The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has invited India's music maestro AR Rahman and four other Oscar winners associated with the Academy award sweeper Slumdog Millionaire to join its roster of voting members.
Rahman has been invited for his music in Slumdog Millionaire and Elizabeth: The Golden Age, while the film's British Director Danny Boyle is also cited for Sunshine.
Besides Slumdog Millionaire, producer Christian Colson has been cited for The Descent, cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle for The Last King of Scotland and film editor Chris Dickens chosen for Shaun of the Dead.
They are among 134 artists and executives who have distinguished themselves by their contributions to theatrical motion pictures. Those who accept the invitation will be the only additions in 2009 to the Academy's roster of voting members.
"These filmmakers have, over the course of their careers, captured the imagination of audiences around the world," said Academy President Sid Ganis in an announcement from Beverly Hills, California.
"It's this kind of talent and creativity that make up the Academy, and I welcome each of them to our ranks."
The Academy's membership would have allowed a maximum of 166 new members in 2009, but as in the previous years, the several branchcommittees endorsed fewer candidates than were proposed to them.
Voting membership in the organisation has now held steady at just under 6,000 members since 2003.
New members will be welcomed into the Academy at an invitation-only reception at the Academy's Fairbanks Centre for Motion Picture Study in Beverly Hills in September.
Rahman has been invited for his music in Slumdog Millionaire and Elizabeth: The Golden Age, while the film's British Director Danny Boyle is also cited for Sunshine.
Besides Slumdog Millionaire, producer Christian Colson has been cited for The Descent, cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle for The Last King of Scotland and film editor Chris Dickens chosen for Shaun of the Dead.
They are among 134 artists and executives who have distinguished themselves by their contributions to theatrical motion pictures. Those who accept the invitation will be the only additions in 2009 to the Academy's roster of voting members.
"These filmmakers have, over the course of their careers, captured the imagination of audiences around the world," said Academy President Sid Ganis in an announcement from Beverly Hills, California.
"It's this kind of talent and creativity that make up the Academy, and I welcome each of them to our ranks."
The Academy's membership would have allowed a maximum of 166 new members in 2009, but as in the previous years, the several branchcommittees endorsed fewer candidates than were proposed to them.
Voting membership in the organisation has now held steady at just under 6,000 members since 2003.
New members will be welcomed into the Academy at an invitation-only reception at the Academy's Fairbanks Centre for Motion Picture Study in Beverly Hills in September.
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