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Old 12-11-2006, 12:06 PM   #1
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Buena Park waxes poetic on its future - Los Angeles Times 12/11/06

Buena Park waxes poetic on its future

Some figures from the defunct Movieland museum could find roles in a developer's project.

By Roy Rivenburg
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
December 11, 2006


Quote:
The trained bears that played basketball are long gone. Ditto for the dancing stallions, FDR's wheelchair, Bonnie and Clyde's car and the tarantula races.

Over the last 30 years, Buena Park has become a veritable graveyard for roadside attractions and amusement parks. The ghosts include Japanese Village and Deer Park, Movieworld Cars of the Stars, the California Alligator Farm and Wild Bill's Wild West Dinner Extravaganza.

But one deceased venue is staging a comeback — sort of. Movieland Wax Museum, which closed last year, is being reincarnated as a Best Buy electronics store and food court called Movieland Plaza.

Wax statues from the old museum will be displayed in glass cases built into the outside corners of the plaza's shops and restaurants, said Steve Thorp, vice president of Burnham USA Equities, the developer behind the project.

Superman, Austin Powers, Liz Taylor, Rudolph Valentino, Shirley Temple and Gen. George Patton are expected to return to the limelight late next year.

Most of the beeswax sculptures will be housed in air-conditioned chambers protected by polarized glass, but a few might end up inside plaza shops, Thorp said.

The nostalgia element is reminiscent of Long Beach's new Pike retail center, which installed a Ferris wheel and a rollercoaster-shaped pedestrian bridge as a tribute to the site's former amusement park, which was demolished in the late 1970s.

But the Movieland project illustrates the situation Buena Park officials face as they try to rejuvenate the tourist and entertainment zone surrounding Knott's Berry Farm.

The golden age of mom-and-pop-style tourist attractions in Southern California is over, and city officials are struggling to find suitable replacements to draw visitors.

The decline began in the 1970s, with the departure of Japanese Village, a theme park featuring deer, performing bears, dolphins, karate demonstrations and pearl divers. Its successor, Enchanted Village, flopped. By the mid-1980s, Movieworld Cars of the Stars, Kingdom of the Dancing Stallions and the gator ranch had joined the exodus.

The wax museum narrowly escaped the same fate after its attendance plunged from 1 million in 1976 to 440,000 in 1984, but only because it was sold to a San Francisco firm.

Still, not all has been bleak along Beach Boulevard. Medieval Times, a dinner-and-jousting theater venue, just celebrated its 20th anniversary. Knott's Berry Farm added Soak City USA, a water park, in 2000. A pirate-themed dinner theater replaced Wild Bill's last year.

And Ripley's Believe It or Not! museum, which arrived in 1990, continues to showcase such oddities as an Elvis Presley-shaped lemon, an eight-legged pig and a Last Supper painting made from burnt toast. Ripley's plans to revamp its exhibits and museum exterior next year, manager Dave Simon said.

But there's no question that the tourist strip has lost some luster. As far back as 1998, city officials launched efforts to make the area more pedestrian friendly, adding benches and landscaping in front of Medieval Times and the wax museum.

Buena Park's top goal next year is to find ways to refurbisha ragtag stretch of Beach Boulevard near Knott's Berry Farm, said interim City Manager Rick Warsinski. The city recently purchased an old motel as part of that effort.

A tougher task, however, might be preserving the area's entertainment identity. After the wax museum closed, no proposals for another tourist attraction or amusement venue surfaced.

The neighborhood has two dinner theaters and a nearby multiplex movie house, so "what else are you going to put in?" Warsinski asked. "A bowling alley? Miniature golf? Nobody like that stepped forward."

So the City Council, on a split decision, authorized a Best Buy electronics outlet.

"Some people believe Best Buy is retail; some say it's entertainment," Warsinski said.

Similar scenarios are playing out at some other longtime tourist stops in Orange County. Farther south on Beach Boulevard, Hobby City — a 10-acre mecca of collectibles, kiddie rides, live reptiles and a half-scale replica of the White House — is limping along.
full article at http://www.latimes.com/entertainment...business-enter
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Old 12-12-2006, 01:19 AM   #2
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Re: Buena Park waxes poetic on its future - Los Angeles Times 12/11/06

I knew those scumbags would make it happen! (reference my previous post: http://www.micechat.com/forums/showt...ight=movieland)

I guess these days a Best Buy does qualify as entertainment. But hey - have a few of the figures in glass boxes and naming the mini mall "Movieland Plaza" makes up for it completely! Where do I buy my tickets????
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Old 12-12-2006, 09:47 AM   #3
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Re: Buena Park waxes poetic on its future - Los Angeles Times 12/11/06

Hey, Disneyland has a Best Buy, oops, I meant Innoventions
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Old 12-12-2006, 01:25 PM   #4
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Re: Buena Park waxes poetic on its future - Los Angeles Times 12/11/06

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Originally Posted by Darkbeer View Post
Hey, Disneyland has a Best Buy, oops, I meant Innoventions
LOL...now that's funny! And oh so true!!!
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Old 12-14-2006, 03:37 PM   #5
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Re: Buena Park waxes poetic on its future - Los Angeles Times 12/11/06

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LOL...now that's funny! And oh so true!!!
Yes - sooooooo true! And it hits on another of my top gripes: Closing America sings for a Best Buy!

I wouldn't have minded if they opened a Best Buy in the middle of Movieland! ahhhhh
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