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COLLECTION — Multiple Containers Identifier: hfa00039

Steve Livernash collection of Boston-area movie theater ephemera and film catalogs

Overview

Collection of long time Boston-area film projectionist Steve Livernash consisting of ephemera related to Boston area movie theaters, including program calendars and documents relating to film projection in each cinema such as union contracts, licenses, and projectionist-written operating notes. Also included are a set of non-theatrical film catalogs from the 1960s and 1970s.

Dates

  • Creation: circa 1965-1980

Language of Materials

Collection is in English.

Conditions Governing Access

There are no restrictions on physical access to this material. Collection is open for research.

The Harvard Film Archive's manuscript collections and paper-based materials are accessed through the Houghton Library Reading Room.

This collection is shelved offsite at the Harvard Depository. Retrieval requires advance notice. Researchers should check with Houghton Public Services staff to determine retrieval policies and times.

Use Restrictions

Reproduction and/or publication of materials subject to copyright requires written permission from a) the copyright owner, his/her heirs or assigns and from b) the Harvard Film Archive, owner of the original material.

Extent

2.5 linear feet (3 document boxes)

Biographical / Historical

Steve Livernash (1941-2019) was among the last of the old-school Boston movie projectionists, having started his career in Boston in 1974 after working 16mm for the NYU Cinema Studies department. A lifetime Arlington, Massachusetts resident, Livernash saw the Boston film scene through the rise of multiplexes, the replacement of reels with platters, the coming of home video, the 2001 crushing of the local projectionist’s union, and the death knell that was digital projection. He spent a large portion of his career as the head projectionist of the Harvard Film Archive.

Born on June 20, 1941, he grew up in Concord and was educated in the Concord public schools. He graduated from Swarthmore College, studied economics and business at the University of Chicago, and received a masters degree in cinema studies from New York University. His connection to Harvard was initially established by his father, Edward Robert Livernash, who had a distinguished career at the Harvard Business School. After completing his studies at NYU, he returned to Cambridge in 1973. He sought a position with the Boston projectionists union and was hired. His first job took him into Bostons Combat Zone. I was hired to work from midnight to 5 a.m., four nights a week, at a pay of $4.75 an hour, he said in a profile published in the Harvard University Gazette in 2001. His career as a projectionist took him to just about every movie theater in the Boston area. I'd do a drive-in in the summer months, and then I'd do Harvard in the spring and fall, and Id take a vacation in January, he told the Gazette. He retired from the Harvard Film Archive in 2009.

Arrangement

Collection is arranged into the following three series: I. Boston movie theater projectionist records; II. Program Calendars; III. Non-theatrical distribution catalogs.

Physical Location

Harvard Depository

Processing Information

Processed by Amy Sloper, 2019 September.

This collection was processed to a basic level with minimal rehousing, organization, and preservation.

Title
Steve Livernash collection of Boston-area movie theater ephemera and film catalogs
Status
completed
Author
Harvard Film Archive, Harvard University
Description rules
dacs
Language of description
und
EAD ID
hfa00039

Repository Details

Part of the Harvard Film Archive, Harvard Library, Harvard University Repository

The Harvard Film Archive is one of the largest university-based motion picture collections in the United States, with a collection of 40,000 audio visual items, a growing number of manuscript collections, and nearly one million still photographs, posters, and other promotional materials from around the world and from almost every period in film history. The HFA's collection of paper materials, including the documentation of individual filmmakers as well as promotional materials such as posters, film stills, and ephemera are accessible to Harvard affiliates as well as to outside researchers.

Contact:
24 Quincy Street
Harvard University
Cambridge MA 02138 USA
(617) 496-6750