
WHERE'S HOT LIPS? "MASH" fans Brian Rooney, left, and Mark Rackow carry a signpost modeled on one that sat at the center of the 4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital compound on the television series for 11 seasons.
'MASH' camp comes alive
Source of this article - Los Angeles Times, February 1, 2008.
Bob Pool
You could almost hear the distinctive thump-thump-thump of
medevac choppers swooping in over the old "MASH" television series set in
Calabasas.
![]() WHERE'S HOT LIPS? "MASH" fans Brian Rooney, left, and Mark Rackow carry a signpost modeled on one that sat at the center of the 4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital compound on the television series for 11 seasons. |
Except the only real noise here Thursday was the heavy
breathing of Brian Rooney and Mark Rackow as they lugged a 10-foot signpost down
a muddy canyon fire road on the western side of Malibu Creek State
Park.
Its familiar-looking, hand-lettered arrows pointed the way to
Boston, Seoul, Coney Island, San Francisco, Tokyo, Burbank, Death Valley, Toledo
and Decatur -- just like the ones that for 251 episodes stood in the center of
the fictional 4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital compound.
The iconic
signpost was being returned for the first time in a quarter-century to the
"MASH" filming location.
Soon it will be the centerpiece of a partially
restored set that state officials plan to use to pay tribute to Malibu Creek
State Park's cinematic past.
The park's 6,000-plus acres have been the
backdrop for thousands of movie and TV scenes since 1927, when it became the
Scottish Highlands for a silent movie called "Annie Laurie" that starred Lillian
Gish.
It doubled for Wales in 1941's best-picture Oscar winner, "How
Green Was My Valley" and was Shangri-La in 1937's "Lost Horizon."
It was
the backdrop for a primate-run world in "Planet of the Apes" in 1968 and where
"Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" were chased over a cliff by a pursuing
posse in 1969.
![]() TOURIST DRAW A military Jeep and an old Army ambulance are all that remain of the "MASH" set. Both were burned in an Oct. 9, 1982, brush fire that destroyed the set as the show's final episode was being filmed. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times) |
But it is "MASH" that matters most to park visitors, who
come from all over the world to see for themselves the Korean wartime world
inhabited by Hawkeye, Hot Lips, BJ, Trapper John and the others who filled out
the landmark black comedy's on-camera Army surgical team.
"When I first
came here in 1988, people were always asking 'MASH' this or 'MASH' that," said
state parks Ranger Tony Hoffman as he stood in the doorway of the Blandings
House, where the 1948 comedy "Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House" was filmed.
It is now a state parks office.
"At first I'd tell them, 'Ask me about
birds and I can tell you. Go to Universal Studios if you want to know about
films,' " Hoffman said with a laugh. "But people come up every day and ask about
'MASH.' Last year when two experts, Harry Medved and Mike Malone, led a hike to
the set, 250 people showed up in the rain to go with them."
These days,
park rangers and docents have been trained to answer questions about the shows
and films shot there.
As proof, Hoffman good-naturedly rattles off some
facts and figures about the Blandings House -- like how it was built at 7/8
scale so Cary Grant would look taller, and with movable interior walls so
cameras could get the most flattering shots of co-star Myrna Loy.
Rooney
and Rackow maneuvered a four-wheel-drive truck carrying the replica of the
"MASH" signpost as close as they could before mud forced them to finish on
foot.
The directional arrows drew appreciative looks from other hikers on
the rutted fire road.
Dave Tillett, 49, a retired chemical engineer from
Thousand Oaks, acknowledged he was a fan of the 11-year TV show.
Andreas
Kyriacou, 52, a retired chemical engineer who lives in Newbury Park, loved the
1970 movie.
"It was one of the first films that touched me. It was a
special film for me -- an emotional thing," Kyriacou said.
After toting
the signpost about half a mile, Rooney and Rackow reached the set. All that was
left were the rusted hulks of a military Jeep and an old Army
ambulance.
Both were burned in an Oct. 9, 1982, brush fire that destroyed
the set as the show's final episode was being filmed.
The fire was
written into the finale, which was titled "Goodbye, Farewell and Amen." When it
aired Feb. 28, 1983, it became the most-watched TV show ever.
Rackow, 54,
is a retired builder. He constructed the directional signs in his Agoura Hills
workshop from pine and cedar based on photographs of the original "MASH"
signpost. It is displayed at the Smithsonian.
He searched under some
twigs and found a hole he had previously dug for the post. Then Rooney carefully
lowered the signpost into the ground.
Rooney stepped back and surveyed
the surroundings near the sign.
"Hawkeye's tent was here. The latrines
were there. The showers over there. The mess tent was over by the picnic table
there. The helicopter pad was on top of that hill," said the 44-year-old West
Los Angeles resident who has written a history of the Santa Monica Mountains
that includes both the state park and the nearby Paramount Ranch National
Park.
![]() BELOVED Cast and crew members are invited to a Feb. 23 event marking the anniversary of the show's series finale. (Fox) |
Rooney is helping state parks officials plan a Feb. 23 ceremony at
the set that will mark the 25th anniversary of the show's series finale. Cast
and crew members are being invited to the event, scheduled from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. and open to the public.
Using original blueprints provided by 20th
Century Fox, the actual locations of the set's tents and structures will be
outlined in rope around the signpost, Rooney said.
Eventually, special
overnight camping at the site is being considered. Videos of the old "MASH" show
might be projected on a bedsheet for campers, he said.
Interpretive signs
will be erected at the set, along with a special photographic "viewing window"
that will depict how the show's tents looked when they were set up.
"In
the past, a lot of people have been disappointed to come out to see the set and
find out there was nothing much to see," said Al Pepito, Malibu area supervisor
for the state Parks Department. "We want to bring back the rich history of
cinema here."
Eventually, interpretive panels will be placed at movie
sites throughout the park, Pepito said. At the "MASH" site, Rooney's signpost
will be displayed on weekends, and only when a docent is present. It will be
locked up the rest of the time to prevent theft.
"The parks people
suggested making a concrete or a metal signpost," Rooney said. "But 'MASH' fans
would never allow that."