The Oscars recognize the previous year’s greatest cinema achievements as determined by some of the world’s most accomplished motion picture artists and professionals. Awards are presented for outstanding individual or collective efforts in 24 categories.
The Power of the Dog leads the field with 12 nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director (Jane Campion), Best Actor (Benedict Cumberbatch), two nominees for Best Supporting Actor (Jesse Plemons and Kodi Smit-McPhee) and Best Supporting Actress (Kirsten Dunst). Dune received 10 nods including Best Picture, but director Denis Villeneuve was snubbed. Other Best Picture nominees include Belfast and West Side Side Story (7 each); King Richard (6), and with four nods apiece: Don't Look Up, Nightmare Alley, and Drive My Car, the first Japanese film nominated in the category (it's also up for Best International Feature).
The first Academy Awards ceremony was held at The Hollywood Roosevelt in 1929, and since then the Oscars have taken place at some of LA’s most famous and historic hotels and theatres.
UNION STATION (2021)
In 2021, the 93rd Academy Awards took place for the first time at Union Station in Downtown LA. Nomadland took home three Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Actress (Frances McDormand) and Best Director for ChloƩ Zhao, who made history as the first woman of color to win; the first Asian woman nominated for Best Director; and is the most nominated woman in a single year in Oscar history. At age 83, Best Actor winner Anthony Hopkins (The Father) was the oldest performer to ever win a competitive acting Oscar.
Known as “the last of the great train stations,” Union Station is the largest railroad passenger terminal in the Western United States. The historic station was designed in a unique blend of Spanish Colonial, Mission Revival and Art Deco styles by the renowned father-son architect team of John and Donald Parkinson.
Opened in May 1939, Union Station is a major transportation hub for Southern California, serving 110,000 daily commuters with Amtrak long distance trains, Amtrak California regional trains, Metrolink commuter trains, and several Metro Rail subway and light rail lines. Union Station was added to the National Register of Historic Places in November 1980.
A star in its own right, Union Station has appeared in films for decades, including Blade Runner, The Dark Knight Rises, Pearl Harbor, and numerous Film Noirs.
Discover Union Station
HOLLYWOOD ROOSEVELT HOTEL (1929)
The first Academy Awards honored the best films of 1927 and 1928 and were presented at a private dinner on May 16, 1929 at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. Named for President Theodore Roosevelt, the hotel opened in 1927 and was financed by a group that included Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford and Sid Grauman. The ceremony was held in the hotel’s Blossom Ballroom, where 270 guests each paid $5 per ticket to attend the dinner and watch the presentation. Winners were announced three months before the ceremony, which was not broadcast on radio or television. The event was hosted by Academy president Douglas Fairbanks, who presented all of the golden statuettes in 15 minutes.
BILTMORE HOTEL & AMBASSADOR HOTEL (1930–1943)
Between 1930 and 1943, the Academy Awards alternated between the historic Millennium Biltmore Hotel in Downtown LA, and the now-demolished Ambassador Hotel, where the second Oscar ceremony took place inside the famed Cocoanut Grove nightclub.
At the time of its grand opening in 1923, the Biltmore was the largest hotel west of Chicago. During the Academy's early years, the Biltmore Bowl at the Millennium Biltmore was the site of eight Oscar ceremonies: 1931, 1935–39, and 1941-42. Today the Biltmore Bowl blends period details and the hotel's interior design with state-of-the-art audiovisual equipment, a pre-function foyer, a curtained stage and a long balcony that’s perfect for lavish buffets.
The Academy was founded in 1927 at a luncheon banquet in the Biltmore’s Crystal Ballroom, where guests such as Louis B. Mayer discussed plans for the new organization, as well as a special event to present film-industry achievement awards, an event that became the Oscars. According to legend, MGM art director Cedric Gibbons, who was also at the luncheon, sketched the design for the Oscar statue on a linen Biltmore napkin. The Crystal Ballroom features a hand-painted 30-foot ceiling, carved columns and Austrian-crystal chandeliers. The second-story balconies that surround the ballroom offer a wonderful vantage point to take in everything that’s happening below.
