AMC Loews Harvard Square 5

10 Church Street,
Cambridge, MA 02138

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Showing 51 - 75 of 105 comments

hkbf23
hkbf23 on October 3, 2007 at 8:23 am

I went to the Harvard Sq. at least once a week during the 10 years I lived in Boston in the 1970s. I saw most of my very favorite film there, and the theater has a very special place in my heart. It was a one screen theater then, I cannot imagine it as a 5 screen cinema now.

IanJudge
IanJudge on June 14, 2007 at 10:27 pm

Not the highest quality video (you can’t see the theater at all really) but at this link:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xIUjJPEOd0g

you can watch Bob Dylan performing “It Ain’t Me Babe” with the Rolling Thunder Revue at the Harvard Square Theatre in 1975.

rsalters (Ron Salters)
rsalters (Ron Salters) on November 20, 2006 at 7:48 am

There is a MGM Theatre Photograph and Report form for the University Theatre in Cambridge. It has a facade photo taken in April 1941. The entrance at that time was on Mass. Ave. There was a rectangular 1920s-style multi-bulbed marquee but the photo quality is poor and I can’t read the names of the attractions. The Report states that the University has been a MGM customer for over 10 years, that it was built about 1925, that it’s in Good condition, and has the following seating: Orchestra floor: 1129; Balcony: 495; Loges: 235; total: 1,859 seats.

Mike1252
Mike1252 on September 26, 2006 at 8:41 pm

I live accross the street from the Somerville Theater, kind of behind Johnny D’s. I’ll deffinitly stop by sometime, I’ve always liked that theater, but haven’t been in a while because I have so many AMC/Loews to go to.

I have heard stories about the “Mad Crapper”, but have not yet met him. I have heard some of Trish’s music scene stories, they sure are wild.

I really like Harvard Square, but for some reason that I cannot figure out I miss the big theater atmosphere. Maybe I’ll go back someday, but for now I am enjoying my time north of the Charles.

IanJudge
IanJudge on September 26, 2006 at 8:22 pm

I have never heard that about the bums – all the roof access used to be locked, even the fire escapes (exit only situation). Watch out for the guy with the one fake leg – we used to call him the “Mad Crapper” for obvious reasons. In the summers he used to sleep on the church steps across the street. There is also a middle-aged african american guy, quite tall, who is known to most theater managers in the area, who crawls around the floors of the theaters while movies are playing and tries to steal purses, wallets, etc. He can be dangerous, and once threw a trash barrel clear across the lobby of the Harvard Square Theatre. Coolidge Corner managers and my managers at Davis Square are all aware of this guys shenanigans. He likes to sneak in exit doors primarily.

What fun this business can be sometimes, eh?

The dressing rooms at Harvard Sq. are cool too – we used to have a great punching bag down there for when staff needed stress relief!

I did indeed manage Boston Common – opened the place. What a monster. But working at Loews was a good learning experience – I learned what I liked and didn’t like about their operations and priorities, and continue to value the many personal and professional connections I made working for them. I also managed Assembly Square for a while… scary in its own way!

Glad the new management likes Trish. She is a doll, and has some incredible stories, especially about the music scene in Boston in the 70’s.

Good luck with the theater. I’m up the road at the independent Somerville Theatre if you are ever in the area; stop in sometime.
-Ian

Mike1252
Mike1252 on September 26, 2006 at 8:06 pm

I will of course take care of Trish. Shes fantastic! And Linda too. Trish was runner up last month for employee of the month, shes still going strong.

I’ll give the exploration thing a shot. I have not yet had the courage to go into the catwalks, but I will eventually. I heard bums live in there during the winter, which concerns me.

Did I see that you also managed at Boston Common? I too had that pleasure.

IanJudge
IanJudge on September 26, 2006 at 7:56 pm

Hi Mike,

I’ve not found very many photos from the old days. You can get a feel for what it looked like by poking your head above the ceiling tiles in theaters 1,2, or 3. All the old decor is still up there. You’ll need a tall ladder, a flashlight, and a long pole to see above the tiles in #1!

Up on the roof, you can climb into the old fly-loft through a door to the stagehouse (you’ll find yourself above the ceiling of number 5.

When I managed the place, I spent many hours poking around everywhere I could. It is an interesting building!

Take good care of Trish, who has worked in various Boston theaters since she was 15, and also Linda, the lady who runs the little jewelry shop that rents from the theater!

-Ian

Mike1252
Mike1252 on September 26, 2006 at 7:47 pm

I was wondering if anyone had, or knows where I might find old photos of the theater from before it’s renovation. I recently became the general manager and am very interested in the theater’s history.

jackrosenquist
jackrosenquist on May 17, 2006 at 1:18 pm

The things you can find on the Internet these days! I was searching for something else altogether and came across Bill White mentioning a string of familiar names, and a ton of nostalgic information. I hope you’re doing well these days, Bill.

