Interesting article in the local Sunday paper. You can
follow the link or read the story below:

http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/nation/ny-usfilm264338166jul10,0,6493952.story

HOLLYWOOD'S LOST CITY

A Famed Movie Set Buried in the Sand
A Brooklyn Man's Quest to Preserve History
BY TINA SUSMAN
STAFF CORRESPONDENT
July 10, 2005

GUADALUPE, Calif.

For those who thought "Sideways" and the Michael
Jackson trial were the most star-studded events to hit
central California, Peter Brosnan would like to direct
you to this sand-blasted town of dunes, railway tracks
and broccoli fields.

Long before the "Sideways" buddies guzzled their way
through the region's chic vineyards, decades before
cabernet sauvignon flourished in the rich soil or the
pop star made headlines, Hollywood established its
presence here by building one of the most lavish movie
sets ever: a replica of ancient Egypt for Cecil B.
DeMille's 1923 silent version of "The Ten
Commandments."


When filming was over, the set vanished, presumably
dragged off the dunes, taken to Hollywood and
forgotten as sound stages and on-location filming
rendered things such as fake, 5-ton sphinxes and
35-foot statues of the Pharaoh Ramses obsolete.

Fast forward to 1983, when a combination of nature's
wrath and Brosnan's curiosity about all things
Hollywood, honed as a film student at New York
University, kick-started one of the oddest
archaeological excavations ever undertaken - an effort
to uncover the not-so-ancient ancient city that was
not removed from the dunes after all.

The story begins with Brosnan, a 52-year-old Brooklyn
native, chatting with a fellow film buff 22 years ago.
"He told me a crazy story about a guy burying sphinxes
in California," said Brosnan, who lives in Los Angeles
and who, for the record, is no relation to actor
Pierce Brosnan. His parents live in Port Jefferson.

A tale of sphinxes

Intrigued by the strange tale, Brosnan began
investigating and discovered that DeMille had
acknowledged in his 1959 autobiography to burying at
least the sphinxes in the dunes. Just as Brosnan was
enlisting the help of Guadalupe locals and
archaeologists to search for them, nature offered its
own assistance with El NiƱo, a climatic phenomenon
that ravaged California's coast in 1983.

Piers were knocked down, highways were washed away,
and best of all for Brosnan, the spectacular sands of
the Guadalupe Dunes shifted.

"That series of storms kicked about three feet of sand
off the dunes. For the first time in 60 years there
was literally acres of statuary sticking out of the
sand," Brosnan said. "We realized there weren't just
sphinxes buried there - probably the whole set was
there."

That would include some two dozen sphinxes, four
Ramses statues, and the 120-foot-high gates guarding
the Pharaoh's city, all made of plaster, which
provided the backdrop for more than 3,000 actors and
5,000 animals that appeared in the movie.

As with DeMille's silent epic, which was nearly
derailed when Paramount bosses balked at the
then-unheard-of budget of more than $1 million,
Brosnan's project has been hobbled by money issues.

'No interest in its history'

Even with multimillion-dollar budgets the norm for
today's Hollywood productions, Brosnan has not
persuaded studios to save what he says is the greatest
set remaining from the golden age of silent films.

He thought the 80th anniversary of "The Ten
Commandments" might spur interest, but it didn't.
Neither did Paramount's marking of the studio's 90th
anniversary in 2002. Now, Brosnan hopes that the new
attention on this relatively isolated region as a
result of "Sideways" and the Jackson trial - held 10
miles away in Santa Maria - will generate interest.

About $35,000 has been raised, but Brosnan says
letters to Paramount seeking about $140,000 more have
been ignored.

"Hollywood just has no interest in its own history,"
said Brosnan, adding that his last request was sent
about two months ago. "I guess if they could figure
out a profit motive in digging up old sets we'd get
some help, but until then, nothing."


Paramount seems flummoxed by the situation. "Are you
sure this guy isn't a kook?" spokeswoman Nancy
Bannister said when asked about Brosnan's quest.

She had never heard of the buried set and couldn't
find anyone at Paramount who had. That may be because
the most memorable scene from the movie, the parting
of the Red Sea, wasn't filmed at the dunes but at
Paramount studios, where a giant pool of gelatin
doubled as the roiling waterway.

But the excavation effort has its own Web site,
www.lostcitydemille.com, and skeptics can view chunks
of the set at the Dunes Center in downtown Guadalupe.
There, a lion's face and a sphinx's foot sit in a
display case, along with smaller pieces uncovered
naturally by sand shifts or salvaged by Brosnan.

Most people in Guadalupe, a town of 5,700 people about
180 miles north of Los Angeles, are familiar with the
set and with DeMille's reason for burying it rather
than carrying it away. Not only was it cheaper to
knock it down and cover it up, it ensured that no
rival studios could use the set.

>From history to preserve

Dalton Pittman, a park ranger at the dunes, indicated
a sandy mountain where he said much of it is hidden.
Like Brosnan, he fears the fragile items will be
destroyed if they are not salvaged.

Unlike in DeMille's day, the dunes now form a nature
preserve where endangered snowy plovers and other
birds nest.

Pittman said as long as excavation was done outside of
the plovers' March-September nesting season, though,
he couldn't imagine anybody objecting to what he
thinks could be a financial boon for tiny Guadalupe.
He envisions placing some of the pieces in Guadalupe's
park.

"If you put them out here, people would come from all
over the place to see them," Pittman said. "If they
don't do something pretty soon, they won't have much
left."

"Star Wars" of the silent age

When it was made, in 1923, "The Ten Commandments" was
a Hollywood epic beyond compare.

THE SET: Largest ever built at the time, 720 feet wide
and 110 feet high. It was decorated with 500 tons of
massive Egyptian art. It later was dwarfed by the
Roman Forum used in Samuel Bronston's 1964 "The Fall
Of The Roman Empire."

PRODUCTION: At $1.4 million, "The Ten Commandments"
was the most expensive film ever made to that time.
That's $15.5 million in 2005 dollars, a fraction of
the $200-million budget for Steven Spielberg's "War of
the Worlds"

SPECIAL EFFECTS: State-of-the-art at the time:
"Parting of the Red Sea" is still considered a
triumph, done long before the dawn of the digital age.

BOX OFFICE: Became the biggest money-maker of its time
at $4 million ($44.2 million in 2005 dollars). In
1956, DeMille produced a version of the film with
sound, starring Charleton Heston.

Copyright 2005 Newsday Inc.





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