Guillermo Del Toroâs âThe Shape of Waterâ took home the top prize at the 90th Academy Awards in what was considered one of the most wide open best picture races in years. The fantasy creature romance also won the Oscars for directing, original score and production design.
A number of the nightâs winners were first-time nominees including Jordan Peele, who won the Oscar for original screenplay for his horror satire âGet Out.â Allison Janney, who won for supporting actress, and Sam Rockwell, who won for supporting actor, were also first-time nominees.
Frances McDormand gave one of the most rousing speeches of the night when accepting the lead actress Oscar for her performance in âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,â while Tiffany Haddish and Maya Rudolph left viewers wanting the pair to host an awards show of their own.
- The complete list of winners and nominees
- Some of Jimmy Kimmelâs best zingers from his monologue
- Play-by-play analysis from critics Kenneth Turan and Justin Chang
- How âThe Shape of Waterâ took home the Oscar for best picture with its timely love story
- PHOTOS: Red carpet | Show highlights | Backstage | Winners
The Oscar winners may have been predictable, but there are reasons to be glad to have watched the show
What if they awarded the Oscars and not one of the winners was a real surprise, not a single solitary one? What would the show be like, would people be glad they watched or wish theyâd played pinochle instead?
That question is not an academic one â it happened Sunday night at the 90th Academy Awards. Of all the 24 little gold statues handed out, none of them could qualify as a genuine upset.
A night like this has been headed our way for quite some time as the world of Oscar prognostication has grown over the years from a genial hobby to a serious business practiced by crack teams of experts.
Analyzed and scrutinized from a multitude of angles for days, weeks and months, it was inevitable that many of the awardâs secrets would be revealed, that the predilections of the academy members would be easier and easier to read.
Yet even as favorite followed favorite to the Dolby Theatre stage, there were reasons to be glad you were metaphorically in the house, watching it all play out.
Read MoreMORE PHOTOS: Red carpet | Show highlights | Backstage | Winners Âť
Here is a minute by minute break down of the 90th Academy Awards
Sundayâs Oscars telecast clocked in at just under four hours. For this critic, hereâs how the show broke down, minute by minute.
5:03 P.M.
Kimmel takes the stage
Jimmy Kimmel kicks things off with an acknowledgment of last yearâs epic envelope snafu: âThis year, when you hear your name called, do not get up right away.â
5:12 P.M.
In a âPrice Is Rightâ-style giveaway, Kimmel offers a free jet ski to the winner who gives the shortest speech. A not-so-subtle way of saying âHurry up, ski-daddle.â
Read MoreMORE PHOTOS: Red carpet | Show highlights | Backstage | WinnersÂť
Oscarsâ TV audience dropped to 26.5 million â an all-time low
ABCâs telecast of the 90th Oscars was watched by 26.5 million viewers on Sunday, the smallest TV audience on record for the ceremony.
The average audience for the broadcast was down 19.5% from last yearâs 32.9 million viewers and under the previous low of 32 million viewers in 2008, according to data from Nielsen.
ABC late-night host Jimmy Kimmel was the emcee of Sundayâs telecast, his second consecutive year in the role. Jon Stewart hosted in 2008.
Man accused of stealing Frances McDormandâs Oscar is arrested; video shows him gloating with it
One person at the official Oscars after-party won himself a pair of handcuffs Sunday night.
Terry Bryant was arrested at the Governors Ball and accused of stealing Frances McDormandâs statue â after he took time to videotape himself bragging and gloating to others at the party about the prize his âteamâ was taking home.
The 47-year-old remained in custody Monday morning on a grand theft charge in lieu of $20,000 bail, according to the Los Angeles Police Department. He was arrested at 11:50 p.m. Sunday at the party site, which is inside Hollywood and Highland.
A photographer caught the alleged thief, LAPD Sgt. Meghan Aguilar said, and the department has seen the video of Bryant mugging on Facebook with the stolen Oscar claiming it was his. The department credits the photographerâs quick action with preventing Bryant from hightailing it with the stolen Oscar.
Aguilar said the photographer did not recognize Bryant as one of the winners, so followed him and took the statue from him without any resistance. The photographer then notified Governors Ball security, who apprehended Bryant.
Bryant had a legitimate ticket to the party, Aguilar said. Sources said that when Bryant was detained he appeared to have consumed a lot of alcohol.
In video posted to Facebook, the man who appears to also go by the name DJ Matari gloated and tried to find out the address of Jimmy Kimmelâs party.
âLookit baby, my team got this tonight. This is mine. We got it tonight, baby,â he says before kissing the statue. âGovernors Ball, baby. Who wants to wish me congratulations?â Hoots and air kisses followed. He said at one point he had won it for âmusic,â and later that heâd won for âbest producer.â
The statue was lifted just after McDormand had it engraved at the official Oscars after-party, and she still didnât have it with her at the Vanity Fair party later in the evening.
âSomebody tried to steal my Oscar at the Governors Ball,â she told producer Jason Blum as she made her way inside the Vanity Fair shindig. âLet me see someone try to pawn that!â
Staff writer Amy Kaufman contributed to this report.
UPDATE
1:26 p.m.: This article was updated with further details about the arrest.
11:58 a.m.: This article was updated with comment from LAPD Sgt. Meghan Aguilar.
This article was first published at 10:55 a.m.
How Guillermo del Toroâs dark, innocent and mystical imagination propels his films
The greatest thing that art does â and our industry does â is erase the lines in the sand. We should continue doing that when the world tells us to make them deeper.
— Guillermo del Toro, filmmaker
Guillermo del Toro infuses the grotesque with innocence and wonder, as if he has slipped into our dreams and fascinations, not to judge, but to find truth and grace in the dark furrows and creaky hallways of human nature.
His characters, often children or those uncorrupted, are drawn into mystical and scary cinematic worlds of fairies, fauns, fallen bombs and, in the case of his best picture winner âThe Shape of Water,â a fish-man in a Cold War parable who awakens the passions of a mute cleaning woman. Del Toro is a filmmaker who explores the soul of âthe otherâ and how the things that frighten us can also heal and make us whole.
âI am an immigrant,â he said in his acceptance speech Sunday for his directing Oscar for âShape of Water.â âThe greatest thing that art does â and our industry does â is erase the lines in the sand. We should continue doing that when the world tells us to make them deeper.â
âThe Shape of Waterâ is the refinement of that quest, a crucible of menace and cruelty that is transformed by the love of two misfits, one of this world, the other an exotic manifestation of another. It is in the subconscious â the flight of imagination â where Del Toro likes to play, notably in âPanâs Labyrinth,â the story of a girl who escapes war and loss through her own fairy tale, and âThe Devilâs Backbone,â about what lurks in the whispers and darkness at a boarding school.
Read MoreMORE PHOTOS: Red carpet | Show highlights | Backstage | Winners Âť
Whatâs best and worst about awards season? The shoes definitely fall into one of those categories
On the Oscars red carpet, attendees at the 90th Academy Awards reflect on the best and worst parts of awards season.
Celebrating with peers, reuniting with castmates, talking about issues and seeing people they donât get to see all the time. These are a few of Oscar-goersâ favorite things.
We asked folks on the Oscars red carpet Sunday about the best and worst parts of awards season, and â on the âworstâ side of the conversation especially â a few themes emerged.
Hint: Even the guys were complaining about the shoes.
âItâs a lot of getting swirled up into hair and makeup, and the high heels,â Allison Janney said. âMy foot, I really think I have to get an operation on my foot.â
Review: 90th Academy Awards show speaks up yet keeps the smiles coming
The 90th edition of the Academy Awards came and went Sunday evening, filling its nearly four hours with laughter and tears, self-mocking and self-celebration and more than a usual amount of music. Jimmy Kimmel hosted for a second time, handily.
It was, as always, a long flight, stimulating in its scenic views, enervating in its length. Compared with some earlier years, there was a decided lack of turbulence.
There were two main narrative thrusts to the evening, one looking backward, one looking ahead â looking ahead was also looking outward, to a more inclusive film industry.
The 90th Oscars ceremony was the reason for the first, which announced itself with a faux-historical, black-and-white newsreel opening and continued through the evening with well-edited montages featuring past winners of major categories. The message seemed to be that movies may have a long way to go in terms of diversity and representation but were always kind of woke: We have much to do, but we have done much.
Read MorePHOTOS: Red carpet | Show highlights | Backstage | Winners
Watch the 5 best moments from the Oscars
Missed the Oscars on Sunday night? Or having a hard time deciding what the best moments were? Allow us to be of service.
Jimmy Kimmel took aim at Harvey Weinstein, gave away a Jet Ski and popped into a movie theater with some famous friends. Emma Stone supported Greta Gerwig. Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway redeemed themselves, and Guillermo del Toro double-checked that the envelope in fact declared âThe Shape of Waterâ as the best picture winner.
But were those the most memorable moments? Nope.
Here are five of our faves, courtesy of several ladies (and Kumail Nanjiani) who dropped the act and brought realness to the Academy Awards.
1. Frances McDormand rouses the troops
In McDormandâs empowering acceptance speech for lead actress, she had some things to say, namely two mystifying words: inclusion rider. She also asked all the women nominees to stand with her.
2. Allison Janney brings the funny â all by herself
âNuff said.
3. The dynamic duo of Tiffany Haddish and Maya Rudolph
The funny ladies had quite the #OscarsSoWhite observations. No heels required.
4. Lupita Nyongâo and Kumail Nanjiani take a stand
The presenters â whose names you have trouble pronouncing, they joked â gave a shout-out to the âDreamers.â
5. That other dynamic duo: Jodie Foster and Jennifer Lawrence
The past Oscar winners stepped in for Casey Affleck and picked on Meryl Streep. Hence, Fosterâs crutches.
Mary J. Blige may not have won the Oscar but hers was the winning performance of the night
Listen closely, future Academy Awards performers: Do. Not. Let. Mary J. Blige. Sing. Before. You.
One of pop musicâs most deeply committed performers, the veteran R&B artist almost always operates at 110%. And on Sundayâs Oscars telecast, where she gave the first of the nightâs performances of the tunes nominated for original song, Blige made the acts that followed look like outmatched beginners.
Singing âMighty Riverâ from âMudboundâ â in which her screen performance led to a second Oscar nod, for supporting actress â Blige dug deep into the gospel-fired composition written by her, Raphael Saadiq and Taura Stinson.
She scrunched up her face as though experiencing the pain the song describes in lyrics like âEgoâs a killer / Greed is a monster.â She pushed her voice to its breaking point in a line about getting âthis hurt off me.â And she ditched words altogether at one point to embody the type of salvation that can feel like a riverâs cleansing waters.
âRoseanne,â âHouse of Cardsâ and âMary Poppins Returnsâ give sneak peeks during Oscars
Move over, Super Bowl. The Oscars are honing in on your trailer territory.
Three notable teasers made their debut during Sunday nightâs ceremony, and they could not be more different.
The first look at Disneyâs âMary Poppins Returns,â starring Emily Blunt in the titular role and Lin-Manuel Miranda, hopes audiences are ready for whimsy.
The tease follows a wayward kite as it tumbles through a gray London day, eventually finding new life with a precious ragamuffin and his buddy Miranda.
Eventually the skies part and one Mary Poppins appears silhouetted in the sky via the kite.
Then thereâs Poppins. We see Blunt examining herself in a mirror as Ben Whishaw and Emily Mortimer, playing the (now grown) Banks children from the original film, look on.
âMary Poppins, it is wonderful to see you,â Whishaw says.
âYes, it is, isnât it,â Blunt replies, walking away from the mirror, leaving her reflection to give her the side eye.
See? Whimsy!
Audiences will have plenty of time to decide how âMary Poppins Returnsâ is ruining their childhoods before the film premieres in theaters Dec. 25.
Meanwhile, Netflix gave fans their first look at the embattled, Kevin Spacey-less final season of âHouse of Cards.â
The only suggestion of former President Frank Underwoodâs (Spacey) existence in the teaser trailer is a presidential portrait in a hallway quickly abandoned for the bustling offices within the White House.
The camera weaves its way through the crowd, finally reaching the Oval Office, where President Claire Underwood (Robin Wright) sits at her desk.
She turns in her chair, looks at the camera and says, âWeâre just getting started.â
âHail to the Chief,â reads the on-screen message that follows.
