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By Zoey Goto
For enthusiasts who want to get closer to their idols, there’s arguably no better way than to book a stay with them. While some of our favorite celebrity homes are probably open to the public, you can fall asleep in the little pink bed aboard Dolly. Parton’s bus tour or make one of Elvis Presley’s favorite dishes with fried peanut butter and peanut butter. Banana sandwiches in the house of his formative years. These homes, as well as the other homes highlighted below, are open to visitors, but be sure to stick to renting. rules, as one of those prominent homes also comes with a superstar owner. Here’s where to sign up for the ultimate VIP vacation.
Inside Dolly Parton’s tour bus.
For more than a decade, this 45-foot tour bus, adorned with folk artwork and a closet for her dizzying wigs, has been the beloved home on wheels of the country queen. After covering an impressive 360,000 miles on the board, he travels Parton across the country, the coach finally retired in 2022 and is now available for overnight excursions at Dollywood’s DreamMore Resort in the Smoky Mountains of Tennessee.
Guests can wake up in Parton’s tiny bed, wrapped in a fuchsia velvet blanket, before settling into position to spend the day at the star’s boudoir, surrounded by their dazzling sequined suits. Everything was left as it is, adding a threadbare hole in the carpet: the precise spot where Parton was spinning in front of the mirror in her Louboutin pointed-toe heels.
The 1986 Dolly Suite costs $10,000 for a two-night stay, with all proceeds going to the charity Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library.
Also read: Mithila Palkar, Ananya Panday, Ishaan Khatter and more: in 6 humble homes
The view from Villa il Palagio in Florence.
The multi-award-winning English musician Sting still lives in this 16th-century villa, using it as a palace during the summer months and renting it out the rest of the year.
Sting and his wife, Trudie Styler, have owned this sprawling estate near Florence, which can comfortably accommodate up to 50 people, for over 15 years. Surrounded by rolling olive trees, which the couple helped restore, the asset also features a serene lake, a high-tech recording studio, and a Zen yoga center.
Price available on request.
The exterior of the Houdini estate on Laurel Canyon Drive in Los Angeles.
Have you ever wondered how the legendary escape artist Harry Houdini mastered some of the greatest illusions of all time, such as making a 10,000-pound elephant disappear or breaking free from the inside of a giant milk can while submerged in water?These secrets and more will possibly be revealed to visitors in his Los Angeles mansion, filled with mysterious caves and the deep-sea reservoir that the wizard used as a testing floor for his thrilling tricks.
Gems from film history are on display at the four-room Houdini estate, which includes five acres of whimsical gardens, plus props from his death-defying stunts and the iron box that first made the impression in the 1953 biopic Houdini.
A here starts at $1,750 per night.
The F. Scott Fitzgerald Suite.
F. Scott Fitzgerald may have set his novel Tender Is the Night on the glamorous palm-fringed Côte d’Azur, but he actually wrote most of this jazz era from a captivating 1910s Craftsman-style house in Montgomery, Alabama, peeking out the window of the sublime magnolia tree rooted in the front yard.
Bibliophiles can now stay in the space where Scott and his wife, Zelda, who at the time he was writing his semi-autobiographical e-book Save the Waltz, lived from 1931 to 1932. In the upstairs apartment, the original Art Deco leaf wallpaper is still peeling off. , while the ground floor has been remodeled into a small museum dedicated to mythical writers.
The Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald Suites cost between $90 and $150 per night.
Also Read: AD Approved: In the Celebrity Homes of 2023
Elvis Presley’s old bedroom.
Fans can now stay in an apartment that replaced the course of pop culture by visiting Elvis Presley’s only apartment in the world that offers sleepovers. The King of Rock and Roll lived in Lauderdale Courts in Memphis between the ages of thirteen and 17, when this pioneering complex was one of the first public housing projects in the United States.
This innovative home gave the impressionable young Presley easy access to the city’s recording studios, concert halls, and gospel services, which he absorbed like a thirsty sponge. This two-bedroom apartment, which narrowly avoided demolition in the 1990s, has been restored to its mid-century glory, adding an antique turntable console and solid iron skillet to recreate rockabilly’s favorite fried sandwiches.
This position is $250 per night and can be reserved by calling 1-901-523-8662.
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