Beverly Hills, CA – The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) have taken a step toward realizing a museum dedicated to motion pictures and the creation of a new and unique cultural center for the city of Los Angeles.
On Tuesday night (10/4), the Academy’s Board of Governors joined their LACMA counterparts in agreeing to sign a memorandum of understanding to work in good faith in establishing the Academy’s movie museum in the historic May Company building, currently known as LACMA West. The memo paves the way for the two organizations to discuss details of a future contract and for the Academy to begin developing plans for fundraising, design, exhibitions, visitor experience, and modifications to this historic site.
“It is appropriate and long overdue for the city that is home to the motion picture industry to recognize this art form with a museum of its own. The LACMA Board is delighted to be facilitating this important cultural event, which has special resonance for me, having spent most of my life dedicated to the great art of movies,” said co-chair of the LACMA Board of Trustees Terry Semel. “The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures will provide a much needed destination for cultural tourists and Los Angelenos to learn more about cinema, and the setting could not be more ideal, nestled next to the largest encyclopedic art museum in the Western United States.”
According to Academy President Tom Sherak, “The new museum will be a world-class destination that is a tangible representation of the Academy’s mission. And the idea of our museum being part of a larger cultural center for the arts, in this city that we love, was incredibly compelling to the Academy Board.”
Plans by various groups to create a movie museum date back to the mid-1960s, but Tuesday night’s vote represents the most significant step yet taken in bringing these hopes to fruition. The Academy hopes to sign a long-term lease for the facility, and will retain autonomy over all aspects of its museum while benefiting from LACMA’s experience in managing a premier arts institution.The Academy will mount a new fundraising campaign for the museum, which will give visitors an entertaining and interactive experience illuminating the way movies reflect culture and the impact they have upon it. The museum is expected to feature both permanent and rotating exhibitions inside the facility’s 300,000 gross square feet.
LACMA West, which formerly housed the May Company department store, was built in 1939, one of the greatest years in film history with such releases as “Gone with the Wind” and “The Wizard of Oz.” “Finally, our industry will have a dedicated space where we can inform and excite people about the endless range and possibilities of motion pictures,” said Academy CEO Dawn Hudson. “This new facility will make our resources and activities – our programming, our archives, and our library – even more visible and accessible all year round.” According to LACMA CEO and Wallis Annenberg Director Michael Govan, “This represents a seismic shift in the cultural landscape of Los Angeles, and an extraordinary new resource for residents proud of their local history, and for fans of cinema worldwide.”
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Such a shame they couldn’t get this together before the Debbie Reynolds collection was auctioned.
Bingo!!..You ripped those words right of my keyboard Itsa.
I thought the same thing when the Debbie Reynolds collection was on the block. Has there ever been follow up to who got what in the auction? Any chance that any of the choice items went to generous philanthropists who will pass along to this museum?
Debbie begged the Academy for 50 years to do a museum with her treasures. This is a disgusting, devastating, idiotic turn of events.
Most of Debbie’s items went to buyers in Japan and several Arab countries. Don’t know it they will ever make it back here again.
I’ll third that on the Debbie Reynolds collection. I should be excited by this announcement, but I can’t help but be disappointed–where were these people when they were needed to preserve the collection intact? It’s like going past a parking lot and seeing a plaque that says, “On this site once stood…”
HUGE mistake.
They just killed 90% of the tourist traffic they could have gotten and will make it more of a “locals” museum that locals will either never make it to or go to once every decade.
Dumb move, people.
How in the world could this “kill” tourist traffic? It’s brilliant and long overdue, as everyone’s remarked. Tourists and locals will go or they won’t, but Paris has had one for ages and it is always full of professionals and film students along with a few tourists and locals.
90 percent? Where did you get that number?
And you do realize that this is where museum row is as well? Also, a large tourist destination and four blocks from The Grove, ANOTHER large tourist destination.
Also, that building was once the May building and was converted to a museum space. Apt for housing this.
This is a great spot, will generate plenty of tourism and have some class – which is something Hollywood Boulevard can’t say.
Of course, maybe not 90 percent. You probably took a poll or something, right?
Can’t help but suspect the Academy took plenty of heat from their ranks after that auction – it was like MGM 1969 all over again… I’m sure the fact that investors paid all that MONEY obviously made them realize they might also capitalize, after all… same old Hollywood – always following…
Are we seriously lamenting over the Debbie Reynolds collection??? I stored some set dressing and props once in a Fox warehouse in Culver City… I shared space with the rotting flats from Gone With The Wind and Sinbad, props from Cleopatra… just a small sample ROTTING in a warehouse. Debbie Reynolds… Puh-leez
Is this the same museum that was going to be on Vine St. south of Sunset?
Yes, this museum was supposed to be a fresh build around the 1313 Vine St. location (Pickford Center). All of those neighboring buildings have been vacated & demolition has started, so something is coming, just not the museum.
Ah ok, thanks. Well, tearing down the KFC on that block was a win for the neighborhood even without the museum. Would have been great to have the museum right in Hollywood. Oh well.
Didn’t Debbie keep some really good pieces she didn’t want to part with.
I shudder to think about what this will do to traffic in the Mid-Wilshire area. Endless lines of tour busses and countless cars all trying to park off Fairfax and Wilshire.
Great idea, bad location ( shouldn’t a ‘Hollywood’ museum be in Hollywood?).
Debbie Reynolds still has another Auction coming up in December…..Time for the Academy to Act. I think that Donelle Dadigan’s Hollywood History Museum located on Highland just south of Hollywood Boulevard could also be a potential reciprocating source of “Hollywoodiana” to help stock the Academy Museum.
Great idea, but wouldn’t Hollywood be a better location? Think of all the tourists that end up on Hollywood Blvd (or even Sunset). I think tourists are more enamored of the movie biz than locals are, but if they don’t care about attendance levels and just want a warehouse to store old memorabilia, than the Wilshire location is fine…
Would you people rather everything else that’s out there go the same way as the Reynolds collection?
Everyone is acting like a bunch of ingrates…
If the Academy wants to bid on Debbie Reynolds’ property, they can bid on it. Like everyone else.