The show appears to be all systems go despite the November removal of Spacey in the wake of multiple of sexual assault and harassment accusations.
Viewers should be able to roll with anything, though. Claire became president during Season 5, and thereâs apparently nothing more unbelievable than a female president.
âHouse of Cardsâ will return in the fall.
And finally, âRoseanne.â
ABCâs resurrected classic sitcom returns at the end of this month, nearly 21 years after the showâs finale in 1997.
âIn the history of television, no family was quite like the Conners,â the teaser intones between clips from the original series.
âNothing has changed,â it concludes before spinning off into new footage from the upcoming season.
The gangâs (nearly) all here in the teaser, which includes Laurie Metcalf, John Goodman, Sara Gilbert, Alicia Goranson and, of course, Roseanne Barr.
âRoseanneâ returns March 27.
Oscars red carpet: Letâs talk about the political movements sweeping Hollywood
Thoughts on the movements in Hollywood
The political movements mobilizing Hollywood toward inclusion and diversity may seem widespread, but insiders believe that Timeâs Up and #MeToo are only just getting started.
âIn the history of the United States, weâve only been talking about sexual violence for four months,â #MeToo founder Tarana Burke told The Times on the red carpet. âPeople are already ready to rush to say whatâs next. We have a lot to unpack where we are right now.â
As awareness increases, they hope that action does too.
âOne of the most important things we can do is stand up and support women,â Oscar winner Common said. âIf they donât have equality, the world is out of balance. Now itâs important that we take the things that weâve been doing and shift them and figure out ways to implement equality.â
After months of #MeToo rage, Oscar night delivered smiles and odes to inclusiveness
This was Hollywood at its sanitized best. After months of horrifying revelations about widespread sexual harassment and assault in the industry, the 90th Academy Awards presented a toothless, feel-good nod to the scandal.
So many of this yearâs films feature transgressive female characters â Frances McDormandâs hell-bent mother in âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,â Margot Robbieâs blue-collar ice dancer in âI, Tonyaâ â but little of that anger made it onstage.
After winning for lead actress, McDormand asked every female nominee to stand and be acknowledged, a graceful gesture of support by a woman for women.
But where you might have expected some righteous rage, Oscar delivered only paeans to inclusiveness.
Earlier, a trio of actresses â all of whom were victimized by Harvey Weinstein â stood together onstage and declared that women were finally speaking as âa mighty chorus,â as one of them, Ashley Judd, put it.
Frances McDormand lost her Oscar at the after-parties. Hereâs how she found it
Somebody tried to steal my Oscar at the Governors Ball. Let me see someone try to pawn that!
— Oscar winner Frances McDormand
Amid the flowing Champagne, towers of seafood and passed plates of Wolfgang Puck cuisine, one of the most bizarre moments following Sundayâs telecast happened at the Governors Ball when a partygoer swiped Frances McDormandâs freshly engraved statue.
Late in the evening, McDormand was spotted red-faced from laughing and crying after an unidentified man lifted the trophy while she was chatting and darted out of the Ray Dolby Ballroom where the party was being held.
At one point, she turned to L.A. Times photographer Jay Clendenin and said, âI lost my Oscar.â Her handlers quickly rushed over to figure out where the sticky-fingered bandit had gone off to.
Elton John Oscar-viewing party raises $5.9 million for his AIDS Foundation
Nearly 1,000 invitees to Elton Johnâs 26th Academy Awards viewing party raised $5.9 million for his AIDS Foundation on Sunday night in West Hollywood.
The tony gathering under white tents set up in West Hollywood Park drew its own bevy of celebrities from film, music, TV and other realms. Among them were Miley Cyrus, Liam Hemsworth, Billie Jean King, Spike Lee, Lionel Richie, Quincy Jones, Zooey Deschanel, Gladys Knight, Heidi Klum, Ricky Martin, George Hamilton, Jennifer Garner, longtime Grammy Awards telecast executive producer Ken Ehrlich and Johnâs longtime songwriting collaborator, lyricist Bernie Taupin.
Attendees were invited to text in pledges as the Oscar telecast was displayed on multiple screens throughout the room. At one point, audience members were informed it was one of the rare events where âitâs OK to spend the night texting.â
The eveningâs host was characteristically resplendent, wearing a rust-colored tux jacket and bejeweled round-frame glasses.
He and David Furnish, his husband and event co-creator, thanked guests for their contributions to the foundation, which has raised more than $400 million for various programs aimed at fighting AIDS globally since EJAF was founded in 1992 in the U.S., with a sibling foundation launched the following year in the U.K.
A live auction of several artworks and other items generated more than $725,000 on the spot Sunday, a major chunk of that for artist Chris Levineâs luminescent portrait of Queen Elizabeth II, âLightness of Being, 2018,â which sold for $270,000. A Lalique sculpture that John created for the evening sold for $80,000.
Following the awards ceremony and live auction, John turned over the annual musical spotlight segment to Michigan-based hard rock band Greta Van Fleet, which let loose with Led Zeppelin-inspired riffs and decibels and high-pitched, Robert Plant-like vocals from lead singer Josh Kiszka.
âWhoever says rock music is dead is completely wrong,â said John, 70. âWhen I first saw them they knocked me out⌠They are going to be one of the biggest bands of the year.â
Taraji P. Henson says she wasnât dissing Ryan Seacrest at the Oscars
Turns out when Taraji P. Henson touched Ryan Seacrest under the chin on the Oscars red carpet, she was actually telling him to keep his chin up.
âYou know what, the universe has a way of taking care of the good people,â the actress told the E! News host on Sunday night, flicking a finger under his chin as she continued, âYou know what I mean?â
Twitter promptly blew up with people reacting to the moment, both for and against. Of course, the shade supporters drew more media attention, especially because Henson was one of the fewer-than-usual people who stopped to chat with Seacrest amid controversy over harassment accusations of which heâs been cleared.
Telling People later Sunday that she âabsolutelyâ supports Seacrest as controversy dogs him, Henson clarified: âI did it to keep his chin up. Itâs an awkward position to be in. Heâs been cleared, but anyone can say anything.â
Too bad we didnât keep watching through the rest of the exchange, which ended this way:
In the skepticsâ defense (and â letâs just say it â ours too), Hensonâs comment to her next interviewer made her Seacrest exchange sound shadier than it turned out to be.
âIâm great now that Iâm in your company,â the actress told ABCâ Wendi McLendon-Covey.
And here we thought Henson was throwing shade and then doubling down. But guess what? Sheâs just really, really nice.
A glimpse behind the scenes at the 90th Academy Awards
From Jimmy Kimmelâs opening monologue to âThe Shape of Waterâsâ best picture win, the 90th Academy Awards was a nearly four-hour long celebration of film. But not all of the eveningâs magical scenes were shown on screen. Here are some candid behind-the-scenes moments captured backstage at Oscars 2018 that you didnât see on TV.
How âThe Shape of Waterâ became the first sci-fi film to win best picture
Love is much stronger than hatred, and itâs much more powerful than fear. âŚÂ Love is the antidote to what weâre living through today.
— Guillermo del Toro, filmmaker
How did âThe Shape of Water,â a movie about a mute cleaning woman falling truly, madly, deeply in love with a fish-man, wind up winning the Oscar for best picture?
It starts with the power of love, the filmâs Oscar-winning director, Guillermo del Toro, says.
âLove is much stronger than hatred, and itâs much more powerful than fear,â Del Toro told The Times in a November interview. âLove is the antidote to what weâre living through today.â
âThe Shape of Waterâ wins best picture at the 90th Academy Awards on a night that balanced celebration and politics
Bringing an end to one of the most wide open best picture races in years, âThe Shape of Waterâ â a fantastical fable about a mute woman who falls in love with an aquatic creature â claimed the top prize Sunday night at the 90th Academy Awards, beating out a strong field of eight rivals that included box office hits such as âDunkirkâ and âGet Outâ as well as smaller, more intimate fare such as âCall Me By Your Nameâ and âLady Bird.â
Marking a moment of redemption for the Academy Awards themselves, the award was presented by Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty, central players in last yearâs shocking mix-up in which the musical âLa La Landâ was mistakenly named best picture over the actual winner, âMoonlight.â (âThis year, when you hear your name called, donât get up right away,â returning host Jimmy Kimmel joked in one of several nods to the bungle throughout the night. âGive us a minute. We donât want another thing.â)
In contrast to last yearâs chaos, this yearâs wins proceeded in an orderly fashion, with many awards going to first-timers.
Fox Searchlight dominates Oscars, with strong showing from Warner Bros.
Buoyed by âThe Shape of Water,â Fox Searchlight Pictures took home more Oscars than any other studio at the 90th Academy Awards on Sunday with six statuettes.
The best picture victory for âShapeâ extends Searchlightâs enviable winning streak, which has seen the independent film label score best picture for âBirdman,â â12 Years a Slaveâ and âSlumdog Millionaireâ in the last 10 years.
Warner Bros. put in a strong showing with five Oscars in the technical categories for âDunkirkâ and âBlade Runner 2049,â and Universal received four statuettes. Fox was the leader going into Sundayâs ceremony with 27 nominations, with Searchlight accounting for 20 of those.
âShapeâsâ Guillermo del Toro singled out the indie studio in his acceptance speech for directing.
With an Oscar win for âA Fantastic Woman,â transgender rights take the spotlight
Iâm on Jupiter. I canât believe that this happened. It is a film that has managed to contribute to a necessary and urgent conversation.
— SebastiĂĄn Lelio on âA Fantastic Womanâ
SebastiĂĄn Lelioâs âA Fantastic Woman,â which won the Academy Award for foreign-language film, is an unrepentant fable in a time when transgender people and others in the LGBTQ community are demanding wider rights in countries, including Chile, that have treated them as deviants and curiosities. The film follows Marina (played by transgender actress Daniela Vega) in a quiet rebellion for dignity against condescension and relentless humiliation.
âA Fantastic Womanâ opens with Marina and her lover Orlando (Francisco Reyes) out on a date in Santiago. Things turn tragic when Orlando falls ill and dies. Marina grieves but also endures the scorn â both pointed and subtle â of a woman who is held in suspicion by Orlandoâs family and the police. She moves through the story stunned but with the accustomed indignation that comes with being âthe other.â In one scene, investigators subject her to a strip search, embarrassing her in the glare of florescent light.
Orlandoâs ex-wife, Sonia (Aline KĂźppenheim), tells Marina with disdain: âWhen I look at you. I donât know what Iâm seeing.â
But she is unbroken; each slight brings a renewed resolve that has made the movie a bellwether for the transgender movement.
Gary Oldman has regrets, even after his Oscar win
Gary Oldman won his first Oscar for playing Winston Churchill in âDarkest Hour,â and even though the film is set during World War II the actor feels it still speaks to today.
â[Director] Joe [Wright] would say that part of the movie is about doubt. But those insecurities and fears, we want to do things with the best intentions, and I would like to give people the benefit of the doubt and say they are motivated by a good heart and that they have the best intentions,â Oldman said in the press room backstage after his Oscar win.
âWhen you are in a position like I think Winston was in 1940, he sends 4,000 men to their deaths to save 300,000 ⌠in war, those are the types of decisions you have to make. Then of course I donât know how you would sleep soundly in your bed on the evening you sent 4,000 men to their death.
âAnd I think we ⌠not to that extent, but most people in the audience, theyâve got financial burdens ⌠theyâre trying to put the kids through college or they have illness or sickness in their family. Weâve all got ⌠and certainly I know I do, you know regrets and things.
âThatâs the worst thing you can do as an artist is you can ⌠second guess. I still sometimes have that little demon, that little voice.
The four actors Oldman trumped for the award include previous winner Denzel Washington and Daniel Day-Lewis and relative newcomers Timothee Chalamet and Daniel Kaluuya.
He had especially kind words for Chalamet, a critics favorite who had triumphed one day earlier at the Spirit Awards (where Oldman was not nominated). âIâm thrilled for Chalamet,â Oldman said. âHeâs a lovely kid, and he really is, heâs a kid and heâs a charmer, hugely talented and I said to him tonight, in the words of Arnie, youâll be back.â
Rachel Shenton fulfills promise to âSilent Childâ star, signs Oscars speech
âThe Silent Childâ writer Rachel Shenton signed along to her acceptance speech when she won the Oscar for live-action short film.
