The Herald Sun

BULL DURHAM

- Chantal Allam: 919-829-4522, @chantalall­am

three-bathroom listed for $1.6 million, about $429 per square foot. That’s steep in today’s tight market where high mortgage rates and low inventory are driving up housing costs. (In

Durham, the median home price stands at $340,336, while the median income is $65,534.)

But the broker’s listing agent, Adam Dickinson, is hoping a bit of 1980s film nostalgia will close the deal. “One can picture Annie relaxing on the screened porch at sunset, making a sly quip,” the listing teases.

Even the clawfoot tub — where Annie and Crash consummate­d their love — remains in the house, confirmed Dickinson, a Realtor with Nest Realty of the Triangle.

The current owners bought the home in 2020 for nearly $1.1 million. Since then, they’ve renovated the kitchen and master bedroom. From the 11-foot ceilings to the stained-glass transoms and original plaster-ceiling medallions, it’s a mix of old with new — “a cool intersecti­on of historic and pop culture,” Dickinson said.

“So many people are curious, we’ve had to be selective for showings.”

THE INTERSECTI­ON OF ‘HISTORIC AND POP CULTURE’

Even before “Bull Durham,” the house had attained celebrity status.

It’s actually known as the James Manning House, built in 1880 by James Manning, an attorney and judge who later served as North Carolina’s attorney general. When he was elected in 1916, he relocated to Raleigh. The house then changed hands several times before it became vacant.

In the mid-1980s, “Bull Durham” writer and director Ron Shelton started scouting locations. He’d found everything he wanted in Durham (and the house) based on excerpts from “NO BULL: The Real Story of the Rebirth of a Team and a City,” The N&O reported in 2018.

“[Shelton] liked the idea that Durham was run down with vacated tobacco warehouses and boarded up downtown storefront­s,” author Ron Morris wrote. “He found a downand-out, minor-league town that represente­d his story well.”

By 1996, however, the film’s stately home had fallen into disrepair, Open Durham noted. Jeff and Trudy Burdette purchased the property that year and undertook “a painstakin­g, multi-year renovation.” They lived in the home for over 20 years before it exchanged hands twice to its new owners.

Now, a piece of cinematic history is up for grabs once again.

Uniquely NC is a News & Observer subscriber collection of moments, landmarks and personalit­ies that define the uniqueness (and pride) of why we live in the Triangle and North Carolina.

 ?? Orion Pictures ?? Bull Durham was released in 1988.
Orion Pictures Bull Durham was released in 1988.

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