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Washington,
DC – March 2023 / Newsmaker Alert: Historic
Hotels of America®, the official program of the National
Trust for Historic Preservation® for recognizing, celebrating,
and promoting the finest historic hotels in the United States, is pleased
to announce The
2023 Top 25 Historic Hotels of America in Film and Television History List.
The historic hotels and resorts selected for this announcement have been
the settings for iconic scenes in beloved blockbusters, art house favorites,
cult classics, and primetime television programs. Guests of these hotels
can retrace the steps of many movie makers and film stars such as Marilyn
Monroe, Elvis Presley, and Alfred Hitchcock through the storied lobbies
and guestrooms, and stand in the same historic places that brought unforgettable
characters like Tarzan, Amy March, and Luke Skywalker to life. A few on
the list even played roles in the history of the film industry. For example,
The Hollywood Roosevelt (1927) in Los Angeles, California, was the location
of the very first awards ceremony of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts
and Sciences—known as the Academy Awards® or the Oscars®—and hosted
by Douglas Fairbanks in the hotel’s Blossom Room in 1929. Often, historic
hotels have been the co-stars in movies, playing their parts through the
talents of architects, interior designers, historic preservationists, and
nature conservationists. Explore this year’s list to find out how the history
of film intersects with historic hotels, from luxury seaside resorts to
dude ranch escapes.
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this press release with accompanying photos at HistoricHotels.org
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River
Street Inn (1817)
Savannah,
Georgia
Set
within a beautifully restored, 200-year-old riverside warehouse in Savannah,
Georgia, and overlooking the magical Savannah River on historic River Street,
the River Street Inn provides interior and exterior locations for filmmakers
who want to frame their subjects in something historic, charming, and unique.
Established in 1817, River Street Inn is part of the Savannah Historic
District, which was designated a National Historic Landmark by the U.S.
Secretary of the Interior in 1966, and was inducted into Historic Hotels
of America in 1999. Considering the historic nature of downtown Savannah,
the Waterfront, and Factors Walk, it is not surprising that the film industry
chooses this area often for movies and television. The River Street Inn
is home to many of these on-site movie and television films as well as
utilized as a famous silhouette in several film backgrounds. Robert Downey
Jr., Michelle Pfeiffer, Michael Douglas, Adam Sandler, David Spade, Liam
Hemsworth, and Tim Daly are just a few of the leading actors that have
walked through the corridors of this iconic hotel or have filmed immediately
outside its doors. Movies filmed within the hotel or in the surrounding
block include The Gingerbread Man (1998), The Do-Over (2016),
Lady
& the Tramp (2019), Ant-Man & the Wasp (2018), and Academy
Award-winning film Glory (1998). In the movie Lady & the
Tramp (2019), the famous spaghetti date scene was filmed on the exterior
southwest corner of the River Street Inn. Additionally, during a scene
where the two pups stroll through a market, this location is really the
River Street Inn’s valet area.
Omni
Royal Orleans, New Orleans (1843)
New
Orleans, Louisiana
When
James Bond (Roger Moore) escapes from the villain “Mr. Big” in Live
and Let Die (1973), Bond tells his team to regroup at the Omni Royal
Orleans in the French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana. (“Royal Orleans
hotel,” Bond tells the cab driver after arriving at the airport.) Located
at the fashionable intersection of St. Louis and Royal streets, the Omni
Royal Orleans exudes the class and elegance that James Bond would choose
for his stay in the Crescent City. Dating to 1843, the hotel was inducted
into Historic Hotels of America in 2010. It appears in a long list of contemporary
popular television programs in addition to a few films: NCIS New Orleans
(2014-2021), Your Honor (2020-2023), Queer as Folk (2022),
Interview
with a Vampire (2022), and Daisy Jones and the Six (2023). Movies
and shows have been filmed at the rooftop pool area, Rib Room Restaurant,
ballrooms, Royal Garden Terrace Courtyard, and various suites. These locations
are all open to being visited, booked, or reserved. Cast and crew have
stayed the night at the Omni Royal New Orleans, and guests can request
to stay in a room once occupied by stars.
The
Peabody Memphis (1869)
Memphis,
Tennessee
Listed
in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, the original Peabody
Hotel in Memphis, Tennessee, opened in 1869 as a symbol of wealth and prestige
for the growing city. Its grandeur, both in size and in richness of design,
have made it a desirable filming location in the region. Three film adaptations
of John Grisham novels have been filmed at The Peabody Memphis: The
Firm (1993), The Client (1994), and The Rainmaker (1997).
The Peabody Memphis served as the setting for several scenes in The
Firm, starring Tom Cruise. The most memorable scene involves a lavish
party on hotel’s rooftop in which Mitch McDeere (Cruise) is persuaded to
accept a job at a Memphis law firm. The Peabody’s fine dining restaurant
Chez Philippe is the setting for a scene in The Client, in which
Tommy Lee Jones’ character District Attorney ‘Reverend’ Roy Foltrigg is
dining with FBI agents at the restaurant’s best table and a fan asks for
his autograph. The Peabody’s historic Continental Ballroom appears in The
Rainmaker as the room in which Matt Damon’s character takes the bar exam.