Joined onstage by the director, Chris Overton, also her fiancĂŠ, Shenton said she promised their 6-year-old lead actress Maisie Sly that sheâd do it.
âOur movie is about a deaf child being born into a world of silence. Itâs not exaggerated or sensationalized for the movie. This is happening. Millions of children all over the world live in silence and face communication barriers and particularly access to education,â Shenton said.
âDeafness is a silent disability. You canât see it and itâs not life-threatening,â she continued. âSo I want to say the biggest of thank yous to the Academy for allowing us to put this in front of a mainstream audience.â
Shentonâs speech was a throwback to that of Oscar-winning actress Louise Fletcher. The âOne Flew Over the Cuckooâs Nestâ star famously used sign language during her 1976 speech to express her gratitude to her parents.
Guillermo del Toro lauds Mexican storytellers after Oscar wins
Guillermo del Toro, who won two of the nightâs top honors (director and best picture for âThe Shape of Waterâ), arrived at the press room after the show with the filmâs producer, J. Miles Dale in tow.
The Mexican director volleyed questions in both English and Spanish about diversity and the significance of Mexican storytellers and stories.
âWhat we have to bring to the world discourse, to the world conversation is extremely important,â he said. âItâs honoring your roots and honoring your country.â
The director said his next stop would be back to Mexico, where heâs going to see his parents. âWith these two,â he said, gesturing to his awards.
Del Toro was also asked what else is going on at Fox Searchlight. âItâs above my pay grade,â he said. âBut what I know is Iâm continuing conversations with them about future projects.â
When asked why he chose to set âThe Shape of Waterâ in Baltimore, Del Toro said he fell in love with the the city as a kid via Barry Levinsonâs âThe Baltimore Trilogy.â
âI think that those three films, âAvalon,â âDinerâ and âTin Man,â are fabulous landmarks of American cinema,â he said.
Through âShape of Water,â which took home four statues Sunday night, the director sought to draw a parallel to Levinsonâs âTin Man,â particularly with the Cadillacs and their symbolic representation of American.
âI loved the setting,â he said of the city. âAnd I know we screwed up with the accent, Iâm aware of that. But what I wanted was to capture that flavor. Itâs such an interesting mixture, the Catholic, the industrial, how near it is to the ocean.â
Anything left to say?
âOh, yes, a lot,â he said. âI have a lot of cousins, man.â
Guillermo del Toroâs speech for director celebrated the power of filmmaking
Guillermo del Toro wins the 2018 Academy Award for directing for âThe Shape of Water.â
Accepting his Oscar for director on Sunday, Guillermo del Toro extolled the virtues of filmmaking.
âI am an immigrant like [fellow Mexican directors] Alfonso [CuarĂłn] and Alejandro [G. Iùårritu], my compadres. Like Gael [GarcĂa Bernal], like Salma [Hayek] and like many, many of you.
In the last 25 years Iâve been living in a country all of our own. Part of it is here, part of it is in Europe, part of it is everywhere. Because I think that the greatest thing our art does and our industry does is to erase the lines in the sand. We should continue doing that when the world tells us to make them deeper.
The place I like to live the most is at Fox Searchlight because in 2014, they came to listen to a mad pitch with some drawings and the story and a maquette. And they believed that a fairy tale about an amphibian god and mute woman done in the style of Douglas Sirk, and a musical and a thriller was a sure bet.
I want to thank the people that have come with me all the way: Kimmy, Robert, Gary, Wayne and George. And my kids. And I wanna say, like Jimmy Cagney said once, âMy mother thanks you, my father thanks you, my brothers and sisters thank you. And I thank you very much.ââ
For Jordan Peele, his Oscar win for âGet Outâ marks the beginning of a movement for black directors
âAm I about to be auctioned off right now?â
Thatâs how Jordan Peele started off his question-and-answer session backstage at the Academy Awards on Sunday, when the âGet Outâ writer-director faced a crowd of reporters after winning the Oscar for best original screenplay. He noted the honor was about more than him.
âI didnât know how important this was,â he said. âI always wanted this, but the campaign is grueling and there were times where I questioned what it was all about [because] youâre watching your last jumpshot for a year. As an artist, that doesnât feel right.â
But when the nominations came out, Peele said, he had that âamazingâ feeling of looking at âthat 12-year-old that had this burning in my gut for this type of validation, and I instantly realized that an award like this is much bigger than me. This is about paying it forward to the young people.â
After the academy announced his nomination, he was reminded of Whoopi Goldbergâs 1991 Oscar acceptance speech for best supporting actress in âGhost.â He reached out to her, he said, and thanked her âfor telling young people who maybe doubted themselves that they could do it.â
Peele said that when he was younger, he longed for role models but found few beyond Spike Lee, John Singleton and Mario and Melvin Van Peebles. He is happy to be a role model for those coming behind him, along with the likes of directors Ava DuVernay, Ryan Coogler, Barry Jenkins (âMoonlightâ) and F. Gary Gray (âFridayâ).
âItâs a renaissance,â he said of this moment when films like DuVernayâs âA Wrinkle in Timeâ and Cooglerâs âBlack Pantherâ will be in the cinematic conversation at the same time. âIâm glad to be part of a time, the beginning of a movement, where the best films of every genre are being brought to me by my fellow black directors.â
More from Oscar winner Frances McDormand on âinclusion riderâ (she just learned about it too)
Frances McDormand arrived in the press room after winning the Oscar for her work in Martin McDonaghâs âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,â and she had just been informed of the online confusion that arose after she ended her rousing acceptance speech with two words: inclusion rider.
âI just found out about this last week â there has always been available to everybody that does negotiation on film, an inclusion rider, which means you can ask for, and/or demand, at least 50% diversity, in not only the casting, but in the crew, so I just learned that after 35 years of being in the film business: Weâre not going back,â she said to loud applause.
McDormand stopped short of saying that this year was a historic year for the idea of inclusion, instead citing the 2017 win of the indie-film-that-could, âMoonlight,â as the beginning of the tide that has swept the industry.
When someone pointed out that âThree Billboardsâ has started a movement, with social justice billboards cropping up in Florida in the name of gun control and in front of the United Nations about the Syrian crisis, McDormand became animated.
âRecently my husband and I were in London, and we went to Tate Modern and saw an exhibition about the Russian Revolution and the propaganda that was used,â she said. âNow, that revolution didnât go too well, so we donât want to think too much about that â but red and black is a really good choice, and Martin McDonagh knew that. He was involved in the choice to use that kind of iconography.â
âBillboards still work â they still work,â she said. âThatâs the kind of power that an image can have, and thatâs what weâre making â weâre making powerful images.â
After only five minutes McDormand, the woman of the hour, was whisked away, but not before she was asked about the impact âThree Billboardsâ will have in China where it was just released.
âAre they going to see it?â McDormand asked of Chinese audiences.
When she was told that so far it has only made about $1 million in box office revenue she said, âWe need to get a little more people in cinemas. It is not America â does not represent America â but it represents a really good conversation about compassion and inclusion.â
Oscars fashion poll: You thought the best-dressed stars were Chadwick Boseman, Allison Williams and Darrell Britt-Gibson
We did an Instagram poll during the Oscars on Sunday to find out what our followers thought were the best/worst looks on the red carpet. Like todayâs political climate, there were a few truly polarizing choices.
Overwhelmingly, viewers appeared to like risk-taking menswear, whether it meant pink satin jackets, all-white ensembles or regally embellished coats. Initially ridiculed, now ankle-high menâs trousers appear to have passed the acceptance test.
For men, there was a tie. Top honors went to âBlack Pantherâ star Chadwick Boseman and âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ co-star Darrell Britt-Gibson.
The views on womenâs wear were less unified. Though previous Oscar winner Rita Morenoâs historic, vintage dress was the most talked about of the night, it wasnât the most loved. That honor for women went to âGet Outâ co-star Allison Williams and her very proper, princess-y dress.
Given how simpler, classic looks scored better overall than the avant garde, perhaps now we know why women play it so safe on the red carpet.
Here are the results of our Instagram poll from just after the conclusion of the 90th Academy Awards:
Allison Williams: 92% best, 8% worst
Allison Janney: 87% best, 13% worst
Rita Moreno: 60% best, 40% worst
Daniel Kaluuya: 75% best, 25% worst
Mary J. Blige: 72% best, 28% worst
Darrell Britt-Gibson: 90% best, 10% worst
Taraji P. Henson: 74% best, 26% worst
St. Vincent: 12% best, 88% worst
Greta Gerwig: 81% best, 19% worst
Chadwick Boseman: 90% best, 10% worst
TimothĂŠe Chalamet: 71% best, 29% worst
Saoirse Ronan: 66% best, 34% worst
Netflix earns its first feature film Oscar as âIcarusâ wins in the documentary category
This yearâs nominees for documentary feature all had some pretty phenomenal stories behind the scenes along with what went on the screen.
The Oscar went to âIcarus,â a real-life espionage story about Dr. Grigory Rodchenkov, a scientist turned whistleblower who helped bring down the immense state-sponsored apparatus in place for the illicit doping of Russian Olympic athletes.
The win marked the first Oscar to go to a feature film from the streaming service Netflix.
Watch Jimmy Kimmelâs Oscars opening monologue
In the 90th Oscarsâ opening monologue, host Jimmy Kimmel riffed on last yearâs best picture gaffe, Harvey Weinstein and the representation of women and minorities in Hollywood.
And he actually made those things kind of funny. All that with only about a bajillion Swarovski crystals sparkling on the set behind him.
Hey, it is Hollywood.
Check out Kimmelâs opening monologue in the video above, or if you just want the highlights, read on.
Obviously Olympic skaters Mirai Nagasu and Adam Rippon were rooting for âI, Tonyaâ
Mingling near the Oscarsâ lobby bar, Olympic skaters Mirai Nagasu and Adam Rippon just barely missed a swiftly exiting Margot Robbie as the âI, Tonyaâ star rushed back into the Dolby Theatre for presenting duties.
The Pyeongchang bronze medalists, who were at the 90th Academy Awards for âAccess Hollywood,â were of course rooting for Robbie, who portrayed Tonya Harding in the biopic.
âWeâre having a great time!â said Rippon, whose harness-couture evening wear was the eye-catching talk of the red carpet.
At least a few of their faves already collected gold statuettes.
âI was really rooting for âCocoâ and also Allison Janney,â Nagasu said with a smile. âWe feel like weâve been rooting for all the right people.â
What did the Olympians think of âI,Tonyaâ?
âWe loved it,â Rippon raved. âWe thought it was awesome.â
Nagasu said she âwasnât born during âI, Tonyaâ times.â
âI didnât really know what Tonya was feeling, and looking at it from her perspective as well was really enjoyable,â she added.
Last month Nagasu hit a milestone reminiscent of the real Harding, becoming the first American female skater to land a triple axel at the Olympics.
The next goal on Rippon and Nagasuâs Oscar night agenda? A face-to-face meeting with Robbie.
Allison Janneyâs next move after her Oscar win? Back to âMomâ tomorrow morning
Allison Janney is a Hollywood veteran whose career began in 1993 with a role on daytime TVâs âGuiding Light.â And now, sheâs an Oscar winner after taking home the Academy Award for supporting actress Sunday night for her role in âI, Tonya.â
âI didnât dare to dream of things like this because I didnât want to be disappointed,â she said, adding that at one point she âhad given upâ because she wasnât getting the roles that would allow her to flex her acting muscles.
âBut [âI, Tonyaâ writer] Steven Rogers did [that] for me, [which allowed me] to show a different side of me and show what I could do,â she continued. âItâs an extraordinary gift heâs given to me. I think Iâm going to get him a Rolex and engrave it on the back.â
Still, sheâs not going to allow the Oscar win to alter her work ethic in any way.
