Wow, HUGE question. Far too much for me to go into in detail, but I'll try to think of some resources.
The director interfaces with all departments. Meetings are often held in pre-production on a regular basis where the direction checks out the costume choices, casts the major roles and usually the minor ones (but sometimes trusts the casting director for that), storyboards the movie with the cinematographer, checks out locations (either in person for major locations or via photographs & video for minor ones with the location manager), looks at set designs & prop choices (for major props). Usually most of this is located in a studio somewhere, usually with the production offices attached.
Crews haul huge amounts of stuff around in production trucks for location work. These are sometimes little panel vans but often 18 wheelers with all sorts of cables, set pieces, whole trucks full of costumes, dressing rooms, bathrooms, catering trucks, offices (basically tricked out RVs) ... it's simply huge the amount of stuff hauled to remote locations (or even just down the street). A feature film can have 20 or more vehicles associated with it, with each major department with a truck of their own plus all the associated support vehicles.
For the Academy Awards, members are mailed nomination ballots. They choose from the list of eligible candidates (the studios or producers send in a list of those people that they think should win an award ... basically everyone.) Often the studio will arrange for free screenings for academy members, especially if the movie came out a while ago to remind them of the great costumes or performances.
Members vote in their field - actors vote for acting, directors vote for directing, make up artists vote for make up. Everyone votes for best picture.
The member fills out the nomination form, they're tallied by whatever that accounting company is these days, then they announce the nominees, lots of ads are taken out and more screenings. Another round of voting. Ceremony.
I don't know much about attending the Oscars, but in essence any who is just attending goes and gets screened and checked off a list when they enter. The list is pretty small, as they moved to the Kodak theater a few years ago which holds about 1,500 fewer people than the old Shrine space. So it's a hard ticket to get.
If you're presenting or nominated there's a rehearsal that they're encouraged to attend (you can probably tell which presenters didn't go to the rehearsal). They get detailed instructions on where to enter, where to go, where to stand, how to exit etc. There are handlers assigned to each (someone will go out into the audience and fetch a presenter if they're not backstage on time, etc.) and the stage manager controls the huge puppet show.
Even with all that managing, things still happen. People go off script and insert political messages, things don't always happen as planned, but hey, that's live TV for you.
Assistant Directors have a huge role on a film. Yes, ADs often do lots of work that a director might do himself. Some ADs actually direct portions of the film. Directors are not allowed to direct extras, so the AD does the directing (and is still not allowed to give too many notes or else the extra is considered a featured actor and must be paid accordingly). ADs also do "second unit" work, which are scenes where another crew goes off an shoots stuff. It's usually establishing shots or maybe a character getting into his car and driving off ... leaving the house, maybe insert shots where someone's turning the pages of a book.
Some directors are extremely dependent on their ADs (to the point that it may be considered like a marriage), so your plot should have no problem at all with that.
NaNoWriMo Staff
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