Universal Studios Fire Ruins Film Sets

More Than 40,000 Videos Destroyed

The fire on Sunday was the second in nearly 20 years at Universal Studios. The November 1990 fire and Sunday's blaze both damaged the same three sites.
The fire on Sunday was the second in nearly 20 years at Universal Studios. The November 1990 fire and Sunday's blaze both damaged the same three sites. (Pool Photo By Andrew Gombert Via Getty Images)
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By Greg Risling
Associated Press
Monday, June 2, 2008

UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif., June 1 -- One of Hollywood's largest movie studios starred in a disastrous sequel Sunday as a fire ripped through a lot at Universal Studios, destroying a set from "Back to the Future," a King Kong exhibit and a streetscape seen frequently in movies and TV shows.

It was the second fire at the historic site in nearly two decades, leveling facades, hollowing out buildings and creating the kind of catastrophe filmmakers relish re-creating. This time around, thousands of videos chronicling Universal's movies and TV shows were destroyed in the blaze. But studio officials said that they were thankful no one was seriously injured at the theme park and that the damaged footage can be replaced.

"We have duplicates of everything," said NBC Universal President and Chief Operating Officer Ron Meyer. "Nothing is lost forever." He estimated there were 40,000 to 50,000 videos and reels in a vault that burned. Firefighters managed to recover hundreds of titles.

The blaze broke out on a soundstage featuring New York brownstone facades around 4:30 a.m. at the 400-acre property, Los Angeles County Fire Chief Michael Freeman said. The fire was contained to the lot, but about 400 firefighters were still trying to put it out several hours later.

The cause of the fire is under investigation. Damage was expected to be in the millions of dollars.

The iconic courthouse square from "Back to the Future" was destroyed, and the famous clock tower that enabled Michael J. Fox's character to travel through time was damaged, fire officials said. Two mock New York and New England streets used both for moviemaking and as tourist displays were a total loss, Los Angeles County Fire Inspector Darryl Jacobs said. An exhibit housing a mechanically animated King Kong that bellows at visitors on a tram also was destroyed.

All three sites were either damaged or destroyed during another fire at Universal Studios in November 1990. That fire caused $25 million in damage and was started by a security guard who was sentenced to four years in prison after pleading guilty to arson.

Universal Studios, nine miles north of downtown Los Angeles, has thrill rides and a back lot where movies and television shows are filmed, including scenes from "War of the Worlds," "When Harry Met Sally" and "Scrubs." The park was closed to the public Sunday because of the fire.

The blaze did not affect the 2008 MTV Movie Awards, which were broadcast live Sunday night from the Gibson Amphitheatre in the adjacent Universal CityWalk.



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