

Stalk It: Annie’s house from Sleepless in Seattle is located at 904 South Broadway in Baltimore’s Fells Point neighborhood. Unfortunately, we did not get to spend a lot of time there, but I found myself wishing we had stayed at one of the hotels lining the main drag as there are so many shops and restaurants in the cobblestoned vicinity.įor more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles. The entire area around Annie’s house is absolutely adorable. Duda’s Tavern, which is located about 500 feet west of Annie’s house at 1600 Thames Street, served as the exterior of City Supper Club, the bar owned by Alex (Justin Long) in the flick.Īnd The Waterfront Hotel, located about 300 feet east of Annie’s house at 1710 Thames Street, masked as the exterior of The Huntsman’s Den, where Alex gave Gigi (Ginnifer Goodwin) some pointers on reading body language. I recently discovered a couple of other He’s Just Not That Into You locales in the same vicinity. In the scene, Connor sat at the southern end of Broadway Square, just east of Admiral Fell Inn. The building visible in the background of the scene has been remodeled in recent years and looks quite a bit different today than it did in 2009 when HJNTIY was shot, so I’m using a comparison image below from Google Street View that was taken in 2011.īroadway Square, which is located just about one hundred feet north of Annie’s house, was also featured in He’s Just Not That Into You, as the spot where Connor (Kevin Connolly) called Mary (Drew Barrymore) to discuss the placement of his real estate ads.

if she’s not sleeping with you” vignette from He’s Just Not That Into You. Unfortunately, the bench where Annie sat in the scene was just a prop.īut that didn’t stop me from posing for a photo there.īroadway Pier was also used very briefly in the “. (As you can see in my images above and below, a car commercial was being shot on the pier the day we were there! Apparently, Broadway Pier, as it is known, is used for filming quite often.) In one particularly memorable scene (well, to me, anyway), Annie walks to the end of the pier and sits on a bench located there, while Sam Baldwin (Tom Hanks) does the exact same thing more than 2,000 miles away at a dock in Seattle. The pier just outside of Annie’s home was also used in the filming. If interiors were shot at a real place, what I wouldn’t give to track it down!

While I always assumed that the charming interior of Annie’s home was a set, my friend/fellow stalker David, who is a denizen of the Pacific Northwest, has heard that interiors were shot at an actual residence in West Seattle. Only the exterior of the site was used in Sleepless in Seattle. Though I do believe the structure was a private residence at one point, today it serves as an office, housing the Baltimore branch of Captel, a fundraising and membership development company. In real life, the three-story property, which was originally built in 1900, houses 1,995 square feet of space and 3.5 baths.

Miraculously, the dwelling looks almost exactly the same today as it did 23 years ago when Sleepless in Seattle was filmed.Įven the duck boot scraper visible in the bottom right of the above screen capture is still intact.Īnnie’s house was featured several times throughout Sleepless in Seattle. So when I found out that the Grim Cheaper and I were heading to Baltimore, where Sleepless was partially filmed, this past September, I started putting together a list of must-see locales from the movie, namely the gorgeous brick townhome where Annie Reed (Meg Ryan) and her fiancé, Walter (Bill Pullman), lived.Īnnie’s residence has been well-documented online for years, so I did not have to do any sleuthing to hunt it down. The film had an immediate visceral effect on me – and still does to this day. As I mentioned in this 2010 post about the houseboat from the 1993 romcom, I still remember exactly where I was the first time I saw it and have my ticket stub tucked away in a box.
Sleepless in seatle restraunt movie#
Sleepless in Seattle is one such movie for me. We all have those movies – the ones that affected us so much upon first viewing, they left a lasting imprint on our hearts.
