Ticket Sales - Film Tour - Part 2 at Heritage Junction at William S. Hart Park on Friday, April 25, 2014


Dance Prism

Information
Film Tour - Part 2 - (SOLD OUT!)

Date: Friday, April 25, 2014
Time: 2:00 PM
Calendar4/25/2014 2:00:00 PM4/25/2014 2:00:00 PMAmerica/Los_AngelesFilm Tour - Part 2 At Heritage Junction at William S. Hart Park24151 Newhall Avenue, Santa Clarita, CA 91321Website: https://danceprism.tix.com/Event.aspx?EventCode=618091FalseMM/DD/YYYY

Heritage Junction at William S. Hart Park
24151 Newhall Avenue
Santa Clarita, CA 91321
Map & Directions

Phone: (661) 250-3735
Email: cowboy@santa-clarita.com
Website: http://www.cowboyfestival.org
Purchase
While tickets are still available, online sales are over.Please call the box office at 661.250.3735 to pre-buy your tickets or purchase your tickets at the shuttle site gate.
Description
Film tour - Part 2

On the second part of our Western film tour, SCV residents and film historians E.J. and Kim Stephens will guide us to several sites in Hollywood, to tell the fascinating story of the early film studios of Tinsel Town. The tour departs from the Cowboy Festival Shuttle Site and heads south to Hollywood where we will pass the site of the former Blondeau Tavern, which in 1911 became the very first studio in Hollywood. In this same area is Hollywood’s famed “Poverty Row,” where hundreds of fly-by-night operations appeared overnight and disappeared just as quickly. It is also the home of “Gower Gulch,” a hangout for cinematic cowboy-wannabes for decades. After passing the birthplaces of Paramount, Columbia, Warner Bros., and Universal, we head west past the site of D.W. Griffith’s old studio, across from where the mammoth sets for Intolerance were once constructed. Nearby is the site of William S. Hart’s former studio, as well as the old Monogram complex – home to hundreds of Westerns over the years. Next, it’s on to the former district of Edendale, where dozens of studios once stood, including Mack Sennett’s legendary Keystone Studios, home to Charlie Chaplin, as well as the Keystone Kops. This was also the site of legendary Bison Studios, where the movie Western was born. After a stop at Griffith Park’s Autry Museum, the tour concludes back at Cowboy Festival Shuttle Site. Please wear comfortable walking shoes.  
 
 

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