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Don’t get left behind this Christmas. If you think that airport mad-dash scene in Home Alone is pure Hollywood, you’re wrong, according to a new survey. Out of 2,000 adults who’ve booked a ...
O’Hare International Airport’s Terminal 3 is where the memorable travel scene in “Home Alone” where the McCallister family hurries to catch a flight to Paris was filmed in April 1990.
The scenes were made specifically for "Home Alone." The popcorn Kevin spills can be seen under the bed when he hides there later. There are a few small details that carry through the film. 20th ...
[9] [10] There was also a scene in Braidwood, Illinois, at the Sun Motel, as well as a scene in Woodstock, Illinois, where the city's old courthouse was shown. [11] Rewrites Hughes did during filming made the amount of footage he shot much larger than the original screenplay needed, and the film's first cut was three hours and 45 minutes long ...
Home Alone: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the soundtrack of the 1990 film of the same name. [1] The score was composed by John Williams and nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Score; the film's signature tune "Somewhere in My Memory" was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song and the Grammy Award for Best Song Written for Visual Media.
Elvis was rumored to have appeared as an extra in the background of an airport scene in the 1990 film Home Alone. It was alleged that the bearded man wearing a turtleneck and a sports jacket, who could be seen over the left shoulder of Catherine O'Hara's character while she is arguing with an airline employee, was Elvis.
YouTube user AnareahRubbers posted a video displaying "proof" that Elvis was an extra in the movie, specifically the scene at the airport: The video, published in 2008, has over 1 million views.
That same year she appeared in the hit family film Home Alone (1990) in a small role as a Parisian airport receptionist. [5] Her major stage debut came after she starred in the Wisdom Bridge/Remains Theater co-production of David Mamet's play Speed-the-Plow for Joel Schumacher with William Petersen in Chicago in 1992. [6]