The Peabody Memphis is also known for light-hearted moments in film, often
due to its charming signature tradition of timed displays of live ducks
promenading through the lobby, an event called the “Peabody Duck March.”
The hotel’s duck march has appeared on screen in the comedy Soul Men
(2008), starring Samuel L. Jackson and Bernie Mac, and in The Open Road
(2009), starring Justin Timberlake and Jeff Bridges. The Peabody Marching
Ducks have also appeared on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson
and on Sesame Street when Bert and Ernie celebrated Rubber Ducky
Day.
Palmer
House®, A Hilton Hotel (1871)
Chicago,
Illinois
The
Palmer House®, A Hilton Hotel in Chicago, Illinois, is America’s longest-operating
hotel and its on-camera gravitas is undeniable. Palmer House, which was
inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2007, dates to 1871 and is
listed in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. The hotel offers
filmmakers luxurious settings and large rooms that can accommodate a film
crew, gilded lobby with a formal staircase, marble-topped tables, velvet
seating, and a ceiling mural depicting Greek mythology. Several notable
films shot scenes at the hotel: Curly Sue (1991), Academy Award-winner
The
Fugitive (1993), and Miracle on 34th Street (1994). It has also
appeared as the setting for recent television shows set in Chicago, including
Chicago P.D. and Chicago Fire. Recently recognized as one
of The
2022 Top 25 Historic Hotels of America for a Romantic Proposal and
built to be a wedding present from Potter Palmer to his new bride, Bertha,
the Palmer House hosted the fifth season of the reality television show
Married
at First Sight. The reality television show features a few couples,
paired up by relationship experts, who agree to marry when they first meet.
Scenes were filmed in the hotel’s elegant halls and romantic ballrooms,
and in the hotel’s ultimate bridal suites, perfect for the brides to prepare
hair and make-up and spend the last moments as bachelorettes with their
bridal party.
The
Mission Inn Hotel & Spa (1876)
Riverside,
California
The
Mission Inn Hotel & Spa in Riverside, California, has attracted filmmakers
for over a century with its ornate antique features, castle-like towers,
Mediterranean domes, flying buttresses, and sprawling arcades. A member
of Historic Hotels of America since 1996 and designated a National Historic
Landmark by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior. It dates to 1876 and has
been expanded several times since its original construction. The six-story
tall inn resembles a colonial-era Spanish mission with thick stucco walls,
heavy carved doors, spiraled columns, and gabled red-tile roofs. The ornate
central lobby leads to rooms with wood paneling imported directly from
a Belgian convent and a grand, art-decked hall with a draped canopied ceiling.
The richness and drama of the space made it a fitting setting for movies
like The Vampire (1918), a silent film; Idiot’s Delight (1938)
starring Clark Gable; The Wild Party (1975), produced by Merchant
Ivory Productions, and starring James Coco and Raquel Welch; Vibes
(1988) starring Jeff Goldblum; science fiction and fantasy show Sliders:
The Exodus, Part I & II (1997); and The Man in the Iron Mask
(1998), a period drama starring Leonardo DiCaprio. In 1982, singer Eddie
Money filmed a vampire lore-inspired music video for his song, “Think I’m
in Love,” at the inn.
The
Jefferson Hotel (1895)
Richmond,
Virginia
Listed
in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, The Jefferson Hotel has
a long, illustrious history as a cultural landmark and grand dame hotel
in Richmond, Virginia, since it opened its doors on Halloween 1885. Despite
its fame and architectural grandeur, the hotel was forced to close in the
1980s and welcomed no guests for about six years. Its story does not pause
there, however, because film history was made at The Jefferson Hotel
even when its guestrooms were empty. In 1980, filmmakers selected the hotel
to serve as the set for My Dinner With Andre (1981), a critically
acclaimed art house classic. Director Louis Malle shot the famous scripted
conversation between actors Andre Gregory and Wallace Shawn–playing versions
of themselves–in the Grand Ballroom, which was transformed for the film
to look like Café des Artistes in New York. After the filmmakers
left, the hotel underwent a tremendous renovation and reopened on May 6,
1986. Three years later, in 1989, the historic hotel was inducted into
Historic Hotels of America as a charter member.
Jekyll
Island Club Resort (1886)
Jekyll
Island, Georgia
The
historic Jekyll Island Club Resort is an iconic resort that exudes Gilded
Age glamor and modern luxury. Designated a National Historic Landmark District
by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior, and nestled in a barrier island
off the Georgia coast, the Jekyll Island Club Resort opened in 1887 as
a retreat for America’s wealthiest families. From the lofty tower to the
encircling verandas and original heart pine floors, Victorian charm still
permeates the public areas and rooms. These traits have allowed the resort
to serve as a backdrop for several period films, including The Legend
of Bagger Vance (2000) directed by Robert Redford and starring Will
Smith, Matt Damon, and Charlize Theron. Fans of Robert Redford’s 2000 film
can dine in the Grand Dining Room as characters in the movie did or stroll
across the front lawn, also used in filming. Redford and scenic directors
chose the resort’s pool as the perfect location for one scene; they covered
up the pool and transformed it into an outdoor dance floor. The most popular
spot from the film at the resort is a replica of the watering hole enjoyed
by Matt Damon. “The Bar,” nestled within the Riverfront Lobby just outside
of the Grand Dining Room, offers guests a chance to pull up to the counter
or to enjoy their libation from the comfort of leather chairs perched in
front of a grand fireplace. Guests of the resort can venture to the Jekyll
Island Golf Club and tee off on the same course depicted in the film.
