The annual Academy Awards ceremony will be held on March 10, with the various nominations scheduled to be announced on January 23.
Whatever one’s opinion might be regarding the annual broadcast, what is not in dispute is Jackson County’s role in making possible the prosperity of the country’s film industry from the 1920s through the 1960s.
Just as it had for meatpacking merchants in the later 19th century, Kansas City’s central location and its vast railroad network enabled its growth as a national distribution center for many of the leading film studios in the mid-20th century. Paramount, Disney, Warner Brothers, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and several other studios built and maintained warehousing and distribution centers across four square blocks between 17th and 19th streets in what is now known as Kansas City’s Crossroads District.
From these buildings film studio executives organized the storage and shipping of an unknown number of film canisters to and from theaters across the Midwest.
Just as important as the transporting of these films, meanwhile, was their timely promotion. In that role few Jackson County residents were more crucial than Landon Laird, appointed in 1924 as the Kansas City Star’s film critic.
This story first appeared on FlatlandKC, a digital news site operated by Kansas City Public Broadcasting. The Jackson County Historical Society appreciates its permission to reprint the article here.
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