Something missing from the picture here is a regular customer, Bobby Panis, who used to go in just about every day for a period of years. He had a gag that worked every time—he’d go up to an employee when no one else was around, start doing something silly like jumping up and down with his eyes bulging and his mouth distorted, somehow get the employee doing it too, then when someone else inevitably came along, Bobby would be standing there, shaking his head and pointing at the employee, and saying “He’s not alright.”

rsalters (Ron Salters)
rsalters (Ron Salters) on May 17, 2006 at 8:14 am

I remember it as the University Theatre in the 1950s. When the entrance was relocated around to Church Street a fancy decorative new facade was created by painting on all the details.(See photo at head of page).

billwhite
billwhite on February 15, 2006 at 10:40 am

i dont know of any postingson the internet, but i remeber quite a few of them, as i helped program them for a time.

harold and maude was the standard co-feature with king of hearts, although “paths of glory” played with it in may of either 82 or 83.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on February 15, 2006 at 9:06 am

I saw “Brokeback Mountain” here last weekend. The staff now all wear AMC uniforms, but they still had a fair amount of Loews Cineplex stuff in the pre-show slides and trailers.

Ian
Ian on February 15, 2006 at 9:01 am

Picture from 2000 of the exterior here:–

View link

stefforbes
stefforbes on February 15, 2006 at 8:00 am

Hey, can anyone remember the double features listed on those wonderful old schedules we all had on our fridges, or send me a link to one online? I want to know what played with King of Hearts.

Some of the ones I can remember are: Swept Away/Seven Beauties, Amarcord/Satyricon, Casablanca/Maltese Falcon, The Magic Flute/Autumn Sonata, Annie Hall/Manhattan…

hollister22nh
hollister22nh on December 29, 2005 at 8:28 am

I went two nights ago… If Harvard ever needed more presentation space, I can’t imagine a better theater to restore.

-John

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on September 10, 2005 at 4:16 am

My July 20 posting proved to be erroneous, as the Boston Film Festival is taking place only at Loews Boston Common and not also at the Harvard Square.

See also my comments about the festival on the Loews Boston Common page.

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on August 10, 2005 at 1:31 am

The difficult job of being a good usher at the University Theatre in 1937, according to a Harvard Crimson article. Favorite bit: “…whether from Sargent or Radcliffe, any group of girls is bound to mean trouble for an usher.”

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on August 9, 2005 at 8:44 am

I think the University Theatre was referred to as the “U.T.” in this 1948 review of To Live in Peace from the Harvard Crimson.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on July 20, 2005 at 1:36 am

The Boston Film Festival, which was held for many years at the late unlamented Copley Place Cinemas, will be split this year between the Harvard Square and Loews Boston Common.

It will be shorter than last year’s, just seven days instead of ten, September 9-15. Last week’s Somerville Journal had an article about the festival:

Diamond’s not forever: Robin Dawson takes over the Boston Film Festival

billwhite
billwhite on June 6, 2005 at 6:47 am

in one of my weekly meetings with owner tony mauriello, during the years i managed the theatre, i criticized a cuople of the double features. tony replied that the individual films didnt matter' it was the psychological impact of the schedule itself.

advocate
advocate on June 5, 2005 at 10:32 pm

I remember this theater with great affection from my undergraduate days at Tufts, 1977-1981, before they (tragically) chopped the place up into little boxes. The film schedule was printed up some three months in advance, and you could get it from street hawkers or the Phoenix. Many was the time I cut classes, smuggled in a soda and a great sandwich from Elsie’s (another landmark sadly gone) and spend an afternoon happily ensconced in that big gritty old auditorium watching a matinee double bill for $2.50 in the company of fellow college slackers and various marginal types. Ah, memories.

billwhite
billwhite on April 5, 2005 at 11:57 am

thanks ron.
i have just posted to the somerville and orson welles sites

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on April 5, 2005 at 11:26 am

Bill, be sure to check out the Capitol, Somerville, and Orson Welles pages while you’re here. I’d love to read your stories from each place.

billwhite
billwhite on April 5, 2005 at 11:08 am

So bill is still at boston Light and sound? a lot of good projectionists went to work for them when the theatre booths became automated. Bill once jerry-rigged a temporary dolby system when we opened purple rain. do you work at the sommerville now? is it still owned by that couple that owns the capitol? i remember once when i was managing there, the projectionist showed a reel of the wild bunch in the wrong order, and when, he finally got them straightened out, projected the next reel upside down. that place was a den of incompetence when i was there. i heard susan had some involvement in writing a script that got produced recently. any truth in that? susan and i were dj’s at wmfo for awhile, and she sublet my apartment one summer. i tried to email her awhile ago but never got a reply. thanks for the note, ian, and its good to hear the community of theatre workers is still as tight as ever.

IanJudge
IanJudge on April 5, 2005 at 11:00 am

Bill,

I know a few of those names for sure. Bill Templeton works for BL&S and services our booth at Somerville quite a bit. Great guy. Also Susan Cassidy, oddly enough, I became friends with her only a few years ago and discovered she worked there too, back in the day. It is like going to a high school reunion sometimes on this website! We’ve all ‘graduated’ from the same theaters…