âI have to be at a table read for âMomâ at 10 a.m. tomorrow morning so Iâm going right back to work,â she said, referencing the CBS sitcom in which she stars. âIâm happy to have a job after something like this because it can go to your headâŚ. Iâm going to have a big crash-down after this so Iâm happy to have the folks of âMomâ to lift me up.â
Watch Frances McDormandâs rousing speech that just fired up the Oscars
Frances McDormand wins the 2018 Academy Award for actress in a leading role for âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.â
Chances are youâll be hearing about Frances McDormandâs triumphant Oscars acceptance speech for actress in a leading role Sunday night for her performance in âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.â And for good reason. Hereâs what she said:
âOK, so Iâm hyperventilating a little bit. If I fall over, pick me up cause Iâve got some things to say. I think this is what [Olympic gold medalist] Chloe Kim must have felt like after doing back-to-back 1080s in the Olympic halfpipe. Did you see that? OK, thatâs what it feels like.
I want to thank Martin McDonagh [who created âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ] â look what you did. We are a bunch of hooligans and anarchists, but we do clean up nice.
I want to thank every single person in this building and my sister Dorothy. I love you, Dot. I especially want to thank my clan, [husband] Joel Coen and [son] Pedro McDormand Coen.
These two stalwart individuals were well-raised by their feminist mothers. They value themselves, each other and those around them. I know you are proud of me, and that fills me with everlasting joy.
And now I want to get some perspective. If I may be so honored to have all the female nominees in every category stand with me in this room tonight: the actors â Meryl, if you do it, everybody else will, câmon! â the filmmakers, the producers, the directors, the writers, the cinematographers, the composers, the songwriters, the designers.
OK, look around, everybody. Look around, ladies and gentlemen, because we all have stories to tell and projects we need financed. Donât talk to us about it at the parties tonight. Invite us into your office in a couple days, or you can come to ours, whatever suits you best, and weâll tell you all about them. I have two words to leave with you tonight, ladies and gentlemen: inclusion rider.â
And for what itâs worth, Olympian Chloe Kim obviously appreciated the shout-out in McDormandâs speech.
âIâm shedding scales!â Sally Hawkinsâ tears of joy turn to sequins after âShape of Waterâsâ Oscar win
After the 90th Academy Awards broadcast wrapped, âThe Shape of Waterâ crew reveled under the glittering awards set. Sally Hawkins, wiping tears out of her eyes, looked down at her dress and realized she had left a pool of sequins to her right.
She laughed and said, âIâm shedding scales!â
Oscar-winning âCocoâ songwriters on learning to appreciate the Day of the Dead and paying tribute to mom
After the husband-and-wife songwriting team of Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez took home an Oscar on Sunday for the song âRemember Meâ from âCoco,â their thank-yous in the backstage press room fittingly included a beloved family member who recently died.
âCocoâ centers on the practice of mourning the departed through the Mexican holiday of Day of the Dead. That tradition proved healing to Robert Lopez after his mother died in August and his family honored her in early November, when the Day of the Dead honors lost loved ones.
âShe was the main force in my childhood who encouraged me to play piano and write music, and go for my dream,â Robert Lopez said in the press room.
âShe told him if he didnât practice she would make him eat the piano,â Kristen Anderson-Lopez said.
âRemember Meâ is a song about leaving people you love, Robert said. âWe sang it at the funeral, and it was very important in helping me in heal.â
From now on, the coupleâs family will celebrate Day of the Dead like Christmas and Halloween, Kristen said. âBecause loss is inevitable. ⌠I want to pass that tradition on to our daughters.â
The pair did not dare dream of another Oscar win after nabbing their first for the epic ballad âLet It Goâ from the 2014 animated feature âFrozen.â The timing of this win, however, was serendipitous, since they just wrapped up the first week of previews for stage adaptation of âFrozenâ at the St. James Theatre on Broadway. The musical includes new songs by the couple.
The Lopezes talked about the importance of âCocoâ to the Spanish-speaking world. Robert lamented that even though his family immigrated from the Philippines â his father was born on a boat on the way from Manila â he never learned Spanish himself.
âItâs one of the great regrets of my life,â he said, concluding, âIâve always felt âotherâ even though I was assimilated. ⌠I want to encourage every brown kid to pursue their dream just like my mom did.â
Whatâs an inclusion rider? Frances McDormand mystifies at the Oscars
Frances McDormand wins the 2018 Academy Award for actress in a leading role for âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.â
To conclude her powerful speech at the Oscars, Frances McDormand invoked two words: âinclusion rider.â
But what is an inclusion rider, exactly?
In a 2016 TED Talk, Annenberg Inclusion Initiative founder and director Stacy Smith explained the advantages of actors including such a rider in their contracts.
Smith, an associate professor at USCâs School of Communication, said that a typical film features around 45 speaking roles and that thereâs no reason that the cast, outside of the leads, shouldnât reflect the demography of the filmâs location.
âAn equity rider by an A-lister in their contract can stipulate that those roles reflect the world in which we actually live,â Smith said. âNow, thereâs no reason why a network, a studio or a production company cannot adopt the same contractual language in their negotiation processes.â
McDormandâs words sparked enough interest that the Annenberg Inclusion Initiative tweeted a brief explanation after her remarks.
âFor those of you asking about the #InclusionRider, itâs designed to ensure equitable hiring in supportive roles for women, POC, the LGBT community, & people w/disabilities.â
You heard McDormand, Hollywood: Get those inclusion riders and make films reflect reality.
Watch the whole of Smithâs TED Talk here.
Backstage with Faye Dunaway, Warren Beatty and this yearâs PwC accountant before Oscars best picture redo
Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway were waiting in the wings backstage at the Oscars, and Dunaway seemed nervous.
She noticed a camera snapping photos in her direction and became distressed. Even though the photographer said he was not taking her pictures, she shooed him away.
âCan you walk away? I donât want cameras. I donât want anyone near me. What can we do about all these cameras?â
She paced in the wings while she read her lines. This year, there would be no Oscar snafu.
She paused to watch the actress reel and exclaimed excitedly when Laurie Metcalf popped up on screen.
âI love her. She was amazing in âDollâs House, Part 2,ââ
she said, referencing Metcalfâs Tony-winning performance on Broadway.
Once Beatty and Dunaway took the stage and began their presentation, one of the PwC accountants who replaced last yearâs wrong-envelope accountants watched the monitor closely as âShape of Waterâ was announced, shaking her head in the affirmative.
âAwesome, awesome show,â the stage manager said, embracing her as she let out a huge sigh of relief.
Yes, Tiffany Haddish swapped her Jimmy Choo stilettos for Uggs
At the Oscars, rising star Tiffany Haddish pulled off what many Angelenos do in the privacy of their own home.
In front of millions of viewers, the breakout star of âGirls Tripâ swapped her shimmery Jimmy Choo stilettos for comfy Ugg slippers. For her funny skit onstage with Maya Rudolph, the 38-year-old comedian slid her tired feet into a suede and shearling style called the Coquette.
It was the second wardrobe change Haddish made that evening. She arrived at the 90th Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre in a traditional Eritrean dress as a tribute to her late father who came from the African nation. Before she cut up the audience with Rudolph, she switched into a white Alexander McQueen gown that she first wore at the premiere for âGirls Tripâ last July and then repeated when she hosted âSaturday Night Liveâ the following November.
After all, the form-fitting dress with a bejeweled collar and a high side slit cost $4,000 of her hard-earned money. As she stated in her âSNLâ monologue: âI feel like I should be able to wear what I want, when I want, however many times I want, as long as I Febreze it.â
Team behind Oscar-winning âCocoâ on the importance of representation
Representation was a major point of conversation in the press room after âCocoâ won the award for animated feature at the 90th Academy Awards on Sunday night. Directors Lee Unkrich and Adrian Molina and producer Darla K. Anderson fielded questions and compliments about the filmâs inclusivity and diversity.
âIt takes an awareness of the fact that strong storytellers come from all sorts of places,â said Molina. âAt Pixar⌠we work very hard to show that films about communities of color, films that come from particular places, have resonance that can reach across the world. Weâve seen that with âCoco,â weâve seen that with âBlack Panther,â and I think youâre going to see it with a lot of other films in the future.â
Molina was also asked about his Mexican heritage and what it meant to him to help bring a story about his own culture to the big screen.
âOf all of the people at Pixar who, when they heard that me and Darla would be making a film about Mexico and Dia de los Muertos, I was one of the people who said, âI need to work on that film,ââ he said. âSo much of my experience growing up, so much of the pride coming from family and a place that is proud of who they are⌠to have this opportunity to reflect all of those experiences with a wonderful team at Pixar, was something that I knew if not now, than when?â
When the filmmakers started making âCocoâ six years ago, âIt was a very different political climate, of course, than it is now,â said Lee.
âWhile we were making the film, we had a change in presidency and a lot of things started to be said about Mexico and about Mexican Americans that was unacceptable,â he added. âAnd while we were making the film, we began to feel a new urgency to get the movie out into the world. To get a positive message about the beauty of Mexico, the beauty of the Mexican people, the beauty of their culture and traditions into the world and also to give Mexican American kids something to look up to, something to aspire to, to see a bit of themselves up on-screen.â
The importance of a film like âCocoâ was not lost on Lee, who aimed to keep the story as true to life as possible.
âWe tried to make the best film, the most authentic, the most respectful film that we could,â Lee said. âIt just means the world to us that the film ended up being the biggest movie of all time in Mexico and that itâs done so well all around the world, including places like China that you wouldnât expect a film like âCocoâ to do well in.â
Hereâs why Jennifer Lawrence and Jodie Foster presenting an Oscar tonight was a big deal
Jennifer Lawrence and Jodie Fosterâs appearance at Sundayâs Oscars bucked tradition, but was not totally unexpected.
The Oscar-winning actresses presented the award for lead actress to âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ star Frances McDormand. They ribbed Meryl Streep during their presentation and praised the trailblazing actresses who share the honor with them.
But something was different this time.
Lawrence and Foster stepped in when Casey Affleck withdrew from the show in January in the wake of the #MeToo and Timeâs Up movements coursing through Hollywood and beyond. Historically, the lead actress prize is presented by the previous yearâs lead actor winner.
âWe appreciate the decision to keep the focus on the show and on the great work of this year,â an academy spokesperson said when Affleck bowed out.
Allegations of past misconduct dogged the âManchester by the Seaâ star last awards season as he swept the lead actor honor. In 2010 he settled with two female crew members who sued him after accusing him of sexual misconduct on the set of his directorial effort âIâm Still Here,â which filmed in 2009.
Affleck was also the subject of 2016 lead actress Brie Larsonâs silent protest at the 2017 Oscars when she refused to clap for him upon presenting him with his prize.
Foster won lead actress Oscars for âThe Accusedâ (1988) and âThe Silence of the Lambsâ (1991) and was nominated for two other films. Lawrence won her lead actress Oscar for âSilver Linings Playbookâ (2012) and was nominated three other times.
Roger Deakins, after winning an Oscar at long last: âA big part of me was saying, âplease, please, noââ
The wait is over for âBlade Runner 2049â cinematographer Roger Deakins, who finally won an Oscar after 14 nominations that go back to 1994âs âThe Shawshank Redemption.â
Deakins was unfazed in the press room when a reporter mentioned that he began his career in the era of film stock.
âOn the way here, I was just reminded that one of the early films I did was âSid and Nancyâ with Gary Oldman,â he said. âSo amazing to be with Gary in the same space. I donât know, what can I say?â
Deakins also addressed the challenges of creating a sequel to Ridley Scottâs original 1982 neo-noir sci-fi classic.
âItâs all a part of your film memory, but this was very much Denisâ film,â Deakins said, a reference to director Denis Villeneuve. âBut when youâre aware of whatâs come before, I think what [âBlade Runnerâ cinematographer] Jordan [Cronenweth] did on that film was stunning, but Iâm a different person.â
He also said that after so many years of coming close but not winning the prize, he developed a sense of hesitation.
âA big part of me was saying, âplease, please, no,ââ he said of the prospect of taking the statue. âBut itâs great because Iâve worked with a lot of the same people on my crew for years and years, and I feel itâs recognition for their work â I really do â and I know theyâre watching in New York and London and Budapest, and I wish I could thank each and every one of them.â
Read Times staff writer Josh Rottenbergâs interview with Hollywoodâs master of light.
Frances McDormand wins for actress in a leading role
Frances McDormand wins the 2018 Academy Award for actress in a leading role for âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.â
Frances McDormand wins the 2018 Academy Award for actress in a leading role for âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.â
‘The Shape of Water’ wins for best picture
âThe Shape of Waterâ wins the 2018 Academy Award for best picture.