Union
League Club of Chicago (1886)
Chicago,
Illinois
A
downtown Georgian Revival landmark, the historic Union League Club of Chicago
is a stately and sophisticated social club and hotel dating to 1886. Its
rich interiors have served as filming locations for films including My
Best Friend’s Wedding (1997) and television shows such as Empire
(2015-2020). The Union League Club of Chicago and the Empire production
team developed a close relationship during their time filming at the clubhouse.
The historic hotel co-starred in scenes with Phylicia Rashad, Terrence
Howard, Taraji P. Henson, and Taye Diggs. The Empire production
crew transformed the hotel’s Presidents Hall into a large conference room
and used the Lincoln Ballroom for the location of an elegant gala. My
Best Friend’s Wedding also filmed a scene in the hotel’s Presidents
Hall, a desirable location because of its expansive pillars, wide ceiling,
beautiful artwork, and fireplace. After filming, the movie crew left the
furniture it had installed for the set. Though the furniture has since
been reupholstered for upkeep, the same design was used and the pieces
remain in the Presidents Hall to this day. The PBS genealogy show Finding
Your Roots (2012-), hosted by Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., used the
Lincoln Ballroom for interviewing the musician Sting. Sting’s only request
of the staff during his time at the club was an electric tea kettle. The
Union League Club of Chicago still has the electric tea kettle purchased
for him and staff there refer to it as “Sting’s Kettle.” Visitors can request
a clubhouse tour to learn more about the history of the building.
Grand
Hotel (1887)
Mackinac
Island, Michigan
Grand
Hotel has been an icon of summer resorts since 1887 and a movie icon since
1980. Designated a National Historic Landmark District by the U.S. Secretary
of the Interior, the hotel is located on Mackinac Island, Michigan, where
cars are not allowed and horse-drawn carriage remains the preferred mode
of transportation. Adding to its romantic appeal, the Gilded Age resort
of the Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island, Michigan, is often synonymous in
popular imagination with the film Somewhere in Time (1980). Starring
Christopher Reeve, Jane Seymour and Christopher Plummer, this time travel
romance was filmed on location. The filmmakers not only took advantage
of the hotel’s sweeping views and Victorian exteriors, they shot much of
Somewhere in Time inside the Grand Hotel itself. The movie became a cult
classic over the subsequent decades and still claims a following. In fact,
Somewhere
in Time fans meet annually at the Grand Hotel in late October. For
a truly immersive experience, the Grand Hotel has two bookable suites dedicated
to the film: the Somewhere in Time Suite and the Jane Seymour Suite.
Both rooms are decorated with memorabilia from the movie. The resort also
offers a special Somewhere in Time Weekend event package. Visitors
to the island can also visit the “Somewhere in Time Gazebo,” a romantic
Queen Anne-style gazebo featured in the film, located at the state park
west of Fort Mackinac.
Hotel
del Coronado (1888)
Coronado,
California
The
Hotel del Coronado seaside resort—with its elegant red cupolas and towers—opened
in 1888. Its founders dreamed of creating a seaside resort that would be
“the talk of the Western world” and it has, perhaps beyond their wildest
dreams. In 1958, the hit sensation Some Like It Hot (1959) was filmed
at Hotel del Coronado. The film showcased the talents of Marilyn Monroe,
Tony Curtis, and Jack Lemmon, while also highlighting the hotel’s assets:
a spectacular sun-drenched silhouette of Victorian architecture, the perfect
backdrop for the film’s 1929 setting. The classic comedy is the humorous
story of two musicians who attempted to flee the Chicago Outfit after witnessing
the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre. Many film critics consider Some Like
It Hot to be one of the greatest films of all time and it is listed
on the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry today. Named the #1
comedy of all time by the American Film Institute, the movie has an honored
place in film and Del history. Although only exterior scenes were filmed
at the hotel, the interior scenes do look very Del-like (right down to
the placement of the lobby elevator and stairs). Hotel del Coronado was
designated a National Historic Landmark District by the U.S. Secretary
of the Interior in 1977, inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2018,
and awarded Historic
Hotels of America Best Historic Resort in 2021.
