 Jeff
McQuarrie '98, producer of Legends of the Palouse, is flanked by the
film's narrator, George Hollingbery '76 (left), and Alexander Bohler,
grandnephew of former WSU athletic director J. Fred "Doc" Bohler. Photo
by Bill Wagner
Fall 2005
Jeff McQuarrie was living an American dream—pulling down a cool
six figures while his wealthy customers pulled in salmon at an
exclusive Alaskan fishing resort.
Yet it wasn't his dream. So, early last year, he tossed a
14-year tenure as president of Sportsman's Cove Lodge to spend two
years and his life's savings crafting Legends of the
Palouse, a film about the history and heart of Washington State
University football.
McQuarrie ('98 Comm.) plans to have the final version wrapped up
and on sale for this gridiron season. He hopes to sell at least
5,000 copies of the film in DVD format.
"I don't know too many Cougar alums who aren't crazy about the
football team," says McQuarrie, who has been a fan since he was a
boy in western Washington.
In Legends of the Palouse McQuarrie seeks to answer the
question, "What is this love affair we have with our school?" The
film tells its story via scores of interviews with people both
famous and forgotten, footage of past games, and dramatic
reenactments of key moments from the program's 111-year history.
The result, the Olympia filmmaker promises, will be a lively
documentary film "plug full of inspirational stories," stylishly
edited, and set to music from rising Northwest bands.
"It's great to have someone raise an awareness of the deep
athletic heritage of WSU," says Rueben Mayes ('90 Gen. St., '00
M.B.A.), a star running back in the 1980s who went on to a
celebrated NFL career before returning to work for the
University.
"I think it's a way to preserve the legacy," says the film's
narrator, George Hollingbery ('76 Ed.), grandson of legendary
Cougar coach Orin "Babe" Hollingbery and son of player Don
Hollingbery. A high school teacher in Lacey, Hollingbery marvels at
the tales McQuarrie has recorded.
"I'm still blown away with the stuff I didn't know. And I know
Cougar history—I thought I did," he says. "It's a story of human
character and indelible human spirit. It's not just a story about
football."
McQuarrie grew up among Husky fans, but his interest always
pointed inland, because Pullman was a place where underdogs often
excelled.
"Maybe it's because I see myself as that type of person," says
McQuarrie, who thrived at marketing despite shyness so profound
that as a boy he paid his kid brother an extra dime to buy 10-cent
candy bars.
"Nothing comes easy to us," says McQuarrie, who attended WSU in
the mid-1980s but finished his degree through correspondence
courses seven years ago. "We have to earn everything we get. So
when we do [succeed], it's a huge deal to us."
Now 41, McQuarrie still had to overcome nervousness to interview
many of his boyhood football heroes, including Mayes and
quarterback Jack Thompson, after whom McQuarrie named his own
son.
Many people helped McQuarrie along the way, including assistant
Diane Estep, wife Julie, and several WSU staffers and alums.
One of his biggest breaks came when he teamed up with George
Hollingbery, who happens to attend the same church as he.
Hollingbery not only lent his voice to the project but did some
filming and helped open doors for McQuarrie.
At the outset, McQuarrie says, "We didn't even know if anybody
would talk to us. We underestimated the Cougar love. Cougars help
each other."
For example, early on, Keith Jackson, ABC's "Voice of College
Football," agreed to come to McQuarrie's home for an interview. His
participation lent the project a legitimacy that helped land other
interviews.
"Do you think if I was from USC, . . . someone like [Jackson]
would come to my house?" McQuarrie says.
"I'm very excited about it. I was glad I got to be a small part
of it," says NFL stalwart Rob Tobeck ('94 Phys. Ed.), starting
center for the Seattle Seahawks. "I think it's one heck of a
project."
Tobeck and fellow standouts Drew Bledsoe, Erik Coleman, Mark
Fields, Steve Gleason, Mark Rypien, Marcus Trufant, and Cory
Withrow are among about 70 former WSU players who sat for
interviews. Plenty of non-alums, including Pro Football Hall of
Famers Bob Griese and Larry Csonka, also share stories tied to
Cougar Nation.
McQuarrie's interviews with so many stars reinforced a belief
that many big-time athletes have strong work ethics, sharp minds,
and generous hearts. Many share the filmmaker's deep Christian
faith.
"That's one of the reasons we wanted to make this, . . . to show
that all these guys on ESPN . . . beating their girlfriends and
doing steroids, isn't typical."
McQuarrie's work also confirmed that the ability of athletes to
reach the highest levels is more about passion than pocketbooks.
The filmmaker can relate. He had long pondered leaving his
high-paying job running the fishing lodge, which he brought from
bankruptcy to having a waiting list of clients willing to pay
$1,000 a day. He had money but craved a meaningful challenge.
"After five or six years of this tug-of-war of what my heart
wanted to do and what my pocketbook wanted to do, my heart won
out," says McQuarrie, who saved up to make the leap. "I didn't have
the courage to jump out of the boat, so to speak, until I was
40."
McQuarrie is uncertain what his own future holds, but he hopes
his work on Legends of the Palouse will enable him to stay
in filming rather than fishing.
"I'm just hopeful that something good will come of this. My wife
keeps telling me it will. She keeps telling me, 'Don't quit.'"
The one thing McQuarrie won't reveal is how much he spent making
the film—though he jokes that it's enough to make some question his
sanity.
"I'm never going to get my money out of this. There's no way,"
he says. "It's the price you pay to follow your dreams."
Eric Apalategui is a frequent contributor to Washington
State Magazine.
Click here to view a video excerpt from
Legends of the Palouse.
For more information, visit http://www.jeffmcquarrie.com/wsudocumentary.htm
Washington State Magazine Home
|