Arnoldâs primary interests were scientific: âThe earliest influence was the son of the man who lived upstairs [in my building]. His son used to tinker around with radios. I was a little kid then, about six or seven years old, and I used to go down to the basement, watching him build stuff. Then another guy moved into the house next doorâhe was a radio repairman, and he gave me parts. And I was going to Avondale School one dayâIâll never forget thisâI was walking up the street on Windham Avenue, and I looked in the wastebasket. There was a bunch of radio stuff. I picked up that radio stuff, ran home, and opened the doorââMom, donât throw this out!â I went to school, barely made it to class, came homeâit was a crystal set that somebody had tried to fix. I just put the wires to the nearest connection and I got it to work. This was in 1927 or â28; I was ten years old at that time.
âIâll never forget putting the earphones on my uncleâs ears when he came over from Manchuria to America. It was the first time he ever heard a radio. The family thought I was nuts, you know, a âcrazy-head scientist.â I was always into magnetics and electrical stuff. Making magnets, burning up batteries, making shocking machines out of batteries from the old battery-radio sets. I used to go around to peopleâs houses and say, âHave you got any used-up batteries?â Theyâd give âem to me, Iâd get some power out of âem, connect âem all in series, make sparks. Typical kid stuff.â
Arnie and his brother Buddy, who was only a year younger, shared the same hobby. âThey were into electrocuting rats in the attic,â their nephew, Samuel Guttman, relates. âArnold was a ham operator [from the age of fifteen], and somehow he had an antenna system that ruined the radio reception in the neighborhood. The two terrorized the neighborhood. My mother once got so crazy she threw a punch at âem through a glass door.â Arnold âwas remarkably intelligent in school, and he would fool around at homeâhe did all kinds of smart scientific things,â recalls family friend Millie Tieger. âHe built a television set in the 1930s, before anybody else did, before anybody knew what a television was. Everybody said, âArnold, what are you doing?ââ
Some of Arnoldâs visionary qualities can be attributed to his avid interest in reading science fiction, a habit he later passed on to his son. âIâve been reading science fiction since I was seven years old, all the way back to the earliest Amazing Stories, â Arnold says. âAmazing, Astounding, Analog âI still subscribe. I still read âem. My kids used to complain, âDadâs in the bathroom with a science-fiction magazine. We canât get in.ââ
Sam and Becky Spielberg, who spoke mostly Russian around the house, were struggling to make ends meet during the Depression, and they could not afford to send Arnold and Buddy to college. After his graduation in 1934 from Hughes High School, Arnold barely missed out on a college scholarship and had to take a job far beneath his potential, working as a clerk in a chain of small-town department stores across the river in Kentucky, run by his motherâs relatives, the Lerman brothers.
Before becoming a store manager for the Lermans, Arnold worked as an assistant manager in Cynthiana, Kentucky, for his older cousin Max Chase, a nephew of Rebecca Spielberg. Starting the process that eventually would make Arnoldâs son Steven into a filmmaker, Max gave Arnold his first movie camera during the early 1930s. âI started taking home movies when I lived in Kentucky,â Arnold recalls. âMy cousin bought one of the earliest 8mm movie cameras. He didnât know how to use it, so he said, âHere, you use it.â I was about seventeen years old when I started
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