Friday, December 25, 2009

'Christmas Story' house open

CLEVELAND - If the movie "A Christmas Story" is one of your holiday favourites, consider a visit to the house in Cleveland where many scenes in the film were shot.

The movie, which premiered 25 years ago, featured a kid named Ralphie who pleaded for a Red Ryder BB gun for Christmas.

Fans can visit the house used in the filming of the movie, restored to its appearance in the film. There is also a museum displaying movie props and costumes.

The interiors were filmed on a Toronto soundstage, but now the inside of the house has been recreated to look just like in the film, which was set in the early 1940s.

Says owner Brian Jones: "I studied the film frame by frame to get the look right."

That look, of course, includes the famous "leg lamp," a table lamp in the shape of a woman's leg, clad in a fishnet stocking.

Fans remember how Ralphie's father, played by the late Darren McGavin, was enchanted by the lamp, while his mother (Melinda Dillon) was mortified when he put it in the front window for all the neighbours to see.

Jones loved the movie so much that when the house came on the market two years ago he bought it for US$150,000, then spent as much again gutting the inside and rebuilding it as it had looked on the Toronto soundstage.

He prowled eBay to buy period artifacts from all over the U.S. His latest acquisition is the 1937 Oldsmobile that McGavin drove -- the car that had a flat resulting in Ralphie swearing -- you don't hear the word, but the narrator calls it "the Queen Mother of dirty words.''

"Look at that," a visitor says, pointing to a bar of red Lifebuoy soap in the bathroom, just like the soap used to wash out Ralphie's (actor, now producer, Peter Billingsly's) mouth.

Jones says 37,000 visitors from all over the continent have toured the house since it opened in November 2006.

Most wander out into the back yard, recalling how Ralphie, in a daydream, saves his family from attack by using his "official Red Ryder 200-shot carbine," the BB gun, with a compass in the stock, that's all he wants for Christmas.

The movie is built around his wish for this coveted gun and his parents' refusal to buy it.

"You'll shoot your eye out," his mother says, as every mom has ever said about a BB gun.

Across the street is a gift shop and museum. In the store, you can buy every imaginable doodad connected with A Christmas Story.

The museum showcases stills from the film, behind-the-scenes pictures, and artifacts such as Ralphie's little brother's snowsuit -- the one that got Randy so muffled up that he couldn't move his arms -- and the chalk board from the school sequences.

A Christmas Story House & Museum is located at 3159 W. 11th St. in the Tremont neighbourhood. Admission is $7.50 for adults, $5.50 for kids 7-12. Hours are Thursday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sundays, noon-5 p.m. The site is also open Wednesdays Dec. 10, 17 and 24, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., with the final tour beginning at 4:30 p.m., but it's closed Christmas Day, New Year's Eve and New Year's Day.

Details at http://www.AChristmasStoryHouse.com

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