G-F1D83FRJTE
Pop Culture Trends

Every iconic venue the Oscars have called home

Hollywood’s glitziest and most glamorous evening wasn’t always the fish-bowl spectacle we know today. When the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences hosted its inaugural awards in 1929, the event was a private gathering for industry insiders, solely focused on honoring the art of filmmaking rather than entertaining the public who consumed it. However, as the Oscars grew in renown — thanks to live radio and TV broadcasting  — so too did the scale of its venues.

Over the years, more than a dozen locations have hosted the prestigious event, until the Dolby Theatre was purpose-built to become its permanent home in 2001. Ahead of the 97th Oscars on March 2, take a look at all the places that have set the stage for Hollywood’s biggest night.

The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, Los Angeles

An outdoor photo of the the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel in 1929.
The Denver Post via Getty Images

The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, which still stands today and often plays host to premieres and flashy Hollywood events, holds the honor of being the location of the very first Academy Awards (the nickname “Oscar” hadn’t been coined yet). The banquet was held in the hotel’s Blossom Ballroom and was open only to Academy members.

Douglas Fairbanks was the host, and the ceremony was held three months after the winners had been announced! At this ceremony, the Clara Bow-starring war drama, Wings, became the first ever Best Picture winner — but handing out the statues only took 15 minutes (a far cry from today’s marathons). —Maureen Lee Lenker

Ambassador Hotel, Los Angeles

A postcard of the Ambassador Hotel.

Nextrecord Archives/Getty Images


The Ambassador Hotel — demolished in 2005 and replaced by a school — was once a Hollywood hotspot and home to the famed Cocoanut Grove nightclub, where performers like Frank Sinatra and Judy Garland entertained. In 1930, the second Academy Awards ceremony took place there, and it was the first time the event was broadcast in a one-hour live special on an L.A. radio station.

From 1930 to 1943, six Oscar banquets were held at the Ambassador, alternating with the Biltmore Hotel. It was here that trailblazing Frances Marion became the first writer to win two awards, and that the Academy saw its first tie — between Wallace Beery and Fredric March for Best Actor — in 1932. The Ambassador was also where Gone With the Wind set records like Hattie McDaniel becoming the first Black Oscar winner, and secret sealed envelopes were introduced. —M.L.L

Biltmore Hotel, Los Angeles

Walt Disney speaking at the 14th annual Academy Awards at the Biltmore Hotel on Feb. 26, 1942.
CBS via Getty Images

The Biltmore Bowl — a ballroom complete with a stage — was the site of the Academy Awards eight times from 1931 to 1942. The hotel, still famed for its Art Deco architecture, has multiple ballrooms with ties to Oscar history.

The Crystal Ballroom was the site of a 1927 luncheon where the Academy was founded. It was also here that MGM art director Cedric Gibbons first sketched the design for the Oscar statuette on one of the hotel’s linen napkins. Luise Rainer made Oscar history at the Biltmore, becoming the first actor to win back-to-back Oscars (a feat repeated only one year later by Spencer Tracy). —M.L.L.

Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, Los Angeles

Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in L.A. on March 2, 1944.
Bettmann/Getty Images

Grauman’s Chinese Theatre — now known as TCL Chinese Theatre — is a Hollywood icon, home to countless movie premieres and the famed forecourt where stars have immortalized their hands and footprints in cement. But it also played home to the Oscars from 1944 to 1946.

The 1944 ceremony (the 16th Academy Awards) marked the first time the celebration was held in a large public venue, pivoting away from the original banquet format. Beloved classic Casablanca won Best Picture that same year. This was the first year the Oscars were covered by network radio, and also the beginning of the supporting actor and actress winners receiving full-size statuettes. It also marked the last time there were 10 Best Picture nominees until 2009. —M.L.L.

Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles

Loretta Young (right) accepts her Best Actress Oscar at the 20th annual Academy Awards at the Shrine Auditorium in L.A. on March 20, 1948.
AP/Shutterstock

The 1947 and 1948 Oscars took place in downtown Los Angeles at the Shrine Auditorium, a venue designed in the Moorish Revival style.

The 1948 Awards got a redux (and the Shrine — which is still standing — a retro makeover) in 2020 when Ryan Murphy recreated the ceremony for his Netflix series Hollywood. Though the ceremony didn’t need to be made any more groundbreaking, considering the impact of Best Picture winner Gentleman’s Agreement, which tackled anti-Semitism in new and unflinching ways. —M.L.L.

Marquis Theatre, Los Angeles

Presenters on stage during the 21st Academy Awards at the Maquis Theatre in L.A. on March 24, 1949.
Anonymous/AP/Shutterstock

For one year only, the Academy moved the ceremony to their own private theater on Melrose Avenue, the Marquis Theatre. The 21st Academy Awards were held there on March 24, 1949. It was a ceremony filled with firsts, including the first non-Hollywood-produced Best Picture winner (Laurence Olivier’s Hamlet, out of the U.K.) and the introduction of the Best Costume Design category. —M.L.L.

Pantages Theatre, Los Angeles

A presenter on stage during an Oscars ceremony at the Pantages Theatre.
Ed Clark/The LIFE Picture Collection via Getty Images

Beginning in 1950, the Oscars kicked off an 11-year run at what was then known as the RKO Pantages Theatre (it’s now called the Hollywood Pantages Theatre, or the Pantages). This Art Deco marvel, once part of the famous Pantages movie palace circuit, has since been converted for theatrical productions and hosts national tours of stage shows like Hamilton.

