Right out of a film by John Ford

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  • Fans of the director's Westerns should go to Monument Valley
    ALAN SOLOMON
    Chicago Tribune

    MONUMENT VALLEY, Ariz -- Harry Carrey Jr. remembers the first time he saw this place. It was October 1948, and the chill of high-country autumn had already set in.


    The actor was here to work on a film with director John Ford; it also featured Victor McLaglen, Ben Johnson and a tall guy by the name of Wayne. John Wayne.


    The movie was "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon." Nearly 60 years later, that film is still wonderful -- and alone among the key players, Harry Carey Jr. is still around. He is 86. His voice, by phone from his Santa Barbara, Calif., home, is 59 years younger.


    "When we worked there," Carey said, "Goulding's was the only public lodging anywhere near Monument Valley -- and it was primitive. There weren't even any bathrooms. The shower we had on `Yellow Ribbon' was a five-gallon tin can with a hose in it and holes in the bottom."


    But it was surrounded by magnificence, Carey recalls.


    "It's the most beautiful place I've ever worked in films, and I've made films everywhere. Of course in those days, the air was a lot cleaner. ..."


    Can't beat the setting


    The "I Disappear" Metallica video was filmed here. A Chevy TV commercial, too.But we can't entirely separate Monument Valley from all those old cowboy movies.


    The Navajos who live and work here certainly understand.


    "They rode right along there," said Rosie Fatt, who grew up in the shadows of the great spires, as she showed a visitor her country. "When they got to the bottom of it down there" -- she was pointing now -- "you saw a young girl running down the sand dune."


    The young girl was a young Natalie Wood. The riders were Jeffrey Hunter -- and John Wayne.


    The dune is still there. That's the beauty part. OK, the dune might have shifted a bit since 1956, when John Ford made "The Searchers" on this stunning landscape. But the dune is still a dune, and the buttes and mesas are as they were when director John Ford made them his Old West signature -- so leave us go amongst them.


    Still a lonesome place


    Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park, the official designation, is not an easy place to get to. Most of the park is in Arizona, though some extends across the border into Utah. Closest town, such as it is, is Kayenta, in Arizona, about a half-hour south on U.S. 163.


    Even just a few years ago, Kayenta was little more than a gas station, a convenience store, a simple restaurant in a trailer and a Holiday Inn for tour groups and strays who couldn't get a room at Goulding's. Today there are two more motels, and you can get a decent meal at the Golden Sands next to the Best Western or, if you happen to be there when it chooses to be open, at the Amigo Cafe.


    Or ... well ... there's a McDonald's, Burger King and a Sonic.


    Goulding's Trading Post and Lodge -- the Utah motel/restaurant/gift shop/museum near the park's only gate -- is almost as much a Monument Valley fixture as Merrick Butte.


    It was Harry Goulding, struggling to save his Navajo trading post during the Depression, who went to Hollywood and induced director Ford to come here for location shots on a movie that would star Claire Trevor, Andy Devine, Thomas Mitchell, John Carradine and Wayne -- a semi-obscure kid actor from Iowa.


    The How Harry Met John Ford story varies from storyteller to storyteller. The consensus: In 1938, a desperate but determined Goulding somehow canoodled his way into a meeting with the famously persnickety director, showed him some black-and-white pictures of the valley and sold him on sending a camera team -- crudely housed but adequately fed by Goulding and his wife, Mike.


    "Stagecoach," released in 1939, was nominated for seven Academy Awards, introduced the world to Monument Valley and made Wayne a star.


    It also made Goulding's a going concern. Owned since 1981 by the LaFont family, the property includes a stone cabin that sits alongside a supply shed.


    If you've seen "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon," you've seen that cabin.


    In time, Wayne and Ford would return to this red-rock country to make four more films together: "Fort Apache," released in 1948; "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon," 1949; "Rio Grande," 1950; and, in 1956, "The Searchers."


    Carey was in the last three. He would work with John Wayne in 11 films -- none more revered than "The Searchers."


    "Greatest Western that ever was," he said.


    Wayne and Ford would make more films, some together and some not, and Ford would shoot other movies in Monument Valley -- but any serious retrospective of either career certainly would include "Stagecoach," "The Searchers" and "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon."


    In all three, and so many others, Monument Valley is an uncredited co-star. It's an interesting sensation to see a Monument Valley movie then come here and see the real thing, then go back and watch the movie.


    Now, these are movies shot in a real place, but they weren't documentaries. Ford filmed "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" in 28 days -- astounding quickness by today's standards -- and you shot where the light was.


    For visitors, as it might have been for John Ford, the light's best in the afternoon.


    It's possible to drive your own vehicle on a designated, rutted sand/rock "road" and see much of the tribal park. Possible. Not smart. Letting a Navajo guide drive you around on a Jeep tour is the better idea, because it will save your car's underside, get you into backcountry open only to tribal members and their guests, and give you a better clue of what you're looking at.


