Janet Yang Re-Elected President of Motion Picture Academy (Updated)

UPDATE (Aug. 8): One week after being re-elected president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, Janet Yang was named one of nine newly-elected 2024-25 Academy Foundation board members. The Academy Foundation board comprises nine trustees who are members of the Academy board of governors.

Elected to board officer positions are:

  • Howard Berger (makeup artists and hairstylists branch), president
  • Brooke Breton (visual effects branch), vp
  • Donna Gigliotti (executives branch), treasurer
  • Kim Taylor-Coleman (casting directors branch), vp
  • Marlon West (animation branch), secretary

Additional board members include:

  • Jason Reitman (directors branch)
  • Stephen Rivkin (film editors branch)
  • Dana Stevens (writers branch)
  • Janet Yang (producers branch)

The Academy Foundation oversees all educational, preservation and cultural activities of the Academy, including the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, the Academy’s Margaret Herrick Library, the Academy Film Archive, the Academy Collection and the Academy’s talent development programs.

Academy Foundation board members and officers serve one-year terms. As representatives of the Foundation board, Berger, Gigliotti and Yang also serve on the Academy Museum board of trustees for one-year terms.

PREVIOUSLY (Aug. 1): Producer Janet Yang was re-elected president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences by the organization’s board of governors, the Academy announced on Thursday (Aug. 1).

Yang is beginning her third term as president and her sixth year as a governor-at-large, a position for which she was nominated by sitting Academy president David Rubin in 2019 and elected by the board of governors in 2022.

Related

Yang is the fourth woman to serve as president of the Academy. Oscar-winning actress Bette Davis was the first in 1941, though she resigned after just two months in the post. Oscar-nominated screenwriter Fay Kanin served from 1979-83; Film marketing and PR executive Cheryl Boone Isaacs served from 2013-17.

A member of the Academy’s producers branch since 2002, Yang previously served on the board as vp and chair of the membership committee and, prior to that, the membership and governance committee.

Yang’s film producing credits include South Central, The Joy Luck Club, The People vs. Larry Flynt, Zero Effect, Savior, The Weight of Water, High Crimes and the Oscar-nominated animated feature Over the Moon. She won a Primetime Emmy in 1995 for the HBO film Indictment: The McMartin Trial, which was voted outstanding made for television movie.

In other news, film composer Lesley Barber, one of three members of the board of governors representing the music branch, was elected to an officer position for the first time. She is a vp and chair of the membership committee.

Barber is best known for her score for Kenneth Lonergan’s Oscar-winning Manchester by the Sea. Her other credits include Late NightMansfield ParkIrreplaceable YouHow to Change the World and You Can Count on Me.

Here is a list of the other four people who were elected to officer positions by the board:

  •     DeVon Franklin, vp (chair, equity and inclusion committee)
  •     Donna Gigliotti, vp/treasurer (chair, finance committee)
  •     Lynette Howell Taylor, vp (chair, awards committee)
  • Howard A. Rodman, vp/secretary (chair, governance committee)

Franklin, Howell Taylor and Rodman were re-elected as officers. Gigliotti previously served as an officer. 

“I am thrilled to have Janet return as Academy president for a third term to continue our great work of the past two years,” Academy CEO Bill Kramer said in a statement. “I also am so pleased to welcome this year’s incredible slate of dedicated board officers.”

The 55-member board of governors includes three members who represent the music branch: Barber, Charles Fox (“I Got a Name,” “Ready to Take a Chance Again”) and Richard Gibbs (Say Anything, Dr. Dolittle).

Board members may serve up to two three-year terms (consecutive or non-consecutive), followed by a two-year hiatus, after which eligibility renews for up to two additional three-year terms for a lifetime maximum of 12 years.  Officers serve one-year terms, with a maximum of four consecutive years in any one office.

For a complete listing of the Academy’s 2024-25 board of governors, click here.

Paul Grein

Billboard