2022 Academy Museum gala to honor Miky Lee, Steve McQueen and Tilda Swinton

Miky Lee, Steve McQueen and Tilda Swinton.
From left, Miky Lee, Steve McQueen and Tilda Swinton.
(Tracy Kumono, John Russo, Michael Lavine)

The Academy Museum of Movement Footage is bringing on the star energy for its second gala. The museum introduced that its annual fundraiser — to be held Oct. 15 —will honor “Parasite” government producer Miky Lee, who's a museum trustee, in addition to Academy Award-winning director-producer-writer Steve McQueen and Oscar-winning actor Tilda Swinton.

Actor Halle Berry, who took house an Academy Award for “Monster’s Ball” in 2002, in addition to Oscar-winning actor Lupita Nyong’o, will co-chair the occasion with screenwriter-director-producer Ryan Murphy and producer Jason Blum.

Museum Director Invoice Kramer stated this 12 months’s honorees are all “members of our worldwide movie neighborhood whose excellent achievements encourage us all.”

Lee would be the recipient this 12 months of the museum’s Pillar Award, for “exemplary management and assist for the Academy Museum.” A vice chairwoman of the South Korean firm CJ Group who manages its leisure and media subsidiary, CJ ENM, Lee has been on the Academy Museum board since 2019 and serves as its vice chair.

McQueen is receiving the Vantage Award, given to an artist or scholar “who has helped to contextualize and problem dominant narratives round cinema.” His “Small Axe,” a five-film anthology illuminating the lives of Black folks in Britain from the late ‘60s to the early ‘80s, was nominated for a Golden Globe and gained the Los Angeles Movie Critics Assn.’s finest image award. McQueen’s first characteristic, “Starvation,” took house a Digital camera d’Or on the 2008 Cannes Movie Competition.

Swinton is being honored with the Visionary Award, given to an artist or scholar “whose in depth physique of labor has superior the artwork of cinema.” Her work is very assorted and prolific and was honored with a Leone d’Oro on the 2020 Venice movie competition, and her position in Tony Gilroy’s “Michael Clayton” earned her a 2008Academy Award for supporting actress.

The museum’s final gala, held in September to kick off the establishment’s opening later that week, honored actress Sophia Loren and Ethiopian filmmaker Haile Gerima. The occasion raised greater than $11 million for programming.

Kramer known as that occasion “an unbelievable reminder of the facility, artistry, variety and resilience of our movie trade.”

Post a Comment

Previous Post Next Post