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VISITORS GUIDE
To The
Desilu Playhouse
in the Rapaport
Center, 2 W. 3rd St.
Jamestown, New York 14701 |
The Desilu Playhouse is the
permanent home of the “I Love Lucy”
50th Anniversary Tour that
traveled the country in 2001-2002 to
celebrate the most popular show ever on
television. Exhibited at convention
centers, state fairs, music festivals,
casinos, and more, it featured exact
reproductions of the original sets.
Following the tour, the exhibit was stored
in Houston, Texas.
In the summer of 2005, five
53’ tractor trailers moved the “I Love
Lucy” 50th Anniversary Tour
to Lucille Ball’s hometown, where it was
installed in the Desilu Playhouse of the
Rapaport Center. Named after the studio at
847 Lillian Way in Hollywood where “I
Love Lucy” was filmed, the Desilu
Playhouse was made possible by the
generosity of Bill and Mary Rapaport of
Buffalo, New York. We hope your visit will
make you feel like you were part of the
studio action!
Displays and Exhibits
My Favorite Husband
Radio Studio Set:
When CBS asked Lucille Ball to bring her
wildly popular radio program, My Favorite
Husband, to the new medium of
television, she agreed – as long as her real
life husband, Desi Arnaz, could play her
television husband. Desi was traveling the
country most of the year with his popular
Latin band, making it difficult for the
Arnazes to achieve their dream of starting a
family. CBS declined, believing that the
public would not accept this “mixed
marriage” of an all-American woman to a
Cuban with a heavy accent -- despite the
fact that the couple had in fact been
married for several years.
Pick up the headsets to hear
excerpts!
“I Love Lucy”
Episode #6 –
“The Audition”:
To prove to CBS that the American public
would accept them, Lucy and Desi created a
vaudeville show that they took on the road
in 1950. In one of their touring skits Lucy
plays “The Professor,” trying to break into
Desi’s night club act with an audition on
her special cello. After six months of
tremendously positive live audience
response, Lucy and Desi produced a pilot
episode and CBS agreed to Desi’s playing
Lucy’s husband. “The Professor” skit was
part of the pilot as well as “I Love
Lucy” episode #6, “The Audition.”
623 East 68th
Street, The New York Apartment:
This was Lucy and Ricky Ricardo’s apartment
after the birth of Little Ricky. Their
first apartment, which did not have a window
over the piano in the living room, was too
small for the three of them, so they moved
upstairs to a larger apartment (episode #61,
“Ricardos Change Apartments”). Extensive
research went into creating the sets you see
here. Hollywood prop houses were scoured to
find exact replicas of the props, from
kitchen items to lamps. (With the Hollywood
tradition of recycling props, it is possible
that some of our items may have been part of
the original show!) Where none existed, new
items were created, such as the upholstered
furniture and Oriental figurines seen on the
mantle.
Artifacts:
Among the costumes and props on display from
“I Love Lucy” are the original
cello and professor costume (pictured in the
large photograph to the left) from the
show’s pilot and episode 6, “The Audition”,
as well as a
13-piece clown outfit and a lion tamer
ensemble worn by Pepito, the Spanish
Clown in
episode 52, “Lucy’s Show Biz
Swan Song”.
Beverly Palms Hollywood Hotel:
When Ricky was cast in the
motion picture Don Juan, he took the
whole gang (Lucy, Fred, Ethel, Little Ricky,
and his mother-in-law) to Hollywood with
him. During this period, 1955-56, the
Ricardos lived in the Beverly Palms Hotel.
It was on this set that Lucy burned her nose
while meeting William Holden. Here also
Harpo Marx re-enacted one of his most famous
movie scenes with Lucy, in what later became
one of Lucy’s favorite episodes, #124,
“Harpo Marx.”
Wall Mural:
Enlarged from a 4x5” image, this wall shows
the studio audience at a toping of “I
Love Lucy”. Desi Arnaz can be seen
(back to camera) “warming up” the audience,
and both Lucy and Desi’s mothers are in the
top row near the center.
“3-Headed Monster”:
Lost for years, this is the custom-made
editing machine known as the “three headed
monster” that film editor Dann Cahn used to
edit the most popular show ever on
television.
Episode #30, “Lucy Does a TV
Commercial”:
Do you pop out at parties?
Don’t be tired and listless or unpoopular!
This hands-on exhibit allows all
“Vitameatavegamin” lovers to give it a try.
The dialogue is in front of you. Here you
can amuse your fellow visitors with your own
version of “Vitameatavegamin.”
Live Like Lucy! Bedroom Set:
An example of the popularity
of the First Couple of Comedy, the “I
Love Lucy” bedroom set seen here was
advertised in Life magazine in 1953
for $198.00. Purchased in 1953 by Gladys
Viola Bladys of Springville, New York, this
set was donated to the Lucille Ball-Desi
Arnaz Center by her son, Don Bladys, in
2004.
Memorabilia:
More examples of the
thousands of “Love Lucy” products
that have been created over the year.
Screening Area:
Enjoy continuous “I Love
Lucy” and related screenings!
Desilu Playhouse Gift Shop:
Thank you for your purchases at the Gift
Shop, proceeds of which help to maintain the
operation of the Desilu Playhouse.
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