From the Executive Director...
Sometimes the making of a good story takes time--and not infrequently, an unlikely cast of characters to bring it to life.
The story behind the film “Not Much to Do” transcends both time and space, bringing together a Presbyterian minister serving an inner city parish; a university professor; a young graduate student; six Philadelphia boys ages 11-15; and last but not least, an archivist who discovered their story.
During the summer of 1966, in a time before video recorders and reality television, six boys became the subjects of a film about their own lives on the mean streets of Philadelphia. The idea for a film project began with the Reverend Bob Stoddard, a pastor at the Tabernacle Federated Church. Sol Worth, a professor in the Annenberg School of Communications at the University of Pennsylvania, suggested to Stoddard that a “significant film might result simply by turning the children loose with a movie camera to take pictures depicting life as they saw it." Ben Achtenberg, a communications student, taught them how to operate a movie camera and edit film, instructing them to “start filming anything they wanted, with the idea of developing a story for their own movie.”
The film “Not Much to Do,” created in the manner Worth proposed, debuted in the fall of 1966. Though financed by a grant from the Presbyterian Board of Christian Education, it was the efforts of the Tabernacle congregation that made the project possible. The film became a centerpiece for the congregation’s outreach efforts to their west Philadelphia community during a time of turbulence and transition. Fast forward forty-five years.
In 2011, PHS Records Archivist David Staniunas “discovered” the film along with some newspaper clippings in a collection donated by the Reverend Stoddard. Staniunas and other PHS staff realized the film’s importance and decided to contact both Stoddard and Achtenberg about their interest in a public screening at PHS, perhaps followed by a panel discussion. Both Stoddard, now retired, and Achtenberg, a successful documentary filmmaker, were thrilled with the idea and agreed to be part of our efforts to share the film and its history with a wider audience.
On October 17, the Presbyterian Historical Society, in collaboration with Old Pine Street Church, will host a film screening and panel discussion of “Not Much to Do.” Learn more about the film and the event here.
Frederick J. Heuser, Ph.D.
You may freely reuse and distribute this article in its entirety for non-commercial purposes in any medium. Please include author attribution, photography credits, and a link to the original article. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDeratives 4.0 International License.