    An international draw


    Movies and commercials and rock videos aside for a moment, the universal reality of Monument Valley is the grandeur. That's what draws international visitors, including Martha Schultzke of Nuremberg, Germany."It's famous, ja? In the guidebooks in Germany, it's on every cover."


    In summer, when the numbers of visitors rise with the heat, it can get a little tense.


    At Artist's Point, an astonishing overlook, it gets so crowded in high season, Fatt said, that tempers flare over people refusing to move their tripods or just being in the way.


    And with so many vehicles around, "it gets really dusty in the summertime."


    Which might have been what Harry Carey Jr. experienced on his most recent visit a couple of years ago. Because when I stopped by in late February, when only a few tourists were around, the clarity of the air was startling. The sky was a deep blue, Camel Butte looked like a camel and Elephant Butte looked like an elephant.


    "Some people I meet, it's like their 12th time being here," said Cinda Atene, who grew up on this land and today is a park interpreter. "They always say, `There's something here that brings me back.'


    "I've even seen men cry here."


    And on clear nights when a full moon is scheduled to rise, dozens of photographers -- even on a bitter cold February evening -- will set their tripods along an appropriate ridge and wait to capture an instant when moon and butte play off each other just right.


    One of those bitter cold nights, I was among them.


    "It is different," Harry Carey Jr. said of today's Monument Valley, "because they paved some of the roads and, of course, there's tons of tourists now. It doesn't have that same starkness and that same wild `out-West' look it used to have."


    But anything less than spectacular? That'll be the day.


    Where Hollywood Cowboys Came


    BASICS


    Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park straddles the Arizona-Utah area near the Four Corners junction with Colorado and New Mexico. It's about 330 miles by car from Phoenix, via Interstate 17. Figure about 5 1/2 hours. From Las Vegas, the drive is a little shorter and a little slower -- and often spectacular.


    Nearest actual town is Kayenta, Ariz., a modest supply/market center for the Navajo Reservation and tourist base, about 20 miles south of the park entrance.


    WAYS & MEANS


    GETTING AROUND: Three choices: Drive yourself along the 17-mile circuit open to visitors, take a Jeep tour -- which gets you onto backcountry roads reserved for Navajo guides -- or hire a horse. Most visitors would be satisfied with the self-drive tour, though they would miss some of the park's better scenery, petroglyphs and the historical information guides provide. Another caveat: The road is unpaved and sometimes crude; nervous drivers might do well to consider the alternatives. Tour prices start around $50 for a half-day; expect to pay about the same for 90 minutes on a horse. Contact the park for a list of concessionaires. There's no unauthorized hiking.


    STAYING THERE: Goulding's, a few miles west of the park entrance on the Utah side, has a variety of options from standard motel (the Lodge) to separate cottages and a large RV campground -- and fine views from most rooms. Also, free John Wayne movies. Through mid-October, doubles run $175 (subject to change); lower the rest of the year.


    Details: 435-727-3231; www.gouldings.com.


    Kayenta has Holiday Inn Best Western and Hampton Inn.


    DINING THERE: Limited. Goulding's has a year-round restaurant that's pretty decent, combining familiar cafe/diner fare with some creative uses of Navajo frybread. Best option in Kayenta, aside from a fast-food cluster and the hotels, is the Golden Sands Restaurant, nothing fancy but a good place to try a local specialty, mutton stew (accompanied by frybread). The park visitor center has food service spring through fall.


    RESOURCES


    Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park office: 435-727-5874; www.navajonationparks.org.


    Monument Valley in the Movies


    John Wayne movies filmed in Monument Valley (all directed by John Ford):


    "Stagecoach," 1939


    "Fort Apache," 1948


    "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon," 1949


    "Rio Grande," 1950


    "The Searchers," 1956


    Other movies filmed there by John Ford:


    "My Darling Clementine," 1946


    "Wagon Master," 1950


    "Sergeant Rutledge," 1960


    "Cheyenne Autumn," 1964


    Other notables filmed there include:


    "Kit Carson," 1940


    "Billy the Kid," 1941


    "The Harvey Girls," 1946


    "How the West Was Won," 1962


    "2001: A Space Odyssey," 1968


    "Easy Rider," 1969


    "Mackenna's Gold," 1969


    "Wild Rovers," 1971


    "The Trial of Billy Jack," 1974


    "The Eiger Sanction," 1975


    "Legend of the Lone Ranger," 1981


    "National Lampoon's Vacation," 1983


    "Starman," 1984


    "Back to the Future III," 1990


    "Forrest Gump," 1994


    "Wild Wild West," 1999


    "Mission: Impossible II," 2000


    "Windtalkers," 2002

  • Thanks again kevin I firmly believe Monument Valley goes hand in hand with John Wayne and John Ford..I actually have capt Brittles tattoo'd to my right bicep..favorite tattoo of them all.