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IN RECOGNITION OF THE CRITICAL ROLE PLAYED BY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY IN THE MOVIEMAKING PROCESS, THE ACADEMY HAS, ALMOST SINCE ITS INCEPTION, HONORED THE ACHIEVEMENTS OF PIONEERS IN THESE FIELDS WHOSE WORK HAS ADVANCED THE MOTION PICTURE INDUSTRY.

First presented at the 4th Academy Awards ceremony in November 1931, The Scientific & Technical Awards are conferred in recognition of original developments that result in significant improvements in motion picture production and exhibition.

Scientific and technical achievement is awarded on three levels: Technical Achievement Award (certificate), Scientific and Engineering Award (bronze tablet), and Academy Award of Merit (Oscar statuette).

Scientific and Technical Oscars recipients have included IMAX for its method of filming and exhibiting large-format, wide-angle motion pictures; Avid Technology for its non-linear editing system; and Horst Burbulla for his invention and development of the Technocrane telescoping camera crane. Search the Academy Awards Database to find all Scientific and Technical Award winners.

Presentations of each year’s honorees are made at a formal dinner held prior to the Oscar ceremony, which has become a highlight of the Academy Awards season. If one or more Scientific and Technical Academy Awards of Merit are awarded in a given year, the event is videotaped, and portions are edited into the Oscar telecast.

The 50th Awards (1977) marked the first time that the Scientific and Technical Awards ceremony became a full-fledged Awards dinner presentation. Five days prior to the main Academy Awards ceremony, that first dinner ceremony was held in the Grand Ballroom of the Beverly Hilton on March 29, 1978. Kirk Douglas and Gregory Peck hosted. Over the next decade, hosts included Christopher Reeve, Lloyd Bridges, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Janet Leigh, Macdonald Carey, and other notables.

Starting with the 51st Awards (1978), the “Class I” Scientific and Technical Award became the Academy Award of Merit, “Class II” became the Scientific and Engineering Award, and “Class III” became the Technical Achievement Award.

The practice of holding a separate Sci-Tech Awards dinner has continued ever since the 1977 Awards. Locations for the dinner ceremony have included the Beverly Hilton, Century Plaza Hotel, Regent Beverly Wilshire, Ritz-Carlton Huntington (Pasadena), and the Beverly Wilshire Hotel.

 

Contact

The Scientific and Technical Awards Committee at
the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
8949 Wilshire Boulevard
Beverly Hills, California 90211-1972
Phone: +1 310.247.3000 x1129
scitech@oscars.org