January 15, 2004
Hollywood Closer Than You Think
Monterey, CA -- After
several weeks of sulking and complaining that there’s nothing to do in
Hollister, I decided to stop being such a whiner and find something fun
to do - even if it meant venturing out of the area.
A true sign of maturity, I began looking for an interesting yet
stimulating activity that didn’t include the words “hey bartender” or
“vodka and seven.”
I came upon an activity that blended movies, the ocean, beautiful people
and money.
So I said to myself, Self, you like all those things, you should check
that out.
Upon checking, I found that it was a bus tour that travels through
Hollywood’s history on the Monterey Coast.
“Monterey Movie Tours®,” which has been up and running for more than four
months, takes its visitors on a three-hour long tour through Monterey,
Cannery Row, Pacific Grove and Carmel.
Doug Lumsden, the tour director and president of Monterey Bay Scenic
Tours, comments almost lovingly about scenes in more than 200 movies
filmed in the Monterey Coast - some dating back to the silent movies of
the early 1900s.
As I sat in the lumbering bus, eyes darting back and forth between the
scenery outside and the miniature TV-screen before me that flashed
scenes of the same landscapes once played before audiences on the big
screen, it was easy to see why movie producers and directors would
choose the area to shoot a movie.
Of course, it wasn’t the first time I’d tootled down Cannery Row or
gaped at the sprawling mansions on 17-MILE DRIVE®, but it was the first
time I correlated the vast cinematic history that the area can boast of.
Lumsden’s tidbits about films, celebrities and the historical aspect of
the entire area proved thought-provoking and amusing, with just enough
of a gossipy edge that kept my attention focused on the tour at hand
instead of the hundred-thousand dollar Ferraris and Mercedes that sped
around the winding curves of 17-MILE DRIVE®.
During the course of the trip I discovered that while many movies have
been shot in the area, only a handful give credit to the location.
The lush landscape doubles for the hills of Vietnam in Mel Gibson’s “We
Were Soldiers,” and the sandy beaches of Pebble Beach apparently are a
dead ringer for the coast of Maine in Sandra Dee’s 1959 love story, “A
Summer Place.”
The manicured links at the Pebble Beach Golf Course that deliver a
stunning view of the sea were, according to Hollywood, are practically
identical to the English coast when they were filming the movie that
made Elizabeth Taylor a star in “National Velvet.”
Being that I’m one of the millions of people who are enthralled with the
eccentric lives of the rich and famous, discovering that to this day
bloodlines and friendships are still the deciding factor whether someone
is inducted to the ritzy country club at Cypress Point at Pebble Beach
was fascinating.
I didn’t know that acceptance based on bloodlines occurred anywhere
outside of old-school East Coast clubs where the women actually have
names like Muffy von Muffenstien and the men wear $1,000 socks.
After getting lost in the movies and taking in the truly breathtaking
sights, I didn’t even mind paying $15 for a sandwich and a cup of coffee
at the swanky Pebble Beach market. It was funny how willing I was to
slap down some cash to pretend that, if just for a moment, I was part of
that make-believe world of movie star lore and legend.
As the bus pulled back into Monterey and dropped me back into the much
less glamorous charade that is my life, I concluded that my grown-up
outing had been just what I was looking for.
Something fun to do that, if just for a little while, convinced me the
small-town scene of Hollister isn’t too terribly far away from the
bright lights of Hollywood.

Check
available dates and buy tickets online.
To purchase tickets by
phone call Zerve at (800) 979-3370 or (212) 209-3370.
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