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The Addams Family location: The charity auction: Ebell of Los Angeles, off Wilshire Boulevard, midtown
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THE ADDAMS FAMILY filming locations |
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CREDITS |
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Coen brothers’ cinematographer Barry Sonnenfeld turned first-time director with the movie version of the sixties TV show of the fifties cartoons.
The filmwas shot at the Hollywood Center Studios, 1040 Las Palmas Avenue, mainly on Stage 3/8, which coincidentally happened to be the studio where the original TV series was filmed. This studio, built in 1919 as the Jasper Studio, survived under various names until, in 1980, it became the ill-fated Zoetrope Studios as part of Francis Ford Coppola’s scheme to run a large independent production facility.
Sadly, there’s no Addams Mansion to see. The frontage of the house was built for the film on a mountain overlooking the Burbank Hills at Toluca Lake (The TV pilot did use a real house – coincidentally on Adams Boulevard – just south of Hollywood. You can still see it during the show’s opening credits, but a painting was substituted for the run of the series).
The film’s locations include the charity auction, where the Addamses buy back their own finger trap, which was filmed in LA’s 1927 club and theatre complex, the Ebell
of Los Angeles, 4401 West
Eighth Street at Lucerne Boulevard, off Wilshire
Boulevard, midtown, seen in many films including Steven Spielberg’s Catch Me If You Can, Air Force One and Forrest Gump.
The school theatre, where Wednesday and Pugsley stage a Peckinpahesque version of Shakespeare, is the Brentwood Theatre on the grounds of the Sawtelle Veteran’s Administration Medical Center, 11301 Wilshire Boulevard in Westside (tel: 800.233.3123; www.brentwoodtheatre.com).
The ‘Wampum Court Motel’, to which the family are exiled, was in Sylmar, northern LA, off the Golden State Freeway in the San Fernando Valley. |
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FILMING
LOCATIONS FOR THE ADDAMS FAMILY
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TRAVEL
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