LOS ANGELES (AFP) – Los Angeles' long-awaited museum dedicated to the magic of movies will open this year and feature tributes to late actor Kirk Douglas.

The idea for an Academy Museum of Motion Pictures was first floated nearly a century ago, and its current futuristic incarnation has been beset by delays.

On the eve of the Academy's flagship event – the Oscars – a nearly completed site was opened to journalists on Friday (Feb 7), showcasing a gleaming sphere made of glass, steel and concrete containing a state-of-the-art 1,000-seat theatre.

The orb-like structure – designed by Italian architect Renzo Piano "as if it were floating" to symbolise "the fantasy and magic of the movies" – is connected by sky bridges to a converted department store housing the main galleries.

Among the 13 million photographs, scripts, costumes, props and more in the Academy's collections are screen legend Judy Garland's ruby slippers from Wizard Of Oz (1939), late actor Bela Lugosi's cape from 1931's Dracula – and items related to Douglas.

"We're close with the Douglas family. We have artefacts related to Kirk, his story will be in the museum," director Bill Kramer said.

The items "will be weaved throughout the stories of cinema" in the galleries.

Douglas, one of the last superstars of Hollywood's golden age of cinema and renowned for his intense, muscular performances in Paths Of Glory (1957) and Spartacus (1960), died on Wednesday aged 103.

Kramer added: "When people pass, this is a home to help tell their stories, and we are committed to doing that."

Construction is "substantially complete" with galleries and exhibitions starting to be installed.

The opening show will be the first-ever US retrospective of Studio Ghibli work from Japan's Hayao Miyazaki, whose animation masterpieces include the Oscar-winning Spirited Away (2001).

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