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Where was A Late Quartet filmed

A Late Quartet

Year: 2012

Genre: Drama

Country: USA

A Late Quartet was filmed in New York in the United States of America.

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Locations

  • Alexandra’s Apartment (74 East 7th Street)

    In movie

    Scene where a home-based sequence that shifts the focus from public performance to personal relationships, using the apartment setting to keep the conflict intimate and immediate in a realistic New York living space.

    Real

    Scene was shot a specific East Village address used as a residential exterior, matching the film’s need for believable private-space transitions. The building sits on a busy, narrow Manhattan street with typical neighborhood texture and close-set facades.

  • Bow Bridge (Central Park)

    In movie

    Scene where

    Real

    Scene was shot A cast iron bridge crossing over The Lake designed by Calvert Vaux & Jacob Wrey Mould and opened in 1862, the first cast-iron bridge built in the park. Bow Bridge is the longed bridge in Central Park clocking in at 87 feet. The bridge is topped by eight cast-iron urns which are duplicates installed in 2008 to replace the originals which disappeared in the 1920s.

  • Bow Bridge (Central Park)

    In movie

    Scene where a calm outdoor interlude that visually separates the characters from interiors and rehearsals, letting the conversation or emotional beat breathe in a recognizable, public New York landmark.

    Real

    Scene was shot the iconic cast-iron pedestrian bridge in Central Park spanning The Lake, recognized for its curved design and frequent use in film and photography. It provides a clean sightline of the park landscape and is accessible from mid-park pathways.

  • East 7th Street (between 1st and 2nd Avenues)

    In movie

    Scene where everyday street movement around the characters that supports a grounded, contemporary New York tone, emphasizing how personal conflict continues in normal city spaces rather than only in performance settings.

    Real

    Scene was shot a residential East Village block between 1st Avenue and 2nd Avenue with typical Manhattan walk-ups and street-level activity. It is a realistic, lived-in neighborhood backdrop that contrasts with the elite music-world venues shown elsewhere.

  • Pathway near Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir (Central Park)

    In movie

    Scene where a reflective walk-and-talk moment that uses the quiet, open space to underline how the characters’ personal worries spill into everyday routines, away from concert halls and formal rehearsal rooms.

    Real

    Scene was shot a well-known running and walking loop in Central Park that circles the reservoir and connects to multiple pedestrian paths. The area is open, heavily used by locals, and offers clear views across the water toward the Upper West Side and Upper East Side skyline.

  • Sotheby’s (York Avenue at East 71st Street)

    In movie

    Scene where a moment tied to elite social and cultural circles, using an auction-house environment to signal money, taste, and the kind of connections that surround prominent artists in the city.

    Real

    Scene was shot the New York headquarters of the international auction house, a recognizable Upper East Side cultural-commerce venue associated with wealth, collecting, and high-profile events. Its frontage and lobby areas are commonly used for upscale establishing shots.

  • The Metropolitan Museum of Art

    In movie

    Scene where

    Real

    Scene was shot The Met was originally constructed in 1872 in the High Victorian Gothic style by architects Calvert Vaux and Jacob Wrey Mould. The design of the original building's design was considered an eyesore, so a new Beaux-Arts facade was constructed along with a number of other improvements by 1902. Two additional wings were constructed along Fifth Avenue in the following decade and over the following century the museum expanded backwards in a mishmash of different styles and is now over 20 times the size of the original structure, more that two million square feet. The Met is the largest art museum in the United States with over two million works in its permanent collection. A portion of the collection is housed in The Cloisters, a smaller museum focused on Medieval art and architecture in Fort Tryon Park.