Jack Oakie and Victoria Horne Oakie Charitable Foundation Award

The Jack Oakie and Victoria Horne Oakie Charitable Foundation Award provides financial support for outstanding students participating in Syracuse University Dick Clark Los Angeles Program.

APPLICATION PROCESS 

Students are responsible for securing and viewing a FILM from the filmography found here. Students should write an essay, which includes the following:

Essays should be: Word documents, 900 and 1,000 words, double spaced, 12pt. Times New Roman, with one-inch margins. Submit to vpala@syr.edu by the date specified during the predeparture meeting.

These merit-based awards will be judged by a committee of Syracuse University professors. Essays will be evaluated according to the following criteria:

Eligibility requirements:

Awards (up to):

One $2,500 scholarship
One $1,500 scholarship
One $1,000 scholarship

Award is received via the awardees’ Syracuse University Bursar account. NOTE: The acceptance of this award may impact a student’s existing financial aid package. Students may contact their financial aid counselor in the Office of Financial Aid & Scholarship Programs at 315.443.1513 to determine if acceptance of this scholarship will have any impact on their account.

Please contact vpala@syr.edu with any questions.  

THE JACK OAKIE AND VICTORIA HORNE OAKIE CHARITABLE FOUNDATION

The Jack Oakie and Victoria Horne Oakie Charitable Foundation’s mission is to follow through with the late Jack Oakie’s wish, “Give the money to the kids,” by underwriting lectures on comedy and scholarships for deserving film and theater students at some of the most prestigious institutions in the country.

Both Jack Oakie and Victoria Horne Oakie were active participants in and during the famous Golden Age of Hollywood. Jack Oakie came to Hollywood in 1927. His career by that time already included vaudeville, Broadway musicals and appearances in New York films. In Hollywood, he made 87 pictures, mostly comedies or musical comedies, over which period he perfected his trademark comic triple-take. His career included such films as “Once in a Lifetime,” “Million Dollar Legs” and “It Happened Tomorrow.” Oakie received an Academy Award nomination in the supporting role category for his satirical portrait of a Mussolini-like head of state in 1940’s “The Great Dictator.” Victoria Horne Oakie was an American character-actress, appearing in 49 films (uncredited in 25 of these) during the 1940s and 1950s. Some of the films in which she appeared included "Blue Skies" (1946), "Forever Amber" (1947, uncredited), "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" (1947), "Abbott and Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff" (1949), and "Harvey" (1950). Jack Oakie died in 1978 and his wife, Victoria Horne, died in 2003.  Between them, they acted in more than 122 films over a 60-year period.  Their contributions to acting and comedy can now be passed on to a new generation with the help of their Foundation scholarships.