Keala Settle doesnât hold back onstage in song or backstage about Jordan Peele at the Oscars
The crowd in the backstage wings erupted when Jordan Peele won his screenwriting award, but it was âThe Greatest Showmanâ star Keala Settle who was most excited for him.
âYes! Yesssss! Y-y-y-es!â she shouted as he was making his acceptance speech. As he exited the stage, she pumped her fist in his direction. âBro! BROOOO!â
After bringing down the house with a performance of the nominated song âThis Is Meâ from âThe Greatest Showman,â she emerged backstage and shouted a phrase we canât print in this publication, âYes, ⌠!â
After taking a few moments to catch her breath, she looked at a stagehand. âUm, can I go?â
On her way out, production staffers kept stopping her to congratulate her on her performance.
âMan, you guys are nice!â
Weâre with Sofia Coppola. Red-carpet fashion could use some more personality
Weâre with director Sofia Coppola, who recently wrote an essay for W magazine lamenting the sterile perfection on the red carpet.
âI miss the days before actresses hired stylists, when women dressed themselves for formal events,â Coppola said. âThere was personality, style â and mistakes.â
No doubt minutes after the best picture Oscar is awarded this year, it will be hard to remember who wore what â and perhaps worse, you wonât care that you canât recall.
However, if you need a real reminder, check out our best/worst gallery of red-carpet looks from the 90th Academy Awards.
Gary Oldman wins for best leading actor
Gary Oldman wins the 2018 Academy Award for actor in a leading role for âDarkest Hour.â
89-year-old James Ivory on his long-awaited first Oscar win: âIt feels good... Itâs mine.â
With James Ivoryâs win for best adapted screenplay for âCall Me by Your Name,â he became the oldest person ever to take home the golden Oscars statue. And heâs taking the honor in stride.
âNinety years for anything you do is extraordinary,â he said, about the age heâs turning in June. âHaving won the Oscar at that age seems like a hiccup in nature. It feels good to be holding onto that Oscar. Itâs mine.â
Ivoryâs win is something of a marvel, considering the industry veteran has never taken home one before. With a career spanning more than six decades, he has done more than direct, and sometimes write, great films; he helped shape American cinema. From the mid-â80s until the mid-â90s, the films of Merchant Ivory Productions, which he led with his late life partner, Ismail Merchant, and their late longtime writing collaborator Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, were such a dominant force at the box office and during awards season that âMerchant Ivoryâ became a genre unto itself.
Ivory directed almost all of them, and although âA Room With a View,â âMaurice,â âHowards Endâ and âRemains of the Day,â among others, nabbed countless Oscar nominations (including three for Ivory) and at least six wins, this yearâs writing honor for adapting the gay love story âCall Me by Your Nameâ is his first.
âIâm glad it was an Oscar for writing,â he said.
If you noticed Guillermo del Toroâs pocket square, hereâs the story behind it
After the Timeâs Up pin, the second-most common menâs accessory may have been a particular pocket square worn by many of the male nominees from âThe Shape of Water.â
Throughout awards season, the teal silk pocket square has been a signature look for the filmâs director Guillermo del Toro, set decorator Shane Vieau and costume designer Luis Sequeira.
Created by production designer Paul Austerberry, the fabric was custom printed with the water-inspired wallpaper pattern that lined the hallway outside Elisa and Gilesâ apartments in the film.
Guillermo del Toro wins for directing
Guillermo del Toro wins the 2018 Academy Award for directing for âThe Shape of Water.â
Guillermo del Toro wins the 2018 Academy Award for directing for âThe Shape of Water.â
Tiffany Haddish and Maya Rudolph rock the room at the Oscars
Social media wanted an encore after Tiffany Haddish and Maya Rudolph took the stage to present the short-film Oscars and assure the audience that despite the number of black people onstage, they shouldnât worry: There were still plenty of white folks to come.
The women might as well have been auditioning together for a buddy movie, starring roles in a TV series or â watch your back, Jimmy Kimmel â the hosting gig at next yearâs Academy Awards. Social media was calling for all of that.
Some even suggested Haddish and Rudolph run on the same ticket in 2020.
Hereâs just a taste of the response the ladies generated on social media.
And yes, Haddishâs dress shouldâve looked familiar. Itâs the same one she wore when she hosted âSaturday Night Liveâ back in November.
Yup, the one she said she was going to wear everywhere.
‘Remember Me’ wins for original song
âRemember Meâ wins the 2018 Academy Award for original song for âCoco.â
Kobe Bryant backstage at the Oscars: Thanks to Oprah and Shonda
After Kobe Bryant won an Oscar for best animated short, the former NBA champion took a question backstage in the press room about his âsheroesâ by naming two Hollywood powers: Oprah Winfrey and Shonda Rhimes.
âThe first person I called was Oprah,â Bryant said of his decision to start his own studio, adding that Winfrey has long been a mentor and that she spent over an hour with him on the phone, going into great detail about how she built her studio, Harpo.
Rhimes invited him to visit her production company, Shondaland, Bryant said.
âShonda Rhimes is absolutely amazing,â he said, adding, âwhen you have mentors like that in your life, you get to learn from the best of the best.â
The scene backstage made for an interesting moment in the #metoo era, as social media was awash in consternation about the win for Bryant, accused of rape in 2004. That case was settled out of court in 2005.
None of this, however, was mentioned when Bryant took questions in the press room, where he appeared thrilled and breathless and was greeted with loud applause.
âIt feels better than winning a championship, to be honest,â Bryant said. âAs a kid I grew up dreaming of winning a championship, but to have something like this coming out of left field ⌠people asked, âWhat do you want to do when you retire?â and I said, âwriter.â And they were like, âThatâs cute,â but to be here right now, to have a sense of validation â itâs crazy, man.â
Whatâs the difference between playing basketball and writing for film?
âPlaying basketball, the hardest thing to do is get out of the way of yourself,â he said. âAs a writer you have to get in a deeper connection with yourself, to understand your fears beneath the surface, to communicate with them.â
Asked if he struggled working to establish himself in a new field, Bryant was sanguine.
âIâve been hard at work for the last two years focusing on novels, writing a series of books that weâre looking forward to bringing those to the market,â he said. âWhen you start over you have to quiet the ego â begin again. My advice to athletes first and foremost is to do the thing that you love to do. I wake up in the morning and I canât wait to go to the studio.â
The filmâs score was by the inimitable John Williams, and Bryant was awed by the experience of working with the film legend.
Williams told Bryant that each key has its own soul.
âHeâs a real Obi-Wan Kenobi,â Bryant said. âHe was so energized he nearly knocked me over.â
Something up their sleeve? More standout looks from the Oscars
With slit sleeves cascading to the floor, Allison Janney swept along the Oscar red carpet in a vivid red Reem Acra gown that captured a growing trend â interesting sleeves.
Notable sleeve details provided a bit of cover to otherwise-bare shoulders or plain gowns.
On the simple side: Laura Dernâs sheath with a capelet sleeve by Calvin Klein by Appointment and Mary J. Bligeâs white Atelier Versace gown with an asymmetric sleeve detail.
Salma Hayek Pinault took the look to the max in a love-it-or-hate-it Gucci laden with heavy swags of crystals draped along her chest and shoulders.
Alexandre Desplat wins for original score
Alexandre Desplat wins the 2018 Academy Award for original score for âThe Shape of Water.â
âStar Warsâ has not won an Oscar since 1981
Mark Hamill, Kelly Marie Tran, Oscar Isaac and BB-8 took the stage at the 2018 Oscars to present the awards for animated short and animated feature.
But their film, âStar Wars: The Last Jedi,â ended the night winless, extending the franchiseâs Oscars drought.
Itâs been 40 years since George Lucas and his galactic fairy tale made their debut at the Academy Awards, and âStar Warsâ has made itself at home in the years since.
But while the franchise has racked up a respectable 33 nominations, spread over nine films (including 2016âs âRogue One: A Star Wars Storyâ), the series hasnât brought an Oscar home since 1981.
The galaxy far, far away had by far its most successful showing at the 1978 ceremony, where âStar Wars: A New Hopeâ won six categories, including film editing, score and visual effects.
(Fun fact: George Lucas has never won an Oscar for the âStar Warsâ franchise. His ex-wife, Marcia Lucas, has won an Oscar for the films, thanks for her part in editing the original film.)
âA New Hopeâ garnered the most nominations among âStar Warsâ films at the Oscars, with 10 nominations. At the 1981 awards, heat for the series was already fading, with âThe Empire Strikes Backâ earning three nominations but only one win.
âEmpireâsâ win for best sound is the last Oscar the franchise has earned, special achievement awards notwithstanding.
But Oscar nominations continue to roll in for the âStar Warsâ universe. Hereâs a look at how nominations break down by picture.
âStar Wars: A New Hopeâ â 6 wins, 10 nominations
âStar Wars: The Empire Strikes Backâ â 1 win, 3 nominations
âStar Wars: Return of the Jediâ â 4 nominations
âStar Wars: The Phantom Menaceâ â 3 nominations
âStar Wars: Attack of the Clonesâ â 1 nomination
âStar Wars: Revenge of the Sithâ â 1 nomination
âStar Wars: The Force Awakensâ â 5 nominations
âRogue One: A Star Wars Storyâ â 2 nominations
âStar Wars: The Last Jediâ â 4 nominations
Weâll see how the next âStar Warsâ film fares next year.
For more historical Academy Awards moments, check out the Timesâ Oscar timeline.
Timeâs Up has its Oscars moment and touts diversity, inclusion and intersectionality
Disgraced producer Harvey Weinstein â a perennial Oscars fixture â wasnât at Sundayâs Academy Awards but his presence still loomed large.
Host Jimmy Kimmel ribbed the mogul and others sullied by harassment scandals in his opening monologue, and the ceremony was peppered with additional commentary on Timeâs Up, diversity and more.
But the most explicit moment addressing the watershed moment came in the form of three Weinstein accusers â Ashley Judd, Anabella Sciorra and Salma Hayek â speaking to the effects ushered in by the producerâs downfall.
The women used the platform to reflect on the changing landscape (which was called into question when Kobe Bryant took home his first Oscar earlier that night) and highlight the academyâs strides toward inclusion and diversity.
âThis year, many spoke their truth. The journey ahead is long, but slowly, a new path has emerged,â Sciorra said.
âThe changes weâre witnessing are being driven by the powerful sound of new voices, of different voices, of our voices joining together in a mighty chorus that is finally saying timeâs up,â Judd added.
The moment was remarkable because all three women were among the scores who brought allegations of sexual misconduct against Weinstein. The former Oscars fixture has kept a low profile since the game-changing reports led to his downfall.
Upon introducing a video package, the women told the audience to look forward to make sure that the next 90 years are filled with âequality, inclusion and intersectionality.â
Here are a few quotes from those featured in the video:
âEveryone is getting a voice to express something thatâs been happening forever.â â Mira Sorvino, Oscar winner
âSome of our best work has come from turmoil⌠Get ready for more âGet Outs,â âBlack Panthers,â âWrinkle in Timesâ â weâre here and weâre not going anywhere.â â Lee Daniels, two-time Oscar nominee
âNow, straight white dudes can watch movies starring me and relate to that⌠itâs not that hard! Iâve done it my whole life.â â Kumail Nanjiani, Oscar nominee
âWhen âThelma and Louiseâ came out, everyone said, âThis changes everything,â there will be so many more movies starring female characters. That didnât happen, but this is now that moment.â â Geena Davis, Oscar winner
âThereâs nothing to be scared of. Itâs just equality.â â Sarah Silverman, comedian
âSeeing âWonder Womanâ and seeing women cry, something clicked â Iâll say it. This is what white men feel all the time. I imagine itâs gonna be the same thing when people go see âBlack Panther.ââ â Barry Jenkins, Oscar winner
âGo make your movie. We need your movie. I need your movie. So go make it.â â Greta Gerwig, Oscar nominee
Times staff writer Amy Kaufman contributed to this report.
Roger Deakins wins for cinematography
Roger Deakins wins the 2018 Academy Award for cinematography for âBlade Runner 2049.â
Jordan Peele wins for original screenplay
Jordan Peele is the first African American to win a best original screenplay Academy Award.
