Jacqueline Stewart to Lead Academy Museum of Motion Pictures

Film scholar Jacqueline Stewart. (TCM via AP)
Film scholar Jacqueline Stewart. (TCM via AP)
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Jacqueline Stewart to Lead Academy Museum of Motion Pictures

Film scholar Jacqueline Stewart. (TCM via AP)
Film scholar Jacqueline Stewart. (TCM via AP)

Film scholar Jacqueline Stewart has been named the next director and president of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles.

The organization’s board of trustees said Wednesday that Stewart, who previously served as the museum’s chief artistic and programming officer, would succeed Bill Kramer to guide the vision of the museum beginning July 18.

"Jacqueline Stewart is the ideal choice to lead the Academy Museum into the future," said Ted Sarandos, the chair of the Academy Museum’s Board of Trustees and co-CEO of Netflix. "A strong and inspiring partner to Bill Kramer throughout the period leading up to our opening, she gave indispensable direction to the curatorial program that has been so widely admired."

Kramer last week was named as the new CEO for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the organization that puts on the Oscars.

Stewart is a Chicago native and a 2021 MacArthur Foundation Fellow known for her contributions to film studies and advocacy for film preservation. Among her many accomplishments, Stewart is the author of the book "Migrating to the Movies: Cinema and Black Urban Modernity," hosts "Silent Sunday Nights" on Turner Classic Movies and is a chair of the National Film Preservation Board.

In her previous role at the Academy Museum, she led strategy and planning for its curatorial, educational and public programming initiatives from exhibitions to screenings to podcasts. The museum opened last year and will celebrate its first anniversary in September.

"Our ambition in opening the Academy Museum was to give Los Angeles and the world an unprecedented institution for understanding and appreciating the history and culture of cinema, in all its artistic glory and all its power to influence and reflect society," Stewart said in a statement. "I feel deeply honored to have been chosen for this new role."



Stars Strive to Dispel Tariff Gloom at Cannes Film Festival 

Actor Tom Cruise attends a British Film Institute (BFI) event to receive BFI Fellowship, at the BFI Chair's Dinner, at the Rosewood Hotel, in London, Britain, May 12, 2025. (Reuters)
Actor Tom Cruise attends a British Film Institute (BFI) event to receive BFI Fellowship, at the BFI Chair's Dinner, at the Rosewood Hotel, in London, Britain, May 12, 2025. (Reuters)
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Stars Strive to Dispel Tariff Gloom at Cannes Film Festival 

Actor Tom Cruise attends a British Film Institute (BFI) event to receive BFI Fellowship, at the BFI Chair's Dinner, at the Rosewood Hotel, in London, Britain, May 12, 2025. (Reuters)
Actor Tom Cruise attends a British Film Institute (BFI) event to receive BFI Fellowship, at the BFI Chair's Dinner, at the Rosewood Hotel, in London, Britain, May 12, 2025. (Reuters)

Movie legends from Tom Cruise to Denzel Washington will gather in Cannes this week for the 78th incarnation of its film festival, as the industry tries to shake off worries over dwindling audiences and threatened US tariffs.

Cruise will be launching what is touted as the last in his "Mission: Impossible" franchise and scores of others will be hoping to follow the path that last year's top prize winner "Anora" took to Oscar glory.

Alongside them, Robert De Niro will be getting a lifetime achievement award, and star actors Scarlett Johansson, Kristen Stewart and Harris Dickinson will all be trying their hands as directors with films competing in the smaller categories.

Just a week ago, US President Donald Trump shook the global film industry by announcing a 100% tariff on movies produced outside the country - a statement that left many studio executives alarmed and baffled about when such levies might be applied or how they might come into force.

In Cannes, those worries have dominated backroom conversations, but made no dent on the frontline announcements.

"Nobody wants to be talking about tariffs and Trump here," said Scott Roxborough, European bureau chief for The Hollywood Reporter. "In the industry, everybody's going to be talking about it."

OSCAR GLORY

The festival kicks off on Tuesday evening. The decisions of its jury - chaired by France's Juliette Binoche with "Monster's Ball" star Halle Berry with her on the panel - will be closely watched.

"Anora", the winner of Cannes' top prize the Palme d'Or in 2024, went on to take home five Oscars. Cannes' top film in 2023, "Anatomy of a Fall", later won one Academy Award. Its pick in 2019, "Parasite", memorably became the first non-English-language film to win the best picture Oscar.

This year, US director Wes Anderson will be launching his new movie "The Phoenician Scheme," which will be competing against independent films including the likes of Joachim Trier's "Sentimental Value" and Julia Ducournau's "Alpha".

Films screening outside the competition include the new "Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning", as well as Spike Lee's "Highest 2 Lowest", starring Denzel Washington.

Hollywood's travails might not be center stage, but world politics has made it into the program.

Three films about the war in Ukraine will be shown as part of a "Ukraine Day" event.

All screenings are sold out for "Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk", which follows 25-year-old Palestinian photojournalist Fatma Hassona, who was killed in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza in April, one day after it was announced that the documentary had been chosen for the festival's ACID program.