Excavating 1968

The premiere of an alumnus’s film about a seminal year at Harvard and beyond 

The Underground 68 film poster features Widener Library and a hard-at-work Ariel Smolik-Valles ’17. (Click the arrow at right to see the full-size version.)

Courtesy of Peter Coonradt

Peter Coonradt, on guitar at center, performs with other 1968 alumni during last spring’s fiftieth-reunion celebration in the Leverett House Theater.

Courtesy of Peter Coonradt

“I’ve had many, many strange emails since publishing my book on Bob Dylan,” classicist Richard Thomas was telling a sold-out crowd at the Brattle Theater last Wednesday evening, before the lights dimmed for the premiere screening of Underground 68—a film that emerged from one of those strange emails. After Thomas’s Why Bob Dylan Matters appeared in 2017, filmmaker Peter Coonradt ’68 got in touch. “Bob Dylan has been my lighthouse beacon on the sea of life for more than 50 years,”  he wrote to the Lane professor of the classics, who read the email aloud to the Brattle audience.

Intrigued, and moved by the poetry in Coonradt’s note, Thomas wrote back, and a creative collaboration sprang up between the two men and Ariel Smolik-Valles ’17, a teacher in Mattapan whose senior thesis on the 1960s campus antiwar movement had led her to a phone call and an ongoing correspondence with Coonradt. The result is Underground 68, a dreamlike, multilayered film, much of it shot in and around Harvard, that mixes fiction with documentary. It takes Smolik-Valles’s thesis as a jumping-off point for exploring not only the 1960s counterculture, but a half-century’s worth of societal upheaval, the unfolding of individual lives, and the abiding importance and meaning in artistic expression. 

Underground 68 spends time in a rowdy elementary-school classroom, on the streets of ancient Rome, and in the Leverett House basement theater, where Coonradt helped organize a weekend of events for the class of 1968’s fiftieth reunion last spring. Scenes from that celebration—a performance of Dylan songs and other folk music, a collaborative mural-painting—are interspersed with recreations of Smolik-Valles researching her thesis in the Harvard archives and in Thomas’s office, where she and the professor read Virgil alongside Dylan; and in the living rooms and kitchens of 1968 graduates who share their personal stories of time and transformation. With curiosity and idealism and obvious affection, the film spins out different threads of the 1960s revolution and weaves together something quirky and hopeful and touching.  

A June screening is planned in Vallejo, California. The film is also available for streaming, and a soundtrack featuring the alumni artists who performed on screen is for sale. More information at the Underground 68 website.

 

Read more about anti-Vietnam war activism at Harvard in the March-April 2019 feature “Echoes of 1969.” 

Read more articles by Lydialyle Gibson

You might also like

Yesterday’s News

A co-ed experiment that changed dorm life forever

Highlights from Harvard’s Past

The rise of Cambridge cyclists, a lettuce boycott, and Julia Child’s cookbooks

Wadsworth House Nears 300

The building is a microcosm of Harvard’s history—and the history of the United States.

Most popular

Harvard New Rules for Campus Use

At Harvard, no chalking, camping, or excessive noise-making without permission

Garber to Serve as Harvard President Beyond 2027

A once-interim appointment will now continue indefinitely.

Explore More From Current Issue

Four men in a small boat struggle with rough water, one lying down and others watching.

The 1884 Cannibalism-at-Sea Case That Still Has Harvard Talking

The Queen v. Dudley and Stephens changed the course of legal history. Here’s why it’s been fodder for countless classroom debates.

Lawrence H. Summers, looking serious while speaking at a podium with a microphone.

Harvard in the News

Grade inflation, Epstein files fallout, University database breach 

A stylized illustration of red coral branching from a gray base, resembling a fantastical entity.

This TikTok Artist Combines Monsters and Mental Heath

Ava Jinying Salzman’s artwork helps people process difficult feelings.