Jordan Peele wins the 2018 Academy Award for original screenplay for âGet Out.â
Armie Hammer had a hot dog cannon at the Oscars and nothing else matters
Ever since Ellen DeGeneres staged her fabled Oscar selfie in 2014, each Academy Awards host has been compelled to throw an unpredictable element into their ceremony.
From Ellenâs pizza delivery to Gary from Chicago, the bits land with varying degrees of success, but all that changed Sunday night. Because Jimmy Kimmel gave Armie Hammer a hot dog cannon.
Kimmel took a big bunch of celebrities across the street to surprise a group of strangers watching a screening of âA Wrinkle in Timeâ with candy and snacks, specifically, hot dogs.
Thatâs right, hot dog cannons exist and they are magnificent.
Check out the photos below to see the glory for yourself.
James Ivory wins for adapted screenplay
James Ivory wins the 2018 Academy Award for adapted screenplay for âCall Me by Your Name.â
Women over 50 make a sartorial splash at the 90th Academy Awards
When it comes to defining classic Hollywood glamour, few did it better than the women over age 50 who graced the Oscars red carpet.
As awards shows continue to tilt toward safe, simple silhouettes, women of a certain age have the advantage. When you no longer have to flaunt your body, classic looks become a mature womanâs best friend.
Variations on the simple white sheath brought glamour to Laura Dern, 51, and Jane Fonda, 80. Helen Mirren 72, and Eva Marie Saint, 93, defined elegance in jewel-tone, long-sleeve gowns. Meryl Streep, 68, in a sweeping red gown with a deep-V neckline, showed that dĂŠcolletage is ageless.
In a move that may stretch the definition of âvintage clothing,â Rita Moreno, 86, the first woman to EGOTâ she has an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony â wore the same dress she wore to accept her 1962 Oscar for âWest Side Story.â Is it still vintage if you wore it the first time?
Before Tiffany Haddish took the stage with Maya Rudolph ... a foot note
Tiffany Haddish walked backstage clutching a glass of white wine.
âHold that for me,â she said, looking at this reporter as she put it down on the table. âIâm coming back for that, OK?â
The actress was radiating with excitement before presenting with Maya Rudolph, spontaneously erupting into song. âIâm so excited, and I just canât hide it!â âNo, no, no!â
Rudolph chimed in, making it a duet. Both actresses were walking onstage without their heels for a bit â and Haddish advised the production crew not to zoom in on her feet.
âThen the foot fetish people be like, âShe got a bunion! Iâm all into that corn.ââ
After the two came offstage, Haddish returned to retrieve her wine, as promised.
âYou didnât let anybody Bill Cosby it, did you?â she asked. âGood, good, good!â
One more footnote: Yes, if you think youâve seen Haddishâs Alexander McQueen dress before . . . you have. See below . . .
These are the 10 activists Common and Andra Day asked to join them during their Oscars performance of âStand Up for Somethingâ
Common and Andra Dayâs performance of âStand Up for Somethingâ was among the most poignant moments of Sundayâs Academy Awards as the pair were joined by nearly a dozen activists.
In recent months the powerful record â lifted from last yearâs âMarshallâ and up for original song â has taken on a life of its own as a potent anthem of resilience. It has been used as a rallying cry for the gun violence prevention movement and was a cornerstone of the L.A. Womenâs March, and the Peopleâs State of the Union in New York City, and was used to raise awareness on immigration rights.
For Sundayâs performance Day and Common wanted to spotlight 10 individuals working to create change, including the founder of the #MeToo movement and activists from a myriad of causes.
âIf itâs one thing I learned from being a part of âSelmaâ is that, an activist is someone who lives their life for what they believe in and works for that cause everyday,â Common said in a statement before the show. âThe activists we asked to join us on stage are people who have dedicated their lives to making the world better. For some because their own personal experiences have driven them to this place, and some because theyâve seen the injustices going on in the world and felt they had to take action.â
Added Day: âI am truly honored to share the stage with such powerful people. People who work, sacrifice and have fought through their personal pain to make the world a better place. ... Common and I wanted to show people who are working everyday in the trenches to transform perceptions, circumstances, legislation, social and political landscapes, and bring hope to the hopeless.â
Hereâs a breakdown of everyone who appeared onstage alongside the performers:
Alice Brown Otter, the 14-year-old who was a prolific voice of the #NoDAPL movement. In the summer of 2016, she ran 1,519 miles from Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North Dakota to the front steps of the Army Corps of Engineers office in Washington, D.C., to protest the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline.
Patrisse Cullors, queer activist and co-founder of the Black Lives Matter movement.
Bana Alabed, a Syrian refugee from Aleppo, who tweeted during the siege of the city in 2016. The 8-year-old penned a book, âDear World: A Syrian Girlâs Story of War and Plea for Peaceâ about her experience, which J.K. Rowling describes as âa story of love and courage amid brutality and terror.â
Bryan Stevenson, the director of the Equal Justice Initiative and the author of âJust Mercy.â Stevenson and EJI won relief for scores of people wrongly convicted or unfairly sentenced.
Cecile Richards, a lifelong activist for womenâs rights and social justice, including more than a decade as president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America and Planned Parenthood Action Fund.
Tarana Burke, founder of the #MeToo movement.
Dolores Huerta, the president and founder of the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Huerta also co-founded the United Farm Workers of America with Cesar Chavez in 1962. She has received numerous awards, among them the Eleanor Roosevelt Human Rights Award in 1998 and the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2012.
Janet Mock, the New York Times bestselling author of two memoirs, âRedefining Realnessâ and âSurpassing Certainty,â books that broke ground by centering her journey as a young trans woman. Mock spoke at the Womenâs March on Washington and founded #GirlsLikeUs, a project that empowers trans women. Mock is also the first trans woman of color to write and produce for television as sheâs working on Ryan Murphyâs upcoming series âPose.â
JosĂŠ AndrĂŠs, who was named one of Timeâs 100 Most Influential People, Outstanding Chef and Humanitarian of the Year by the James Beard Foundation. He served more than 3.3 million meals in Puerto Rico following the devastation of Hurricane Maria last year, reaching communities in need across all 78 municipalities through 23 kitchens. AndrĂŠsâ work has earned numerous awards including the 2015 National Humanities Medal, one of 12 distinguished recipients of the award from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Nicole Hockley, mother of Dylan Hockley, who was killed in the Sandy Hook shooting. She is the founder and managing director for Sandy Hook Promise, the national non-profit organization founded and led by several family members who lost loved ones at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012.
At the Oscars, itâs a sea of blush, nude and pale pink gowns
Striking a note between bold and bland, blush-tone gowns gave that sense of barely-there coverage mixed with innocence. Blush, nude, pale pink â whatever you call it â the tone can melt into paler complexions, but when itâs embellished with plenty of sparkle, those subtle hues come alive.
They were a popular choice on the Academy Awards red carpet on Sunday night, chosen by Allison Williams in Armani Prive, an Elie Saab Couture-clad Abbie Cornish, Emily V. Gordon in J. Mendel and Elisabeth Moss, who wore Dior Haute Couture.
‘The Silent Child’ wins for live-action short
âThe Silent Childâ wins the 2018 Academy Award for live-action short.
Call him Oscar winner Kobe Bryant now. Or not
Eighteen-time NBA All-Star and five-time champion Kobe Bryant received his first Academy Award Sunday night.
The former Lakers star accepted his Oscar for animated short during Sundayâs ceremony alongside artist Glen Keane, who gave life to his 2015 âDear Basketballâ letter, which announced the ballerâs retirement from the game. Composer John Williams scored the film.
âItâs a message for all of us,â Keane said in his speech. âWhatever form your dream may take, itâs through passion and perseverance that the impossible is possible.â
Bryant, who produced and wrote the short, interrupted Keaneâs speech to remind viewers that âas basketball players, weâre supposed to shut up and dribble.â He additionally thanked his wife and three daughters and kept his comments onstage brief.
The athleteâs nomination alone sparked controversy in the age of #MeToo and Timeâs Up. Sexual misconduct scandals ended careers throughout the entertainment industry in the past year, so Bryantâs recognition by the academy will no doubt raise eyebrows given that he was charged with rape in 2003.
That was the same year the academy awarded the director Oscar to convicted sex offender Roman Polanski for âThe Pianist,â as the The Timesâ columnist Robin Abcarian wrote this week. The charges against Bryant were later dropped, but, Abcarian wrote, that âis not an exoneration.â
Read more about âDear Basketballâ here and Abcarianâs column on Hollywoodâs moral confusion here.
âHeaven Is a Traffic Jam on the 405â wins for documentary short
âHeaven is a Traffic Jam on the 405â wins the 2018 Academy Award for documentary short.
A dazed-looking Sufjan Stevens triggers Oscar memories of Elliott Smith
Reaffirming the established idea that nothing makes a gentle indie boy look more frightened than the Oscars stage, Sufjan Stevens sang his very pretty âMystery of Loveâ (from âCall Me by Your Nameâ) like someone whoâd been called unwillingly to the principalâs office.
The performance â for which Stevens was aided by a hipsterâs dream team that included St. Vincent, Chris Thile and Moses Sumney â took place almost 20 years to the day after Elliott Smith flashed his best deer-in-headlights look as he did âMiss Miseryâ (from âGood Will Huntingâ) on the Academy Awards in 1998.
Lee Smith wins for film editing for âDunkirkâ
Lee Smith wins the 2018 Academy Award for film editing for âDunkirk.â
Allison Janney drops some truth on the Oscars crowd
âI did it all by myself.â
— Allison Janney
‘Dear Basketball’ wins for animated short
âDear Basketballâ wins the 2018 Academy Award for animated short.
âBlade Runner 2049â wins for visual effects
The 2018 Academy Award winners for visual effects are John Nelson, Gerd Nefzer, Paul Lambert and Richard R. Hoover for âBlade Runner 2049â
Sam Rockwell backstage after his Oscar win: âI could go on for an hour about Philip Seymour Hoffmanâ
Sam Rockwell sauntered backstage after winning the supporting actor Oscar for his portrayal of an erratic and racist police officer in director Martin McDonaghâs dark fairy tale, âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.â
He looked relaxed, like a man who expected to win after an awards season that found the film he starred in alongside Frances McDormand and Woody Harrelson garnering a wealth of critical accolades, including seven Academy Award nominations.
Asked what he did to prepare for the volatile role of a deputy who tries to prevent a grieving mother from continuing to publicly chastise the sheriffâs department for not solving the rape and murder of her teenage daughter, Rockwell called his process, âA big soufflĂŠ, a stew. I did some ride-alongs with some cops, met with some skin-graft patients. I had two or three months to indulge in all this research.â
He also elaborated on a previous statement that his characterâs arc was similar to Barney Fife from âThe Andy Griffith Showâ transitioning into Travis Bickle from the ultra-violent 1970s parable, âTaxi Driver.â
âThe town of Ebbing is very much like Mayberry, and Woody Harrelson is very much like Andy Griffith,â he said. âThe goofiness of Barney Fife morphing into Travis Bickle was kind of a generalization. Itâs a lot more complicated than that, obviously.â
Rockwell became extra animated when asked why he thanked the late Philip Seymour Hoffman when he accepted his Oscar statuette. He wasnât sure anyone had heard him because the music was swelling when he uttered his last words.
âHe was an old friend of mine, he directed me in a play at the Public Theater,â Rockwell said, adding that Hoffman was an inspiration to all of his peers including Billy Crudup, Liev Schreiber, Mark Ruffalo and others. âPhil Hoffman was the guy, and he was a great director. He vowed to direct a play of a year ... I could go on for an hour about Philip Seymour Hoffman.â
Regarding McDonaghâs contention that âThree Billboardsâ couldnât be set in Ireland or England, Rockwell said he felt it could be set in almost every working-class town around the world, but, he added, âThere is something very timely about it now with whatâs going on in this country.â
âA Fantastic Womanâsâ Daniela Vegaâs advice to other trans people in the industry
âI would like more trans people to take their own path. And those of us that have been paving the way for others and opening doors, we need to continue to keep those doors open for the next generation.  But a question is, why is it just now that trans individuals are starting to run next to people who have always had those opportunities to play the main roles. Why is that just happening?â
— Daniela Vega, actress
‘Coco’ wins for animated feature film
âCocoâ wins the 2018 Academy Award for animated feature film.
