FILMMAKERS ANNOUNCE NEW FILM FOUNDATION FOR FILM PRESERVATION Beverly Hills Film directors Martin Scorsese, Woody Allen, Francis
Ford Coppola, George Lucas, Stanley Kubrick, Sydney Pollack, Robert
Redford, and Steven Spielberg announced today the formation of
The Film Foundation, dedicated to ensuring the survival of the
American film heritage. At a news conference at Creative Artists Agency in Beverly Hills,
Martin Scorsese, President of the new Foundation's Board of Directors
noted, "When filmmakers in the 21st century ask what was done
to preserve the pictures made in this century, they will look
to us. As friends and colleagues who have been concerned about
film preservation for many years, we have come together now as
filmmakers to assure that fifty years from now we'll be able to
give an affirmative answer to our successors." Scorsese was joined
at the news conference by fellow Foundation founders George Lucas,
Sydney Pollack, and Steven Spielberg. Allen, Coppola, Lucas, Kubrick, Pollack, Redford, Scorsese, and
Spielberg have each been involved as individuals in the film preservation
cause in the past. With The Film Foundation they have joined together
to work as creative artists dedicated to the principle that as
filmmakers they have a special responsibility both to the work
of the past masters of their art and to the motion pictures which
they and their peers are creating today. The Film Foundation has four primary goals. In all of its activities
it will foster a greater awareness with the general public of
the urgent need to preserve motion picture history; second, the
Foundation will work with the archives to raise funds for preservation;
third, the Foundation will encourage cooperative preservation
projects, bringing together the archives and the industry; fourth,
it will work to insure that reliable preservation practices are
in place to ensure the long life of current production. The Foundation will be advised on the establishment of goals and
policies by its Archivists Advisory Council, made up of leaders
from the nation's five major film archives. Chaired by Robert
Rosen from UCLA, the institutions represented on the Council include
the International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House,
the Library of Congress, the Museum of Modern Art, the National
Center for Film and Video Preservation at the AFI, and the UCLA
Film and Television Archive. The Foundation will be administered by Co-Executive Directors
Raffaele Donato, Martin Scrosese's Archivist, and CAA Agent Jay
Moloney. Serving as Secretariat to the Foundation will be the
National Center for Film and Video Preservation at the AFI, playing
a coordinating role with the broader archival field. The Foundation has already established a number of projects it
will pursue. The first of these is to encourage the creation of
a Studio Preservation Fund totally at least $30 million for restoration
projects to be undertaken jointly by the studios and the archives.
The Foundation has also announced an initiative on behalf of the
preservation of independent films to be spearheaded by board member
Robert Redford. A third initiative, chaired by Archivists Advisory
Council member Paul Spehr, will deal with guidelines for the preservation
of current production. Fifty percent of all the films made in the United States before
1950 have already been lost, and much more remains endangered.
Says Foundation Board member Steven Spielberg, "Our hope is that
the partnership of the archives and the studios will ensure that
our film heritage is something that we can pass on to our children."
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©1999, The Film Foundation