TCL CHINESE THEATRE (1944–1946)
Chinese Theatre IMAX Photo: TCL Chinese Theatre IMAX |
LA.'S Best Movie Theatres
SHRINE AUDITORIUM (1947–1948)
Photo courtesy of Shrine Auditorium |
ACADEMY AWARD THEATRE (1949)
In 1949, the Oscars were held for the only time at the Academy Award Theatre. According to the Academy’s website, the ceremony was moved from the Shrine Auditorium to the Academy’s own theater “primarily because the major Hollywood studios had withdrawn their financial support in order to address rumors that they had been trying to influence voters.”
The 21st Academy Awards featured a number of firsts. Hamlet became the first non-Hollywood production to win Best Picture, and Hamlet director and star Laurence Olivier became the first person to direct himself in an Oscar-winning performance. John Huston (Best Director, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre) directed two Oscar-winning performances in the same year for two different films: his father Walter Huston in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, and Claire Trevor for Key Largo. Jane Wyman became the first actor since the silent era to win an Oscar for a performance with no lines. It was also the debut of the award for Best Costume Design.
PANTAGES THEATRE (1950-1960)
In 1950, the Academy Awards were held for the first time at the Pantages Theatre in Hollywood. Located at the iconic intersection of Hollywood and Vine, the Pantages Theatre was designed by architect B. Marcus Priteca and was the last theater built by vaudeville impresario Alexander Pantages. The landmark Art Deco theater opened in 1930 as part of the Pantages Theatre Circuit.
The 25th Academy Awards ceremony was held in 1953 at the Pantages Theatre in Hollywood and the now-demolished NBC International Theatre in New York City. It was the first time the Academy Awards were televised, and it was the first Oscars ceremony that took place in Hollywood and New York City simultaneously. In one of the all-time upsets, the heavily favored High Noon lost the Best Picture award to Cecil B. DeMille's The Greatest Show on Earth. With five awards that night, The Bad and the Beautiful earned the most wins ever for a film not nominated for Best Picture.
Hollywood Pantages Theatre: The Story Of An L.A. Icon
SANTA MONICA CIVIC AUDITORIUM (1961–1968)
For the 33rd Academy Awards in 1961, the ceremony moved west to the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. Built in 1958, the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium was designed by renowned architect Welton Becket, whose other landmarks include the Music Center, the Capitol Records Building and the Cinerama Dome (now part of Arclight Hollywood). The Apartment was named Best Picture at the 1961 Oscars, the last black and white film to win in that category until 1993, when Schindler's List won.
DOROTHY CHANDLER PAVILION (1969–1987)
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion | Photo: Evelyn Hitchcock |
L.A. Women's Landmarks
DOROTHY CHANDLER PAVILION & SHRINE AUDITORIUM (1988–2001)
From 1988 to 2001, the Academy Awards alternated between the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion and the Shrine Auditorium, which hosted the ceremony eight times between 1988 and 2001. The 70th Academy Awards took place at the Shrine Auditorium in 1998, the year that Titanic won 11 Oscars, including Best Picture and James Cameron for Best Director. The popularity of Titanic, which was the No. 1 movie in the country when the ceremony took place, helped the 70th Academy Awards become the highest-rated broadcast in Oscars history.
DOROTHY CHANDLER PAVILION & SHRINE AUDITORIUM (1988–2001)
From 1988 to 2001, the Academy Awards alternated between the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion and the Shrine Auditorium, which hosted the ceremony eight times between 1988 and 2001. The 70th Academy Awards took place at the Shrine Auditorium in 1998, the year that Titanic won 11 Oscars, including Best Picture and James Cameron for Best Director. The popularity of Titanic, which was the No. 1 movie in the country when the ceremony took place, helped the 70th Academy Awards become the highest-rated broadcast in Oscars history.
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