Legacy
Founder, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
In early 1927, during dinner at the home of M-G-M’s studio chief Louis B. Mayer, Mayer and three of his guests – actor Conrad Nagel, director Fred Niblo and producer Fred Beetson – began talking about creating an organized group to benefit the entire film industry. They planned another dinner for the following week, with invitees from all the creative branches of the film industry. And so, on January 11, 1927, 36 people met for dinner at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles to hear a proposal to found the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Attendees included many of the biggest names in the industry at the time: Mayer, Mary Pickford, Sid Grauman, Jesse Lasky, George Cohen, Cecil B. DeMille, Douglas Fairbanks, Cedric Gibbons and Irving Thalberg. The group supported the concept and by mid-March of that year, articles of incorporation were presented and the first officers were elected, with Douglas Fairbanks as president. On May 11, 1927, a week after the state granted the Academy a charter as a non-profit organization, an official organizational banquet was held at the Biltmore Hotel. Of the 300 guests, 230 joined the Academy, paying $100 each. Initially five branches were established: producers, actors, directors, writers and technicians.
Recipient of the first Milestone Award
It was a star-studded night at the Coconut Grove on September 12, 1951, when Jesse Lasky became the first recipient of the Screen Producers Milestone Award “for his historic contribution to the American Motion Picture.”
Ready for the camera prior to the 1st Annual “Milestone” Dinner are (standing) Mervyn LeRoy, (seated) Cecil B. DeMille, William Perlberg, Jerry Wald, Gloria Swanson, Adolph Zukor, Mary Pickford, Arthur Freed, Jesse L. Lasky; (seated on floor) Sam Goldwyn and George Jessel.