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Historic Warner Hollywood Studios to Be Torn Down

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Some Like It Hot Marilyn Monroe Warner Hollywood Studios
Some Like It Hot with Marilyn Monroe: Partly shot at the United Artists Studios a.k.a. the Warner Hollywood Studios a.k.a. The Lot.

Ramon Novarro Beyond Paradise

Historic Warner Hollywood Studios to be torn down

The historic Warner Hollywood Studios, currently known as The Lot, is to be torn down, reports the Los Angeles Times (March 2012). In its place, current owner CIM Group will erect “glass-and-steel structures.” The Los Angeles area doesn’t have enough of those, does it?

The powers-that-be in the city of West Hollywood, where the Warner Hollywood Studios are located, have apparently given the go-ahead to CIM. First to go will be the Pickford Building, erected in 1927, and then the Goldwyn Building, erected in 1932. When all’s done, that’ll be the end of one more Los Angeles landmark.

Update: According to one source, not every building on The Lot will be razed.

Erected in 1919

Built in 1919 by silent era producer-director Jesse D. Hampton (The Spoilers, 1923), The Lot is located at the corner of Santa Monica Boulevard and Formosa Avenue. Initially known as the Hampton Studios, it was later renamed the Pickford-Fairbanks Studios, the United Artists Studios, and the Samuel Goldwyn Studios.*

Warner Bros. acquired it in the 1980s – hence, the Warner Hollywood Studios moniker – but sold the property at the turn of the century. Currently, HBO’s True Blood is shot there.

* Not to be confused with the Warner Bros. Hollywood Studios on Sunset Boulevard, the site where Alan Crosland’s landmark part-talkie The Jazz Singer was filmed in 1927.

Old Mary Pickford-Douglas Fairbanks studio

Among those who worked on The Lot long before Anna Paquin, Stephen Moyer, and Alexander Skarsgård were born were:

  • Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, two of United Artists co-founders, who purchased the Hampton Studios for a reported $150,000.
  • Independent producer Samuel Goldwyn, who later fought with archenemy Pickford for ownership of the lot.
  • Titanic actress Gloria Stuart and Eddie Cantor in Goldwyn’s musical Roman Scandals (1933).
  • Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon, the stars of Goldwyn’s William Wyler-directed Wuthering Heights (1939).
  • Bette Davis, Herbert Marshall, and Teresa Wright, the stars of Goldwyn’s Wyler-directed The Little Foxes (1941).
  • Filmmaker Sam Peckinpah, who actually lived there at one point.
  • The Some Like It Hot (1959) crowd, including Marilyn Monroe, Billy Wilder, Tony Curtis, and Jack Lemmon.
  • Natalie Wood, Richard Beymer, and Oscar winners Rita Moreno, George Chakiris, Robert Wise, and Jerome Robbins, while working on West Side Story (1961).

More recently, among those who toiled on The Lot were:

  • Michael Douglas and Sharon Stone in Basic Instinct.
  • Tom Hanks in The Green Mile.
  • Sandra Bullock in Miss Congeniality 2.

See also:

  • Historic Mary Pickford Building Destroyed.”

Marilyn Monroe Some Like It Hot image: United Artists.

Info on the Hampton Studios’ cost: Jeffrey Vance, Tony Maietta, and Robert Cushman’s Douglas Fairbanks.


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