Movies

Inside the real Greenwich Village apartment that inspired ‘Rear Window’

Everybody knows Alfred Hitchcock’s “Re🅠ar Window’’ is set in Greenwich Village. But few realize the massive Hollywood set on which the thriller takes place is based on an actual New York City location.

The address given inജ the film — which opened 60 years ago t🐭his week — is 125 W. Ninth St., a red brick apartment building where the wife murderer played by Raymond Burr lives in a rear apartment with a fire escape that Grace Kelly climbs to look for evidence.

Sean Gullette’s West 10th Street home l😼ooks onto the courtya🔴rd that inspired the film.Zandy Mangold

As was customary in crime films back then, the address is fictitious. But film historian Donald Spoto, a longtime residen💯t of the West Village, traced that address a few years ago to 125 Christopher St. — as Ninth Street is called west of Sixth Avenue.

It’s not an easy building to get into — there’s no doorman, and the super didn’t answer the doorbell. But around the corner on West 10th Street, The Post was welcomed into a Federal-era townhouse on the other side of the courtyard for a rarely seen rear view of 125 Christopher and the neighboring buildings that inspired th๊e movie’s set.

“Yes, this is where Jimmy Stewart lives in ‘Rear Window,’ ” says the tenant, actor-director Sean Gullette. “Architecture is one of the building blocks of making films, and Hitchcock was brilliantly inspired by this view.”

Even with a vista partly obscured by trees absent from Hollywood’s version, it’s recognizably the same point of view seen from the apartment of Stewart’s wheelchair-bound photogr🅰apher-turned-voyeu💦r.

Granted, the backyard fence is taller than the one Kelly, Stewart’s fashionable girlfriend, scales in high heels — Gullette thinks the fence may have been rebuilt fairly recently. But even in 1954, the set d✨esigners rearranged things to accommodate t🌜he intricacies of Hitchcock’s plot and camera moves.

Sixty𝕴 years later, it’s easy to imagine where Raymond Burr’s apartmꦿent would have been — and where Miss Lonelyhearts (Judith Evelyn) lived just below, and the fire escape where another couple slept in an era when few working-class people had air conditioners.

A building at 125 Christopher St. (inset) provided “Rea𒐪r Window” director Alfred Hitchcock (on-set with Jimmy Stewart and Grace Kelly) with an imaginary stage for murder. The Post photographed it from a nearby West 10th Street townhouse that shares the same point of view as Stewart’s apartment.Courtesy of Everett Collection; Zandy Mangold

Easy, too, to see which of the low-rise buildings on the right inspired 🥂the penthouse studio occupied by the composer played by Ross Bagdasari💖an (better known as David Seville, creator of the singing Chipmunks).

Cornell Woolrich’s short story upon which “Rear Window’’ is based doesn’t even specify a city, much less a neighborhood. That was apparently Hitchcock’s 📖idea.

According to a 1954 Paramount Pictures press book, the director personally scouted Greenwich Village locations and “dispatched four photographers to that colorful section of New York with instructions to shoot the Village from all angles, in all weather and unde🦩r all lighting conditions, from dawn to midnight.’’

In the Hitchcock classic, James Stewart is a wheelchair-bound voyeur caught up in the mundane (and murdero♔us) lives of his neighbors.Courtesy of Everett Collection

According to Steven Jacobs’ “The Wrong House: The Architecture of Alfred Hitchcock,’’ for months the director and set designers Hal Pereira and Joseph MacMillan Johnson “did nothing but plan the design of what was to become the largest indoor set ever built at Paramount. Hitchcock himself superintended the huge and complex construction that to🌸ok six weeks to set up.’’

Jacobs continues: “The entire set was fit with a sophꩲisticated drainage system for the rain scene an🌟d with an ingenious wiring mechanism for the highly complex lighting of day and night scenes in both the exterior of the courtyard and the interior of the apartments.’’

Of the 31 apartments, 12 were fully furnished on a massive set that was 38 feet wide, 185 feet long and 40 feet high — with the soundstage floor re꧂moꦡved so that the courtyard level could be built into the basement.

from on .

Not a frame of “Rear Windo🦂w’’ — which never shows even a glimpse of the froဣnts of any of the buildings, save a restaurant on “West Ninth’’ — was actually shot in Greenwich Village.

But the portion of the courty𓃲ard behind West 10th Street finally got its close-up — in 1993’s “Manhattan Murder Mystery,’’ Woody Allen’s “Rear Window’’ homage.

According to Gullette (whose f🥀eature directing debut “Traitors’’ played this year’s Tribeca Film Festival), the backyard he shares with neighbors also played Al Pacino’s garden in 1973’s “Serpico.’’

Although a building on Minetta Street was used for 𝓰the exterior of Serpico’s home, he’s also shown working at the NYPD’s 6th Precinct, which is directly across the street fromღ the townhouse.

In “Rear Window,’’ Stew♓art’s character calls that same (but never seen) 6th Precinct when Burr’s murderer discovers that Kelly has sneak🔥ed into his apartment.

Sixty y🔯ears later, we know why the cops arrived just in the nick of time.