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Signs of the old Movieland Wax Museum linger in Buena Park

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The old sign still looms over Beach Boulevard, a 20th century landmark that, like the museum it once trumpeted, held out past the dawn of multiplexes and YouTube.

The Movieland Wax Museum, which closed in 2005 after 43 years in business, continues to beckon motorists who drive up and down the main thoroughfare of Buena Park’s entertainment district. The tall sign in front, featuring the museum’s name surrounded by white diamonds atop a spindly blue base, has stayed in place even as wax sculptures were auctioned off and new tenants moved in.

On a recent warm afternoon, Mario Orozco, a retired Buena Park resident, sat at the Starbucks below the sign and recalled his days visiting the museum as a child. Back then, he said, the opportunity to see celebrity likenesses up close was a rare treat. And that massive sign broadcast the message that something special resided beneath it.

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“To me, it’s like the big A at Angel Stadium,” Orozco said at an outdoor table, looking up. “It’s one of those things that’s an icon. In Buena Park, it is.”

As R.E.M. once sang, though, the 20th century has gone to sleep. Many of the stars once portrayed in the museum’s cool confines are likely to have small audiences on Netflix, at least among millennials. And as Buena Park officials look to sweep out relics along Beach Boulevard, from former tourist spots to shuttered motels, the future of that curving blue sign has become a question mark.

For two years, Premier Exhibitions has installed two temporary shows in the facility — one focused on the Titanic, the other on the human body. Now, a new permanent tenant is set to move onto the property: Los Angeles-based Butterfly Pavillion plans to open an elaborate complex featuring an atrium full of butterflies, a movie theater and more next year.

As that time approaches, the city, which bought the Movieland Wax Museum property in 2007, will have to reach an agreement regarding a staple of the Buena Park skyline.

“They’re probably going to change the face of the sign,” said Ruben Lopez, the city’s economic development administrator. “We’re going to see if we can negotiate to keep ‘Movieland’ in there somewhere.”

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A LINK TO THE SILENTS

“Where they wax eloquently.”

So the Los Angeles Times proclaimed the museum when it opened in 1962, offering about 60 sculpted figures that represented the first half-century of cinema.

Actress Mary Pickford, one of the biggest stars of the silent era, showed up to dedicate the grounds on opening night. Entrepreneur Allen Parkinson treated the museum’s debut like an actual movie premiere, complete with searchlights, bleachers and stars arriving in limousines.

The museum drew as many as 1.2 million visitors a year during its peak of popularity, in the 1960s, and it remained a prestigious spot for celebrities for decades after. The cement handprints still preserved in front of the building include those of Carol Burnett, Marcel Marceau, Ray Charles, Ed Asner and the leads of the “Batman” TV series.

The museum kept current with celebrities over time, as Kate Winslet and Britney Spears took their places along the likes of Mae West and W.C. Fields, but attendance and interest diminished nonetheless. Times opinion page columnist Karin Klein, reflecting on the museum before its closure, labeled it a relic from the days “when we were all more easily thrilled.”

“During its 1960s heyday,” she wrote, “long before kids were able to manipulate Orlando Bloom on GameCube, Movieland was as close as you could get to most Hollywood stars, with their elaborate costumes and painstaking hair plugs (real stars have them too, you know). Nowadays the tourists seem decidedly un-wowed.”

For some, at least, the allure persists. Tony Pascale, who visited the museum as a child in the 1970s and ‘80s, operates a memorial website, Movielandwaxmuseum.org. The home page proclaims that the site “is dedicated to preserving the memories of a lost but not forgotten attraction that we all grew up with knowing.”

Pascale, who lives in North Hollywood and works as a restaurant server, is at work on a documentary about the museum’s history, which he plans to offer for sale on his site. (He’s already posted a trailer featuring footage shot inside the museum set to orchestral fanfare.) On the frequently-asked-questions page, Pascale notes that if any readers worked at the museum or know someone who did, he would love to talk with them.

In the meantime, he’s touching base with a few fellow enthusiasts. Pascale recently started a Facebook tribute page to Movieland, and 16 members have signed up to date. Among the posts is a photo of the museum sign with the caption, “Last day, October 2005.”

“It’s like a time capsule of their lives,” Pascale said. “They say, ‘Oh my God, I remember that.’”

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‘YEARS AND YEARS’

A documentary on the wax museum’s history may kindle fond memories for moviegoers. But for visitors to Buena Park, that sign over Beach Boulevard sometimes poses a problem.

Sara Copping, the executive director of the Visit Buena Park tourist bureau, often gets calls asking if the museum is open or what its hours are. The sign may represent a treasured part of history for locals, but those from outside the neighborhood are often confused about the lack of a wax museum under it.

Copping, who joined the bureau staff a half-decade after the museum closed, said she would be happy to see the sign amended to focus on the new tenant.

“I think it absolutely would help with eliminating some of that confusion from tourists in the area,” she said.

Rubin Stahl, the chief executive of Butterly Pavillion, would be happy to alleviate that confusion — although, like Lopez, he hopes to preserve at least some of the sign’s old aura.

At this point, he said, his company has not laid out design plans, but he hopes to reach an acceptable arrangement with the city.

“It’s something that goes back years and years and years,” Stahl said. “We’d like to keep it, in a sense.”

One who doesn’t entirely mind having the sign in front is Heather Johnson, the assistant general manager of Premier Exhibitions.

Since her temporary exhibitions moved in two years ago, she said, past visitors have stopped by the property and shared memories. Sometimes, they’ve even brought their children with them, only to find the museum is long closed.

“We get people who used to work here — a lot of those,” Johnson said. “And people who just remember it as a child. It was a good experience for them.”

Often, though, the visitors pay admission for the current shows instead. In “Titanic,” they can view authentic artifacts from the ocean liner’s 1912 voyage, which Movieland once portrayed in a scene. And in “Bodies,” they can view specimens from actual cadavers — a fitting choice, perhaps, for a building that once prided itself on making still figures look like flesh.

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