Pancho Barnes has been
the subject of several books, including Tom Wolfe's bestseller "The
Right Stuff". She was portrayed in the film made from the book,
and her life served as inspiration for the television movie "Pancho
Barnes" featuring Valerie Bertinelli. In the past, attempts
were made to make a documentary about Pancho, but with only mixed
results. Unfortunately, few documents and other materials related
to Pancho seemed to have survived the devastating fire at the Happy
Bottom Riding Club in 1953, and therefore much of the context of
Pancho's life seemed to be irretrievably lost.
While conducting research for an article about Edwards
Air Force Base, Producer Nick Spark met Dr. Lou D'Elia. By happenstance,
Dr. D'Elia had recently acquired a large archive of "lost"
materials relating to Pancho, including rare photos, personal letters,
a rough draft of an auto-biography, voice recordings, even Barnes'
student pilot license.
Nick Spark recruited filmmaker and friend Amanda
Pope to take a look at the Pancho materials. After some discussion
they agreed that it represented a truly significant window in Pancho's
extraordinary life, and that they had to make a film about her.
Thus the Pancho Barnes documentary project came
into being.Through careful research by the production team, new
artifacts and important materials have surfaced to supplement the
project, including never-before-seen film footage and even FBI records
related to Pancho's legal case against the Air Force.
In February of 2005, KOCE-TV PBS of Orange County
agreed to assist the production and, thanks to a matching / challenge
grant made available by a California non-profit, funding now exists
to produce this project. Your tax-deductible donation can help make
"Pancho Barnes!" a reality. See the "How
to Help" page for more information. |