The
Historic Magnolia House (1889)
Greensboro,
North Carolina
The
Historic Magnolia House in Greensboro, North Carolina, is a vibrant hotel
and fully restored “Green Book” historic site. While the hotel itself has
not been featured in a film or television show, it does offer guests a
rare chance to learn about the history of The Negro Motorist Green Book
that was featured in the Primetime Emmy Awards-nominated television show
Lovecraft
Country (2020), the documentary The Green Book: Guide to Freedom (2019)
directed by Yoruba Richen, and the Academy Award-winning film Green
Book (2018) directed by Peter Farrelly. First published in the 1930s,
Victor Green’s travel book was a lifesaving guide for non-white travelers
navigating Jim Crow America. It listed restaurants, motels, service stations,
barber shops, nightclubs and more where African Americans could expect
safe service. The Historic Magnolia House was listed in The Negro Motorist
Green Book almost every year between 1955 and 1961. From the moment
guests walk through the front door of The Historic Magnolia House, they
stand in the historic steps of African American travelers who stayed there
during the Jim Crow Era. In 1949, Arthur and Louise Gist transformed their
Greensboro home—which dates to 1889—into a motel where Black travelers
could rest. At the time, most motels were whites-only and the Gists thus
offered an important service by opening their house to other African Americans.
Guests at The Historic Magnolia House during its heyday include Martin
Luther King, Jr., writers Carter G. Woodson and James Baldwin, musicians
Tina Turner and Ray Charles, baseball star and businessman Jackie Robinson
(who starred in his own dramatized biopic, The Jackie Robinson Story,
in 1950), and Lena Horne, the performer and civil rights activist remembered
for her roles in Stormy Weather (1943), Cabin in the Sky
(1943), and The Wiz (1978). The Historic Magnolia House is listed
in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places and was inducted into
Historic Hotels of America in 2022.
White
Stallion Ranch (1900)
Tucson,
Arizona
The
White Stallion Ranch in Tucson, Arizona, has been the setting for over
25 feature-length films, many of them Westerns made between 1940 and 1970.
The ranch began as a family farm in 1900 and 116 years later, in 2016,
it was inducted into Historic Hotels of America. Its star apparently rose
around the time that the Academy Award-nominated film Arizona (1940) shot
scenes at the ranch in 1940. A new owner acquired the ranch in 1945 with
a dream of relocating from Chicago to Arizona’s warm desert climate. The
farm experienced a cultural renaissance during its time as the new owner,
who constructed six new buildings that could be outfitted for guests. As
such, the cattle ranch took its first steps toward operating as a traditional,
upscale resort. The success of Arizona and the ranch’s growing amenities
for guests attracted more Hollywood producers to use the site to film various
aspects of their movies. Among the films shot within the vicinity of the
ranch during this era of classic Westerns were The Last Round-Up
(1947) starring Gene Autry; Winchester ‘73 (1950) starring James
Stewart and later selected for the National Film Registry by the National
Film Preservation Board; and The Last Outpost (1951) starring Ronald
Regan and Rhonda Fleming. The ranch’s true metamorphosis into a vacation
destination resort occurred in the 1960s. Allen and Cynthia True purchased
it in 1965 and developed it, acquiring some 3,000 acres of land and building
additional facilities to accommodate guests. Its popularity soared, and
for decades since the historic, family-owned, dude ranch continues to catch
the eye of movie producers and location scouts into the 21st century.
The
Fairmont Hotel San Francisco (1907)
San
Francisco, California
Since
1907, The Fairmont Hotel San Francisco has served as the residence for
U.S. presidents, world leaders, and entertainment stars when they are in
San Francisco. The landmark hotel is also known for setting the scene of
numerous films and television shows for over 85 years. The Academy Award-winning
film Alexander’s Ragtime Band (1938)—the highest grossing film of
the 1930s—was filmed at the Fairmont Hotel San Francisco, and more recent
films like Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021) have
been filmed on-site as well. Other notable films include Vertigo
(1958), Towering Inferno (1974), and The Rock (1996). Vertigo
(1958), directed by Alfred Hitchcock, was filmed in the heart of San Francisco,
where the characters were residents in an apartment building across from
The Fairmont Hotel San Francisco. Alfred Hitchcock stayed at the hotel
during the filming of this production. In the early 1970s, the Academy
Award-winning film Towering Inferno (1974) filmed scenes at the
Fairmont Hotel San Francisco. The Rock (1996) features a thrilling
scene filmed on the hotel’s iconic Penthouse Balcony, and the following
chase scene goes down the hotel escalators and into the hotel’s main kitchen.
The Fairmont Hotel San Francisco is listed in the U.S. National Register
of Historic Places and was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in
2001.
