Orson Welles Trove to Academy Collection

Invitation to Citizen Kane wrap party, 1940. Academy Collection, image courtesy of the Margaret Herrick Library. James Pepper Collection on Orson Welles
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has announced numerous additions to its 52-million-item collection. Among them is Santa Barbara bookseller James Pepper's gift of his collection of Orson Welles material, assembled over half a century. Shown is an invitation to Citizen Kane's wrap party, addressed to Mercury Theater actor Paul Stewart. The Pepper collection includes photographs, press clippings, and books; two hand-annotated scripts to Touch of Evil; correspondence relating to The Magnificent Ambersons, Othello, and The Other Side of the Wind; a grievance-filled 11-page letter (1977) to producer Medhi Bousherhri, lamenting the trials of a 62-year-old Hollywood wunderkind and outcast.

Also new to the Academy collection are a Lumière Model A film projector, about 1897; James Cagney's tap shoes from Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942); the bicycle from Pee Wee's Big Adventure (1985, a gift of Paul Reubens).

Bicycle from Pee Wee's Big Adventure (1985).  (c) Academy Museum Foundation, gift of Paul Reubens. Photo: Joshua White/JWPictures

Comments

Anonymous said…
The AMPAS museum opening in 2021, decades after the movie industry in LA started in the early 1900s, makes me think of LACMA opening in 1965. Or well after various people didn't want their artworks stowed away in Exposition Park with dinosaur bones and dioramas.

Now in 2026, a well-known movie producer is planning to open his art museum in Exposition Park while LACMA is transitioning from a tract-house campus to a Public-Storage campus.

As the saying goes, God does have a sense of humor.

metmuseum .org: In 1921 [Lousie and Walter] Arensbergs moved to Hollywood. While far from the art world’s epicenter in New York, the couple continued to be actively involved by lending to exhibitions and acquiring artwork....Their collection...grew to include one of the largest holdings of Cubist art at that time.... The couple presented the collection to the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1950.
Anonymous said…
Paul Reubens graduated from CalArts (the theater program). Being around visual artists must have informed the production design of his work (e.g., Pee-wee's Playhouse). Today, one can find traces of Pee-wee's aesthetic in the works of various artists. See, for example, Tierra Whack's video "Shower Song."

--- J. Garcin.