Many things have lain hidden beneath the sands of time, awaiting their resurrection into memory and history. Ancient ruins, monolithic structures, and cultural artifacts give us a small window with which to peer into the past.

While the organizers behind most archaeological excavations hope to unearth ancient or prehistoric artifacts, a local project is casting its gaze back a mere 90 years. Thanks to a cryptic passage from the posthumously published biography of Cecil B. DeMilleāwho is often considered to be the father of American cinemaāthe location of a historic movie set from the silent film era has been recovered from where it was lying in wait under the sands in the Guadalupe Dunes.
While the 1956 version of The Ten Commandments with Charlton Heston is a well-known movie, it was actually a remake of DeMilleās earlier, silent version of the epic biblical story. Unlike the later film, which DeMille shot in Egypt, the silent version used Guadalupe for its scenes of Moses and the exodus.
The Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes Center is playing host to the findings of a private excavation; the effort has included several archaeologists, but was spearheaded by filmmaker Peter Brosnan, whoās been preparing a documentary. Literally decades in the making, the film is about the find and the excavation, which proved much more challenging than the filming process due to myriad reasons.
A public unveiling of the newly recovered set pieces āwhich have been conserved by art restoration experts at the Hollywood Heritage Museumāwill happen at the Dunes Center on June 14. The event will be speakeasy themed, celebrating the era in which the historical film was made.
Genesis of an iconĀ
Cecil B. DeMille was one of many stage-directors-turned-film-directors in the early 1900s, helming his first movie in 1913. Just a decade after his first film project, DeMille was a hugely respected director, garnering countless fans and Hollywood support.
The genesis of The Ten Commandments was a publicity stunt by DeMille and the Los Angeles Times, who together offered $1,000 to whoever came up with the idea for DeMilleās next epic film. More than one reader suggested the biblical exodus as a suitable topic for the project, and the powerhouse director agreed.
An artist of authenticity, DeMille hoped to shoot The Ten Commandments in Egyptāan idea his backers, however, were reticent to fund. The small town of Guadalupe, relatively close to Los Angeles, would make more sense.
āAny time a film needed some place that looks like Africa or the Middle East, Guadalupe is a lot more pleasant of a place to work than the desert,ā said Doug Jenzen, executive director of the Dunes Center.
The Dunes Center is playing host to the artifacts found in Brosnanās excavation.
āPeter Brosnan collected a lot of oral histories from the old-timers out here, which was really forward thinking of him,ā Jenzen said.
Brosnanās studies unveiled a lot of information about how a production as big as The Ten Commandments impacted Guadalupe and Santa Maria.
āBecause I began working on this in the 1980s, most of the people who worked on it were still alive,ā Brosnan said. āI was able to interview the ranchers, wranglers, horse riders, and actors; they all related great stories about what it was like to be there on the Dunes in 1923.ā
Scope and size
Perched atop a sand dune, which is now in the Santa Barbara County Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes Reserve, the set included a 120-foot-tall, 800-foot-wide faƧade of the āThe City of the Pharaoh,ā which required more than 70 miles of cable to keep upright. A group of sphinxes, each of which weighed 5 tons, flanked an avenue.
āOne of the interesting aspects of this is that the majority of the population of Guadalupe at the time were Filipino and Japanese folks,ā Jenzen said. āThey couldnāt work in the movie at that time, so they were hired to build the set.ā

