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How Paul Newman’s Rolex Daytona watch ended up in the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures – and what Silent Sunday Nights host Jacqueline Stewart is planning for the new LA attraction

The ‘Paul Newman Rolex’ which the actor wore for decades, including the 1983 Academy Awards when he was nominated for Best Actor for The Verdict, is on display at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles. Photos: Handout
The ‘Paul Newman Rolex’ which the actor wore for decades, including the 1983 Academy Awards when he was nominated for Best Actor for The Verdict, is on display at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles. Photos: Handout

  • The iconic ‘Paul Newman Rolex’, famously worn by The Sting star to the 1983 Oscars, is now on display at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles
  • Curator and programmer Jacqueline Stewart talks about the iconic piece and why else you should visit the new museum celebrating Hollywood’s golden age

The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures opened in Los Angeles on September 30. Dedicated to exploring the art and science of films and film-making, the museum offers educational and family-friendly programmes, screenings and has more than 13 million objects from movies dating back to the 1920s – items such as Dorothy’s ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz and the only surviving shark mould from the movie Jaws. This is the first large-scale museum of its kind in the US.

Impression of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles, United States. Photo: Academy Museum Foundation
Impression of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles, United States. Photo: Academy Museum Foundation

Scholar, programmer, educator, author, film archivist and host of Silent Sunday Nights on Turner Classic Movies, Jacqueline Stewart has now added chief artistic and programming officer at the museum to her list of credits. We asked her what a typical day looked like in the run-up to opening.

“We were hard at work putting the finishing touches on the Academy Museum. The objects were being installed, lighting focused, video montages completed and loaded. We mapped out how visitors will flow through the galleries, and how viewers will get tickets and be seated in our beautiful theatres,” says Stewart.

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“I was working with our curatorial, education, film programming and publications teams on the next round of exhibitions, workshops, screenings and books. In museum work, we are always operating in multiple time frames – exploring the past, engaging with visitors now, laying the groundwork for future installations and collaborations.”

Jacqueline Stewart joined the museum in January 2021. Photo: Academy Museum of Motion Pictures
Jacqueline Stewart joined the museum in January 2021. Photo: Academy Museum of Motion Pictures

Stewart started her role at the museum in January 2021 during the pandemic. “Most of my meetings over the first eight months were remote. I met all of my colleagues on screen! Because of the intensity of opening a new museum, the meetings have been extremely productive and solutions-driven even though they were virtual,” she says.

“As we gradually made our way back into the museum building, I’m finding there is a trade-off between the wonderful aspects of in-person interaction – like casual conversations and reading body language – and the hyper-focused energy that scheduled virtual meetings can bring to a work environment.”

Jacqueline Stewart has multiple roles to juggle. Photo: @ProfJStewart/Twitter
Jacqueline Stewart has multiple roles to juggle. Photo: @ProfJStewart/Twitter

Timing is critical when it comes to juggling her roles. “I have a daily meeting to manage my schedule, making and shifting meetings, juggling the relative urgency of multiple projects. Sometimes it does feel like there are not enough hours in the day or days in the week. That’s where having a strong ability to set priorities, sometimes on the fly, becomes so key. It does become a matter of, do I spend the next 30 minutes on this or that?”

For a healthy work/life balance, Stewart starts the day on a calm note. “I start every day early with meditation and yoga. Having those rituals helps me to feel the satisfaction that I have done something for myself each day. And they calm my nervous system for the many unexpected challenges that work brings,” says Stewart.