The
Plaza (1907)
New
York, New York
Designed
in a style reminiscent of a French chateau and located off Central Park
in New York, The Plaza’s imposing exterior and opulent interior have captivated
the imaginations of guests and movie-goers for years. In 1959, Alfred Hitchcock’s
classic thriller North By Northwest marked the first time The Plaza
was prominently featured on the big screen. It is from this hotel that
the movie’s hero, Roger Thornhill (Cary Grant), is kidnapped. In The
Way We Were (1973), Barbara Streisand meets Robert Redford by chance
at the Fifth Avenue entrance of The Plaza. The Plaza’s place in the cult
classic Home Alone 2: Lost In New York came in 1992, when the opulence
of the location and the lofty standards of the luxury hotel made it the
ideal location for abandoned scamp Kevin McCallister to check-in with his
dad’s credit card. The 59th street lobby and Suite No. 411 are the key
features of The Plaza shown in the film. In homage to the film and its
fans, The Plaza offers a package that recreates a day in the life of Kevin
McCallister at The Plaza. The package comes with a 4-hour private limousine
ride around New York City to visit other famous Home Alone 2 filming
locations from the movie including the Empire State Building, Rockefeller
Center, Central Park, Carnegie Hall, and Radio City Music Hall. Of course,
no limousine ride would be complete without a hot cheese pizza to savor
while reliving Kevin’s famous limo pizza scene. During the filming of Home
Alone 2, the film crew asked what was under the lobby carpeting, because
they wanted a scene of Kevin sliding through the lobby. When the carpet
was removed, the hotel discovered original tiling from 1907 that now remains
uncovered. The Plaza was designated a National Historic Landmark District
by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior in 1986 and it and was inducted into
Historic Hotels of America in 1991.
The
Hermitage Hotel (1910)
Nashville,
Tennessee
Filmmaking
has played a role in the history of Nashville, Tennessee’s The Hermitage
Hotel since its early years, almost immediately after the hotel opened
in 1910. When Tennessee’s “first moving picture play” was filmed in 1914,
the filmmakers stayed at The Hermitage Hotel as they moved around the region,
and they used the vantage point from the hotel’s roof to capture footage
of the surrounding city. Many decades later, filming for a portion of a
made-for-television movie Roots: The Gift (1988) starring Louis
Gosset, Jr., took place over six days at The Hermitage Hotel. Reba McEntire
filmed portions of a music video for her song, “Sunday Kind of Love,” in
the hotel’s ballroom that same year. With Nashville being Music City, The
Hermitage Hotel is naturally popular place for country music videos. In
addition to “Sunday Kind of Love,” Josh Turner filmed there for “I’m Your
Man”, Ronnie McDowell for his cover of the classic hit “I Don’t Want to
Set The World on Fire,” and Marty Stuart for “That’s What Love’s About.”
The television show Nashville (2012-2018) filmed numerous scenes
at The Hermitage Hotel over the course of its six seasons. Finally, The
Hermitage Hotel has been a popular place not only as a location for filming
but as a host for numerous acting legends when they visit Nashville. One
story tells of how Charlie Chaplin arrived at the hotel’s front desk carrying
a custard cream pie, which had been presented to him earlier by a fan.
The Hermitage Hotel was designated a National Historic Landmark by the
U.S. Secretary of the Interior in 2020, and was inducted into Historic
Hotels of America in 1996.
Fairmont
Copley Plaza (1912)
Boston,
Massachusetts
The
Fairmont Copley Plaza in Boston, Massachusetts, is a historic Renaissance
Revival-style luxury hotel with a rich history of co-starring in major
motion pictures. It is a recognizable setting featured in cult classic
The
Boondock Saints (1999), Bride Wars (2009), Academy Awards-nominee
American
Hustle (2013), Academy Awards-winner Little Women (2019), Julia
(2022), and Academy Awards-nominee Don’t Look Up (2021). In Little
Women, directed by Greta Gerwig, the Fairmont Copley Plaza’s Grand
Ballroom set the scene for an opulent French ball attended by Amy March
(Florence Pugh) and Laurie (Timothée Chalamet). For its part, the
Fairmont Copley Plaza is included in a Little Women Film Tourism
Map created by the Massachusetts Film Office. At the end of
Don’t Look
Up, directed by Adam McKay, the hotel’s OAK Long Bar + Kitchen was
chosen for a scene toward the end of the film when Cate Blanchett and Tyler
Perry’s characters lament the end of the world in a ransacked, empty restaurant.
It was an extensive takeover of the entire restaurant, and production used
all of OAK’s furniture as seen in the movie. Finally, the hotel has “played”
two other historic Fairmont hotels also recognized on this list. In Julia,
the Fairmont Copley Plaza’s Presidential Suite was the filming location
for Julia Child’s guestroom at the Fairmont Hotel San Francisco. In Bride
Wars, Ann Hathaway and Kate Hudson play old friends who grew up together
dreaming of having their respective weddings at The Plaza in New York,
which is actually played by the Fairmont Copley Plaza in the movie. The
Plaza is a sister hotel to Fairmont Copley Plaza, both managed by Fairmont
and designed by the same architect: Henry Janeway Hardenbergh.
OHEKA
CASTLE (1919)
Huntington,
New York
The
grand historic hotel OHEKA CASTLE appeared as the palatial “Xanadu” estate
in the opening montage of the film Citizen Kane (1941). Considered
by critics to be one of the greatest films of all time, Citizen Kane
was produced, directed, and co-written by its starring actor, Orson Welles.
