Library Hours
- Cinematic Arts Library
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Sat Aug 26
1pm to 5pm
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Sun Aug 27
noon to 8pm
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Mon Aug 28
9am to 10pm
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Tue Aug 29
9am to 10pm
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Wed Aug 30
9am to 10pm
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Thu Aug 31
9am to 10pm
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Fri Sep 01
9am to 5pm
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Sat Sep 02
Closed
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Sun Sep 03
Closed
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Mon Sep 04
Closed
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Tue Sep 05
9am to 10pm
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Wed Sep 06
9am to 10pm
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Thu Sep 07
9am to 10pm
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Fri Sep 08
9am to 5pm
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Sat Sep 09
1pm to 5pm
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Sun Sep 10
noon to 8pm
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Mon Sep 11
9am to 10pm
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Tue Sep 12
9am to 10pm
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Wed Sep 13
9am to 10pm
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Thu Sep 14
9am to 10pm
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Fri Sep 15
9am to 5pm
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Sat Sep 16
1pm to 5pm
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Sun Sep 17
noon to 8pm
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Mon Sep 18
9am to 10pm
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Tue Sep 19
9am to 10pm
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Wed Sep 20
9am to 10pm
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Thu Sep 21
9am to 10pm
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Fri Sep 22
9am to 5pm
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Sat Sep 23
1pm to 5pm
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Sun Sep 24
noon to 8pm
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Mon Sep 25
9am to 10pm
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Tue Sep 26
9am to 10pm
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Wed Sep 27
9am to 10pm
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Thu Sep 28
9am to 10pm
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Fri Sep 29
9am to 5pm
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Sat Sep 30
1pm to 5pm
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Sun Oct 01
noon to 8pm
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Mon Oct 02
9am to 10pm
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Tue Oct 03
9am to 10pm
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Wed Oct 04
9am to 10pm
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Thu Oct 05
9am to 10pm
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Fri Oct 06
9am to 5pm
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Sat Oct 07
1pm to 5pm
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Sun Oct 08
noon to 8pm
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Mon Oct 09
9am to 10pm
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Tue Oct 10
9am to 10pm
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Wed Oct 11
9am to 5pm
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Thu Oct 12
9am to 5pm
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Fri Oct 13
9am to 5pm
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Sat Oct 14
1pm to 5pm
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Sun Oct 15
noon to 8pm
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Mon Oct 16
9am to 10pm
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Tue Oct 17
9am to 10pm
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Wed Oct 18
9am to 10pm
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Thu Oct 19
9am to 10pm
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Fri Oct 20
9am to 5pm
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Sat Oct 21
1pm to 5pm
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Sun Oct 22
noon to 8pm
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Mon Oct 23
9am to 10pm
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Tue Oct 24
9am to 10pm
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Wed Oct 25
9am to 10pm
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Thu Oct 26
9am to 10pm
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Fri Oct 27
9am to 5pm
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Sat Oct 28
1pm to 5pm
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Sun Oct 29
noon to 8pm
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Mon Oct 30
9am to 10pm
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Tue Oct 31
9am to 10pm
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Wed Nov 01
9am to 10pm
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Thu Nov 02
9am to 10pm
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Fri Nov 03
9am to 5pm
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Sat Nov 04
1pm to 5pm
Collections in the Cinematic Arts Library Archives are nowavailable for consultationby USC faculty, staff, and students. Researchers please be aware due to the impact of COVID-19 we are drastically understaffed, so allow six to eight weeks for most archival research requests to be filled
Stephen L. Hanson, Head (213) 740-7273
For reference assistance, please contact: cin@usc.edu.
For archives assistance, please contact ctlibarc@usc.edu or contact Sandra Garcia-Myers 213-740-8383.
About this Library
The University of Southern California Cinematic Arts Library's primary mission is to support the curriculum of the School of Cinematic Arts and to foster study and research. In addition to an extensive book collection, the library also holds many archives focusing on the history of the film industry and containing many rarely seen photographs, as well as scripts, scores and other artifacts.
