It’s no secret that real estate in Los Angeles can be a dirty business, but a deal-gone-wrong concerning the famous “Brady Bunch” house in Studio City has at least one celebrity seeing red.
Lance Bass, the former member of boy band *Nsync and a television and radio personality, says he was “used” by Douglas Elliman, the real estate firm representing the listing, to drive up the price of the house. This following his claim that an “over-asking” offer he made was accepted.
“I’m feeling heartbroken,” he wrote on Twitter on Saturday night (August 4). Citing “unforeseen circumstances,” Bass says another corporate buyer — “Hollywood studio” — “wants the house at any price.” Bass claims the seller’s agent discouraged an even higher bid by Bass and his husband, Michael Turchin. “I truly believe I was used to drive up the price of the home, knowing very well that this corporation intended...
Lance Bass, the former member of boy band *Nsync and a television and radio personality, says he was “used” by Douglas Elliman, the real estate firm representing the listing, to drive up the price of the house. This following his claim that an “over-asking” offer he made was accepted.
“I’m feeling heartbroken,” he wrote on Twitter on Saturday night (August 4). Citing “unforeseen circumstances,” Bass says another corporate buyer — “Hollywood studio” — “wants the house at any price.” Bass claims the seller’s agent discouraged an even higher bid by Bass and his husband, Michael Turchin. “I truly believe I was used to drive up the price of the home, knowing very well that this corporation intended...
- 8/5/2018
- by Shirley Halperin
- Variety Film + TV
One of showbiz’s most recognizable homes, a late 1950s, split-level ranch known around the globe as the home of the Brady family from the iconic early 1970s sitcom “The Brady Bunch,” has come for sale for the first time in 45 years at $1.885 million. Built on in a quiet, leafy street adjacent to the coveted Colfax Meadows neighborhood in the San Fernando Valley’s increasingly sought after and expensive Studio City community on an irregularly shaped .29-acre parcel that borders the concrete-paved Los Angeles River, the almost 2,500-square-foot residence is configured with just two ample bedroom suites, one upstairs and one down, and a total of three bathrooms.
Only the exterior of the house was used to represent the Brady home; a fake window was added to the front façade for filming to make the house appear as a two-story home — it was long ago removed — and interior shots were filmed in studio.
Only the exterior of the house was used to represent the Brady home; a fake window was added to the front façade for filming to make the house appear as a two-story home — it was long ago removed — and interior shots were filmed in studio.
- 7/19/2018
- by Mark David
- Variety Film + TV
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