DeMilleās production employed 1,600 laborersāthe majority of whom were localsāto help build the wood frames and concrete and plaster set pieces. The huge sculptures were actually crafted by Paul Iribe, the famous artistic director of Vogue.
āThe Guadalupe set is arguably the earliest extant three-dimensional work by Paul Iribe, the father of art deco,ā Brosnan said. āItās one of the interesting things about the project: So many fascinating people were involved in it.ā
[newspack-popup id="53316"]Once the massive set was finished, DeMille and his crew arrived. With the help of the military, the director had a huge camp built on the sand dune next toĀ set. It included 500 tents for actors, camera operators, lighting technicians, makeup artists, and military members. There was a hospital tent, projection room tent, and even a giant mess tent that could seat up to 1,500 people.
āDeMille was certainly the master of the biblical epic,ā Brosnan said, āand the master of putting a thousand people on screen, which nobody else could do.ā
Once set up and ready to shoot, DeMille called on locals to help fill out his epic exodus scene. The Santa Maria Valley was already a booming agricultural area on the Central Coast, and local ranchers were more than ready to hire out not just themselves as extras, but their animals, too. The exodus scene included 2,500 actors and 3,000 animals.
āThey needed those farm animals, so they would hire anybody who let them use their farm animals,ā Jenzen said, āand then they needed people to take care of those animals; so, if you were local and worked in Guadalupe, you worked in the movie.ā
Brosnan has tracked down many illuminating anecdotes about the production from the āold- timersā he interviewed in the early ā80s. Some of these ranchers-turned-actors included Ernest Righetti and Clarence Minetti.
āWe even talked to one guy who rented his horse in return for a car ride back to town,ā Brosnan said. āHe had never ridden in a car before that.ā
DeMille, who was famous for his strict rules of conduct on set, also hired a kind of vice police to patrol the tents and make sure there wasnāt any undesirable activity going on. Some of the cultural artifacts recovered include the Prohibition Era ācough syrupā bottles, a clue that perhaps illegal alcohol consumption was some of the behavior DeMille was trying to restrict.
āIn those days Guadalupe was a wide-open town, what we would call a red light district today,ā Brosnan said. āDeMille hired soldiers to construct his camp, and they had a good time after hours.ā
The soldiers and crew would come to town often to indulge in activities not sanctioned by DeMille. And, though no one remembers exactly who was driving the chariots from the film, the reproductions of ancient vehicles were used as practicalāand impracticalātransport.
āWhen they were off duty, they would ride their chariots to town,ā Brosnan said. āThere were some really wild chariot races up and down the street, which the public just loved.ā

Once the principle photography requiring the set was finished, DeMille had little use for it. Though he had agreed to remove all of the construction when he first got the permits to film in Santa Barbara County, DeMille wasnāt prepared to ship thousands of tons of concrete, plaster, and the rest back to Hollywood.
āThere are two theories as to why, the first being that he ran out of money and the film was so costly that he couldnāt afford to take everything back with him to Hollywood,ā Jenzen said. āThe second theory is that if he didnāt bury it, someone else would find the set and use it to make a movie with hardly any of the cost.ā
Unbeknownst to the community and the county permits office, DeMille dynamited the base of the huge Egyptian temple face, which fell backward and was buried. He used an early form of the bulldozer to dig a ditch and push in all 21 of the massive sphinx statues. Piles of garbage and unnecessary items were buried as well, leaving clues as to how the cast and crew lived while making motion picture history on the Guadalupe Dunes.
Excavating the exodus
The only clue Cecil B. DeMille left regarding the massive set of The Ten Commandments waiting under the sands of Guadalupe came in his autobiography.
āIf 1,000 years from now, archaeologists happen to dig beneath the sands of Guadalupe,ā the filmmaker wrote, āI hope that they will not rush into print with the amazing news that Egyptian civilization, far from being confined to the Valley of the Nile, extended all the way to the Pacific coast of North America.ā
That small paragraph set a handful of Hollywood film buffs on the trail of the āLost City of DeMille.ā Brosnan, who was involved from the beginning of the project as a documentarian, was one of the first to stand on the site while aware of what rested underneath.