The Cinematic Arts Library is committed to becoming a multimedia archive of materials ranging from the raw materials that go into the making of motion pictures, to the finished products themselves, and to all of the new technologies for preserving the moving image and presenting it to a new generation of filmgoers. The library promotes interdisciplinary teaching and collaborative projects such as digital imaging and archiving.
The Cinematic Arts Library is located on the ground floor of the Doheny Memorial Library on the University Park campus.
There are no posted reference hours at the Cinematic Arts Library, but please contact the library for reference questions and to schedule a time when a staff member can be available to answer any reference inquiries.
The Louis B. Mayer Film and Television Study Center
Established through a grant from The Louis B. Mayer Foundation, The Louis B. Mayer Study center offers a viewing collection of almost 13,000 motion picture and television titles in DVD, Laser disc, and VHS formats. Videos may be checked out by USC faculty for classroom screenings in all disciplines, or may be placed on course reserve in Leavey Library if not required for cinema and television classes.
The Study Center maintains 20 viewing stations open to Cinema and Theater majors, and to all students enrolled in the School of Cinematic Arts film and television courses, the Thornton School of Music's film scoring classes, or with a legitimate USC course-related assignment. Other students may view films in the Leavey Library's 24 hour DVD Center. All viewing within the Louis B. Mayer Study Center must be course-related in accordance with U.S. Copyright Law governing public exhibition.
Requests to view videos for individual course-related research may be made.
The David L. Wolper Center and Archives
Sandra Garcia-Myers, Director (213) 740-8383
The producer of some 800 collective works, David L. Wolper is a recipient of the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Oscar from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and an inductee to the Television Hall of Fame. Throughout his career, Mr. Wolper's television programs received more than 50 Emmy, 7 Golden Globe, and 5 Peabody Awards. His motion picture films garnered 20 Oscar nominations, and 3 awards.
David Wolper donated his personal archives to be housed in the David L. Wolper Center at the University of Southern California. This collection of memorabilia traces Wolper's career over the past half-century of entertainment and covers the process of filmmaking from the initial stages of development through distribution.The holdings of the David L. Wolper Center are primarily paper materials and viewing copies of his films on tape or DVD. The Wolper Center does not have his actualfilms or the original footage that he used to make them.
The David L. Wolper Center is located on the ground floor of USC's Doheny Memorial Library. Please contact us for an appointment.
Warner Bros. Archives
Bree Russell, Curator Contact: WBArchives@cinema.usc.edu
Presented to USC by Warner Communications in 1977, the USC Warner Bros. Archives is the largest single studio collection in the world. It is the only collection to bring production, distribution and exhibition records together to document the activities of a vertically integrated studio. The making of many classic films such asThe Jazz Singer,CasablancaandRebel without a Causeis documented from story purchase through theatrical release and chronicled down to the daily contributions of writers, directors, producers and actors.
The USC Warner Bros. Archives contains the records of Warner Bros. Pictures Inc. and its motion picture-related subsidiaries (including First National and Vitagraph). The records document the period from 1918 (the release of the brothers’ first major feature film) through 1968 (the sale of the studio to Seven Arts). Also included are extensive production records for Warner Bros. television series from 1955-1968. The holdings include:
- Legal, production, story and publicity files
- Correspondence, memoranda and documents
- Scripts, treatments, outlines and synopses
- Publicity and historical stills
- Film music scores, orchestral parts and original sketches
- Art department stills and set drawings
- Animation drawings and backgrounds
- Stanley-Warner theater chain exhibition records
Materials may be viewed by appointment only.
The Warner Bros. Archivesaremanaged by the School of Cinematic Arts.
For Warner Bros. Archive inquiries, please fillout this archival request form.
If you have further questions regarding the Warner Bros. Archive, please write toctlibarc@usc.edu.