Xanadu in Citizen Kane is in Florida, but OHEKA CASTLE is nestled
in Huntington, New York, on Long Island’s north shore. It is not difficult
to see how OHEKA CASTLE caught Welles’ attention: built by financier and
philanthropist Otto Hermann Kahn in 1919, The New York Times declared it,
“the finest country house in America.” During the Roaring Twenties, the
estate entertained Hollywood luminaries, esteemed heads of state, and distinguished
royalty. The chateau remains the second-largest private residence ever
built in the United States and was inducted into Historic Hotels of America
in 2004. Today, OHEKA CASTLE’s stunning European style, dramatic surroundings,
and proximity to New York City continue to make the castle a popular backdrop
for professional film, television, video, and still photography productions.
OHEKA CASTLE has appeared in music videos for “Haunted” (2013) by Beyonce,
“Brokenhearted” (1994) by Brandy, and “Blank Space” (2014) by Taylor Swift.
Recently, it portrayed a Hungarian castle in the second season of Succession
(2018-) on HBO. OHEKA CASTLE was inducted into Historic Hotels of America
in 2004 and is listed in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.
Hawthorne
Hotel (1925)
Salem,
Massachusetts
In
1970, the cast and crew of Bewitched (1964-1972) stayed at the Hawthorne
Hotel in Salem, Massachusetts, while filming episodes for the classic television
show’s special: “Bewitched: The Salem Saga” (1970). Local landmarks featured
in the television special included The House of the Seven Gables, The Witch
House, and the Fisherman Statue. The hotel exterior and interior appeared
in the show, too: in the background of Salem Common and in a scene filmed
by the hotel elevators. For years after it aired, the hotel was flooded
with calls asking if it was the “Bewitched Hotel.” The Hawthorne Hotel
is often ranked as one of the most haunted hotels in America and its folklore
was recently featured in the 2022 Top 25 Historic Hotels of America Most
Haunted Hotels. Guests have reported moving furniture, sightings of a ghostly
woman, and unexplained noises. In 2007, Syfy’s popular paranormal show,
Ghost
Hunters (2004-2016), visited the hotel to investigate. More recently,
actors Robert de Niro, Jennifer Lawrence, and Bradley Cooper filmed scenes
at the hotel for their movie Joy (2015). The beautifully restored,
stately Federal-style hotel opened in 1925 and is in the Salem Common Historic
District in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. It is named
for the author Nathaniel Hawthorne, who spent his childhood in Salem.
The
Inn at Death Valley (1926)
Death
Valley, California
Death
Valley National Park in California has been a popular filmmaking destination
since Cecil B. DeMille directed the silent film Chimmie Fadden Out West
on location in Death Valley in 1915. Located about five hours from Los
Angeles, it is easily accessible to the major studios and provides one
of the most unique desert landscapes in the world. Inside the park, The
Inn at Death Valley opened in 1926 and the inn has served filmmakers, cast,
and crew, as well as holidaymakers for almost a century. The inn was inducted
into Historic Hotels of America in 2012. Guests can experience fine dining
in one of the world’s most remote settings, relax by a spring-fed pool,
stroll through spectacular palm gardens, and play a round on a golf course
that is a record 214 feet below sea level. Many actors—including Bette
Davis, John Wayne, and Marlon Brando—enjoyed staying there so much that
they went back after filming ended. Indeed, Clark Gable and Carole Lombard
spent a portion of their honeymoon in the resort. In the 1970s and 1980s,
while filming the original Star Wars trilogy at Death Valley National Park,
some cast members stayed at The Inn at Death Valley. Non-human actor Margie
the Elephant, who played a “Bantha,” a fictional desert beast of the Star
Wars universe, made the nearby Oasis Gardens her home during filming. The
historic inn itself appears in films The Lively Set (1964) and Winter
Kills (1979). The Inn at Death Valley was most recently seen on the
silver screen as a location for Valley of Love (2015), a French
film starring Gérard Depardieu and Isabelle Huppert.
The
Don CeSar (1928)
St.
Pete Beach, Florida
Built
in 1928 to resemble a Mediterranean-style castle and affectionately called
the “Pink Palace,” The Don CeSar of St. Pete Beach, Florida, is a classic
resort with unforgettable architecture and private beach. The resort was
inducted into Historic Hotels of America as a charter member in 1989. Popular
films that shot scenes at The Don CeSar include HealtH (1980) starring
Lauren Bacall, Carol Burnett, and James Garner; Once Upon a Time in
America (1984) starring Robert DeNiro and James Woods; Forever Mine
(1999) starring Ray Liotta; and The Infiltrator (2016) starring
Bryan Cranston. These movies made great use of the historic hotel’s preserved
and restored settings: the private beach, stunning lobby, restaurants and
bars, pools, and guestrooms—all of which are available for visitors to
drop by or book today. Additionally, the rock band Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
worked with the hotel and MTV to film a music video on the hotel roof in
1985. The footage showing the band with the iconic hotel in the background
was used in the MTV documentary Southern Accents (1985). Today,
visitors can learn more about films made at The Don CeSar by stopping at
a display near its restaurant, Society Table.
