Ontario Airport Inn from “Poltergeist”

The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (4 of 23)

In “I must be living under a rock” news, I had no idea that a Poltergeist remake had debuted in 2015 – in 3D, no less!  Considering the so-called curse that plagued the OG trilogy, I’d have to think long and hard before signing up to be a part of any sort of reboot!  That cast and crew were seriously brave – yet it turns out the only thing plaguing the recent flick was bad reviews.  The rumored curse has never stopped me from stalking locales from the franchise, though, including the motel where the Freeling family stayed at the end of the 1982 original.  The location was actually a mystery for years, with several sources claiming that filming took place at Hotel Silver Lake in Westlake, and I am not entirely sure who finally pinpointed the correct spot.  Whoever did discover that the hotel utilized in the production was the Holiday Inn at 1801 East G Street in Ontario (now the Ontario Airport Inn), I thank you!  Since the lodging is situated right off the 10 Freeway between L.A. and Palm Springs, I figured it would be the perfect place for a pit stop on the way home from my last visit to the City of Angels, as wells as a perfect Haunted Hollywood posting.

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The property currently known as the Ontario Airport Inn was originally built as a Holiday Inn in the mid-1960s.

The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (19 of 23)

The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (23 of 23)

At the time, nothing was surrounding it but vacant land as you can see in the 1980 image from Historic Aerials below.

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Aerial views look quite different today, though amazingly the hotel hasn’t changed a bit, structurally at least.

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Per ads I came across on newspapers.com, by 1996 the lodging had become the Good Nite Inn which it remained through at least 2000.  Today, the Ontario Airport Inn, situated less than a mile from Ontario International Airport, boasts a huge pool, a courtyard with a BBQ, a laundry room, free coffee and fruit available 24 hours a day, a business center, park-and-fly services, rooms with Tempur-Pedic memory foam beds, and a complimentary continental breakfast and airport shuttle.  Not bad for rates that start at $69.95!

The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (21 of 23)

The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (22 of 23)

Before snapping any photographs, the Grim Cheaper and I popped into the lobby to ask permission from the powers that be.  A front desk clerk welcomed us and I explained that I was hoping to see the area of the hotel featured in Poltergeist.  She retreated to ask the manager if it was alright and when she returned she told me it was perfectly fine and then produced a map of the property, pointed to a building on the southern side and informed me that filming had taken place in front of Room 209.  Shocked that she knew the precise spot and figuring her awareness had to be due to the countless requests from stalkers like myself, I said, “Oh, do a lot of people come by asking to take photos because of Poltergeist?”, to which she deadpanned, “Nope, not really.”  And here I thought maybe I was in good company!  The GC and I could not stop laughing as we headed out the door toward Building 4, where we had been pointed (that’s it below).

The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (18 of 23)

Said to be “the Holiday Inn on I-74,” the weary Freelings venture to the hotel after leaving Midwestern suburbia, where their possessed home has just been sucked into a paranormal vortex, at the end of Poltergeist.  (That scene was achieved using a 6-foot by 4-foot model of the Simi Valley property that stood in for the family’s residence, the debris of which were, at least for a time, displayed in Steven Spielberg’s office.)

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The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (2 of 2)

Room 209, where the Freelings check in, can be found on the second floor of Building 4.

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The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (1 of 2)

I was shocked to discover upon walking up to the Freelings’ door that Ontario Airport Inn not only boasts the same coloring it did onscreen in 1982, with red doors and yellow walls, but that the number placards also remain entirely unchanged!

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The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (2 of 23)

It is incredible that so little of the hotel has been altered since the filming, especially considering two changes in ownership and the passage of 37 years!  Aside from the addition of some hedges and the removal of the Holiday Inn signage, though, the place is frozen in time.

