Reliving Scenes from Favorite Movies on New York City Tour
by
Colette Connolly
Movie fans visiting New
York City for the first time might want to consider taking the New York TV &
Movie Sites tour, a three-hour jaunt by bus through several Manhattan
neighborhoods where filmmakers regularly shoot footage for movies and
popular TV shows.
The tour
is run by On Location Tours, a New York City-based company that not only
offers this particular tour but a variety of other tours, too, taking
visitors to locations where scenes from Sex and the City, Gossip Girls, The
Sopranos, and other shows were made.
Actor
and voiceover talent Brian Taylor is one of several tour guides on the New
York TV & Movie Sites tour. A few times a week, Taylor shares his intimate
knowledge of the movie industry and New York City’s eclectic neighborhoods. <
During a recent tour, which
began at Ellen’s Stardust Diner, a legendary spot in the middle of New
York’s Times Square, Taylor began by pointing out locations from several
recent movies, including The Devil Wears Prada, Vanilla Ice, Enchanted,
Michael Clayton, and Spiderman 3. In between locations, Taylor drew our
attention to the drop-down video screens playing scenes from several movies
that were mentioned on the tour.
Early on, we passed by the
Hearst Tower where scenes from Disney’s Confessions of a Shopaholic were
filmed in 2008. Taylor told us that the vicinity of Lois Lane’s fictitious
apartment in the 1978 Superman movie was located near Columbus Circle, and
also in midtown, we had a close-up look at the fountain outside the Plaza
Hotel where the opening scene from Friends was filmed.
We
learned that the upscale store, Bergdorf Goodman, was featured in a scene
from the movie, Arthur, that the New York Public Library was used as a
backdrop in an episode of Seinfeld, Sex and the City and the first Spiderman
movie, and as we passed the Empire State Building, Taylor reminded us of
scenes from King Kong and Sleepless in Seattle.
On Bedford and Grove Streets
in the West Village, our bus stopped a few short blocks away from the
Friends building. Although the series itself was shot in Los Angeles, this
particular Manhattan building was considered a suitable one for the show’s
exterior shots.
At 14 North Moore Street in
TriBeCA, Taylor told us that the Hook and Ladder 8 building had served as a
backdrop for a scene in the Ghostbusters movie, and the brownstone at 10 St.
Luke’s Place is where exterior shots were taken for The Cosby Show.
We
discovered that filming in New York City is no easy task. Filmmakers must
seek permission from city officials
before shooting. Once that’s
granted, film companies can spend anywhere from $10,000 to $40,000 per day
capturing scenes.
To catch
a glimpse of Hollywood’s hottest stars on location in Manhattan, Taylor
suggested we visit the website
www.onlocationvactions.com or the popular movie database website
www.imdb.com that details the careers of
thousands of actors and is a treasure trove of media information. <
To find
out more about the tour, which costs $36, and others offered by On Location
tours, visit www.screentours.com
or call (212) 209-3370.
Colette
Connolly is a New York-based travel writer
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