Martin Scorsese was honored with the David O. Selznick Award as part of the 35th Annual Producers Guild Awards ceremony at the Ray Dolby Theater in Los Angeles on Sunday.
The 81-year-old film icon joined a vaunted group of colleagues who have received the honors in the past, which the Producers Guild says it aims to recognize “a producer or production team for extraordinary work on films.”
Previous honorees include Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, Kathleen Kennedy, Clint Eastwood, Jerry Bruckheimer and Tom Cruise.
The New York City native mentioned names from Hollywood lore, as he recalled the podium in the room when he first accepted a guild award for his student film It’s Not Just You, Murray! at the age of 22 in 1965.
‘On stage, Alfred Hitchcock, James Stewart, Jack Benny, Samuel Goldwyn, Jack Warner and Norman Lear, Lew Wasserman, Julie Stein, Cary Grant, Eva Marie Saint, Janet Leigh, Dick Van Dyke, Elke Sommer and David O. Selznick ” Scorsese said, according to Deadline.
Martin Scorsese, 81, was honored with the David O. Selznick Award as part of the 35th Annual Producers Guild Awards ceremony at the Ray Dolby Theater in Los Angeles on Sunday.
Previous honorees include Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, Kathleen Kennedy, Clint Eastwood, Jerry Bruckheimer and Tom Cruise.
The Oscar-winning director said the show took place at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on March 8, 1965, when it was called the Milestone Awards Dinner, and was in its 13th year.
‘At the end of the stand I was; I was there until the end,” the director of classics such as Goodfellas, Cape Fear, Casino, Raging Bull and The Departed told the audience. ‘I was receiving the Jesse L. Laskey intercollegiate award for a film I made at New York University, when I was 22 years old.
‘I’m up here with all these people. Cary Grant was very kind to me. Many of the others were friendly too. When Elke Summer gave me the award she didn’t know what to do. I look over my right shoulder and Cary Grant says “Kiss her!” So I did it.
Scorsese added: ‘I must tell you that the Milestone Award that night was presented to Alfred Hitchcock, who stood up to speak after a 34-minute clip. It was a shorter evening, but it lasted 34 minutes!’
Scorsese, nominated for an Oscar for Best Director for his last film, Killers of the Flower Moon, recalled the changing cinematic landscape of that time.
“The word past, it speaks of a bygone era as they used to say, it was really the 13th edition of this event,” Scorsese said. ‘It was another world. Over the hill are Bonnie and Clyde, Easy Rider and Wild Bunch just around the corner.
“So, in a way, we were the ones making the movies. The history in that room, Warner, Goldwyn, Selznick, those incredible actors.
Scorsese spoke about the award’s namesake, saying he was four years old when his beloved late mother Catherine took him to the theater to see the 1946 Western romance Duel in the Sun: “It was condemned by the Catholic church and my mother wanted to see it. She said The boy likes Western movies, I’ll take him.
The filmmaker posed with his Killers of the Flower Moon collaborator Lily Gladstone.
Scorsese is nominated for an Oscar for best direction for Killers of the Flower Moon, while Gladstone is nominated for best performance by an actress in a leading role.
Scorsese posed with fellow Oscar-winning filmmaker Guillermo del Toro at the event
The director of classics such as Goodfellas, Cape Fear, Casino and The Departed was also photographed with PGA presidents Donald De Line and Stephanie Allain.
And he added: ‘It’s the first movie I remember seeing by title. So, for me, the first impact of classic Hollywood cinema begins there.
‘Color carvings, movement, landscapes, dazzling scenes like the dancing in the cantina, the approaching horsemen lined up against the railway, the mysticism of the film mixed with the profane. It takes place on a gigantic screen and stars gigantic actors.
He recalled a moment of dialogue in the film that had a subsequent impact on him decades later.
“At one point Lionel Barrymore says, ‘There’s a strange glow in the sky tonight,'” Scorsese said. ‘Those figures of him in the stroller are silhouetted against a red sky.
“The year was 1946 and I was sure that those figures would end up in my film The Killers of the Flower Moon, the sequence of the meadow on fire at night. He stayed with me all those years.
Scorsese concluded by saying, “Tonight I feel like it’s really extraordinary, like I’m coming full circle.” I was 22 when Cary Grant told me to kiss Ekle Sommer; I’m 81 now and I’m glad I kissed her.