer look at that pier.
... and Now, a Google Maps satellite view of the same spot. Dotted lines have been added to show where the demolished pier used to be (a shorter pier next to it was also removed). The arrow marks the end of the pier where the filming took place (map).
Then ... Cathy drives to Blake's tug, berthed at the end of the pier - behind her, across the water, we see the side of Pier 45. Note the gap between the two sheds, more clearly seen in the above aerial.
... and Now, to match this view Citysleuth walked over to the adjacent Hyde Street Pier marina. From this vantage point he could look towards and beyond where the pier used to be.
Then ... In this shot Blake's tug is in the right foreground as we look down the length of the pier behind Cathy's car towards the glowing neon signs of Fisherman's Wharf restaurants. The building on the right at the far end of the pier was a small coffee shop serving the local fishermen.
... and Now, the pier (approximated by the dotted lines) is gone and only a remaining stub-out faces us, now used as the parking lot for the iconic Scoma's restaurant (which started life in 1965 as that coffeeshop). At far left in both Then and Now images is the front corner of Pier 45's Shed B. The white building to the left of the far end of the pier, above, has been replaced by a gabled chapel, below, under the green Alioto's restaurant sign. (Click the image to enlarge it).
... in the 1970s ... this 1970s photo shows the pier as it was when the movie was filmed. The coffee shop on the right of where the pier begins and part of the white building to the left are both visible.
... in 1939 ... This vintage photo reveals a closer look at that white building. CitySleuth has heard, he hastens to say second hand, that it was a rooming house for sailors but was eventually closed down to put a stop to illicit nocturnal visitors. This building also showed up in the 1950 movie Woman On The Run. Pier 45 Shed B with the twin Shed A alongside it is off to the left.
... and Now, the building was replaced in 1981 by the Fishermen's and Seamen's Memorial Chapel. Inside hang plaques bearing the names of those whose lives were taken by the sea and a bell in the campanile tolls periodically in their honor.
But Blake sends Cathy away - still smarting from Mason cancelling his tugboat contract, he intends to shake him down, unwittingly setting himself up as a prime suspect.