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The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (12 of 23)

In an interesting twist, the locale is not included in the shooting schedule featured on Poltergeist: The Fan Site which covers all sixty days of principal photography, as well as one day of second-unit photography.  That coupled with the fact that Ontario is a somewhat out-of-the-way spot to film, especially considering the rest of the thriller was lensed in Simi Valley, Agoura Hills, Irvine, and Culver City, makes me wonder if the hotel segment was a re-shoot or perhaps a scene added after initial filming wrapped.

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The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (7 of 23)

Figuring one of the Poltergeist DVD iterations had to feature a commentary of some sort which might provide clarity on the issue, I got to Googling and was shocked to discover via DVD Exotica that is not actually the case.  Amazingly, the only home release of the film with any sort of extras about the movie itself (and not paranormal activity in general)  is the 1982 LaserDisc which boasts a stills gallery, the original trailer, and a 7-minute making-of featurette (that you can watch here).  Sadly, none of the three provide any info on the hotel.  An Upland resident named Don J. did inform the Daily Bulletin in 2017 that producers landed on the locale thanks to its classic neon signage, which few Holiday Inns in the area still had at the time.  Whether that information is true or not is anybody’s guess.

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The Ontario Airport Inn has another claim to fame!  The many musicians hired to perform at the California Jam music festival in 1974 were put up there and shuttled back and forth to the venue, the Ontario Motor Speedway, via helicopter.  During their stay, the motel’s marquee read “Welcome Western States Police Officers Assn.,” a rather humorous attempt to mislead any fans heading to the property hoping to catch glimpses of the various acts, which included such bands as Earth, Wind & Fire and the Eagles.

The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (16 of 23)

The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (17 of 23)

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The Ontario Airport Inn from Poltergeist (20 of 23)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Ontario Airport Inn, aka the Holiday Inn from Poltergeist, is located at 1801 East G Street in Ontario.  Filming took place in front of Room 209 on the second floor of Building 4.  Please keep in mind that the hotel is private property and you need permission to be on the premises.  You can visit the lodging’s official website here.

They’re Here!

A few weeks ago I sent Mike from MovieShotsLA out to do a little Haunted Hollywood stalking for me. I had read online that the house from the original Poltergeist movie (another horror flick I have yet to see!) is located in Simi Valley, and since Mike was in the area, I asked him to run by and snap some pics for me. As you can see from the above screen capture, the home looks exactly the same today as it did 26 years ago when the movie was filmed. The house actually looks like an average, everyday home that could be located on any street in America, and I think that is exactly why producers chose to use it. In fact, the voiceover in the trailer for the movie says this: “The house looks just like the one next to it, and the one next to that, and the one next to that. A couple lives in it with their three children . . . and something more.” The normalcy of the house makes the movie all the more scary.

Even though I have never actually seen Poltergeist, the movie has always intrigued me due to the rumored curse that has long been attached to it. Four actors from the Poltergeist trilogy passed away at fairly young ages causing many to believe the movies are cursed. The most tragic of the Poltergeist deaths were, of course, the deaths of the two young girls who played the Freeling family daughters. Dominique Dunne, who played Dana Freeling in the movie and who was the real life daughter of author Dominick Dunne, was strangled to death by her former boyfriend in the driveway of her West Hollywood home on November 4, 1982, just a few months after Poltergeist premiered. She was 22. Child star Heather O’Rourke, who played younger daughter Carol Anne, passed away on February 1, 1988 due to complications from cardiopulmonary arrest and intestinal stenosis. She was 12. Ironically both girls are buried at the Pierce Brothers Westwood Memorial Park Cemetery in Westwood. The other two Poltergeist actors who passed away at fairly young ages both starred in the second movie in the trilogy. Julian Beck, who played Kane, passed away from cancer at the age of 60, and Will Sampson, who played Taylor, passed away at 53 due to complications from surgery. Curse or no curse the untimely passing of so many of the trilogy’s stars definitely adds an amount of grim allure to the movie.

Big THANK YOU to Mike for taking the pics and stalking this location for me! 🙂

Until next time, Happy Stalking! 🙂

Stalk It: The Poltergeist house is located at 4267 Roxbury Street in Simi Valley.