Oscar Producers with Live TV Experience, Host and All Categories on the Show
Bill Kramer talked about the Academy’s finances, inclusion standards and consideration of gender-neutral categories.

Kramer will leave town next week on trip that will take him to major fall film festivals — Venice, Telluride, Toronto and London — as part of effort to cater to increasingly international organization (“25 percent of our members are non-U.S.”) and support the return of festivals and the theatrical moviegoing.
But planning for the next Oscars ceremony, set for March 12, 2023, is already underway, having started earlier in the year than ever before.
Kramer says: “We’ve been talking to ABC [the Oscars’ longtime broadcast partner] from the minute I started about what the show is going to be, and there will be announcements, but we’ve had incredibly productive and engaged conversations with them.”
Citing the Bill Condon and Laurence Mark-produced Hugh Jackman-hosted 81st Oscars from 2009 as an “incredibly successful” outing, he emphasized, “The Oscars are a live television show.
It’s very important to us that we work with producers who have expertise in that area”–as opposed to director Steven Soderbergh or producer Will Packer. And he made clear that unlike three of the last four ceremonies, there will be an emcee for the 2023 the ceremony. “We definitely want a host,” he made clear, elaborating, “A host is very important to us, we are committed to having a host on the show this year and we are already looking at some key partners on that.”
Kramer also indicated his desire for all 23 Oscar categories to be restored to the live telecast a year after 8 of them were presented prior to the telecast and then edited into it to shorten the show’s runtime.
It was an act that angered many Academy members and ultimately did not keep the show from running 40 minutes long. “We want to see all disciplines equitably acknowledged on the show,” Kramer stated. “That is our goal. There are many ways to do that and we’re working that through with ABC right now.”
Meanwhile, Kramer, who made his name as a fundraiser and was instrumental in rallying support for the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, which he ran, revealed that the museum generated more than $40 million in revenue last year, prompting to create a new office of revenue and business development at the Academy.
“The Academy Awards and the contracts that surround the Oscar show used to bring in about 95 percent of our annual revenue,” he explained. “But because we opened the museum and created a very robust advancement department tasked with bringing in diversified streams of revenue through corporate sponsorships, foundation support, individual giving, board support, ticket sales, a retail store and a restaurant, all the contracts around the Academy Awards now bring in 70 percent of our income.”
Kramer indicated that he believes the Academy can help ABC grow the Oscars’ ratings and make the telecast more financially profitable.
Upping the Ratings
In terms of ratings, Kramer feels that the Academy should do more to promote Oscar contenders “in an equitable way on all of our social channels” because “that creates great lead-in to the Oscars. We want to create a lot of energy around our members who are working on first-run films, many will be nominees and then after nominations really create some energy and emotion and knowledge around our nominees. That is critical to getting people to tune in and remain interested. You’ve got to personalize this.”
Kramer said that one of the topics he plans to tackle at the upcoming all-member meeting is the Academy’s “inclusion standards,” which were announced in 2020, provoking backlash from some, and which are set to take effect next Oscar season.
Kramer said “we deeply believe in” the requirements, which, if not met, will keep a film from being eligible for the best picture Oscar. “We don’t want to legislate art. That’s not what this is about. We want filmmakers to continue to make the films they want to make. I’m very happy to announce that the best picture nominees from this past year all would have qualified under our inclusion standards.” He continued, “At the all-member meeting we’ll be talking more about that because that’s a big point of discussion for our members, and we want to be very clear that we don’t want this to be onerous or punitive; we want this to be collaborative.”
After this week’s announcement that the Spirit Awards have adopted gender-neutral acting categories, Kramer was asked if the Academy is considering a similar move. “We are conducting due diligence on that,” he said, “but there’s no plan right now to activate that.”