The first televised Oscars took place here in 1953 (with joint presentations from New York City) with Bob Hope — who hosted a record 19 times — presiding over the event. For their first time on TV, the Oscars came complete with an upset in the Best Picture category when Cecil B. DeMille’s The Greatest Show on Earth beat heavy favorite High Noon. In 1960, it was here that Ben-Hur set the record for most Oscar wins ever (11), which has been met twice but never broken.

NBC International Theatre, New York

Shirley Booth and Fredric March present on stage at the 25th annual Academy Awards at the NBC International Theatre in New York City on March 19, 1953.
NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images

In 1953, the Oscars offered their first-ever bicoastal broadcast, airing live on television (also a first-time occurrence) from both Los Angeles’ Pantages Theatre and New York’s NBC International Theatre in Columbus Circle.

Fredric March acted as emcee for the NYC proceedings, with many nominated Broadway actors going straight from their theaters to the broadcast since it didn’t begin until 10 p.m. E.T. The theater, which was owned by NBC, was torn down not long after this. —M.L.L.

NBC Century Theatre, New York

Audrey Hepburn accepts her Best Actress Oscar during the 26th annual Academy Awards at the NBC Century Theatre on March 25, 1954.
NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images

The Oscars remained a bicoastal affair from 1954 to 1957, and it was the NBC Century Theatre that served as the New York City hub for the broadcast. It was here that two of the biggest actresses of the 1950s accepted their Academy Awards.

In 1954, newcomer Audrey Hepburn won for her gamine role as royalty playing hooky in Roman Holiday, while the 1955 awards honored an entirely different type of performance, Method actress Eva Marie Saint’s hyperrealistic turn in On the Waterfront. —M.L.L.

Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, Santa Monica, Calif.

A view of the stage during an Oscars ceremony at the Civic Auditorium in Santa Monica, Calif., circa 1960s.
Porges/ullstein bild via Getty Images

The Academy Awards reached their furthest west destination beginning in 1961 when they moved to Santa Monica. The newly built Civic Auditorium played host to the Oscars until 1968. The Apartment became the last black-and-white film to win Best Picture for more than three decades here.

In 1966, the ceremony was broadcast in color for the first time from sunny Santa Monica. This was also the site of the infamous 1963 Oscar spat between Joan Crawford and Bette Davis where Crawford upstaged Davis in the midst of her What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? nomination (this moment and all that led up to it was also recreated by Ryan Murphy on Feud: Bette and Joan). The 1968 awards were postponed from April 8 to April 10 due to the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. —M.L.L.

Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, Los Angeles

Presenters and performers on stage during an Oscars ceremony at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in L.A.
Getty Images/Getty Images

Beginning in 1969, the Oscars found a new space at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, home to the LA Opera and one of the biggest stages in the world. The ceremony was held here every year through 1987, and then it alternated with the Shrine Auditorium for another dozen years from 1988 to 2001.

The 41st Academy Awards in 1961 were the first to be broadcast internationally. That year also marked Stanley Kubrick’s only Oscar win, for the visual effects of 2001: A Space Odyssey, and a rare tie (the only one in the Best Actress category) between Katharine Hepburn for The Lion in Winter and Barbra Streisand in Funny Girl. The 1999 ceremony was the final one to be held here, and it was at that Oscars where Shakespeare in Love famously upset Saving Private Ryan for Best Picture. —M.L.L.

Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles

An overhead shot of the Shrine Auditorium in L.A. for the 72nd annual Academy Awards on March 26, 2000.
HO/AMPAS

The Oscars returned to the Shrine for the 1988 and 1989 ceremonies, before alternating between here and the Dorothy Chandler until 2001.

During the Academy Awards’ second stint at the Shrine, it served as host for the 70th Oscars in 1998 where Titanic won an epic 11 Oscars, tying with Ben-Hur for most wins ever (which would be matched once more by The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King in 2003). Due to Titanic’s immense box office popularity, that ceremony became the highest-rated broadcast in Oscar history. —M.L.L.

Dolby Theatre, Los Angeles

Renée Zellweger accepts the Best Actress Oscar on stage during the 92nd annual Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre in L.A. on Feb. 9, 2020.

Richard Harbaugh – Handout/A.M.P.A.S. via Getty Images


The Dolby Theatre, formerly known as the Kodak, was designed specifically with the Oscar ceremony in mind and has played home to the Academy Awards since it opened in 2001.

Numerous memorable modern Oscar moments have occurred here — including The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King‘s record-tying 11 wins; the infamous envelope mix-up that led to La La Land being mistakenly named Best Picture before the record was corrected to honor Moonlight; and Will Smith slapping Chris Rock across the face just before winning Best Actor. —M.L.L.

Union Station, Los Angeles

A view of the red carpet at Union Station in L.A. on April 25, 2021.

Chris Pizzello/Penske Media via Getty


A train station might not be the first place you’d imagine hosting the Oscars, but the Art Deco/Mission Revivial style interiors created an unexpected yet perfect backdrop. From its outdoor terraces and fountains lining the red carpet to the cathedral-like windows and newly restored ceilings of the ticket lobby, the venue radiated the sort of timeless, old-Hollywood glamour you’d see in the Hollywood Roosevelt or Biltmore.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 93rd Academy Awards alternated between the Dolby and Union Station to maintain social distancing. It was at this ceremony that Nomadland helmer Chloé Zhao made history as the first woman of color — and only the second woman ever — to win Best Director, while the then-83-year-old Anthony Hopkins became the oldest nominee to win Best Actor (for The Father). —James Mercadante

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button