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Jack Warner founded Sunset Bronson in 1919, building his studio on old farmland. It was here that Warner and Zanuck shot Rin Tin Tin (1924), the film's success leading to the birth of the Warner Brothers franchise. The first talking feature film, The Jazz Singer (1927), was shot here and both Warner Bros' Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons were produced on site from the 1930s to the 1950s.

Gene Autry bought Sunset Bronson in 1964 and turned it into indie production space. The studios' current tenants include streaming behemoth Netflix.


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Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±'s must-see attractions

Nearby attractions

1. Sunset Gower Studios

0.26 MILES

When Nestor Film Company moved to the corner of Sunset and Gower in 1911 it became the Sunset Gower Studios, which birthed Columbia Pictures when the Cohn…

2. Pantages Theatre

0.57 MILES

Scottish architect Benjamin Marcus Priteca designed this 1930 survivor, the last theater commissioned by Greek-born theater magnate Alexander Pantages…

3. Hollywood & Vine

0.59 MILES

If you'd turned on the radio in the 1920s and '30s, chances were you’d hear a broadcast ‘brought to you from Hollywood and Vine’. Thanks to a mega…

4. Hollywood Forever Cemetery

0.62 MILES

Paradisiacal landscaping, vainglorious tombstones and epic mausoleums set an appropriate resting place for some of Hollywood's most iconic dearly departed…

5. Capitol Records Tower

0.64 MILES

You’ll have no trouble recognizing this iconic 1956 tower, one of LA’s great mid-century buildings. Designed by Welton Becket, it resembles a stack of…

6. Janes House

0.92 MILES

The last remaining Victorian home on Hollywood Blvd, built in 1903, and the former site of Miss Janes’ School, which was attended by the children of old…

7. Egyptian Theatre

1.12 MILES

The Egyptian, the first of the grand movie palaces on Hollywood Blvd, premiered Robin Hood in 1922. The theater’s lavish getup – complete with hieroglyphs…

8. Guinness World Records Museum

1.21 MILES

You know the drill: the Guinness is all about the fastest, tallest, biggest, fattest and other superlatives. Frankly it's an underwhelming tourist trap…