6 Awesome Hotels That Were Once Celebrity Homes

6 Awesome Hotels That Were Once Celebrity Homes
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You've booked the celebrity home tours, watched endless reruns of "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous," and feverishly scrolled through your favorite A-listers' Instagram feeds for a glimpse of what it's like to walk in their shoes. But to truly understand how the other half lives, one must spend a night in their master bedrooms, lounge in their stunning pools, and fuel up in their state-of-the-art kitchens. Luckily, we've rounded up six celebrity abodes-turned-hotels for all those times that walking tour just won't cut it.

-- Alisha Prakash, Oyster.com

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This 52-acre, 22-room Jamaican property has plenty to brag about: With private beach and lagoon access, spacious cottages, a tree house spa, oceanfront pools, and a couple of restaurants (here's looking at you, $50 million makeover), it also happens to be the birthplace of James Bond. Before transforming into a full-fledged hotel, author Ian Fleming resided at this retreat, where he allegedly penned all 007 novels. In fact, his original three-bedroom villa, which held on to the writer's desk and peaceful views overlooking the sea, is still up for grabs. Book it and get your own creative juices flowing.

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Live like Marilyn Monroe, who once holed up in suite 246 at this Hollywood Boulevard hideaway. Outfitted in white furniture, sleek hardwood floors, vintage Eames designer accents, and a roomy wrap-around balcony, this 750-foot loft-like will give you a taste of old Hollywood glamour. Just watch your back--some claim the grounds are haunted after spotting the actress' ghost in the lobby mirror that once belonged to her.

With panoramic views of the Pacific Ocean, secluded poolside suites and bi-level bungalows tucked inside manicured gardens, and front-row seats to the type of dreamy sunsets you write home about, it's no wonder so many Hollywood heavyweights chose this Santa Monica destination as their escape back in the day. In the 1920s, Greta Garbo became the first celeb to move into the six-story Palisades Wing, living there for four years. Jean Harlow soon followed suit, renting one of the Miramar bungalows in the early 1930s, and Jean Simmons, who shacked up there for seven months, trailed not far behind. Nowadays, it still attracts the bold and the beautiful--Olivia Newton-John, Robert Downey Jr., Jodie Foster, Hilary Swank--but for briefer stints.

The resident list at Andre Balaz's castle-like Los Angeles hotel reads more like an Oscar ballot than a building manifest. Since opening its doors in 1929 as luxury apartments, the Sunset Boulevard digs have housed entertainment hot-shots like "Rosemary's Baby" director Roman Polanski, who permanently put down roots in 1968 with this wife, Sharon Tate; John Belushi, who moved into Bungalow 3 and later OD-ed on heroin; and Robert De Niro, who crashed here for two years straight. Years later, it still retains its luxurious charm, which comes to life in velvet armchairs, wrought-iron chandeliers, private bungalows, serene pool surrounded by landscaped gardens.

Remember the lyric "now you're smiling out of the window of that crummy hotel" in Joan Baez's tune "Diamonds and Rust?" Turns out, the songstress was crooning about room 305 in the charming Greenwich Village hotel, which she and Bob Dylan called home in the 1960s. Formerly named Hotel Earle, the more than a century-old building hosted all kinds of artist guests (Hemingway, Albert King, Bo Diddley, to name a few) in its heyday. Although the star-studded guest-list has decreased, a recent renovation (rooms are now decked out in Art Deco-inspired accents) has bolstered its popularity among the NYU family crowd.

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If you've ever wondered what it's like to live like a Vanderbilt, here's your chance. Originally built by businessman Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, the 33-room property that once housed the wealthy American family now serves as a holiday escape for guests. Book a room at the hotel (it also includes a spa, fitness center, indoor and outdoor pools, and two restaurants) and use it as a launchpad to explore the nearby Newport waterfront. Or, curl up by the fire inside the Christy Room and let the Beaux-Artes details transport you back to the Gilded Age.

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