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Photos: Moviemaking at Old Tucson Studios
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Alert Top Story

Photos: Moviemaking at Old Tucson Studios

  • Rick Wiley
  • Oct 9, 2023
  • Oct 9, 2023 Updated Oct 9, 2023

Since 1939's "Arizona," Old Tucson Studios west of the Tucson Mountains has hosted nearly 300 productions. Nearly 40-percent of the historic wooden buildings burned to the ground in a devastating fire in 1995.

P.S. — The Star has a Tucson history email newsletter! Sign up at tucson.com/timemachine. 

Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Visitors at Old Tucson often have a chance to watch actual movie or television filming. Shown in the foreground, they watch actor Cameron Mitchell at work in July 1977. John Wayne, Paul Newman, Glenn Ford, Clint Eastwood and Kirk Douglas are among the stars that have filmed there.

Old Tucson Studios
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

James Coburn during production of "The Last Hard Man" at Old Tucson on November 6, 1975.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Lee Marvin, right, talks with Jack Palance during a break in the filming of "Monte Walsh" at Old Tucson in 1970. For this film the production company built the town of Harmony 35 miles east of Tucson. The set there is now the Mescal location and still used today.

Old Tucson Studios
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Old Tucson Studios in 1980.

Arizona Daily Star
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Night scenes for the John Wayne classic, "Rio Bravo" at Old Tucson on May 24 1958.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Building the soundstage at Old Tucson on June 11, 1968.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

The cast of the televsion show "High Chaparral" on set at Old Tucson in May, 1968. From left, Henry Darrow, Leif Erickson and Don Collier, who lived in Tucson and showed up in local TV commercials later in life.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Glenn Ford at Old Tucson on October 1966 during production of "Pistolero" Upper Sabino Canyon was also used for filming. The classic Western actor also appeared as the bad guy in the original "3:10 to Yuma," also filmed at Old Tucson.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Dean Martin hangs on to Ricky Nelson as John Wayne takes a swing with a blanket on the set of Rio Bravo at Old Tucson Studios in 1959.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Actor Max von Sydow gets makeup on the set of "Reward" on June 15, 1964. A section of the Old Tucson in Tucson Mountain Park was remodeled to depict a street in a small Mexican town. Two of the movie's scenes were filmed at Old Tucson.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Actor John Saxon, left, and director John Huston during production of "The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean" at Old Tucson in December, 1971. The film starred Paul Newman.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

An Andy Warhol Western? Yep. It was "Lonesome Cowboys" and it was filmed at Old Tucson in 1968.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

The streets of Old Tucson transformed for the movie "McLintock!" starring John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara in December, 1962.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

A film camera truck pulls a stagecoach on the set of "The Lone Ranger" near Old Tucson in 1957.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Sidney Poitier with Lilia Skala on the set of "Lilies of the Field" Movie in December 1962. Poitier was the first African American actor to win the Oscar for Best Actor for his portrayal of Homer Smith in the movie.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

On the set of "Gunfight at the O.K. Corral" in 1957. It starred Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas and was directed by John Sturges, who directed several other movies at Old Tucson.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Actor Paul Newman has his photo taken by his wife Joanne Woodward during a break in filming of "Hombre" at Old Tucson in 1967. Woodward said, "Being married to Paul is being married to the most considerate, romantic man." Newman died in 2008.

Old Tucson Studios
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Director John Sturges, left, confers with actor Clint Eastwood during production of "Joe Kidd" at Old Tucson on December 2, 1971. Sturges was a well-known action film director with such hits as "The Great Escape" and "The Eagle Has Landed."

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Noah Beery Jr. at Old Tucson on June 5, 1968. He played James Garner's father in the TV series, "Rockford Files."

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Walter Brennan snd John Wayne during filming of Rio Bravo in 1958. These ruins are leftover walls from the Mexican Village built for the film "Arizona." John Wayne filmed four movies at Old Tucson.

Old Tucson Studios
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

A building is expanded during set improvements for the movie "El Dorado" starring John Wayne and Robert Mitchum at Old Tucson on September 28, 1965.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

The church is changed using adobe bricks during set improvements for the movie "El Dorado" starring John Wayne and Robert Mitchum at Old Tucson on September 28, 1965.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Robert Shelton (left) then president of Old Tucson talks with art director George Chan (right) from 20th Century Fox during building construction in 1964.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

A scene from the 1940 film "Arizona" for which Old Tucson was built. The look and feel of the town was more authentic than any Western filmed to that point..

Old Tucson Studios
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

James Arness rides through Old Tucson as Sheriff Matt Dillon in TVs Gunsmoke. Gunsmoke ran from 1955-1975, though most episodes were filmed in Southern California.

Old Tucson Studios
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Kirk Douglas shows other actors how to draw and whirl during the filming of "Posse" at Old Tucson in October, 1974. Douglas was the star and director of the film.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Actor Josh Brolin, who played Jimmy Hickok in the television show "The Young Riders" on the set at Old Tucson Studios in August, 1989. Brolin is an accomplished actor, with credits like "No Country for Old Men."

Rick Wiley / Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Moses Gunn (left) and Merlin Olsen (right), rehearse a scene from one of the many episodes of "Father Murphy" filmed at Old Tucson from 1981-83. Olsen was a Pro Hall of Fame tackle for the Los Angeles Rams.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Actress Michelle Carey (best known for her role in "El Dorado" with John Wayne) on the set of "Scandalous John" at Old Tucson in November, 1970. Carey spent most of her career in supporting TV roles, including three appearances in "The Wild Wild West."

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

John Wayne, on the set of "Rio Lobo" in Old Tucson in June, 1970, confessed to Tucson Citizen movie critic Micheline Keating that he was nervous about the Academy Awards show the next night. He won Best Actor for "True Grit." Rio Lobo was his last film at Old Tucson.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

An extra catching a snooze in the warm sun on the set of "McLintock!" at Old Tucson in 1962.

Tucson Citizen
Moviemaking at Old Tucson

Writer-director Burt Kennedy, right, on the set of "Young Billy Young," aka "Who Rides with Kane" at Old Tucson in July, 1968. Actor John Anderson is at left. Kennedy, a decorated WWII veteran, also directed "The War Wagon," "Support Your Local Gunfighter," and episodes for several TV show.

Tucson Citizen
Rick Wiley

Rick Wiley

Photo editor

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