and presented in 1921 to
Cosmopolitan Productions for the film
Humoresque (1920) In 1921,
Photoplay established what is considered the first significant annual movie award, the
Photoplay Magazine Medal of Honor. An actual medallion produced by
Tiffany & Co., it was voted on by the readers of the magazine and given to the producer of the year's best film, chosen with an emphasis on (according to Quirk) "the ideals and motives governing its production... the worth of its dramatic message." Though
Photoplay only gave the single award for best film, its intentions and standards were influential on the
Academy Awards founded later in the decade, and they overlap on
Best Picture choices to some extent, though increasingly in the 1930s
Photoplays choices reflected its primarily female readership. By 1939, the Medal of Honor had declined in importance, and the award was discontinued that year. From 1944 to 1968,
Photoplay awarded a Gold Medal for film of the year based on polling done by
George Gallup's Audience Research Inc. through the 1950s, and then voted on by the magazine's readers. It also awarded Most Popular Male Star and Most Popular Female Star based on actors' and actresses' popularity, not their performance. The awards were based on polling through the 1950s, and then on a vote by the readers, similar to the Gold Medal.
Medal of Honor winners: 1920–1939 • 1920:
Humoresque • 1921: ''
Tol'able David'' • 1922:
Robin Hood • 1927:
Seventh Heaven •
The Conquering Power •
The Old Nest •
The Affairs of Anatol •
Experience •
Doubling for Romeo •
The Golem In January 1923,
Photoplay also added the category Best Performances of the Month. The initial selections for this award were: ==Mergers and closure==