The Twilight Zone Locations
The Twilight Zone is an American horror-drama TV series created by Rod Serling. It stars Rod Serling, Robert McCord, Jay Overholts, won 1 Golden Globe and ranked the original TV series #5 of the 60 greatest shows of all time in 2013 by TV Guide. The show was shot in black and white and aired on CBS from 1959 to 1964. It ran for 5 seasons (156 episodes). The Twilight Zone was filmed in Yuma, Arizona, USA, and at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios in Culver City, California.
Universal Studios Hollywood. Photo by Emanuel EkstroĢm on Unsplash.
Where was The Twilight Zone Filmed?
The Twilight Zone was filmed in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, Pacific Ocean Park, Universal Studios Hollywood and Yuma.
The complete list of the locations with latitude and longitude coordinates are listed below in the table.
The Twilight Zone Locations Map
The Twilight Zone Locations Table
Location Name | Latitude | Longitude |
---|---|---|
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios | 34.017487 | -118.402191 |
Pacific Ocean Park | 33.997936 | -118.482063 |
Universal Studios Hollywood | 34.137993 | -118.353371 |
Yuma | 32.690468 | -114.626198 |
Recent Comments
Watching twilight zone marathon I hear them mention cities in New York in almost all shows. Why
The first few episodes or first season were filmed at cbs on 57th st in manhattan.
Bob, Ithaca College still is a top communications school: Roy H. Park School of Communications.
i thought the first episodes were filmed in NYC. am i wrong?
It's Ithaca, NY you refer to. Aside from Cornell U it's also home to Ithaca College, once a top communications school and Rod Serling did occasionally lecture there later in his life as well as maintain a home along Cayuga Lake.
Ithaca was home to the early cinema silent industry and many early production houses based there. It's an interesting early history in film worth a gander.
Rod Serling was from upstate Ny.. I read somewhere that this was why alot of NY locations were "used". The Production company is even named after one of the Finger Lakes in NY state, Cayuga
The use of these places is an homage by Rod Serling to his childhood.