September 16, 2002
1:03 PM
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The lost Egyptian city of DeMilleIn 1923,
Cecil B. DeMille built an Egyptian city in the dunes of the Guadalupe Desert north of Los Angeles as the set for "
The Ten Commandments," the first true Hollywood epic. Cost over-runs on the filming left too little money for a complete dismantling of the set, so DeMille had it buried instead. In recent years the set has been partially uncovered by Pacific winds, revealing the remains of three-story-tall plaster sphinxes and
other artifacts, and leading to a campaign to
excavate and
preserve this important piece of film history.
posted by me3dia (15 comments total)
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Organizers hoped that modern Hollywood would fund subsequent recovery work -- but their funding requests were snubbed...Organizers have now raised over $40,000 (nearly $180,000 is needed) to save the rapidly deteriorating set. No funding, to date, has come from Hollywood studios.
Amazing. But, on second thought, given the depth of Hollywood's respect for history, maybe it's not so amazing.
posted by mediareport at 1:31 PM on September 16, 2002