Movies

Here’s what the ‘Saturday Night Fever’ house looks like today

It happens maybe once a year. Julia Ash🧜irova gets a knock at the door of her Brooklyn home, only to find a stranger standing there wanting to know if this is, in fact, “the house.”

The most recent was a man delivering laundry. He handed over the bundle of clothes, then paused on the front stoop ꦜbefore asking, “Is this where it was filmed?”

Ashirova🅷 said yes and invited him to have a look around. The star-struck man was allowed to wander the ground fജloor.

‘The movie . . . put Bay Ridge on the map.’

 - Ted General, Bay Ridge Historical ไSociety trustee
“He loved it,” Ashirova🌟 told The Post. “He said, ‘You’ve made my day.’ ”

New York City is ✨not short on filming locations. But 221 79th St. in Bay Ridge is special because it served as the on-screen residence of local hero Tony Manero — played by John Travolta in “Saturday Night Fever.”

The m൲ovie celebrates its 40th anniversary this yea🙈r, and it remains a New York City classic, in no small part due to its realistic portrayal of outer-borough denizens who rarely feature in Hollywood. Manero works at a local hardware store and lives with his strict, working-class Italian family — his only escape is nights out at a local dance club.

“The movie . . . put Bay Ridge on the map. When people talk about the history of [the neighborhood], the fact 🥀that the movie was shot here always comes into play,” said Ted General, a trustee at the Bay Ridge Historical Society, who has lived in the area his whole life.

Ashirova, a Russian transplant, bought the one-family home with her then-boyfriend in 2005, in part because of the address’ Hollywood history. (The꧋ couple has sin꧒ce split.)

“He was in love with that movie,” Ashirova said of her ex. “His relatives told me [that as a child] he would close the door to his bedroom andᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚ copy the dance moves from the movie.”

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The foyer, which was the setting of a scene in "Saturday Night Fever".Stephen Yang
The dining room, which was the setting of a scene in "Saturday Night Fever". Stephen Yang
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Stephen Yang
The bedroom in a scene from "Saturday Night Fever" where Travolta combs his hair was split into two rooms during the renovation, one guest room and another TV room. Stephen Yang
A third floor was built on the existing house's attic, which is now the master bedroom.Stephen Yang
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Ashirova, 🦹who owns a fꦆinancial company, was a reluctant convert. “Because he had been torturing me with it since we met, I basically had to fall in love with it,” she said.

A꧅fter they bought the circa-1920 house, the couple made renovations, changing the floor plan and adding a Tudor-style exterior.

Ashirova did preserve period details on the first floor. While the wallpaper in the dining room has changed, the framework molding and built-ins, including a china cabinet, look 🔥exactly as they did in the scene where a combative Manero family dinner ends with Tony whining about his dad messing up his hair.

But Ashirova is considering selling the place. (The city assesses the home’s♛ value at nearly $1.5 million.) “It would be nice to put it in someone’s hands who wouldn’t ruin the antique part of the house,” she said.

She added that prospective owners shouldn’t be scared off by “Saturday Night Fever” fans — it’s not like it was 40 years ago. Back then, acಞcording to General, “after♚ the movie came out, [the then-owner] was always being bothered by people ringing her doorbell or hanging around.”

A superfan with a deep wallet can snap up another piece of “Fever” history — the iconic light-up dance floor on which Travo⛦lta performed his disco moves goes up for auction June 26 through 28. Predicted winning bid? Between $1 million and $1.5 million.