New York Street Games
New York Street Games | |
---|---|
Film poster | |
Directed by | Matt Levy |
Produced by |
Matt Levy Craig Lifschutz |
Written by |
Matt Levy Lars Fuchs |
Starring |
Keith David Hector Elizondo Robert Klein C. Everett Koop Arthur Leipzig Whoopi Goldberg Bobby Moresco Joe Pantoliano Regis Philbin Robert Costanzo David Proval Ray Romano Curtis Sliwa Annie Lanzillotto Mike Starr Vinny Vella |
Narrated by | Hector Elizondo |
Music by | Butch Barbella |
Cinematography | Michael Vitti |
Edited by |
Lars Fuchs Paul Petschek |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 76 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
New York Street Games is a 2010 documentary film directed by Matt Levy about children's games played by kids in New York City for centuries.[1] The games are fondly remembered by people who grew up in the city. Current and historical documentary footage shows children playing these games, interspersed with scenes of celebrities discussing their own childhood experiences playing these games on the streets of New York.[2] The story is brought to the present with discussions of the current role of street games and opinions as to what kids lose by not having the freedom to play without adult supervision, most importantly the social skills developed when kids could play in the streets.
Synopsis
New York Street Games lovingly recalls a central feature of the lives of hundreds of thousands of children who grew up in New York City in the twentieth century: games played in the streets of the city. Many of the ball games featured are played with a pink rubber ball called a Spaldeen.
The games
- Stickball
- Ringolevio
- Stoopball
- Kick the can
- Punchball
- Hopscotch
- Slapball
- Hit the Stick
- Skully
- Double Dutch
- Johnny on a Pony
- Boxball
- Steal the Bacon
- Ace-King-Queen
- Red Rover
- Off the Wall
- Box Baseball
References
- ↑ "New York Street Games".
- ↑ Ginger Adams Otis (9 May 2010). "What happened to New York's storied street games?". New York Post.