Christopher Knight Opens Brady House Tours at $300 Experience
The brady house in Studio City has been turned into The Brady Experience and is now open for tours. The renovated home begins semiprivate guided tours on May 11, giving visitors access to a recreated TV setting that once existed only on screen.
Studio City's 1969 TV home
The house became famous in 1969 as the exterior of the Brady family residence, while the interior scenes were filmed on the Paramount Studios lot. This version has been renovated to match what viewers saw on television, and the attraction is being offered for a limited time.
Tickets cost close to $300, a price point that puts the experience in the premium-souvenir bracket rather than the usual nostalgia-stop category. For buyers, the draw is not just the house itself but the curated memorabilia included on the tour, including an engraved silver platter featured on the series.
Christopher Knight at the opening
Christopher Knight, who played Peter Brady, attended the opening and pointed to the show’s appeal as comfort. “What is it? What's the draw? I keep coming back to, it has to be the comfort,” he said. He also said, “I recognize that others have attachment to it, it's appealing to them, it has a measurable impact for them,” and added, “And I think I understand what it is and I'm all for it because I think it's good and comfortable.”
Derek Berry, president of experiences for Bucket Listers, said the value is in what visitors leave with: “By the time you leave, you have your tangible takeaways,” and “Some amazing pictures and videos and content as they're calling it, right? And then the other thing is these lifelong memories you created. People probably dreamed of coming into this house. Now they get to finally do it.”
Wags & Walks gets proceeds
A portion of the proceeds benefits Wags & Walks, the local dog rescue supported by home owner Tina Trahan. She tied that donation to her own limits as a volunteer, saying, “I used to volunteer and I can't because I always go home with dogs,” followed by, “So I had to stop volunteering. This is how I give back.”
The setup gives the house a second life as a ticketed attraction with a charity component, not just a photo stop. For anyone buying in, the practical move is simple: the tours start May 11, the run is limited, and the experience comes with both memorabilia and a donation built into the price.