Director Fred Borzage and actress Janet Gaynor both won for their work on Seventh Heaven. |
Note: A
version of this entry first appeared in this blog on May 16, 2010.
The Academy Awards will be presented
tonight with less suspense than usual.
Virtually everyone expects the French
made The Artist to waltz blithely away with the big prize for Best Picture. Hardly an article on the phenomenal success
of that film fails to note that it is the first silent—or virtually silent—picture
nominated since the very first awards 84 years ago. You probably missed those. I hear TV reception was crummy. Anyway, here is a look back at Hollywood’s first big celebration of
itself.
On May 16, 1929 the
first Academy Awards were presented
at a banquet at the Hollywood Roosevelt
Hotel. 270 people plunked down $5
for tickets to the black tie event.
In many ways it was
indistinguishable from awards dinners common to any industry. The main event seemed to be the dinner. The awards were presented in a brisk 15
minutes after the deserts were cleared and after speeches by founders of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences, including producer Louis
B. Mayer who was a prime mover in establishing the organization just two
years before.
The Academy’s first
President, actor Douglas Fairbanks, shared
hosting and presenting with his successor, director Cecil B. DeMille. There we
no surprises. Award recipients had been
announced weeks earlier.
While many things would
change about the annual ceremonies, one constant was the Award itself, a hefty
gold statuette of a sleek man holding a sword point down with his hands clasp
in front of him. In 1931 Bette Davis would give it an enduring
nick name by observing, “This looks just like my uncle Oscar.”
Recipients of the first
awards were mostly for films released in 1927.
Many awards, including those for acting were given not for a single
film, but for a body of work during the year.
There were two best picture awards, Outstanding
Picture, Production for popular, main stream hits, and Outstanding
Picture, Unique and Artistic Production for what we would today call an art film. The action-packed World War I flying
adventure Wings starting Buddy
Rodgers, Gary Cooper, and Clara Bow won the commercial
award. Sunrise: A Song of Two
Humans, an allegorical film by
German director F.
W. Murnau staring George O’Brien as
“The Husband” and Janet Gaynor as
“The Wife” won the art award. The film included
music and sound effects, but no dialog on a sound track using Fox-Movietone Sound-on-Film system.
It was a very good year
for 22 year old Gaynor. She won Best
Actress in a Leading Role for her
performance as the long suffering wife and for two films she made with director
Frank Borzage and leading man Charles Farrell, Seventh
Heaven, and Street Angel. Borzage took home the trophy as Best
Director, Dramatic Picture for the charming romance Seventh Heaven.
That year there was also a separate award for Best Director, Comedy
Picture which was won by Lewis Milestone for Two
American Knights, produced by Howard
Hughes and staring William Boyd—the
future Hopalong Cassidy—and Mary Astor.
Best Actor in Leading Roll went to
German character actor Emil Jannings for work in two pictures, The Lost Command as an exiled Czarist general, and The Way of All Flesh as a
businessman tempted and dishonored.
There were three writing awards.
The former newspaper man Ben Hecht won Best Writing, Original
Story for the early gangster flick Underworld. Best Writing, Adapted Story went once
again to Seventh Heaven for Benjamin Glazer’s screenplay. Joseph Farnham won in the doomed
category Best Writing, Title Cards for his whole body of work in 1927
which included Fair
Co-Ed, Laugh,
Clown, Laugh, and Telling the
World.
Awards were also given
out for Best Cinematography (Sunrise), Best Engineering Effects (Wings), and Best Art Direction.
Two Honorary awards
given. The first was to Charles Chaplain, who had been
withdrawn from consideration in several categories of regular award because he
did, well, everything. His citation
read, “For versatility and genius in acting, writing, directing and producing The Circus.” The dawning of a new age was recognized in a
special award to Warner Brothers “For
producing The Jazz Singer,
the pioneer outstanding talking picture, which has revolutionized the
industry.”
Even the most
optimistic boosters of the new awards did not foresee how popular—and powerful
they would become. The eyes of Hollywood
were opened when winning films were re-released to big audiences. Sunrise,
in particular, which had made hardly any money in its first release suddenly
found an audience. Thereafter the Awards—and
the presentation showcases for them—would become a very big deal indeed in Tinsel Town.
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