Hilton
Chicago (1927)
Chicago,
Illinois
The
Hilton Chicago is a Chicago landmark – the city’s third-largest hotel –
overlooking Grant Park, Lake Michigan, and the Museum Campus. Established
in 1927, the hotel has appeared as the backdrop to countless prominent
films and television shows. The Hilton Chicago appears in My Best Friend’s
Wedding (1997), Road to Perdition (2002), and The Fugitive
(1993), as well as ER, in which the heliport of Hilton Chicago portrays
the hospital helipad. In The Fugitive, starring Harrison Ford, Tommy
Lee Jones and Joe Pantoliano, the Hilton Chicago’s plush Grand Ballroom
played an important role in the tense climax of this movie. Perhaps the
most beloved scene captured at the Hilton Chicago is the end of Home
Alone II: Lost in New York (1992), when Kevin McCallister is reunited
with his family after his solo adventure in the Big Apple. The New York
hotel suite portrayed in the film was in fact the Conrad Suite of the Hilton
Chicago. It is one of the hotel’s thirteen specialty suites and nicknamed
the “Midwest White House,” given the number of presidents who have passed
through this suite. Visitors are welcome to learn more about the Hilton
Chicago’s film and television history at the hotel’s history corridor,
where a reel clip station is set up to show the hotel’s starring roles.
The
Hollywood Roosevelt (1927)
Los
Angeles, California
As
one of the most historic hotels in Los Angeles, The Hollywood Roosevelt
has seen decades of famous faces. In 1929, the hotel was the location of
the very first awards ceremony of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences —also known as the Academy Awards® or the Oscars® —and
hosted by Douglas Fairbanks in the hotel’s Blossom Room and attended by
the who’s who of Golden Age Hollywood. Ever since, it has welcomed icons
from Shirley Temple to Angelina Jolie. Today, the hotel still buzzes with
industry executives and talent, and is a popular destination for locals
and tourists from around the world. One hit movie that was filmed at the
hotel is the biographical crime comedy-drama Catch Me If You Can
(2002) produced by Steven Spielberg and starring Tom Hanks and Leonardo
DiCaprio, with Christopher Walken, Martin Sheen, and Nathalie Baye. In
the film, the hotel’s Tropicana Pool was turned into the Tropicana Motel.
They rented out the entire pool area, stairway in entrance of the pool,
Rosy Café, and Cabana Room 208. Today, guests can access these locations.
Other popular movies filmed at The Hollywood Roosevelt are A Star is
Born (2018) with Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga; Almost Famous
(2000); and Beverly Hills Cop II (1987) starring Eddie Murphy. TV
shows with scenes filmed at the Roosevelt include Curb Your Enthusiasm
(2000-), I Love Lucy (1951-1957), and many more.
Hotel
Warner (1930)
West
Chester, Pennsylvania
Hotel
Warner has been one of West Chester’s most celebrated historical landmarks
since it opened as a movie theater in 1930. In fact, this spectacular historic
hotel is among the few former or current historic movie theaters listed
in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. Before its transformation
into a desirable hotel destination, the building served as the magnificent
Warner Theater. In the late 1920s, during the Golden Age of Hollywood,
Warner Bros. Pictures selected West Chester, Pennsylvania, to be the location
for its own opulent 1,650-seat venue. The theater was designed by the firm
Rapp & Rapp of Chicago, one of the leading designers of palatial movie
theaters in the early 20th century. Their work on the Warner Theater—also
known as the “High Street Theater” or the “Showplace of Chester County”—included
the theater, restaurant, and a series of small stores. The brilliant Warner
Theater debuted in 1930 with a showing of The Life of the Party
(1930), an all-talking Technicolor comedy starring Winnie Lightner. Child
star Davey Lee even made a personal appearance on opening night, who sang
and danced on stage. When its days as a movie theater ended in the 1970s,
developers renovated the Warner Theater to host live entertainment. Nevertheless,
the theater eventually closed in 1984. The façade and lobby were
preserved and saved from demolition, and in the early 21st century the
building was transformed into a hotel, with a new tower that complemented
the theater’s historic design. Centrally located to countless restaurants,
sidewalk cafes, brew pubs, and eclectic shops, Hotel Warner is the only
hotel in West Chester’s historic downtown. Visitors can enjoy a stroll
through the historic streets and discover the rich architecture and vibrant
past of this nationally acclaimed neighborhood.
The
Lodge at Wakulla Springs (1937)
Wakulla
Springs, Florida
Since
opening in 1937, filmmakers have flocked to The Lodge at Wakulla Springs
in Wakulla Springs, Florida, to take advantage of its lush surroundings
and clear spring waters—and luxury resort amenities. In 1939, the hotel’s
owner hired famed swimming coach Newton Perry to serve as the hotel’s general
manager. Perry was a Hollywood insider, having served as a consultant for
on-location water scenes for many years. He had pioneered a groundbreaking
method for shooting film underwater, which inspired many up-and-coming
filmmakers to seek his expertise. Perry used his connections in the movie
industry to attract all kinds of upscale clientele to the hotel. The filmmakers
he attracted began to use both the hotel and its surroundings as the setting
for various films, starting with Richard Thorpe’s Tarzan’s Secret Treasure
in 1941. Starring Olympic-class swimmer Johnnie Weismuller as Tarzan and
the iconic Maureen O’Sullivan as Jane, the movie established The Lodge
at Wakulla Springs as a desirable place to produce films. Eight more movies
were shot in the area, including the likes of Academy Award-winning short
film Amphibious Fighters (1943) and Night Moves (1975). Director
Jack Arnold also filmed portions of the legendary Creature from the
Black Lagoon (1954) on-site, too, filming the movie’s tropical scenes
in the area of Wakulla Springs. All underwater shots featured in the movie
Airplane
‘77 (1977) were staged just beyond the hotel’s front door. The film
crew even erected a partial replica of a submerged passenger jet on the
grounds. Parts of the jet plane are still scattered around the Edward Ball
Wakulla Springs State Park. In addition to these major films, there have
been independent films, documentaries, and news novelty newsreel footage
using the backdrop of the lodge and springs.
