Newport was a film favorite
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Elia Powers
Although the Newport Beach Film Festival has brought hundreds of
movies to the city over the past six years, filmmakers have been
visiting the area since the early 1900s.
“Filmmakers needed remote-looking places, and Newport had a huge
harbor that could look like just about anything,” said Marty Capune,
Newport Beach’s film liaison and a former film location manager.
According to county historian Jim Sleeper’s “Great Movies Shot in
Orange County,” the earliest documentary made in the county was
filmed in Newport Beach in 1912. The film, he wrote, followed the
flight of a water plane.
But many of the movies shot in Newport Beach tended to be of the
action or comedy variety. Sleeper wrote that in 1916, a film crew
came to Balboa Island and set fire to the bridge that connects the
island to the mainland.
Joseph Francis Keaton, better known as “Buster,” shot “The Boat”
in Newport Beach in 1921.
City residents were enthralled by the process of filming,
according to Sleeper. They would stand by the shores and watch as
actors and stunt devils jumped off ships and conducted battle scenes
on the water.
In 1927, Keaton starred in “College,” a film about crew racing
that was shot in Newport Beach. The film’s cast stayed at the
Southern Seas Club, and the filmmakers hired locals to be extras in
the film. Newport Beach residents were paid $5 a day and given
all-access passes to see the making of the film, according to
Sleeper’s book.
One of the most famous films was the 1930 Oscar award-winning “All
Quiet on the Western Front.” The World War I drama was filmed in what
is now Corona del Mar and the Back Bay.
“This place has always been film friendly,” Capune said. “People
have historically gone out of their way to do what is needed.”
Newport Harbor played prominently in “College,” and Sleeper wrote
that the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce publicized the movie in
order to promote a harbor bond issue and to encourage future
filmmaking in the region.
It must have worked, because throughout the first half of the 20th
century, the area was a favorite of many Los Angeles-based
filmmakers. Looking for less-crowded beaches and a more unfettered,
natural setting, opportunistic directors began shifting their
waterside filming locations from Los Angeles County to Orange County.
Newport Beach was the setting for the silent version of “Treasure
Island,” according to Capune. The harbor was transformed many times
over on the big screen, often serving as the setting to films with
ancient backdrops.
The city reaped the financial benefits, and the films helped
attract tourists and actors.
Corona del Mar had its time in the spotlight, as well. In the
silent version of the 1917 film “Cleopatra,” viewers saw the city’s
trademark hills in the background.
“The harbor looked like it could have been the Nile,” Capune said.
“Filmmakers loved the freedom they had to use the surroundings.”
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