Usc School Of Cinema-television

The University of Southern California's School of Cinema-Television is the oldest film school in the United States, established in 1929 as a joint venture with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. The Schools founding faculties include Douglas Fairbanks, D.W. Griffith, William C. DeMille, Ernst Lubitsch, Irving Thalberg, and Darryl Zanuck. Notable professors include Drew Casper, the Alma and Alfred Hitchcock Professor of American Film, Tomlinson Holman, inventor of THX, and Mark Jonathan Harris, documentary filmmaker. The program is one of the most competitive specialty schools, accepting 150 out of roughly 14,000 undergraduate applicants each year. It is famous for turning down Steven Spielberg's application for undergraduate studies (ironically, he is now on the school's board of directors). Since 1973, not a year has passed without an alumnus being nominated for an Academy Award; and alumni have held key creative or production positions in 8 of the 10 highest grossing movies in history.

Areas of study

Famous alumni

See also: List of University of Southern California people

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
the journal
jesse crowell
lecithin
joe trippi
island (novel)
high tech
cronulla sharks
our dumb century
bernie mac
robert a. frosch
geauga lake
erode district
oslofjord
double ender
arnes
wormdigger
marine worm harvester
long billed corella
markeaton
jozef stefan institute
playa kalki
mz3
batting helmet
bighorn sheep
conor oberst
vermont expos
samuel morgan
fiji coups of 1987
yvonne fletcher
list of planetary nebulae
maria schneider (cartoonist)
monument
hypersurface
tombstone (film)
robert ettinger
prusik knot
taft family
fairey firefly
dice game
west middlesex
jrgen klinsmann
rabies (album)
end of the world (disambiguation)
durotriges