Oscar Statuette Facts
Official Name: Academy Award® of Merit
Height: 13½ inches
Weight: 8½ pounds
Number of Awards Presented: 2,809
First Recipient: Emil Jannings, named Best Actor for his performances in “The
Last Command” and “The Way of All Flesh” in 1929
Design: A knight holding a crusader’s sword, standing on a reel of film. The
film reel features five spokes, signifying the five original branches of the
Academy (actors, directors, producers, technicians and writers).
Designer: Cedric Gibbons, chief art director at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Sculptor: Los Angeles artist George Stanley
Manufacturer: R. S. Owens & Company in Chicago
Manufacturing Time: 3–4 weeks for 50 statuettes
The Oscar Statuette
The most recognized trophy in the world, the Oscar statuette has stood on the
mantels of the greatest filmmakers in history since 1929.
Shortly after the formation of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
in 1927, the fledgling organization held a dinner in the Crystal Ballroom of the
Biltmore Hotel in downtown Los Angeles to set out its goals. Among the topics
discussed that night was how best to honor outstanding moviemaking achievements
and thereby encourage excellence in all facets of motion picture production.
Agreeing to institute an annual award, the group turned its attention to
creating a suitably majestic trophy. MGM art director Cedric Gibbons designed a
statuette of a knight standing on a reel of film gripping a crusader’s sword.
The Academy tapped Los Angeles sculptor George Stanley to realize the design in
three dimensions – and the world-renowned statuette was born.
A Knight Called Oscar
Since the initial awards banquet on May 16, 1929, in the Hollywood Roosevelt
Hotel’s Blossom Room, 2,809 statuettes have been presented. Each January,
additional new golden statuettes are cast, molded, polished and buffed by R.S.
Owens & Company, the Chicago-based awards manufacturer retained by the Academy
since 1982.
Oscar stands 13½ inches tall and weighs in at a robust 8½ pounds. The film reel
features five spokes, signifying the five original branches of the Academy:
actors, directors, producers, technicians and writers. Although the statuette
remains true to its original design, the size of the base varied until 1945,
when the current standard was adopted.
Officially named the Academy Award of Merit, the statuette is better known by
its nickname, Oscar. While the origins of the moniker aren’t clear, a popular
story has it that upon seeing the trophy for the first time, Academy librarian
(and eventual executive director) Margaret Herrick remarked that it resembled
her Uncle Oscar. The Academy didn’t adopt the nickname officially until 1939,
but it was widely known enough by 1934 that Hollywood columnist Sidney Skolsky
used it in a piece referring to Katharine Hepburn’s first Best Actress win.
The Stuff that Dreams are Made Of
The statuettes presented at the initial ceremonies were gold-plated solid
bronze. Within a few years the bronze was abandoned in favor of britannia metal,
a pewter-like alloy which is then plated in copper, nickel silver, and finally,
24-karat gold. Due to a metal shortage during World War II, Oscars® were made of
painted plaster for three years. Following the war, the Academy invited
recipients to redeem the plaster figures for gold-plated metal ones.
Achievements in up to 25 regular categories will be honored on February 26,
2012, at the 84th Academy Awards presentation at the Kodak Theatre at Hollywood
& Highland Center®. However, the Academy won’t know how many statuettes it will
hand out until the envelopes are opened on Oscar Night®. Although the number of
categories are known in advance, the possibility of ties and of multiple
recipients sharing the prize in some categories makes it impossible to predict
the exact number of statuettes to be awarded. As in previous years, any surplus
awards will be housed in the Academy’s vault until next year’s event.
More than 80 years after that auspicious gathering in Hollywood, Oscar’s success
as a symbol of filmmaking achievement would probably amaze those who attended
the dinner, as it would its designer, Cedric Gibbons.
http://www.oscars.org/awards/academyawards/about/awards/oscar.html