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Film institute honours longtime chief
LOS ANGELES—The woman who has
overseen more than two dozen career-achievement awards given by the
American Film Institute was honoured Thursday for her own life’s work.
Jean Picker Firstenberg, who is retiring after 27 years as the group’s
chief executive officer, was given a life-achievement award during a
luncheon marking the institute’s 40th anniversary.
Kirk Douglas, who received the film institute’s life-achievement award
in 1991, presented the award. During Firstenberg’s tenure, the institute
helped solidify American cinema’s dominance worldwide, Douglas said.
“Jean is very aware that Hollywood films are not just a national
treasure but a global treasure,” Douglas said. Firstenberg took charge
of the institute in 1980, succeeding George Stevens Jr. as the second
person to head the institute that promotes moviemaking, film education
and preservation. “First of all, I want to say thank you for inviting me
to be a part of AFI, and secondly, for allowing me to stay so long,”
Firstenberg said.
Among the ventures developed under Firstenberg were the institute’s
annual top-100 lists ranking such achievements as the best American
films, comedies, love stories and heroes and villains. She also presided
over the group’s transition from an outfit funded by government grants
to a non-profit organization and oversaw the group’s directing workshop
for women, said Howard Stringer, Sony Corp. chairman and head of the
institute’s board of trustees. Firstenberg said the institute’s mission
was best summed up by something a great American filmmaker said at one
of the institute’s past events. “Orson Welles said it best,” Firstenberg
said. “`To the movies. To good movies of every possible kind.’”—Agencies
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