Pickford's career continued to thrive with the advent of sound, and her Oscar was for her first talkie. But behind the scenes, she was just getting started.
Photos on the wall show her among the group that founded the United Artists studios, with the goal of giving artists more of a say in the production of their movies.
She was also in the group that founded the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. She served on the Beverly Hills Chamber of Commerce and founded WAMPUS (Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers) to promote up-and-coming actresses such as Ginger Rogers and Joan Crawford. And one of the iPad film clips shows her breaking ground for the Motion Picture Country Home for retired actors.
World War II saw her making propaganda films for the war effort, and joining Dressler and other luminaries on tours to sell war bonds.
A real Moviola film-editing machine is on loan from the Motion Picture Editors Guild of Los Angeles. This piece of machinery had a cameo role in a scene from Leonardo diCaprio's 2004 film The Aviator, Miller said. And the lady with her back to the camera editing the film in that scene did the actual film editing for Lawrence of Arabia.
“It's more than just these three,” Wright said of Pickford, Dressler and Shearer.
“We really want to honour all the Canadian women in the industry. It's big task – there are so many.”
This is where the History of Hollywood time line (with iPads) comes in, which is where the flow of the museum takes you to from either the Dressler or Pickford side.
There was a time, in the '20s and '30s, where the top-grossing and best-paid actors were female. It was a world where women had a fair opportunity to succeed in the industry, both behind and in front of the camera, and to raise the most important social issues of the day.
The exhibit shows a clear decline in the status of women in the film industry, much of it due to the Hays Code that governed (some might say censored) content.
“You couldn't show murder. You couldn't show sex scenes. You couldn't even show the idea of a woman giving birth,” Wright said.
The result sharply limited what women's dialogue could be about, virtually reducing it mostly to fashion and love interests.
By 1968, it was being loosely enforced, if at all, and was replaced by the earliest version of the motion-picture rating code we know today.
There were other influences, of course, from the war to Netflix, and you can learn more about these from the iPads – as well as more about Canada's other amazing women in film. Wright refers to them as nine early women and nine Oscar winners.
Some of them won Oscars as teenagers – Deanna Durbin's miniature-scale Juvenile Oscar given essentially for her youth and enthusiasm for the industry (as opposed to a film) and Anna Paquin's 2010 Oscar for a real dramatic role in The Piano.