Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

N.M. tribe bets on movie studio in old casino

- RUSSELL CONTRERAS

TESUQUE PUEBLO, N.M. — A small northern New Mexico American Indian tribe has opened a movie studio in a former casino that it hopes will lure big production­s.

The Tesuque Pueblo recently converted the building near Santa Fe into a movie studio campus called Camel Rock Studios with more than 25,000 square feet of filming space.

The tribe’s lands feature stunning desert and the iconic Camel Rock formation in the red-brown foothills of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains and tribal officials said outdoor filming can take place on 27 square miles of the reservatio­n.

The tribe with about 800 members decided to open the studio after scenes from the Universal Pictures western movie “News of the World” starring Tom Hanks were filmed last year in the Camel Rock Casino, which closed in 2018.

Universal’s use of the casino for filming helped persuade tribal officials to transform the empty building into studio space, said Timothy Brown, president and CEO of the Pueblo of Tesuque Developmen­t Corp. Also influencin­g the decision were investment­s in New Mexico movie studios by Netflix and NBC-Universal in recent years, said Tunte Vigil, Tesuque Pueblo’s business developmen­t associate.

The tribe’s governor, Robert Mora Sr., “thinks this is a great opportunit­y for the pueblo to get into this industry,” Vigil said. “The market is really open right now, and the [tribal government] wants to bring different businesses to the pueblo.”

No production­s are happening now and none are planned for the immediate future because the pueblo and most of New Mexico remain under strict covid-19 business restrictio­ns. But Brown said that that hasn’t stopped potential production­s from contacting the pueblo and asking to reserve studio time.

Cheyenne and Arapaho filmmaker Chris Eyre, a Santa Fe resident and an adviser to Camel Rock Studio, said the studio’s unique aspect is that its former makeup as a casino provides the site with pre-made infrastruc­ture that can be used for filming different types of movie scenes

“It’s a museum. It’s an opulent hotel lobby. It’s a capitol building,” said Eyre, who directed the 1998 film “Smoke Signals” about two Coeur d’Alene tribal members who travel from Idaho to Arizona to retrieve the remains of their father after he died alone. “There are sorts of interestin­g standing sets that can be creatively [crafted] for all sorts of scenes.”

The site also has a set workshop called a mill that can be used by crews to build sets for use inside the casino or on the tribe’s land, Eyre said, adding that he could envision movies filmed there that are set in the Middle East or the U.S. Southwest.

Older movies filmed on the Tesuque Pueblo include the 1955 western “The Man from Laramie” starring James Stewart and the 1988 “Young Guns” with Emilio Estevez and Kiefer Sutherland.

But Eyre said previous production­s had stereotype­s about Indigenous people and limited American Indian input and that tribal officials hope future production­s don’t follow in their footsteps.

The studio is being establishe­d at a time when American Indian writers, including Pulitzer Prize-winning Cheyenne and Arapaho author Tommy Orange and Inupiaq American poet Joan Naviyuk Kane, are transformi­ng American Literature — and putting pressure on Hollywood to incorporat­e more American Indian stories.

Tribal officials plan to create internship­s and movie training programs for Tesuque Pueblo members and hope that the studio will foster a new storytelli­ng movement, Eyre said.

“Native Americans are natural storytelle­rs,” he said. “What better place to do it?”

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