U.S.|An Old Mining Town in Montana Finds New Gold in Film
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/28/us/butte-montana-filming-yellowstone-1923.html
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![A map of the United States with a red pin marking Butte, Montana.](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2024/11/19/us/atc-mt-butte/atc-mt-butte-articleLarge.png?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale)
There was a healthy dose of skepticism in Butte, Mont., when Hollywood producers began showing up to shoot their shows. Now, many say the industry’s arrival has been a boon for the city.
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WHY WE’RE HERE
We’re exploring how America defines itself one place at a time. Residents of the small, historic city of Butte, Mont., have had a front-row seat to a growing local economy.
Dec. 28, 2024
Paige Layne was several weeks into her new job as a security guard — standing watch outside of the civic center in her hometown of Butte, Mont. — when she found out exactly what it was she had been guarding.
Inside, a team of people was busy working on a set for “1923,” a multimillion-dollar prequel to the hit television show “Yellowstone.” And as word spread, it soon became the talk of the town that the production would be filmed in Butte.
The city was once the largest in the state and home to a copper mining boom a century ago that brought it the nickname “the richest hill on earth.” Since those days, however, the population has declined to about 36,000, the government has undertaken a massive cleanup of mining waste and, for some locals, good-paying jobs have been hard to come by.
Now the town was abuzz with rumored sightings of Harrison Ford imbibing at local watering holes and Helen Mirren shopping at the Walmart.
The 2022 debut episode of the Taylor Sheridan-created show, a Western drama about conflicts in ranching, mining, immigrants and Native Americans, was viewed by an audience 200 times the size of Butte’s population.
When filming began, it was regarded in town with a heavy dose of skepticism, to say the least. Residents like Ms. Layne were wary of other Hollywood producers who had already begun dropping into town to film projects like “Last Survivors” (2021), “Ghosts of Devil’s Perch” (2022) and “Father Stu” (2022). They feared that the productions could worsen a rise in prices the city had seen after a wave of remote workers moved to Montana during and after the pandemic.