presented by The Billiard Almanac
Project Summary
The games of pocket billiards and 3 cushion seem to continually rise and fall in popularity in the United States.
Documentary photojournalist and founder of American Reportage, Pete Marovich is pursuing a photographic project to illustrate the current state of the game, focusing on amateur players and professionals, bars, old dingy pool halls, as well as upscale rooms.
It will include people who are preserving the history of the game as well as restorers of antique tables and cues and current cue makers who are adding their art to the legacy of the game.
Background
In the last 60 years, pool has had two big revivals, the first in 1961 with the release of the movie “The Hustler.”
New billiard rooms opened all over the country and for the remainder of the ‘60s pool flourished until social concerns, the Vietnam War, and an increase in outdoor activities led to a decline in the game. At one time there were over 3,000 licensed pool establishments in Manhattan
alone.
Then, in 1986, “The Color of Money,” a sequel to “The Hustler,” brought the excitement of pool to a new generation.
Upscale rooms opened to cater to a new type of player whose senses may have been offended by the old cliché of poolrooms.
A Hard Business
Today many of those upscale rooms from the 1990s have closed. Retired cue maker Paul Mottey who owns Breakers, a billiard hall and lounge in the Dormont neighborhood of Pittsburgh, says that rent is the number one issue owners of pool rooms face — rooms have to be large to be profitable.
Jim Gottier, owner of the now-closed Greenleaf’s Pool Room in Richmond, Virginia, was quoted as saying, “It is a very hard business because you need so much square footage to have these big tables, and you can’t charge a lot to play on them, so there’s not much revenue from each table.”
Today it is hard to gauge whether a resurgence is again taking place, but there seems to be an increase in leagues and more women interested in the game.
Professionals, such as Earl Strickland, are pushing to make the game respectable and remove the stigma of the dark pool rooms where gambling and hustlers used to be prevalent. Strickland insists that gambling needs to be removed from pool and is a strong advocate for above-the-board tournament play.
Preserving the History
Michael Shamos, a career professor in the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University and a contributing editor to Billiards Digest magazine, is the creator and curator of The Billiard Archive, a Pennsylvania non-profit foundation set up to preserve the game’s history.
The Billiard Archive holds the largest collection of prints and paintings on the subject of billiard in the United States.
It is the goal of this project to contribute to the preservation of the history of the game while providing a snapshot of the current state of billiards through still images, audio and video interviews with
subjects featured in the essay.
Ideally, portions of the work will be published in billiard magazines and news outlets.
The scope is to include coverage of the professional and amateur worlds of pool as well as cue makers, historians and curators of historic memorabilia.
Pete Marovich is a documentary photojournalist based in the Washington, DC, Metro area. His clients include The New York Times, The Washington Post, Getty Images, European PressPhoto Agency and United Press International.
His photography is contained in the permanent collections of the Smithsonian Museum of American History and the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. He is the founder of American Reportage.
All original content, both text and photography, on this website is the exclusive intellectual property of Pete Marovich and protected by United States copyright law.
All other content referenced, quoted and linked to is the property of the credited and referenced publishers and provided here under the section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, where allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research.
Fair use is a doctrine in United States copyright law that allows limited use of copyrighted material without requiring permission from the rights holders, such as commentary, criticism, news reporting, research, teaching or scholarship.