Jerry Harvey(1949-1988)
- Writer
- Soundtrack
Jerry Harvey was born in the late 1940s and came from Bakersfield,
California where he and his two sisters were raised in a strict
Catholic home by a father who worked as an attorney and judge and a
mother who was a hospital administrator. Harvey describes his childhood
as not only unhappy but as a cross between "American Graffitti" and
"Two Lane Blacktop". His sister Ann definitely committed suicide; she
left her family a series of communications stating her reasons for
taking her own life. His other sister Mary may have also committed
suicide; this has not been confirmed because Jerry would only say
sister Mary 'vanished' and would not go into more detail. His
background left Harvey paranoid and in need of constant counseling. He
fell in love with movies as a child and moved to Los Angeles in the
late 1960s to attend UCLA. While on campus one day in 1971, he met
Douglas Venturelli and became fast friends. Together, they wrote a
western script that was produced in Europe and released with the title:
"China 9, Liberty 37". Harvey then got a job booking films for the
Beverly Canon repertory theater. One of his greatest accomplishments
was getting director Sam Peckinpah to deliver an uncut version of "The
Wild Bunch" to the Beverly Canon which played to packed houses. When
his first wife Vera caught him yelling at their TV because of the lousy
programming, Vera urged Jerry to do something about it. After writing
an angry letter to the Los Angeles based pay TV service SelectTV, the
service not only contacted Harvey but hired him as an assistant film
programmer. From there, he became an assistant film programmer for the
Z Channel in the early 1980s, another Los Angeles based pay TV service.
Harvey eventually became head film programmer for Z and through a
combination of connections, aggression and love started booking
important films to be shown to Z Channel subscribers. His programming
included uncut versions of films such as: "Once Upon a Time in
America", "1900" and "Heaven's Gate". At the same time, he would book
mainstream studio fare, independent films and even soft core porn on
their "Night Owl" series of films. The Z Channel became influential and
mandatory viewing for not only film buffs and industry professionals
but young filmmakers such as Alexander Payne and Quentin Tarantino.
Many fans even looked forward to receiving the Z Channel program guide
that included articles by writers such as critic F.X. Feeney. At the
same time, established filmmakers such as Peckinpah and Michael Cimino
befriended Harvey. After divorcing his first wife Vera in the mid
1980's, the increasingly difficult Harvey fell in love with Deri
Rudolph, who owned a building near UCLA where Harvey rented an
apartment. They were married a short time later, with Cimino as best
man. The Z Channel was eventually sold to a company that tried to
combine films with sports programming. This did not sit well with
Harvey who protested against this change and struggled to find his path
away from the Z Channel. As more and more pressure mounted on Harvey,
he seemed unable to cope and in the spring of 1988, he shot his wife
Deri to death with a gun given to him by Peckinpah. He then used the
gun to kill himself. The Z Channel went out of business in 1989.
Harvey's main legacy is discovering the appeal of the "Director's Cut"
of a film and the value in showing films from companies other than the
major studios. Jerry Harvey's career is the subject of the documentary
film "Z Channel, a Magnificent Obession".