...these blueprints, while I just happened upon in killing time doing a Google Image search for shots of the interior MASH set, are phenominal. We (my co-author and I) did an over 800 page book on MASH, a couple years ago, and I wish I had know about this. Good shots of all 3 versions of the camp are very hard to find. There are a few in 2 previous books on the show from the 80's, and I've made many screen grabs of some of the best shots I can find. About 5 yeas ago, I missed out on an Ebay auction for over 1000 publicity still of the Malibu Creek State Park set. And for our book, Fox wanted $225 for each shot, plus a $50 finders fee. So, we mostly went with current shots of various people. Anyway, great job. I'm wondering how you were able to figure out the layout of much of the stage 9 hospital. Some rooms remained a mystery to me.
Anyway, not trying to add a cheap plug (especially since this appears to be a Star Trek site), but the book is, TV's MASH; The Complete Guide Book, by Ed Solomonson and Mark O'Neill(Me). Larry Gelbart wrote the forward, gave us TONS of info..plus actually wrote a great deal of new dialogue for us. Over 50 MASH alumni (writers, actors, stuntman, etc...) gave us commentary for the book. It's on Amazon. We did it as fans, for fans, to cover much info never in previous books. Ok, thanks. I'm going to try to contact the guy who did the designs, now.
Hi there and thanks for the kind words!
Fortunately, I'm pretty regular here and I also happen to subscribe to all threads I post in, so it was easy for me to see this quickly and respond.
How did I get the layout, you ask? Well, several years ago I got the complete M*A*S*H series DVD box set for Christmas and I - literally - went through every episode and mapped it out from as many angles as I could find, watching every scene and hitting the pause button quite frequently. The research took me a couple of months to complete and was definitely a labor of love. This was as the only way, as I'm sure you probably realize, source reference material on this particular subject has always been
extremely sparse. Weird thing about those shows from the 70's and 80's - they didn't seem to care much about documenting and archiving the nuts-and-bolts of production, nor did they pay too much attention to internal continuity with set dressings & props, etc. References on set design are virtually impossible to find, sadly. So, the "brute force" method was all I had to go on. I'm pleased to hear that it sounds like I got quite a bit of it right from someone who researched the show like you did.
Yes, I found the hospital to be somewhat paradoxical in its layout - sometimes having walls in one episode and switching over to simple curtains in another episode to separate the rooms. I'm convinced that most of the walls in Radar's office in the middle were movable (or flying) walls that changed on almost an episode-by-episode basis, depending on the shots and angles. And, of course, the original hospital at Malibu creek had an even different layout (albeit a little more fixed) from the stage version - a project that I never got a chance to work on due to the even more sparse nature of visual evidence from the original movie.
I did have a few real "ah-ha!" moments - particularly with the X-ray room and the O.R. Originally, I had the OR reversed, which I quickly corrected after conferring with some other M*A*S*H-heads online, and was able to get the layout on almost everything. My only concern was the space I named "Unknown Area" of the hospital interior. I honestly don't know why that piece juts out like it does away from the scrub/dress-out/lab area and I've never figured out what's behind it. I'm hoping you have some insight on this from some of your research. I'd love to get a hold of some production stills of the back-stage areas to help accurize the layouts.
In case you're interested, I posted these pics originally over on
MASHtalk Forums before I brought them here - there were some pretty knowledgeable folks there who helped me flesh out the designs in the early days of this project.
This was the original thread I was working in. Guess my involvement there goes back about 5 years now. Time flies!
Thanks for the info on your book, BTW. I've added it to my "Wish List" on Amazon for later purchase. Definitely something I am interested in getting. M*A*S*H was one of my early favorite non-sci-fi shows when I was younger. Glad to still there are still a lot of people interested in it. Thanks again!