The MPS is part of the LDS Church's media production division, which includes producers, editors, animators, sound stages, editing bays, and a collection of 19th-century buildings on a backlot.[1]
During Whitaker's 22-year term at the MPS, a host of films were created. Some were privately funded, but most were created at the request LDS Church departments.[2]
In 1991, the MPS separated from BYU and became a directly-operated function of LDS Church, as part of the church's Audio Visual Department.[4]
The MPS South Campus, in Elberta, Utah, was approved by the church's First Presidency in 2010 and construction began on a set of biblical Jerusalem. Elberta, population less than 1,000, was chosen because of the surrounding area's similarity to Jerusalem's geography—hills, plains, cedar trees, and a stream.[5]
Lynn G. Robbins, executive director of the church's Media Services Department, was instrumental in the creation of the MPS South Campus.[5]
In 2013, the LDS Church released several scenes of Jesus Christ's life that were filmed there as part of the New Testament film project.[6]
In 2017, production started on a visual library producing a series of films from the Book of Mormon.[7]
In 2014, a morning fire, caused when an electrical box exploded on top of the studio, resulted in power outage and a fire.[8] Occupants evacuated the building, the Provo City Fire Department soon put out the fire, and no injuries were reported.
Astle, Randy (2013), "Mormons and Cinema", in Hunter, James Michael (ed.), Mormons and Popular Culture: the global influence of an American phenomenon, Santa Barbara, California: Praeger (ABC-CLIO), ISBN9780313391675, OCLC776495102