Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, has become a popular destination for the television and film industry, attracting dozens of
film and
television productions each year.[1]
Many prominent actors have worked on productions filmed in Hamilton, and the city has positioned itself to attract new productions with a regional
tax incentive.
In 2007 the city launched an ad campaign to lure in film studios.[2]
Hamilton has a dedicated office geared towards assisting those in the film and music industry.[3]
Local TV station
CHCH introduced Canadians to Smith & Smith, which featured
Steve and
Morag Smith (the former better known from his stint as
Red Green). The Hilarious House of Frightenstein was a Canadian children's television series which was also produced by
CHCH in 1971. It was syndicated to television stations across Canada and the
United States, and occasionally still appears today in some TV markets. The show's cast included
Billy Van,
Fishka Rais,
Guy Big, Mitch Markowitz,
Vincent Price, and
Julius Sumner Miller. One hundred and thirty episodes of the series were made in a nine-month span starting in 1971. Don Cherry's Grapevine began airing on CHCH TV in the 1980s and shot on location at CHCH TV's Telecentre on King Street West and then at CHCH's main studio on Jackson Street West. The production then moved (including the original set and bar) to the restaurant Cherry had in town, also called "Don Cherry's Grapevine". The restaurant was on Main Street East. CHCH also produced local broadcasts such as Tiny Talent Time and Party Game.[4]
A number of Hamiltonians played a part in the early development of Hollywood, including
Jean Adair (1873–1953),[6]Julia Arthur (1868–1959),[7]Douglass Dumbrille (1889–1974),[8] and
Florence Lawrence (1890–1938) who was a
silent film actress and often referred to as "Hollywood's First Movie Star". She was also known as "The Biograph Girl" and "The Girl of a Thousand Faces". During her lifetime, Lawrence appeared in more than 270
films for various motion picture companies.[9]Del Lord (
Grimsby, Ontario) was an early Hollywood film director and actor, best known as a director of
Three Stooges films. Interested in the
theatre, he travelled to
New York City; when fellow Canadian
Mack Sennett offered him a job at his new
Keystone Studios, Lord went on to work in Hollywood,
California. There he played the driver of the
Keystone Cops police van, appearing in several of the successful films.[10]
Locations across Hamilton have been featured prominently in a number of major film productions. Hamilton is often used as a stand-in for other, more recognizable cities.
The DeLuxe Restaurant was a
nostalgic 1950s-style diner found on
King Street (Dundas), used primarily for film shoots. A number of feature films and television productions have been shot in Dundas.[23] They include:
After years of sitting closed and serving the film industry on occasion, the DeLuxe Restaurant underwent extensive renovations and opened as Thai restaurant Bangkok Spoon in 2009.[24]
De Luxe Restaurant
De Luxe Restaurant
De Luxe Restaurant
Studebaker sign, De Luxe Restaurant
Film studios
Digital Canaries began as a film production company in 2007.
[1] In 2015, they stopped producing in-house content.
As of 2021, the company was operating six separate film locations. Five of those were in Hamilton, including a 100,000 square-foot warehouse. That building includes a bar with upstairs apartment and large patio, a full size banquet hall, and two school properties.
The last studio belonging to Digital Canaries in Dundas features abandoned house sets, tunnels, and post-apocalyptic landscapes. Its standing sets range from hospitals to police precincts and bars. The location also houses a comprehensively stocked prophouse for diverse set design needs, including furniture, decorations, medical tools, and military gear.
The studio also has a number of full sized airplanes and a flight simulator. They also have a wide variety of wardrobe options ranging from casual wear, evening dress, and wedding attire, to first responder uniforms, and continuity wardrobe. It's CEO is Simon Winterson.
Steel Work Studios opened in March 2008, aiming to get in on the $1 billion industry. It closed three months later.[25]
A 2004 conversion of a 500,000-square-foot (46,000 m2) facility on
Victoria Avenue North that was one time home of the
Otis Elevator Company and
Studebaker plant into a film studio failed dramatically after only a few months. Local investors were ready to open up the $30-million Hamilton Film Studios but pulled out two months after opening.[26]
In 2018, the NUVO Network opened its 150,000 square foot facility consisting of
three state-of-the-art media production studios, podcasting facilities, recording and vlogging studios, alongside editing suites, office spaces, and events venue.[27]
In December 2019, Hamilton Film Studios (commonly known as HFS) opened at 400 Wellington St. North in downtown Hamilton by filmmakers Zach Zohr, Graham Purdy and Ken Woychesko. The studio supports all film from Hollywood productions to indie movies, music videos to commercials. HFS also has a location in Dundas, a retail store in Hamilton (which caters to filmmakers) and offers equipment rentals and location support. It has helped to reinvigorate the film scene in Hamilton and has been praised for inserting a true film vendor in the city.[28]
Film list
The following is a partial list of films and television programs shot in
Hamilton, Ontario, and their release dates: