October 27, 2004 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Dawn Newell - (310) 247-3000 dnewell@oscars.org
Academy to Launch Annual Documentary Film Program
Lecture Series Named in Honor of Oscar®-Winning Writer-Director John
Huston
Beverly Hills , CA - The documentary film will be the subject of an
annual event presented by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
beginning next month. The inaugural John Huston Lecture on Documentary
Film, named in honor of the late Oscar-winning writer-director, will
present its first program, titled "Documentaries of Dissent," on
Wednesday, November 10, at 7:30 p.m. in the Academy's Samuel Goldwyn
Theater.
Los Angeles Times film critic Kenneth Turan will host the evening, which
will include discussions with noted documentary filmmakers. Participants
scheduled to appear include Peter Davis, producer of the 1974 Oscar-winning
documentary feature "Hearts and Minds;" Penelope Spheeris,
producer-director of the 1981 documentary "The Decline of Western
Civilization" and two subsequent sequels; Rob Epstein, producer-director
of two Oscar-winning documentary features, "The Times of Harvey
Milk," which won in 1984, and "Common Threads: Stories from
the Quilt," which won in 1989, and Barbara Trent, producer-director
of "The Panama Deception," which won the Oscar for Best Documentary
Feature of 1992.
Panelists will discuss the challenges faced when making a documentary
film as well as how the genre has changed over the years. In addition
to viewing film clips, the audience will participate in open discussion
with these accomplished filmmakers.
The documentary has long been an important part of cinema culture, offering
filmmakers a non-fiction means to express an alternative, and oftentimes
contentious, point of view on a topical issue. "Documentaries of
Dissent" will examine some of these controversial films from the
early 1940s through the 1990s.
The annual lecture was named in honor of Huston, whose 14 Academy Award® nominations
include wins for directing and writing "The Treasure of the Sierra
Madre." Huston's documentary work while in the Army Signal Corps
during World War II produced three unique yet controversial films, "Report
from the Aleutians " (1943), "The Battle of San Pietro" (1944)
and "Let There Be Light" (1946). "The Battle of San Pietro" was
not released publicly until 1945, when General George Marshall removed
its "classified" status. Clips from this film will be shown
during the evening's program.
A second installment of "Documentaries of Dissent" will be
held in 2005 and will focus on a selection of theatrical documentaries
released in 2004 that have played a role in the current debates over
political and social issues.
The Huston Lecture is the sixth of the Academy's annually scheduled
lectures, joining the Marvin Borowsky Lecture on Screenwriting, the George
Pal Lecture on Fantasy in Film, the Jack Oakie Lecture on Comedy in Film,
the Marc Davis Lecture on Animation and the George Stevens Lecture on
Directing.
Tickets for "Documentaries of Dissent" are $5 each for the
general public and $3 for Academy members and students. Tickets may be
purchased by mail, in person at the Academy during regular business hours,
or, pending availability, the night of the event when the doors open
at 7 p.m. The Academy is located at 8949 Wilshire Boulevard in Beverly
Hills . For more information, call (310) 247-3600.
# # #
©A.M.P.A.S.®
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
8949 Wilshire Boulevard Beverly Hills, CA 90211-1972
(310) 247-3000
www.oscars.org
publicity@oscars.org
|