How Leslie Odom Jr. could earn two Oscar nominations
OK, campers. Rise and shine. And donât forget your booties because itâs cold out there. Well ... cold for SoCal. But the good news? Tomatomania is around the corner! And thanks to Reddit, Iâm flush with funds to buy all the varieties I want this year.
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Iâm Glenn Whipp, awards columnist for the Los Angeles Times and host of the Envelopeâs Friday newsletter. Welcome to this weekâs edition, which Iâm sending out to all the people with the hedges (and the hedge-less hordes too).
How many Oscar nominations for Leslie Odom Jr.?
Leslie Odom Jr. passed on playing Sam Cooke in âOne Night in Miamiâ the first time Regina King offered him the role. No disrespect, he thought, but a movie depicting an imagined conversation among four iconic Black men â Cooke, Malcolm X, Muhammad Ali and Jim Brown â felt as if it could go sideways in a second. Plus, there wasnât much time to prepare. There would be no rehearsal. Too nerve-racking. And you want me to sing âA Change Is Gonna Comeâ in the final scene of the movie? No thank you.
But â and Odom says this never happens â the actorâs agent and manager asked him to take another look at Kemp Powersâ screenplay, which he adapted from his own play. And when he did, Odom moved past the fear and started digging into the ideas being expressed, the boundaries being pushed. And he understood that âOne Night in Miamiâ went beyond a standard biopic, making a private conversation public and exploring Black humanity in a way that felt groundbreaking.
âGiving these men the dignity of Black humanity, that felt audacious,â Odom told me in a recent interview.
Odom could earn two Oscar nominations for âOne Night in Miamiâ â for supporting actor and for the song, âSpeak Now,â (an âoffering,â Odom calls it) he cowrote with Sam Ashworth that plays over the movieâs closing credits. As the title suggests, itâs a call to action, an appeal for community. âI swear weâll never find a way to where weâre going, all alone / Donât take your eyes off the road.â
And if thatâs not enough, Odom could find himself nominated for multiple Golden Globes too, as the filmed performance of âHamiltonâ is eligible.
You want Oscar predictions? Here you go.
It wasnât that long ago when you could watch the Oscars, see what movie won the award for cinematography and think, âOK. That might be the best picture winner too.â In the â90s, the two awards went hand in hand six times. âDances With Wolves,â âSchindlerâs List,â âBraveheart,â âThe English Patient,â âTitanicâ and âAmerican Beautyâ all pulled off the feat. In the ensuing two decades, it has happened just twice â âSlumdog Millionaireâ and âBirdman.â
Instead, the correlation now comes between director and cinematographer. Alfonso CuarĂłn won both Oscars for âRoma.â Two years before that, âLa La Landâ swept the two honors. âThe Revenant,â âBirdman,â âGravityâ and âLife of Piâ also won both.
This year, itâs possible weâll again see the director-cinematography connection. âNomadlandâ filmmaker ChloĂŠ Zhao has been piling up critics honors, winning director honors from the Los Angeles and New York groups among many others. And since Zhao and cinematographer Joshua James Richards shot much of the movie during the âmagic hourâ of dusk when the sun hits the horizon and makes everything glow just right, âNomadlandâ could well win the cinematography Oscar too. This is an unbelievably gorgeous movie, and it lets its audience just bathe in that imagery.
Recently, I took an early look at the director and cinematography Oscar races, as well as the song, score and animated feature categories, where Pixarâs âSoulâ should do nicely.
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Sundance goes virtual; âCODAâ opens with a splash
This year you can attend Sundance from the comfort our your living room sofa. The Timesâ film staff picked 24 movies that are worth checking out, and I interviewed the great Marlee Matlin, who stars in one of those films, âCODA,â which opened the festival last night.
Written and directed by Siân Heder, âCODAâ (child of deaf adults) follows Ruby (Emilia Jones), the only hearing member of a deaf family who, at 17, dreams of going away to college and pursuing her passion for singing. But sheâs torn. Her family runs a fishing business and depends on Ruby to navigate the world outside the home.
All of the deaf characters â Rubyâs father, Frank (Troy Kotsur); mother, Jackie (Matlin); and brother, Leo (Daniel Durant) â are portrayed by deaf actors, and American Sign Language is subtitled, rather than verbalized by another character, highlighting its vibrancy as a form of communication.
Matlin was the first actor to join âCODAâ and stuck with Heder through a development process that had financiers balking at casting deaf actors in lead roles. Finally, Matlin issued an ultimatum: Hire deaf actors or Iâm out.
âFor the first time in a long time ... in fact, for the first time since my first film (âChildren of a Lesser Godâ), I felt that audiences would really see deaf people in a film,â Matlin says of her âobsessionâ with getting âCODAâ made. âThere are so many levels for people to identify with and, for people with no connection, who have never met a deaf person, to see sign language, to see deaf people in normal, day-to-day settings. ... People think that deaf people are monolithic in terms of how they approach life. And this film bursts that myth.â
Thank you, Cicely Tyson
When I attended the Governors Awards two years ago, everyone in the room wanted to pay their respects to Cicely Tyson, who died Thursday. The queue of well-wishers surrounding her table at the Ray Dolby Ballroom spilled across the length of the room.
When Tyson took the stage, following introductions from Tyler Perry, Quincy Jones and Ava DuVernay (again: Everyone wanted to pay tribute), she delivered the nightâs most emotional speech, noting that when then-academy president John Bailey called to tell her she would receive the honor, âI just went to water. I could not say a word. I call it Niagara Falls. All I did was cry and cry and cry.â
Tyson, Oscar-nominated for her role in the 1972 drama âSounder,â thanked Oprah Winfrey and Whoopi Goldberg before looking skyward and addressing her mother.
âMom, I know you didnât want me to do this, but I did,â she said, holding the Oscar aloft. âAnd here it is. For the longest time, I wanted to hear something positive from her. When I did â[The Autobiography of Miss] Jane Pittmanâ ... she said, âI am so proud of you.â And I think if I had not heard those words from her, none of this would make a difference to me.â
Tyson was a pioneer and an icon. Rest in power, dear lady.
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From the Oscars to the Emmys.
Get the Envelope newsletter for exclusive awards season coverage, behind-the-scenes stories from the Envelope podcast and columnist Glenn Whippâs must-read analysis.
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