āThereās evidence out there in the sand of one of the biggest motion picture sets ever built,ā he said. āWhatās out there is a piece of an era in film that has never been matched, and never will be.ā
In 1983 Brosnanāalong with Bruce Cardoza and Richard Eberhardtātraveled to the site, led there by local Joe Gray. After digging into the sand, they found the sculpted face of a horse, which they recognized from the wall of the giant set faƧade. They also began uncovering other plaster pieces and cultural artifacts. Unfortunately, due to a lack of financial support and county permits, the project was deserted, much like the set.
āI left the project, but something I hadnāt expected [happened]āthe project hadnāt left me behind,ā he said. āWe apparently created a project that just kept generating interest.ā
After the DeMille family gave Brosnan a grant to digitize the interviews he collected from people involved in the project, interest was piqued. The Los Angeles Times, echoing its early support for DeMille, covered efforts to uncover the set of The Ten Commandments. This brought Brosnan worldwide attention, including that of a woman in Texas who contacted him and agreed to fund the rest of the project, excavation and film included.
Though Brosnan received the financial support he needed, getting permitting and permission was another story. In the early ā90s, with the help of archaeologist D. John Parker, the team was able to use ground-penetrating radar to locate much of the set, without doing any real digging. Once prepared to actually dig, literally one business day before the excavation was set to take place, the Santa Barbara County permitting office rescinded the permit, claiming it had issued the wrong kind of permit, Brosnan explained.
āParker had spent the better part of a year going to County Parks and getting all the permits we needed,ā Brosnan said. āHe left in disgust, but he connected us with another archaeology company based out of Santa Barbara.ā

Once the permitting situation was finally figured out, the excavation party still had to wait. The Ranch Guadalupe Wildlife Preserve, which includes much of the Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes, is a protected sanctuary for the western snowy
plover, an endangered bird that nests on the dunes. Plover season runs from March through the beginning of Octoberāso late that autumn, hoping to beat the winter rains, the team spent two weeks excavating.
āIt was pretty exciting,ā Brosnan said. āSadly, we had found that much of the material we found 20 years ago has been destroyed. We learned that sand is a wonderful preservative; there is a virtual history museum buried and preserved in the sand.ā
The sand acted as a natural desiccant, preserving materials used to make the films, including some costume pieces. Unfortunately, when what was once preserved becomes exposed to the wind and moisture in the air, it quickly falls apart.
Ā One manās trash ā¦
āThe first time I ever saw the site, I didnāt know it was the site,ā Jenzen said. āI just wondered why there was trash all over the sand dune.ā
Many of the cultural artifacts are being kept by the Dunes Center on behalf of Santa Barbara County, which technically owns them. The large set pieces recovered by Brosnan have been taken to Los Angeles to the Hollywood Heritage Museum where theyāre being restored for the unveiling on June 14.
āWe have an art conservatory down here,ā Brosnan said. āAmy Higginsāshe specializes in plaster reconstruction and restorationāshe is working on restoring the pieces and creating exhibit pieces for them.ā
The unveiling will be a watermark for Brosnan, but not the last. He hopes to complete the documentary film cataloging the project soon and possibly debut it at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival.
āAt times, this has been a real pain in the butt,ā he said, ābut now that itās all over I am very happy that I have had the chance to interview everybody and show this history and tell this story.ā
Though the excavation unearthed many artifacts, it only scratched the surface, Brosnan explained; thereās still quite a lot of the set out there. The Dunes Centerās display capability is limited by what can fit inside its doors, so the larger set pieces remain unrecovered.
āWhen the report on this project is done, it will show that there is a lot more out there,ā Brosnan said. āI hope the exhibit at the Dunes Center will encourage people to go out and uncover a lot of the wonderful things out there.ā
Though Brosnan is done with his project, other professional groups can apply for permitting from the county to try to excavate the set. Note that members of the general public arenāt allowed to remove any set pieces from the site without facing legal action from the county.
āItās part of our public heritage and heritage of the area,ā Jenzen said. āItās actually the last surviving movie set from early Hollywood.ā

The majority of silent era films are lost, Brosnan explained. Not just the films, but also the sets and artifacts used to make them. Thatās what makes The Ten Commandments set so special: Itās a well-preserved window into a time when the 20th centuryās dominant art form was still developing.
āI always have to laugh when I see a film crew on the Dunes,ā Brosnan said. āThey are out there using movie-making language; well, 90 years ago DeMille was out there inventing that language.ā
Brosnan also sees the current project and any possible future iterations as a golden opportunity for Guadalupe and the areaās tourism.
āThereās a little town up in the Sierras, Lone Pine, and a lot of films were shot out there in the 1930s, and they have turned it into a tourist destination,ā he said. āI think Guadalupe could do that same thing. I would love to see a classic film festival at their theater. Itās a classic town with connections to a lot of classic Hollywood movies.ā
Contact Arts Editor Joe Payne at jpayne@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Jun 6-13, 2013.

