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Omaha Magazine

Drive-By Delight

Apr 01, 2014 09:54AM ● By Leo Adam Biga
Alexander Payne's new Oscar-nominated film Nebraska is stirring the pot in his home state the way his last film made here, About Schmidt, did in 2002.

That earlier project's superstar lead, Jack Nicholson, naturally dominated media coverage. Nicholson’s character, the dour Warren Schmidt, lived in the Dundee home at 5402 Izard St. Bess Ogborn owned the house during filming, but the Jill and Mike Bydalek family moved into the home in mid-2003.

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"Even years after the movie people would drive by really slow," says Jill. "Tour buses would pull up. There were people getting out and taking pictures."

"Every time Payne has a successful movie there'll be people that show an interest in the house," says Mike, who practices technology law for Kutak Rock. "The guy has a following. Random people visiting Omaha will, on their way to the airport, detour and drive by."

The couple, whose children Grace and Jack grew up there, fully expects the same to happen should Nebraska fare well come Oscar time.

"And it's not just here, it's a half dozen other places around town," Mike says, referring to the favorite Midtown spots the filmmaker made part of his Omaha trilogy (Citizen Ruth, Election, About Schmidt).

In a city with few degrees of separation, the Bydaleks claim a connection to another Omaha Payne house. Grace attended a nearby home daycare that served as the residence of the family friend Matthew Broderick's character hits on in Election.

But because it's so closely associated with Nicholson's potent cinema legacy, few other Omaha movie locations have the iconic pull as does the Izard Street house. To capitalize on this intrigue the Omaha YWCA (now the Women’s Center for Advancement) held a Home for the Holidays fundraiser at the three-story, red brick Colonial constructed in 1923.

A largely untouched interior made it the right fit when the filmmaker, location manager John Latenser V, and production designer Jane Stewart scouted it."We'd searched for the 'Schmidt House' for quite some time," says Latenser, who comes from a long line of architects that designed enduring Omaha public structures. "We knew we wanted Warren Schmidt to live in the Dundee neighborhood. We had scouted nearly 50 houses there, but nearly every one had updated-upgraded interiors. We were looking for a house that had not been updated."

He says as soon as the team entered the home and saw its vintage wallpaper and original kitchen they knew they'd found the one.

"It was that perfect."

Bess Ogborn's daughter, Susan Ogborn, president and CEO of the Food Bank of the Heartland, was there for much of the shoot. She says her family "thoroughly enjoyed the experience" of their house becoming a movie artifact. Her folks moved there in 1964. After the death of her father in 1967, her widowed mother hung onto the place.

"Mother redecorated it in 1971, and other than basic maintenance, that was the way the filmmakers found it. But she would want you to know they moved her furniture out and used set furniture, and that her house was never that dirty or gloomy as it was in the movie. I don't think she regretted letting them use her home at all. Seeing the house in the film didn't seem strange, but walking through that set was very odd."

The Bydaleks removed the wallpaper, redid the kitchen, and made many more renovations while retaining the five-bedroom home's original integrity.

"It's a great house," says Mike. "It's just as simple as can be, and that's kind of nice."

"They don't make these houses anymore," says Julie.

The Bydaleks know it will always link them to a slice of pop culture.

"It's kind of fun to say we live in the About Schmidt house," says Mike.

As things worked out, the Bydaleks' daughter, Grace, 18, became the family's own resident movie star. Acting on stage since childhood, she's done voice-over work for animated television series, and she portrayed the title role in the Omaha-made film For Love of Amy (2009). During a Carnegie Mellon (Pittsburgh) theater camp, she says she used the Schmidt tie "as my fun fact during my dorm floor ice-breaker," adding, "People were impressed a girl from Omaha would have a connection with the movies."

As for Jack, 15, he says "it's cool as a movie buff to live in a house made famous" by a popular film and its legendary star.

Leo Adam Biga is the author of "Alexander Payne: His Journey in Film." Read more of his work at leoadambiga.wordpress.com.

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