Allison Janney wins for actress in a supporting role
Allison Janney wins the 2018 Academy Award for actress in a supporting role for âI, Tonya.â
In Sacramento, theyâre holding their breath for âLady Birdâ
There was a red carpet in front of the iconic blue house featured in âLady Birdâ as Oscar night drew neighbors rooting for their hometown favorite, writer-director Greta Gerwig.
âHer story really resonates,â said Chris Wood, the owner of the East Sacramento home that serves as the setting for some of the movieâs most poignant moments.
Wood and a large throng of neighbors gathered to watch the Academy Awards, all hoping the movie that has resonated so deeply in Californiaâs capital city would walk away with at least one of the statues on Sunday night.
A few blocks away, a large crowd gathered at Club Raven, a neighborhood bar whose neon sign also got its brief few seconds of fame in Gerwigâs movie. Inside, patrons were dressed up in ball gowns and black tie. (After the film opened, the bar began serving a âLady Birdâ cocktail--vodka, blackberry syrup, sweet and sour mix and soda water.)
Back at the Wood family home, neighbors joked that the house shouldâve been nominated for best supporting actor.
âWeâve had fun,â said Wood of the notoriety.
Kazuhiro Tsuji just made Oscar history â but heâd rather focus on his work
With his Academy Award win, along with David Malinowski and Lucy Sibbick, for their work in âDarkest Hour,â Kazuhiro Tsuji became the first Asian individual to win the Oscar for hair and makeup.
But the makeup artist, whom Gary Oldman pulled out of retirement for this project featuring the actor as Winston Churchill, doesnât focus on his identity and being a first.
âI donât want to think about [being] Asian,â he said backstage at the Academy Awards. âIâm just doing what I love to do. As soon as we start to think about the race we are, itâs not good. It doesnât work well.â
Maybe letâs forget that Oscar performance of âCocoâsâ âRemember Meâ?
Well, that was ⌠kind of awkward.
Considered by many to be the front-runner for the original song Oscar, âRemember Meâ (from Disneyâs âCocoâ) got an iffy rendition that started out with the very charming Gael GarcĂa Bernal warbling a few lines in what appeared to be his impression of a 12-year-old boy.
Then Miguel and Natalia Lafourcade showed up, and though they certainly sang better than Bernal did, the two seemed stifled by needing to wind their way through the troupe of dancers twirling around them.
Great song, shaky performance.
âA Fantastic Womanâ wins for foreign language film
âA Fantastic Womanâ wins the 2018 Academy Award for foreign language film.
Mary J. Blige digs deep for Oscar performance of âMighty Riverâ
Mary J. Blige gave the first of the eveningâs five performances of the tunes nominated for original song â but she definitely didnât come with a soft launch in mind.
Singing âMighty Riverâ from âMudboundâ (which also led to a nod for Blige in the supporting actress category), the veteran R&B star dug deep into the gospel-fired composition she co-wrote with Raphael Saadiq and Taura Stinson, pushing her voice close to the breaking point as she sang about how âgreed is a monsterâ and described the need to âput our differences aside.â
Janet Mock at the Oscars: Itâs time for better representation, in front of the camera and behind it
I think right now thereâs greater awareness. I canât wait to see the actual action. The actual action that people do to actually, hopefully change things from the gender pay gap to, of course, sexual assault and harassment in the workplace. And making sure also ⌠behind the scenes that we shift and change, and that people who are actually being portrayed on camera are written by and directed by and costumed by folk from those communities.
— Trans activist Janet Mock
Paul D. Austerberry wins for production design
Paul D. Austerberry wins the 2018 Academy Award for production design for âThe Shape of Water.â
The other nominees include:
‘Dunkirk’ wins for sound mixing
The 2018 Academy Award winners for sound mixing are Mark Weingarten, Gregg Landaker and Gary A. Rizzo for âDunkirk.â
Greta Gerwig and Laura Dern crowd-source their documentary presentation
Just before she was to present best documentary feature, Greta Gerwig was having her makeup touched up - - âI did you on âNo Strings Attached!â the makeup artist reminded the actress - - when co-presenter Laura Dern arrived backstage. Gerwig was jittery with excitement.
â I canât breathe in,â she said with a smile.
âI know,â Dern said. âI wish I didnât wear eyeglasses.â
âWhen we walk out, should we hold hands?â Dern asked Gerwig. âI think arm-in-arm is awkward.â She noticed a clutch of reporters observing the actressesâ conversation and asked for advice.
âHolding hands? Thatâs cute, right?â
âWe crowd-sourced it!â Gerwig said.
Just as they made their decision, an accountant from Price Waterhouse Cooper handed Dern the envelope. âCan you confirm that this is for documentary feature?â the accountant asked the actress.
Because we arenât playing around with those envelopes this year, yâall.
#MeToo founder Tarana Burke answers the question: What next?
After a momentous year in which Hollywood began to confront sexism and sexual misconduct in the industry, #MeToo founder Tarana Burke walked the Oscars red carpet with a compelling question lingering in the air: What next?
âWeâve only been talking about sexual violence for four months, so when people are already rushed to say whatâs next, we have a lot to unpack where we are right now,â Burke said. âAnd so weâre continuing to unpack and look at sexual violence, and really, whatâs next is figuring out how to get sexual violence resources. We have millions of people around the world who have opened up and are talking about their needs, and now we need to figure out how to meet those needs.â
‘Dunkirk’ wins for sound editing
The 2018 Academy Award winners for sound editing are Richard King and Alex Gibson for âDunkirk.â
From Harvey Weinstein to âBlack Panther,â some of Jimmy Kimmelâs best zingers from his Oscars monologue
Jimmy Kimmel returned for his second stint hosting the Oscars, hopefully this time without the wrong film being named best picture at the end.
Here are some of the best bits from his opening monologue:
After thanking the academy for having him back a second time: âSome of you will be going home with an Academy Award. This year when you hear your name called, donât get up right away. Give us a minute, we donât want another thing.â
About the âthingâ that happened: âLast year, about a week before the show, the producers asked me if I wanted to do comedy with the accountants, and I said âNo, I donât want to do comedy with the accountants.â And so the accountants went ahead and did some comedy on their own.â
About the Oscar statuette itself: âOscar is the most beloved and respected man in Hollywood and thereâs a good reason why. Just look at him, he keeps his hands where you can see him, never says a rude word and most importantly, no penis at all. He is a statue of limitations.â
Forget the gold: These Olympians are all about glam at the Oscars
Itâs a long way from Pyeongchang, South Korea, to Hollywood, but you wouldnât know that to look at the athletes at the Academy Awards on Sunday night.
Several Olympians graced the red carpet, not bedecked with medals, but with style.
Besties and figure skaters Mirai Nagasu and Adam Rippon were styling, with Nagasu in light blue and Rippon rocking a leather halter.
Alpine skier Lindsey Vonn broke out the black for the event with beads and sparkles and sequins to spare. Vonn was joined on the carpet by Spanish tennis star GarbiĂąe Muguruza.
At the Academy Awards, power dressing is a bold move
Although some men might think veering into velvet is a big step forward in formal wear, a few Oscar attendees made a bold interpretation of power dressing for the red carpet.
Fresh off winning a bronze medal at the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, figure skater Adam Rippon fearlessly showed off the trends for cutouts and bondage in his black Moschino suit designed by Jeremy Scott.
Besides excising the shoulders from the tuxedo jacket, Scott accessorized the Olympian with a patent leather bow tie, a leather studded chest harness and a satin cummerbund. Compared with the weather in South Korea, Hollywood was balmy at 62 degrees on Sunday. So Rippon didnât wear his socks under his ensemble, which Scott described as âa nod to old Hollywood with a twist.â
Eva Marie Saint is older than the academy and proud of it
IÂ just realized something:Â Iâm older than the academy. ... Iâm very proud of that. Just keep moving.
— Eva Marie Saint, 93, who presented the award for costume design
Read more about Eva Marie Saint and her Hollywood history here.
Rachel Morrison on her historic Oscar nomination
What three words describe the feeling of being the first woman to receive an Oscar nomination in the cinematography category? âFulfilling, inspiring, terrifying,â Rachel Morrison said Sunday on the red carpet.
âAnd to be the first is, obviously, thereâs an extra pressure. Itâs momentous. I know there are women looking up to me now, and hopefully this will open doors for people across all budgets, across all projects.â
Morrison just might be back next year, as sheâs the director of photography on director Ryan Cooglerâs hit âBlack Panther.â
âRyan Iâve known since âFruitvale [Station].â Heâs like the brother I always wanted and never had, so just to hang out with Ryan for six months was the best part of âBlack Pantherâ for me.
âThe setâs awesome too. You get to do things, certainly for me, that Iâve never done before. Bit stunt sequences, the CGI elements which turned out to be a lot less intimidating than I thought theyâd be. We all were trying to do something special ⌠with a message and much more grounded authentic look at the world. So Iâm incredibly proud of the results.â
‘Icarus’ wins for documentary feature
âIcarusâ wins the 2018 Academy Award for documentary feature.
Taraji P. Henson appears to throw shade at Ryan Seacrest on the red carpet
There was a definite bit of shade of the Oscars red carpet Sunday, thanks to Taraji P. Henson.
As Ryan Seacrest soldiered through a handful of interviews, he initially managed to escape even the slightest mention of the sexual harassment allegation that was leveled against him recently.
Henson apparently didnât get the memo.
Taraji P. Henson says she wasnât dissing Ryan Seacrest at the Oscars
âYou know what, the universe has a way of taking care of the good people,â she said to him directly, flicking a finger under his chin as she continued, âYou know what I mean?â
Seacrest replied, âI agree.â
The âAmerican Idolâ host disagrees with his accuser and has since October denied the accusations made by his former stylist, Suzie Hardy. In November, a third-party investigator hired by E! News found âinsufficient evidenceâ of misconduct. Hardy went public with details last week.
Mark Bridges wins for costume design
Mark Bridges wins the 2018 Academy Award for costume design for âPhantom Thread.â The filmâs star, Daniel Day-Lewis, is pictured.
‘Darkest Hour’ wins for makeup and hairstyling
The 2018 Academy Award winners for makeup and hairstyling are Kazuhiro Tsuji, David Malinowski and Lucy Sibbick for âDarkest Hour.â
Sam Rockwell wins for actor in a supporting role
Sam Rockwell wins the 2018 Academy Award for actor in a supporting role for âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.â
Wakanda forever: âBlack Pantherâ cast shines on Oscars red carpet
Fresh off the filmâs third weekend topping the box office, several members of the âBlack Pantherâ cast graced the Academy Awards red carpet looking like Wakandan royalty.
âThe Walking Deadâsâ Danai Gurira and Oscar winner Lupita Nyongâo were spotted on the carpet together, with Gurira in pale pink and Nyongâo rocking black and gold.
âBlack Pantherâ star Chadwick Boseman repped Wakanda several times on the carpet, posing for photos and shouting âWakanda foreverâ to thrilled onlookers.
And, of course, Daniel Kaluuya was featured prominently on the carpet, given his nomination for lead actor in Jordan Peeleâs horror hit âGet Out.â
Check out the style below.
Read more about the continued box office dominance of âBlack Pantherâ here.
Michael Stuhlbarg on making films that resonate with the LGBTQ community
Itâs been a long year. âCall Me by Your Nameâ came out at the Sundance Festival and people seemed to respond to it right away, and so weâve been talking about it all year long, which has been thrilling and a good thing.  Iâm glad that the films have been received well. I think films about love in particular are specific to all of us, and I would say thank you [to the LGBTQ community] and I would say I support you and I hope to tell more stories that resonate with you and with us all.
— Michael Stuhlbarg, âCall Me by Your Nameâ actor
âPhoenixesâ Ashley Judd, Mira Sorvino talk Weinstein, Timeâs Up on Oscars red carpet
Oscars presenter Ashley Judd brought Mira Sorvino to the ceremony as her date on Sunday night. And the two women had plenty to say about disgraced producer Harvey Weinstein and the Timeâs Up movement that sprouted in his harassment scandalâs wake.
âI want people to know that this movement isnât stopping,â Sorvino told Vanity Fairâs Krista Smith during ABCâs red carpet coverage. âWeâre going forward until we have an equitable and safe world for women.â
Timeâs Up advocate Sorvino, who won her supporting actress Oscar for 1995âs âMighty Aphrodite,â said she is actively supporting anti-sexual harassment legislation in California.
