LOS ANGELES -- Even though Lynn Stalmaster helped such actors as John Travolta, Christopher Reeve, Richard Dreyfuss and Jon Voight get their start in Hollywood, he would never say he "discovered" them.

"I feel I'm instrumental," the 88-year-old casting director said, his eyes glistening as he considers the impact he may have had on those careers.

"I'm getting too emotional here," he said.

Stalmaster will become the first person to receive an Oscar for casting when he accepts an honorary Academy Award Saturday at the film academy's eighth annual Governors Awards. There is no Oscar category for casting directors, who only established a branch within the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences three years ago.

Action star Jackie Chan, film editor Anne V. Coates and documentarian Frederick Wiseman are also receiving honorary Oscars for lifetime achievement at the Governors Awards ceremony in Hollywood.

Stalmaster, who started his career as an actor, suggested Travolta for what would become his breakout role: Vinnie Barbarino in the sitcom "Welcome Back, Kotter."

"He won and became a national star," Stalmaster said. "The young girls loved him. And then later, even (Quentin) Tarantino," who revived Travolta's career with 1994's "Pulp Fiction."

Stalmaster earned a master's degree in theatre from UCLA, and though he was having some success as an actor (he counts the 1951 John Wayne film "Flying Leathernecks" among his credits), he wanted a backup plan. He started working as a production assistant to a prolific pair of television producers, who eventually asked him to become their casting director.

"I'd never sat in on casting," Stalmaster said. "And (they said), 'We want you to cast our five series.' No training!"

He made it his business to know every young performer around, and travelled regularly to New York and Europe to meet with actors, managers and agents. Stalmaster ultimately opened his own casting office and went on to work with such directors as Billy Wilder, George Stevens, William Wyler, Norman Jewison, Blake Edwards, Hal Ashby, John Cassavetes, Mike Nichols and Sydney Pollack.

As a casting director, Stalmaster was responsible for bringing fresh faces to filmmakers and helping them shape their ensembles in such films as "West Side Story," "The Graduate," "Deliverance," "Tootsie" and "The Right Stuff."

He employed his own acting skills to bring out the best in the performers he was casting by reading with them in auditions.

"I could look into their eyes and play the scene," he said. "And I probably played more roles than any other actor in history -- and females!"

But he never regretted changing careers. Stalmaster said he's gratified by the projects and people he worked with, and the unprecedented recognition from the film academy.

"That's what brings me so much inner joy and emotion," he said. "It's not only an Oscar for me, but it's recognizing the major contribution casting makes."