The
University of Southern CaliforniaSchool of Cinematic Arts (SCA) houses seven academic divisions: Film & Television Production; Cinema & Media Studies; John C. Hench Division of Animation + Digital Arts; John Wells Division of Writing for Screen & Television; Interactive Media & Games; Media Arts + Practice; Peter Stark Producing Program.
The USC School of Cinematic Arts is led by dean Elizabeth Monk Daley, who holds the Steven J. Ross/Time Warner Chair and is the longest-serving dean at the
University of Southern California, having led the cinema school since 1991.
Since opening, the USC School of Cinematic Arts has been ranked highly as one of the best film schools in the
United States.[4] The USC School of Cinematic Arts currently has a 3% acceptance rate. [5]
History
The George Lucas Instructional Building (top) was demolished in 2009 after the opening of the new Cinematic Arts Complex (bottom).
When
Douglas Fairbanks became the first president of the nascent Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1927, one of his recommendations was that the academy should have a “training school”. As Fairbanks and his enablers reasoned that training in the cinematic arts should be seen as a legitimate academic discipline at major universities, given the same degree considerations as fields like medicine and law. Although cinema studies programs are now widely entrenched in academia, back then it was a novel idea and many universities turned Fairbanks down. But he found tepid acceptance at the University of Southern California that agreed to allow one class, called “Introduction to Photoplay” that debuted in 1929, the same year as the Academy Awards. Determined to make it a success, Fairbanks brought in the biggest industry names of the era to lecture, including
Douglas Fairbanks,
Mary Pickford,
D. W. Griffith,
Charlie Chaplin,
William C. DeMille,
Ernst Lubitsch,
Irving Thalberg, and
Darryl Zanuck.[6] From that one class grew a Department of Cinematography (1932) in the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, renamed the Department of Cinema (1940), which led to the establishment of the USC School of Cinema-Television (1983), which was renamed the USC School of Cinematic Arts (2006).[7]
.
On September 19, 2006, USC announced that alumnus
George Lucas had donated US$175 million to expand the film school with a new 137,000-square-foot (12,700 m2) facility. This represented the largest single donation to USC and the largest to any film school in the world.[8] His previous donations resulted in the naming of two buildings in the school's previous complex, opened in 1984, after him and his then-wife
Marcia, though Lucas was not fond of the
Spanish Colonial Revival architecture used in those buildings. An architectural hobbyist, Lucas laid out the original designs for the project, inspired by the
Mediterranean Revival Style that was used in older campus buildings as well as the Los Angeles area. The project also received another $50 million in contributions from
Warner Bros.,
20th Century Fox and
The Walt Disney Company.[1]
The USC School of Cinematic Arts announced it would remove an exhibit devoted to actor and former USC student
John Wayne, after months of insistence from a small number of students denouncing the Hollywood star’s views and the portrayal of
indigenous Americans in his films. The exhibit has been relocated to the Cinematic Arts library which has many collections for the study of figures whose lives and works are part of society's shared history. These materials are preserved for posterity and made accessible for research and scholarship as will the materials in the Wayne Collection.[10]
The current Chair is Gail Katz, holder of the Mary Pickford Endowed Chair; Vice-Chair is Susan Arnold.
Cinema & Media Studies
The Division of Cinema & Media Studies (CaMS) is the central hub for film theory at the USC School of Cinematic Arts. The current Chair is Priya Jaikumar. Notable faculty members of the Cinema and Media Studies department include
Todd Boyd and
Drew Casper. Prior to his 2019 retirement, Casper was the 3rd-highest paid professor in the
University of Southern California's history.
John C. Hench Division of Animation + Digital Arts
The John C. Hench Division of Animation + Digital Arts teaches courses in animation and digital arts. These include classic character animation, 2-D and 3-D storytelling, performance capture, visual effects, motion graphics, stop-motion, experimental filmmaking, installations and multimedia, documentary animation, and visualizing scientific research. The current Chair is
Teresa Cheng, who holds the John C. Hench Endowed Division Chair.
