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Hollywood Foreign Press Association Awards $2Million To CalState Northridge

Hollywood Foreign Press Calstate northridge donationThe Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA) has awarded California State University, Northridge $2 million to support students and enhance technology in the school’s acclaimed Department of Cinema and Television Arts.

A portion of the grant will go toward creating endowed scholarships to support underrepresented film and television students in the industry. Scholarship recipients will be declared Hollywood Foreign Press Association Scholars and be mentored by department faculty and industry professionals.

HFPA President Lorenzo Soria expressed his enthusiasm and hopes for what the grant bestowed upon CSUN will bring.

“The Hollywood Foreign Press Association is thrilled to continue its relationship with CSUN, which now spans two decades and has provided invaluable opportunities for deserving students to hone their craft,” Soria said. “We believe that by empowering the filmmakers of tomorrow, we can ensure that our industry is left in good hands. We hope that these gifts will open doors that otherwise wouldn’t have been there in the first place.”

“Southern California’s entertainment industry is known worldwide for creative storytelling with universal appeal,” CSUN President Dianne F. Harrison said. “The Hollywood Foreign Press Association exposes global audiences to new voices and their generous gift to CSUN greatly expands opportunities for even more talented filmmakers to find their voice.”

Cinema and television arts professor Nate Thomas, who heads CSUN’s film production program, hailed HFPA’s generosity.

“The new $2 million from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association will allow a diverse group of underrepresented students to study with us and transition into the tough industries that make up the cinematic arts,” Thomas said. “The students selected to become HFPA Scholars will come from mostly working-class backgrounds. This gift will literally make the difference between mere artistic aspiration and actual fulfillment of dreams. The Hollywood Foreign Press Association is at the forefront of helping to attain needed positive change in the entertainment industry, and ensuring that tomorrow’s filmmakers reflect the wide diversity that their audiences consist of.”

Noting that the HFPA’s gift includes money for purchase and maintenance of new film and television equipment, Thomas said the gift “will ensure that the many students that we serve will cultivate their art and craft on state-of-the-art equipment, since no tools change as quickly as the tools of the film arts.”

To date, the HFPA has committed more than $23.9 million in grants, handed out over 1,000 scholarships and helped restore 90 films. Last summer, the HFPA continued their long-time tradition by awarding more than $2 million in grants at their annual Grants Banquet. The donations benefit a wide range of projects, including higher education, training and mentoring, and the promotion of cultural exchange through film.

CSUN’s relationship with the association dates back to 1996, with an initial gift of $500. Prior to this announcement, the association over the years has nearly given CSUN a total of $1 million to support student film projects and keep CSUN’s film program current with the latest technology. Students edit in the Hollywood Foreign Press Association Senior Film Edit Suite on campus, and work on sound design in a state-of-the-art sound mix facility made possible by a grant from the association.

“Everybody in this industry talks about diversity, but it remains mostly talk,” Thomas said. “The HFPA is willing to use its money to make change, and to train the next generation of filmmakers and industry practitioners who come from and reflect the lives of their audiences.”

Jon Stahl, chair of CSUN’s Department of Cinema and Television Arts, thanked the HFPA for its “remarkable level of generosity and support, and for the faith in us and our mission that this grant represents.”

“The HFPA grant will allow us to enhance and upgrade our production and post-production facilities, bringing them to a level commensurate with the excellence of our program,” he continued. “Additionally, this wonderful grant will allow us to provide direct scholarship support to several of our most deserving students, many of whom are the first in their families to attend a university.”

Dan Hosken, interim dean of CSUN’s Mike Curb College of Arts, Media, and Communication, which houses the Department of Cinema and Television Arts, agreed.

“We are grateful to the Hollywood Foreign Press Association for their generous support of our students and our programs,” he said. “This gift will provide much-needed scholarship support for our students and provide them with state-of-the-art facilities to go along with our exceptional faculty. Combined with our close proximity to the heart of the entertainment industry, this gift will allow us to offer an unparalleled educational experience in the cinema and television arts.”

CSUN’s Department of Cinema and Television Arts has an international reputation for producing dedicated and talented entertainment industry professionals who recognize the value of hard work as they learn and continue to perfect their crafts. The department currently enrolls nearly 1,700 undergraduate students and 30 students in its graduate screenwriting program. Its alumni work in all aspects of entertainment media, from writing, producing and directing to manning cameras and having the final say in what project is made. In 2014, The Hollywood Reporter listed CSUN as one of the top film schools in the U.S., and this year, Variety listed CSUN as one of the top 30 film programs in the U.S. and one of the top 40 film programs internationally.

Serving more than 40,000 students each year, CSUN is one of the nation’s largest single-campus universities in the U.S. and is the third largest in California. CSUN ranks 10th in the country in awarding bachelor’s degrees to underrepresented minority students, fifth nationally in awarding master’s degrees to Hispanic students, and it enrolls the largest number of deaf and hard-of-hearing students of any U.S. state university.

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