Hilton
Hawaiian Village® Waikiki Beach Resort (1957)
Honolulu,
Hawaii
When
Elvis Presley visited Hawaii over the years between 1957 and 1967, he only
stayed at the historic Hilton Hawaiian Village® Waikiki Beach Resort
in Honolulu, Hawaii. After Presley was released from the Army in 1961,
he headed to Hawaii to raise money for a USS Arizona memorial at
Pearl Harbor and to start filming his first major motion picture, Blue
Hawaii. Filming locations at the hotel include the HauTree Bar, the
Hilton Pier, the main lobby entrance, and the Tropics Bar & Grill.
Presley and his entourage booked the entire 14th floor of the Ocean Tower
(The Ali’i) at the Hilton Hawaii Village and stayed for over two weeks.
Today, his guestroom suite is bookable and includes memorabilia from his
time at the hotel, including memories of Blue Hawaii filming. For
his contribution to the war memorialization effort, the World War II Foundation
dedicated a plaque to him at the Hilton Hawaiian Village in 2021. The plaque
is displayed in the Tapa Tower lobby’s history wall–right next to the hotel’s
Historic Hotels of America plaque. In addition to Blue Hawaii, the beautiful
Midcentury Modern resort hotel has set the scene for hit television shows
including Wheel of Fortune (1983), Baywatch Hawaii (1999-2001),
Magnum
P.I. (2018-), and Hawaii Five-0 (2010-2020). It is a remarkable
location within the generally stunning setting of Waikiki Beach. The hotel
offers filmmakers and guests Waikiki’s widest stretch of white sand, a
beachfront lagoon, lush tropical gardens and waterfalls, views of Diamond
Head, and romantic seaside sunsets.
“Where
else can a traveler stay in a scene from a famous movie or put themselves
into the same setting used in an iconic film but at a historic hotel! Whether
it’s a Hollywood blockbuster or a family vacation home movie, Historic
Hotels of America provide authentic settings and locations made famous
over the past century by numerous, movie and film stars, celebrities, directors,
and producers. The unique features of historic hotels draw filmmakers to
select these one-of-a-kind settings as the perfect location to stage their
art,” said Lawrence
P. Horwitz, Executive Vice President of Historic Hotels of America
and Historic Hotels Worldwide. “Historic Hotels of America hotels and resorts
are places where you can stay the night and be the star of your own travels.”
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About
Historic Hotels of America®
Historic
Hotels of America® is the official program of the National Trust for
Historic Preservation for recognizing, celebrating, and promoting the finest
historic hotels in the United States of America. To be nominated and selected
for membership in this prestigious program, a hotel must be at least 50
years old; designated by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior as a National
Historic Landmark or listed in or eligible for listing in the National
Register of Historic Places; and recognized as having historical significance.
Of the more than 300 historic hotels inducted into Historic Hotels of America
from 44 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, all historic
hotels faithfully preserve their sense of authenticity, sense of place,
and architectural integrity. For more information, please visit HistoricHotels.org.
About
Historic Hotels Worldwide®
Historic
Hotels Worldwide® is a prestigious and distinctive collection of historic
treasures, including luxury historic hotels built in former castles, chateaus,
palaces, academies, haciendas, villas, monasteries, and other historic
lodging spanning ten centuries. Historic Hotels Worldwide represents the
finest and most distinctive global collection of more than 320 historic
hotels in more than 46 countries. Hotels inducted into Historic Hotels
Worldwide are authentic historic treasures, demonstrate historic preservation,
and celebrate historic significance. Eligibility for induction into Historic
Hotels Worldwide is limited to those distinctive historic hotels that adhere
to the following criteria: minimum age for the building is 75 years or
older; historically relevant as a significant location within a historic
district, historically significant landmark, place of a historic event,
former home of a famous person, or historic city center; hotel celebrates
its history by showcasing memorabilia, artwork, photography, and other
examples of its historic significance; recognized by national preservation
or heritage buildings organization or located within a UNESCO World Heritage
Site; and presently used as historic hotel. For more information, please
visit HistoricHotelsWorldwide.com.
To
learn more, please visit:
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Contact:
Katherine
Orr
Historic
Hotels of America | Historic Hotels Worldwide
Manager,
Marketing Communications
Tel:
202-772-8337
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