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More info on Dancehall...Josh still not confirmed.

Movie to tell story of lady in
lake

LAKE PLACID - A 1999 monster movie about a giant alligator was called
"Lake Placid" but had nothing to do with the village of Lake Placid at
all. But a new film, based on a mystery novel inspired by true local
events, will start shooting in the Olympic Village in June.
According to one of the film's producers, Ed Graham, "Dancehall" will
star Stephen Lang, who just did a little movie called "Avatar," as well
as Oscar winner Ellen Burstyn and possibly Josh Hartnett, who is known
for roles in "Black Hawk Down," "Pearl Harbor" and "Sin City."
"The casting process has been very interesting so far," Graham said.
"Having these big stars show interest has changed things in a heartbeat.
If Josh doesn't sign on, I'm sure someone else of the same stature will
be interested."
Graham said he is currently working with writer/director Tennyson Bardwell, of Ballston Spa, on securing funds to support the film. If all
goes well they will start shooting in Lake Placid in early June.
Bardwell got some attention last year for his second film, "The Skeptic," which was shot in the greater Albany area and starred Tim Daly
and Tom Arnold.
Locations for "Dancehall" will include a private home on Moose Island, scenes on the lake and underwater and key scenes shot in the historic
Essex County Courthouse in Elizabethtown.
"We actually did a winter shoot already - on the ice off the Lake Placid Lodge," Graham said. "It was pretty chilly out there, but everything
went well."
The film is adapted from a 1982 novel of the same name written by Bernard F. Conners, of Loudonville, who is also a part-time resident of
Lake Placid and has served on the state Olympic Regional Development
Authority Board of Directors. The novel was inspired by true events.
"I first heard the legend when I was canoeing on Lake Placid in 1980
with a group from Camp Woodsmoke," Graham said. "Then I found Mr.
Conners' novel and just fell in love with the story."
In 1963, a woman's body was discovered by a group of local divers, right off rocky cliffs of Pulpit Rock, not far from the Lake Placid Marina.
Eventually it was identified as Mabel Douglass, founder and the first
dean of New Jersey College for Women, who had disappeared 30 years
earlier.
According to "A Lady in the Lake: the True Account of Death and Discovery in Lake Placid," written by George Christian Ortloff and
published by With Pipe and Book, the body was incredibly well preserved
as it sat in the cold and still waters of Lake Placid, but began to
disintegrate as it was brought to the surface.
The woman's drowning was eventually determined to be accidental but left several questions unanswered, perhaps the most intriguing being: Could
she have possibly been murdered?
According to Graham, the novel, based on these events, was first optioned by Francis Ford Coppola in the 1980s, but after about a decade
the rights reverted back to the author. Graham reached out to Conners in
the early '90s and was able to secure the rights to make a film.
"The story kind of fell off everyone's radar screen but mine," Graham said. "I had been thinking about it all those years."
The film will be set in 1962, when a young woman disappears, and 1982, when her body resurfaces, according to Graham. If Hartnett signs on, he
will play the film's center role as the character David Powell; Lang
will play an investigator looking into the case - based on real-life
investigator Mark B. Cross - and Burstyn will play Powell's
mother-in-law.
"There are so many captivating elements to this story," Graham said. "It's a rags-to-riches story, with the twists and turns of a whodunit
mystery. All of the characters are incredibly relatable."
Although Conners is not involved with the process of making the film, Graham said he has been helpful yet respectful, saying: "It's your
project, and I'm available if you need me."
Graham said the film is very true to the novel and will highlight the beauty of the area. He also said the project could have positive
economic benefits to the region.
"This type of thing can help various tourism councils to draw in a lot of visitors and bring a lot of attention to Lake Placid.
Graham said that Lake Placid's already-established international draw, along with an economic incentive from the state, were key factors in
deciding to shoot the entire film in upstate New York.
He said if all goes according to plan, a crew of about 60 to 80 people will be in the village of Lake Placid for about six to eight weeks,
staying in local motels or renting houses in the area.
Although more details will be provided when things move forward, casting and production crews will be looking for local extras, according to
Graham.
"If we can secure the funds, I think we have a great story to tell," Graham said. "This is a real movie. I have to keep telling people that
there are no alligators in this film."
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