Pubdate: Fri, 25 Jan 2002 Source: Blade, The (OH) Copyright: 2002 The Blade Contact: http://www.toledoblade.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/48 Author: Julie Watson, Associated Press Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) MEXICO OPENS HOLLYWOOD DRUG CLINIC J. REFUGIO SALCIDO, Mexico (AP) - Durango, best known as the dusty backdrop for Hollywood westerns, has a new Betty Ford-style clinic and hopes to offer celebrities a refuge from paparazzi amid the same secluded, mountain desertscape that has lured filmmakers to the Mexican state for decades. President Vicente Fox's wife, Martha Sahagun, christened Mision Korian on Wednesday. It is a privately funded, $2 million walled compound at the end of a dusty road outside this village of adobe homes where chickens meander, pecking at the dirt. The state donated the land. The drug and alcohol treatment center, which will eventually house 42 patients, will charge a maximum $3,000 for five weeks of treatment, but fees for locals will be as low as $100, depending on income. Sahagun called the center an alternative "not only for the poor but also for those who find themselves imprisoned, vulnerable and weak in the face of addictions." The center's spokesman, K.B. Forbes, plans to market the clinic to Hollywood studios, agents and Beverly Hills doctors. "This offers an intimate setting and privacy for people who want to get away and not have the National Enquirer snooping around," said Forbes, a former spokesman for presidential candidates Steve Forbes and Pat Buchanan. He is not related to his billionaire former boss. With a bilingual staff and meditation room, Mision Korian will offer spiritual as well as medical treatment - an approach similar to that of the world-renowned Betty Ford Center. That clinic, in Rancho Mirage, Calif., has counted many Hollywood luminaries among its patients, including Elizabeth Taylor and Liza Minnelli. Durango has seen its share of famous faces, too. John Wayne, Burt Lancaster, and Ernest Borgnine worked side-by-side with locals here for years, acting out barroom brawls and Wild West shootouts in villages that were turned into faux frontier towns. "Durango is a place where people respect privacy," Forbes said. "They take pride in that and just let actors be." Durango played host to film crews working on scores of movies during the 1960s and '70s. Filmmakers were attracted by the state's few paved roads, nonunion work force and sunny skies uncluttered by power lines. One of the more famous movies shot here was "True Grit," a 1969 film that won Wayne his only Oscar for his portrayal of an over-the-hill marshal who helps a 14-year-old track down her father's killer. Durango was also the backdrop for "The Wild Bunch," filmed the same year. But after Wayne's death in 1979 and the subsequent decline of Hollywood westerns, Durango struggled to keep the spotlight. Now only about one Hollywood crew shoots here each year. In 1992, the state opened the Office of Cinematography to lure more business, but it's been a tough battle as technology makes it easier and cheaper to create scenes off-location. Today some towns - which continue to exist alongside the Hollywood props left by film crews - seem sad and confused. In nearby Chuapaderos, a livery stable built for John Candy's last movie, "Wagons East," houses Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. Candy, who played a drunken stagecoach driver in the movie, died of a heart attack while filming in Durango. The portly comedian was 43. Many local men who used to work as extras pass their days sitting on movie set porches, sipping beer and reminiscing while they wait for work. With the economic slump, Durango state has seen a rise in addictions, said Dr. Cesar Franco, a physician for a state family agency that provided support for the clinic. Many of Durango's youth now migrate to the United States to work, only to return home with drug problems. "Mexico is no longer just a place of transit for drugs, it is also a consumer country," Franco said. "That's been the reality, but there's not been a place for people to go to get help until now." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake