West Village - Current and Prior Residents That Appeared in Movies or TV Shows

Current and Prior Residents That Appeared in Movies or TV Shows

  • Matthew Broderick
  • Claire Danes
  • Will Ferrell
  • Jill Hennessy
  • Phillip Seymour Hoffman
  • Seth Meyers
  • Julianne Moore
  • Sarah Jessica Parker
  • Brooke Shields
  • Liv Tyler

Costas Kondylis' 1 Morton Square residential development (full-block on Morton and West Street, completed in 2004):

  • Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen
  • Daniel Radcliffe

Richard Meier's towers (173 Perry Street, 176 Perry Street, 165 Charles Street - all by West Street, Perry Street towers completed in 2002, Charles Street tower completed in 2004):

  • Jim Carrey
  • Hugh Jackman
  • Nicole Kidman

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Famous quotes containing the words current, prior, residents, appeared, movies and/or shows:

    The current of our thoughts made as sudden bends as the river, which was continually opening new prospects to the east or south, but we are aware that rivers flow most rapidly and shallowest at these points.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    The logic of the world is prior to all truth and falsehood.
    Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889–1951)

    In most nineteenth-century cities, both large and small, more than 50 percent—and often up to 75 percent—of the residents in any given year were no longer there ten years later. People born in the twentieth century are much more likely to live near their birthplace than were people born in the nineteenth century.
    Stephanie Coontz (20th century)

    We saw one schoolhouse in our walk, and listened to the sounds which issued from it; but it appeared like a place where the process, not of enlightening, but of obfuscating the mind was going on, and the pupils received only so much light as could penetrate the shadow of the Catholic Church.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Nostalgia, the vice of the aged. We watch so many old movies our memories come in monochrome.
    Angela Carter (1940–1992)

    To love something as an artist ... means to be shaken not by its ultimate value or lack of value, but by a side of it that suddenly opens up. Where art has value it shows things that few have seen. It’s conquering, not pacifying.
    Robert Musil (1880–1942)