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| The
Academy Awards Ceremony |
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There's The first Academy Awards were handed out on May 16, 1929,
at the dawn of the talking movie era. That first ceremony
took place during a banquet held in the Blossom Room of
the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. The attendance was 250 and
tickets cost $10 each.
Unlike today's ceremony, suspense was in short supply.
Back then, the winners were known prior to the banquet.
Results were given in advance to the newspapers for publication
at 11 p.m. on the night of the Awards. In 1940, guests
arriving for the affair could actually buy the 8:45 p.m.
edition of the Los Angeles Times and read the winners.
As a result, the sealed-envelope system was adopted the
next year and remains in use today.
Interest in the Academy Awards has always run high,
though not at today's fever pitch. While the first presentation
escaped the media, an enthusiastic Los Angeles radio
station covered the second banquet during a live one-hour
broadcast. Every presentation since then has had broadcast
coverage.
The first 15 Award presentations were banquet affairs
held first in the Blossom Room, then at the Ambassador
and Biltmore hotels. After 1942, increased attendance
and World War II made banquets impractical, and the Awards
moved to theaters, where they've been held since.
The 16th Awards ceremony was held at Grauman's Chinese
Theater and was covered by network radio for the first
time and broadcast overseas to American GI's. After three
years at Grauman's, the Awards moved to the Los Angeles
Shrine Auditorium.
In March 1949, the 21st Awards were held in the Academy's
own Melrose Avenue theater. For the next 11 years the
Awards were held at the RKO Pantages Theater in Hollywood.
It was there, on March 19, 1953, that the presentation
was first televised. The NBC-TV and radio network carried
the 25th Academy Awards ceremonies live from Hollywood
with Bob Hope emceeing and from the NBC International
Theater in New York with Fredric March making the presentations.
In 1961, the Awards moved to the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium
and for the next 10 years the ABC-TV and radio network
handled the broadcasting duties.
The Oscars were first broadcast in color in 1966. From
1971 through 1975 NBC carried the Awards. ABC has televised
the show since 1976 and is under contract through 2008.
On April 14, 1969, the 41st Academy Awards ceremonies
moved to the brand new Dorothy Chandler Pavilion of the
Music Center of Los Angeles County. It was the first
major event for this world-renowned cultural center.
The Awards remained at the Music Center until 1987,
when they returned to the Shrine Auditorium for the 60th
and 61st Awards. Subsequently the Awards moved back and
forth between the Shrine and the Music Center. The Shrine
Auditorium, with seating for 6,000, was used mainly to
accommodate as many Academy members as possible; the
Music Center seats only about 2,500. The Awards returned
to Hollywood for the 2001 (74th) Awards Presentation
at the state-of-the-art 3,300-seat Kodak Theatre.
In the first year, Janet Gaynor was the lone woman among
15 Award winners. In the second year, only seven awards
were given — two for acting and one each for Best
Picture, Directing, Writing, Cinematography and Art Direction.
Since then, the Awards have grown slowly and steadily
in both the size of its audience and the fields of achievement
covered.
The need for special awards beyond standard categories
was recognized from the start. Two were awarded for the
1927/28 year: one went to Warner Bros. for producing
the pioneer talking picture, THE JAZZ SINGER, and the
other went to Charlie Chaplin for producing, directing,
writing and starring in THE CIRCUS.
In 1934, three new categories were added: Film Editing,
Music Scoring and Best Song. That year also brought a
write-in campaign to nominate Bette Davis for her performance
in OF HUMAN BONDAGE. The Academy now forbids write-ins
on the final ballot. Price Waterhouse (now known as PricewaterhouseCoopers)
signed with the Academy that year and has been employed
ever since to tabulate and ensure the secrecy of the
results.
In 1936, the first Supporting Actor and Actress Oscars
were given to Walter Brennan for COME AND GET IT and
Gale Sondergaard for ANTHONY ADVERSE, respectively. The
following year saw the first presentation of the Irving
G. Thalberg Memorial Award, which went to Darryl F. Zanuck.
The Special Effects category was added in 1939 and was
first won by THE RAINS CAME.
In 1941, the documentary film category appeared on the
ballot for the first time. The Academy brought foreign
countries into the field of Oscar recognition in 1947,
with a Special Award going to the Italian film, SHOE-SHINE.
The following year the Academy placed Costume Design
on the ballot. The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award was
established in 1956 and presented to Y. Frank Freeman.
In 1963, the special effects award was split into two:
Sound Effects and Special Visual Effects. Makeup was
added in 1981, along with the Gordon E. Sawyer Award
for technological contributions. In 2001, the first Animated
Feature Oscar was awarded.
The scheduled Awards ceremony has been interrupted three
times. The first was in 1938 when floods all but washed
out Los Angeles and delayed the ceremonies one week.
The Awards ceremony was postponed two days in 1968 out
of respect for Dr. Martin Luther King, whose funeral
was held on April 8, the day set for the Awards. And
the Awards were postponed for 24 hours in 1981 due to
the assassination attempt on President Ronald Reagan.
Attendance at the Annual Academy Awards is by invitation
only. No tickets are put on public sale.
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