Interactive Media & Games Division
The Interactive Media & Games Division focus is on video games. USC has been a pioneer in teaching the foundations of games and interactive media while also moving the field forward with innovative research concepts. Since the start of its rating system in 2009, The Princeton Review has consistently ranked USC as the top school for game design in North America. The Chair at the moment is Danny Bilson.
Media Arts + Practice
The Media Arts + Practice Division (MA+P) creates and analyzes media for fields as diverse as business, medicine, education, architecture, law, urban planning, filmmaking. The current co-chairs are
Holly Willis and
Elizabeth Ramsey.
John Wells Division of Writing for Screen & Television
The USC School of Cinematic Arts offers Bachelor of Fine Arts and Master of Fine Arts degrees in Writing for Screen and Television for students who seek professional preparation for a career in screen and television writing. The programs emphasizes small, workshop-style classes. Students attend a variety of guest speaker presentations, take industry internships, are provided with mentors and are taught by professors who are actively working in the entertainment industry. Each fall, 30 undergraduate and 32 graduate writing students are selected to begin the program. The current Chair is
David Isaacs.
Peter Stark Producing Program
The Peter Stark Producing Program is a two-year (four semester) full-time graduate program. Approximately 24 Peter Stark Program students are enrolled each fall. The curriculum is designed to prepare a select group of students for careers as producers and executives of film, television, and new media. The current Chair is
Edward Saxon.
Faculty
The School of Cinematic Arts also has an active Board of Councilors who help guide the future direction of the School and work with the Dean to ensure the School is properly resourced.
Facilities
Donations from film and game industry companies, friends, and alumni have enabled the school to build the following facilities:[11]
School of Cinematic Arts Complex, completed in 2010, which includes:
Eileen Norris Cinema Theatre Complex, featuring a 365-seat theatre that also serves as a classroom with USC faculty member and
Academy Award winner
Tomlinson Holman's
THX audiovisual reproduction standard used in film venues worldwide. The
Frank Sinatra Hall, dedicated in 2002, houses a public exhibit and collection of extensive memorabilia commemorating Sinatra's life and contributions to American popular culture.
At the center of the new television complex is a statue of founder
Douglas Fairbanks. He is seen holding a fencing foil in one hand and a script in the other to reflect his strong ties with the
USC Fencing Club.
Distinctions
Since 1973, at least one alumnus of SCA has been nominated for an
Academy Award annually, totaling 256 nominations and 78 wins.[14]
Since 1973, at least one SCA alumnus or alumna has been nominated for the
Emmy Award annually, totaling 473 nominations and 119 wins.[14]
The top 17 grossing films of all time have had an SCA graduate in a key creative position.[14]
The Princeton Review has ranked the Interactive Media and Games Division's video game design program best in North America multiple years in a row.
Both The Hollywood Reporter and USA Today have ranked SCA the number one film program in the world, with its unmatched facilities, proximity to Hollywood, and numerous industry connections being the primary rationale.
The current acceptance rate for the USC School of Cinematic Arts is 3%.[15]
Awards for USC Cinema short films
In 1956, producer Wilber T. Blume, a USC Cinema instructor at the time, received an Academy Award for best live action short film for a film he created entitled The Face of Lincoln. Blume also received an Academy Award nomination that year for documentary short.[16]
In 1973,
Robert Zemeckis won a Special Jury Award at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences' second annual Student Film Awards presentation for A Field of Honor.
In 2006, director, co-writer, and producer
Ari Sandel received an Academy Award for best live action short film ("
West Bank Story") made as a USC Cinema graduate school project.
^The New York Times reports the motto as meaning "Reality ends here", but a more direct translation of the Latin approximates as, "The border is the regions of things".
^
abcdeUSC Cinematic Arts(PDF), University of Southern California, School of Cinematic Arts, 2013, retrieved January 27, 2017