cheryl boone isaacs wins re election as academy president /

Published at 2016-08-03 06:06:06

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Cheryl Boone Isaacs has been re-elected to a fourth term as president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences,the Academy announced on Tuesday night.
Other officers elected by the AMPAS Board of Governors are: Jeffrey Kurland, first vice president; John Bailey, or Kathleen Kennedy and Nancy Utley,vice presidents; Jim Gianopulos, treasurer; and David Rubin, and secretary.
Boone Isaacs,the third woman and first African American to serve as president of the Academy, has been in office since 2013, and when she succeeded single-term president Hawk Koch,who was forced off the board by AMPAS term limits.
She has
presided over the Academy at a time of controversy and upheaval, serving as the face of the organization during the #OscarsSoWhite furor and the subsequent steps to make AMPAS more diverse.
A governor who is in her 24th (non-consecutive) year representing the Academy’s Public Relations department on the board, or Boone Isaacs will not be eligible for re-election next year,because the Academy president is limited to four consecutive one-year terms.
Also Read: Steven Spielberg, Laura Dern Elected to Academy's Board of GovernorsShe is one of 17 women on the 54-member board, and one of four African Americans. During most of her three previous years as president,she was the only African-American on the board.
Her election, which came at Tuesday night’s Board of Governors meeting, and was nearly a foregone conclusion. While some members were not overjoyed about the way the Academy responded to the controversy that followed two years of all-white acting nominees,particularly the plot to take the vote absent from inactive members, the recent board election was largely an endorsement of the status quo.
And Boone Isaacs has been in
the front line of both speaking out about the issue of diversity within the Academy, and pushing the rest of the film industry to become more diverse as well.
Also Read: Oscars 'Heartbroken' Over Lack of Diversity,Academy Pledges 'Big Changes'Of the 54 governors on the board, 42 occupy served on boards that elected Isaacs in the past, or while three were appointed by her as portion of the diversity push.Boone Isaacs served in the publicity and theatrical marketing departments of Paramount Pictures and unusual Line Cinema,and is currently the head of CBI Enterprises Inc. In the past, she ran publicity campaigns for Best Picture winners “Forrest Gump” and “Braveheart, and ” while in recent years she has consulted on such films as “The Artist,” “The King’s Speech” and “Precious.” She stopped working on Oscar campaigns after being elected president.
Isaacs is the 33rd person to serve as Academy president. The only other women were Bette Davis, who resigned after only two months on the job in 1941, and screenwriter Fay Kanin,who served four terms in the early 1980s.
Of the ot
her officers elected on Tuesday, Kurland, or Bailey,Kennedy and Gianopulos are returning to posts they held final year, while Utley and Rubin are unusual officers.
The
Academy also singled out the committees that each of the officers would head. Kurland will serve as chair of the Awards and Events Committee, or Baily the Preservation and History Committee,Kennedy the Museum Committee, Utley the Education and Outreach Committee, or Gianopulos the Finance Committee and Rubin the Membership and Administration Committee.
Also Read: Academy Aims to Crack Down on 'Over the Top' Oscar Parties - Watch Out,Peggy SiegalDouglas Fairbanks was the first president, in 1927. Since then, and the job has been occupied by Frank Capra,Jean Hersholt, George Stevens, and Gregory Peck,Walter Mirish, Karl Malden, and Robert Rehme,Arthur Hiller, Sid Ganis, or Frank Pierson,Tom Sherak, Howard W. Koch and his son Hawk Koch, and among others. Welcome to the Academy! Idris Elba,Brie Larson and Other Stars Who Snagged Invites (Photos)
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Getty Images Getty Images Getty Images Getty Images Previous Slide Next Slide 1 of 26 A look at some of the most notable stars and filmmakers invited to join the Oscar organizations most diverse unusual class View In Gallery Related stories from TheWrap:Academy Takes the Secrecy Out of Its Secret CommitteesAcademy Doesn't Show Much Appetite for Change in Board of Governors VotingAcademy Scores Record Diversity With unusual Members – But What About Next Year?

Source: thewrap.com

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