For more than 100 years, movie studio tours have drawn Los Angeles residents and tourists for a glimpse at how movie magic is made.
Related: Universal Studios Hollywood celebrates 60th anniversary with retro Studio Tour
Back in the late 1800s and early 1900s film studios were built throughout Hollywood and the San Fernando Valley as the home base for major entertainment companies to make their films.
By the 1920s the major studios were grouped into The Big 5 — RKO Pictures, Warner Brothers, MGM, Paramount Pictures and 20th Century Fox — and the Little 3 —Universal, Columbia and United Artists.
Surprisingly enough, it was one of the little three that originated the concept of the Studio Tour.
Before it was a theme park, Universal Studios Hollywood first opened up to the public in 1915 as Universal City.
For just a quarter, guests were able to witness how movies were made. The concept at the time was a live theatre experience similar to a modern-day studio taping. The original studio tours first took place during the era of silent films, so when “talkies” came into the picture it became too much to have an audience, and in around 1930 studio visits came to an end.
That was until around 30 years later when Lew Wasserman took over Universal Pictures and he, along with his Executive Vice President Al Dorskind, sought a way to generate new revenue for the studio. As legend has it, they saw photographs from the original tours in 1915 and decided it was time to invite the public back to see how movies were made. The modern day studio tour was born.
Universal Studios opened as a theme park in July 1964 with the Studio Tour as one of the opening day attractions. Those who went on the tour got a first hand look at an exhibition of costume designs, a western stuntman show and were even able to get off the tram for a bit to walk through Doris Day’s dressing room.
Additions to the tour have come and gone as new films have been released such as Amity Island from Jaws in the…
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