The Academy and the award

by Bruce Davis

The first behind-the-scenes history of the organization behind the Academy Awards.

For all the near-fanatic attention brought each year to the Academy Awards, the organization that dispenses those awards—the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences—has yet to be understood. To date, no one has ever produced a thorough account of the Academy’s birth and its awkward adolescence, and the few reports on those periods from outside have always had a glancing, cursory quality. Yet the story of the Academy’s creation and development is a critical piece of Hollywood’s history.

Now that story is finally being told. Bruce Davis, executive director of the Academy for more than twenty years, was given unprecedented access to its archives, and the result is a revealing and compelling story of the men and women, famous and infamous, who shaped one of the best-known organizations in the world. Davis writes about the Academy with as intimate a view of its workings, its awards, and its world-famous membership. Thorough and long overdue, The Academy and the Award fills a crucial gap in Hollywood history.

“A very beautifully written book. I highly recommend it."

—ALEXANDRA JACOBS, New York Times

“The Academy and the Award is a major contribution to Hollywood history—and a great read."

—LEONARD MALTIN, film critic and historian

“Invaluable"

—VARIETY

“Davis's seminal history of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences reads with all the honed stagecraft and drama of an Oscar-nominated screenplay."

—JOHN BAILEY, cinematographer; Academy President 2017-2019

“Mr. Davis's magnum opus is essential reading for any serious cinephile.”

—ROBERT HARRIS, Motion Picture Archivist


About BRUCE DAVIS

Bruce Davis joined the staff of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1981, after serving as Theater Department chair at Juniata College in Pennsylvania. At AMPAS, he was Executive Director for twenty years, overseeing the establishment of the Academy’s Herrick Library, one of the world’s great film archives. Davis has described his AMPAS tenure as “thirty years among the masters of an art form.” He lives in Los Angeles.