The first Academy Awards were held in a Hollywood Hotel ball room and resembled any other industry banquet. |
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.
MGM mogul Louis B, Mayer was the prime mover in creating the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences and its awards ceremony is seen here with Best Actress Helen Hayes in 1932. |
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 purportedly gave it an enduring nickname by observing, “This looks just like my uncle Oscar.”
Some film historians put the quip into other mouths.
Recipients
of the first Academy 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, mainstream 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.
German character actor Emile Jannings won Best Actor for work in two films, The Lost Command by director Josef Von Sternberg and The Way of All Flesh directed by Victor Flemming. |
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 were 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.”
The Academy Award first showed its box office power when the previously little seen art film Sunrise was re-released to booming business. |
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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