Tag Motion Pictures in Pioneertown

These are newspaper articles with stories involving the filming of motion pictures and television shows in and around Pioneertown Ca. USA.

May 19, 1949 featured image

Rivals Get Together

Just to prove that all isn't knives in the back out Hollywood way. Gene Autry is filming practically all of his current film, "The Cowboy and the Indian," at Pioneertown, Calif. Roy Rogers owns a good slice of the place.
May 21, 1949 featured image

Village Builds Airstrip for Film

Notified that Autry wanted to fly his entire company there from Hollywood to film "The Cowboy and the Indian." in nearby Pioneertown, citizens of Yucca Village, purchased Army surplus landing strip section and in one day laid an S-shaped strip each runaway 3000 feet long.
Sept. 13, 1949 featured image

Jimmie Fidler In Hollywood

Some miles from Hollywood, and in one of the most torrid districts of southern California, is Pioneertown, a village built especially to serve the producers of western pictures. On the outskirts of the village is a huge billboard which used to read: "Live Here and Live Longer." After toiling there for a week in the Republic film, "Daybreak," Law Ayres borrowed a paint brush and a can of paint and added a single line to that sign. It now bears, below the original slogan, the sarcastic comment, "It only SEEMS longer!"
Sept. 13, 1949 featured image

Town For Producers

On the outskirts of Pioneertown is a huge billboard which used to read: "Live Here and Live Longer." After toiling there for a week in the Republic film, "Daybreak," Lew Ayres borrowed a paint brush and a can of paint and added a single line to that sign. It now bears, below the original slogan, the sarcastic comment, "It only SEEMS longer!"
Sept. 18, 1949 featured image

Old West Lives

The Old West isn't dead yet. It has recently had a re-birth in the founding of a real, old frontier town, Pioneertown by name, that will stand as a living monument to the West that was.

West Lives Again

The Olde West isn't dead yet. It recently had a re-birth in the founding of a real, old frontier town, Pioneertown by name, that will stand as a living monument to the West that was.