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	<title>1,001 Chicago Afternoons &#187; Park West</title>
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	<description>1,001 stories of life in Chicago, based on Ben Hecht&#039;s famed 1920s newspaper column. New every M/W/F</description>
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		<title>#44: Life in a Stage Set</title>
		<link>http://1001chicago.com/44-life-in-a-stage-set/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Aug 2012 11:00:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Paul Dailing</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Park West]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://1001chicago.com/?p=1705</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It looked exactly like a firefighters picnic, but wasn&#8217;t. It had the food tents, the firetrucks parked nearby, the kids running about &#8212; I almost rode my bike up to see if I could score some food, but something was off. For starters, it seemed a little closed off, not as spread out and welcoming [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It looked exactly like a firefighters picnic, but wasn&#8217;t.</p>
<p>It had the food tents, the firetrucks parked nearby, the kids running about &#8212; I almost rode my bike up to see if I could score some food, but something was off. For starters, it seemed a little closed off, not as spread out and welcoming as your normal picnic.</p>
<p>Also, normal picnics for firefighters don&#8217;t have so many people walking around with walkie-talkies.<span id="more-1705"></span></p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a TV show,&#8221; one of the walkie-talkie guys told me. &#8220;&#8216;Chicago Fire.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>We chatted a bit. It&#8217;s debuting this October. I almost asked which network until I noticed a walkie-talkie woman with a peacock baseball cap. I rode on thinking about the cab company poster on my wall.</p>
<p>The poster is for &#8220;The Smartest Choice in Gotham City.&#8221; As anyone who has ever taken a taxi in Batman&#8217;s fictional home knows, that&#8217;s Gotham Cabs. (Boy Wonder Taxis is for suckers.) It&#8217;s beautiful, like an art deco woodcut.</p>
<p>I scored it off the &#8220;Batman Begins&#8221; propmaster. They spent an entire weekend turning a section of lower Michigan into a hobo shanty town, complete with Gotham Cabs ads and fliers for a Thomas and Martha Wayne Foundation gala. To repeat, they made sure their fake Hooverville was made of fake garbage from a fake city and made sure that fake garbage was beautifully designed.</p>
<p>The shanty town was in the background for less than eight seconds. Christian Bale was arguing with Katie Holmes in a car. They didn&#8217;t get out of the car.</p>
<p>A year earlier on that same spot, I met Maura Tierney and Goran Višnjić of &#8220;ER.&#8221; Or more appropriately, yelled &#8220;I loved &#8216;NewsRadio!&#8217;&#8221; to Tierney as I hauled a leaking garbage bag past the pair.</p>
<p>&#8220;ER&#8221; was filming a scene on the dock where I worked at the time. It was one of the hottest nights of summer, but the body doubles &#8212; and later Tierney and Višnjić, to be fair &#8212; were wearing full-length coats. It was going to be a winter scene.</p>
<p>They were right by the bridge where Sean Connery&#8217;s beat cop first met Kevin Costner&#8217;s Eliot Ness in &#8220;The Untouchables.&#8221;</p>
<p>Chicago is roughly accustomed to working around filming, but if I&#8217;m any example, it&#8217;s cute for a while, then you get sick of it.</p>
<p>I liked the conversation I had with a security guard who couldn&#8217;t think of the movie star he was guarding (it was Dennis Farina), but I was not amused when Fox&#8217;s short-lived &#8220;The Chicago Code&#8221; kept blocking my street to shoot exterior&#8217;s of Jennifer Beals&#8217; character&#8217;s house. John Leguizamo&#8217;s Christmas comedy kept delaying my bus when I lived in a crappier neighborhood.</p>
<p>But my favorite filming story comes long after the camera stopped. I was looking for parking by some friends&#8217; house in Uptown. I turned on Argyle and freaked the hell out. Essenay Studios. Right there.</p>
<p>Essenay was a silent film studio. And, for a brief year, the Chicago home of Charlie Chaplin.</p>
<p>Lured by big money and lured away by bigger, Chaplin only shot one Essenay film in Chicago &#8212; the rest he shot in Essanay&#8217;s Niles, Calif., studio. But here was some film history. And not just Chaplin. Ben Turpin. Francis X. Bushman. And a hell of a lot of other stars forgotten to all but nerds like me.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not making a straight line from a studio Charlie Chaplin ended up hating to an NBC fall lineup show about firemen, but Chicago&#8217;s got a long past on film. That past filters in when you watch &#8220;High Fidelity&#8221; or &#8220;The Blues Brothers&#8221; and realize you&#8217;ve been to that L stop, eaten at that restaurant a dozen times.</p>
<p>At that moment, it&#8217;s not Cusack, Connery, Bale or Beals up on the screen. As corny as it sounds, it&#8217;s you.</p>
<p><a title="His New Job" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ULQqgaS0O7s">See Chaplin&#8217;s one Chicago film</a></p>
<p><a href="https://www.facebook.com/1001chicago">Comment on this story</a></p>
<p><a title="#9: Dead Row" href="http://1001chicago.com/dead-row/">That&#8217;s life with the quick. Now meet the dead.</a></p>
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