âWe want to take our activism and our power into action and change things for every woman, everywhere working in any workplace,â Sorvino said.
The two women, who were among the scores of women who publicly accused Weinstein of harassment, highlighted the active support theyâve received since coming forward and the various initiatives that are encouraging change for for women in Hollywood and beyond.
Though no official dress code was implemented on the Oscars red carpet, the movement was still a popular topic of discussion.
Judd recounted her alleged 1997 encounter with Weinstein and said she told her âdevastatingâ story the moment it happened.
âWhatâs so spectacular about this moment is that finally the world is able to hear,â Judd said. âWe women, one, our voices have been squelched, and two, those of us who have come forward, weâve often been disbelieved, minimized, shamed. So much of the movement is about externalizing that shame and putting it back where it belongs, which is with the perpetrator.â
Judd described them as âphoenixes that can light the wayâ in Hollywood and beyond.
The women noted that 20,000 people have donated to the Timeâs Up Legal Defense Fund, which has already raised more than $21 million since it was established at the beginning of the year.
Jimmy Kimmel is pumped backstage before the Oscars, and Kelly Ripa is ready for interviews without Ryan Seacrest
With 10 minutes to go before showtime Jimmy Kimmel emerged from his dressing room, where dozens of staffers outfitted in black awaited him. One launched into a spontaneous chant: âBest show ever! Best show ever!â It rang through the halls and continued as Kimmel walked toward the stage.
Also following behind him? Kelly Ripa and Helen Mirren, who emerged from the elevator leading to the backstage area just as the chant was in full swing. âDame Helen Mirren is here! Letâs have a little respect, for Christâs sake!â Ripa kidded. The talk show host has a prime spot backstage to interview celebrities after they win their big prizes. She will be conducting interviews for her talk show, âLive With Kelly and Ryan,â without her co-host, Ryan Seacrest.
The best and worst looks at the Oscars
Fashionâs biggest red carpet is here and we have the best looks and some misses from the Oscars.
Be sure to keep checking as weâll be adding more looks. Here is a sneak peek:
Best:
She is a royal after all, and here is Helen Mirren in blue.
Worst:
Is it a dress? Weâre not sure what St. Vincent is wearing but we believed she is a miss for tonight.
The Oscar screener was invented by accident, and other secrets of an awards season staple
Filmmaker John Boorman was desperate.
Despite great reviews, his 1985 movie âThe Emerald Forestâ wasnât getting a for-your-consideration Academy Awards campaign from its distributor, which was in disarray. Few members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences had seen the drama, and Boorman feared it would be overlooked.
So he arranged in January 1986 for several hundred VHS copies of âThe Emerald Forestâ to be made available for free to academy members at local video rental stores. He took out ads in entertainment trade publications to alert Hollywood to his effort, splitting the $15,000 cost with the distributor.
âIt was just a rather desperate act of trying to get some recognition for the picture,â said Boorman, 85, who directed and produced the Powers Boothe-starring film. âI was aware that it hadnât been done before.â
Dee Rees on the red carpet: âIt took 90 years to get hereâ
âMudboundâ co-writer and director Dee Rees arrived on the Oscars red carpet, fully aware of what her nomination â the first for a black woman in the adapted screenplay category â could do for her film.
The Academy Awards, she said, makes people aware of films that they have not seen. The ceremony also highlights films that âunpack the cultureâ and âget people talking about the art around the film.â
And the worst part of the Oscars? âI think people can stay at the spectacle level and only get inspired by the spectacle,â she said, adding that âI hope they enjoy the spectacle but then dive deeper into the art.â
Her history-making nomination did prompt some reflection, she said.
âWhy am I the first? It took 90 years to get here,â she said, adding that she had lunch with Suzanne Depasse, the first black woman nominated for original screenplay.
Rees and âMudboundâ have some tough competition. The other nominees are âCall Me by Your Name,â screenplay by James Ivory; âThe Disaster Artist,â screenplay by Scott Neustadter & Michael H. Weber; âLogan,â screenplay by Scott Frank & James Mangold and Michael Green, and story by Mangold; and âMollyâs Game,â written for the screen by Aaron Sorkin.
Facing a copyright suit, can âShape of Waterâ win for original screenplay?
The script for âThe Shape of Waterâ is up for an Oscar in the original screenplay category, but a copyright infringement lawsuit alleges originality isnât one of the filmâs strengths.
David Zindel, son of author and Pulitzer-winning playwright Paul Zindel, filed the suit in mid-February, alleging the story was taken in large part from his dadâs 1969 play âLet Me Hear You Whisper.â
The screenplay is credited as written by Guillermo del Toro and Vanessa Taylor; with the story also by Del Toro.
Fox Searchlight, which is one of the defendants along with director Del Toro and others associated with âShape,â said it intends to file for a dismissal and called the suit âmeritless.â
The studio cast aspersions on the timing of the suit, saying it was targeted to Oscars voting in order to get a settlement. An attorney for the plaintiffs said a âgroundswellâ of commentary about the two worksâ similarities alerted David Zindel to the situation, which was addressed promptly after the studio did nothing.
In 1983, Meryl Streep was already on an Oscars roll
The year is 1983 and the nominees in the lead actress category are standouts: Debra Winger, Sissy Spacek, Jessica Lange and Julie Andrews, but all of them fell short of the one, the only, Meryl Streep.
Streep took home her second Academy Award that year for her performance in âSophieâs Choice.â It was her fourth Oscar nomination in five years.
Thirty-five years later, little has changed for Streep beyond the names of her competition. Sheâs again nominated for lead actress, and this year she faces formidable foes in Saoirse Ronan, Frances McDormand, Sally Hawkins and Margot Robbie.
Regardless of whether Streep takes home the Oscar for âThe Post,â the nomination alone â her 21st â pads her lead as the most nominated performer in the acting categories in Academy Award history. Her nearest competitors are Jack Nicholson and the late Katharine Hepburn, with 12 apiece.
All hail Oscar queen Meryl Streep! Long may she reign!
Mary J. Blige feeling humbled and blessed on the red carpet
Man, Iâve never been to the Oscars before in my life and this just makes me want to cry. Just to be here as an actress and to be here for music. To be nominated for acting and to be nominated for what I do already. I donât know I feel lightheaded I feel humbled, so blessed. Itâs a huge blessing. Man doesnât do this. This is all God. Man canât do this.
Honorary Oscars: These are the Governors Award recipients
The 90th Academy Awards havenât started yet, but the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has already handed out five honorary awards this season.
The Governors Awards are conferred by the academyâs Board of Governors, and Oscar statuettes are given to the honorees ahead of the glitzy telecast.
The latest batch were presented to directors Charles Burnett and Agnès Varda, cinematographer Owen Roizman and prolific actor Donald Sutherland during the 9th Govenors Awards gala in November.
The governors also recognized director Alejandro G. Iùårritu with a special award for his virtual-reality installation, âCarne y Arenaâ (Virtually Present, Physically Invisible), for its remarkable storytelling.
The merit honors âextraordinary distinction in lifetime achievement, exceptional contributions to the state of motion picture arts and sciences, or for outstanding service to the academy,â according to AMPAS.
Highlights from the star-studded event are usually incorporated into the main Oscars show.
Rita Moreno goes vintage with Oscar dress she wore to the Academy Awards in 1962
Rita Moreno, who is set to present at the 90th Academy Awards tonight in Los Angeles, is bringing a piece of Oscars history with her.
The 86-year-old Puerto Rican actress and singer is wearing the same dress she donned when she took home the best supporting actress Oscar for her role in âWest Side Storyâ in 1962.
Morenoâs decision to wear the same dress was revealed during the Oscar rehearsals in Hollywood on Saturday by her daughter, Fernanda Gordon, as she watched her mother on stage. âShe bought the fabric herself and had an architect make it,â said Gordon of the sleeveless, halter-neck gown with a billowing gold-patterned skirt, which her mother paired with black opera gloves when she accepted her gold statuette 56 years ago.
Allison Williams, Kelly Marie Tran and more hit the Oscars red carpet
An hour before the ceremony begins, the stars are already out in full force on the red carpet. Jordan Peele and Allison Williams of âGet Out,â Chadwick Boseman of âBlack Panther,â Kelly Marie Tran of âStar Wars: The Last Jediâ and more are strutting their stuff at 90th Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood.
This is how the Oscars opened its ceremony 50 years ago
Thereâs a strange juxtaposition in watching the opening moments of the 1968 Academy Awards.
Quick cuts of celebrities including Sonny and Cher and Carol Channing are spliced together with shots of Raquel Welch and Audrey Hepburn attempting to find their seats, as all the magic unfolds at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium.
But as the ceremony starts, itâs not host Bob Hope who takes the stage, but academy president and Oscar-winning actor Gregory Peck.
It was not a typical ceremony. In 1968, the Oscars were postponed for only the second time in history, pushed back two days, after the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
âSociety has always been reflected in its art, and one measure of Dr. Kingâs influence on the society we live in is that, of the five films nominated for best picture of the year, two dealt with the subject of understanding between the races,â Peck said in his opening remarks.
Those films, âGuess Whoâs Coming to Dinnerâ and âIn the Heat of the Nightâ won two and five Oscars, respectively.
Striking about the clip is how many of the issues the show faced are still pressing concerns in 2018, suggesting that even though the Oscars ceremony may look very different, things havenât changed much at all.
For more historical Academy Awards moments, check out The Timesâ Oscars timeline.
Here are the predictions for the winners of all 24 Oscar categories
Talking to academy members the past couple of weeks, I heard an earful about all the problems they had with various best picture contenders â âWhyâd she have to ⌠that fish?â lamented one voter of âThe Shape of Waterâsâ interspecies sex scene â but not so much about the ways they loved the nominated movies. Right up until the Feb. 27 deadline, many still couldnât decide how to rank their ballots.
With Gary Oldman, Frances McDormand, Sam Rockwell and Allison Janney sweeping all of the key precursor awards, the four major acting races appear to be locked down. But the overall indecision in the best picture field has proved contagious. With this yearâs best picture race being such a wide-open free-for-all, Iâve gone back and forth on my own prediction a couple of times.
Will it be âThe Shape of Waterâ? Could âGet Outâ sneak in? What about âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ? Canât we just give it to âMoonlightâ again, this time in a proper fashion? But the wheelâs got to stop spinning sometime. Hereâs where it landed.
James Ivory gets facetime with TimothĂŠe Chalamet on the red carpet
âCall Me By Your Nameâ director James Ivory was formally supporting his star TimotheĂŠ Chalamet on the Oscars red carpet Sunday â he had the actorâs face custom-drawn on the white shirt under his tuxedo jacket.
Ivory said heâs giving the shirt to Chalamet after the show.
Listen to the 5 Oscar-nominated songs before theyâre performed during the broadcast
Proven movie-music makers will vie against pop-star newcomers for the original song Oscar on Sunday night, with the nominated songs performed during the broadcast before the winner is called.
Canât wait for Common and Andra Day, Mary J. Blige, Sufjan Stevens, Keala Settle, and Gael GarcĂa Bernal, Natalia Lafourcade and Miguel to work their vocal magic during the show? Then listen to all five of the nominees right now.
The nominees include songs from the musicals âThe Greatest Showmanâ and âCoco,â along with more introspective numbers from âMudboundâ and âCall Me by Your Nameâ and a sweeping empowerment anthem featured in âMarshall.â
Do the Oscars matter? Arguments for and against
A debate about the Oscarsâ relevance has been brewing among Oscar watchers, and The Timesâ Jeffrey Fleishman and Kenneth Turan had much to say on the topic in dueling essays published this week.
Turan said they still matter, while Fleishman argued that they donât, though both made interesting cases for their positions.
Hereâs a sampling of what they had to say:
If the Oscars truly were passĂŠ, no one would take the time to worry if they still mattered. The fact that the question is asked is partial confirmation of significance.
— Kenneth Turan
Another reason to tune in? They serve as âa one-of-a-kind yardstick, an indicator of what the Hollywood community values now and in the past,â Turan said.
But some, namely Fleishman, believe the awards have squarely lost their mojo âamid rising oceans, sexual abuse scandals and slain schoolchildren.â
The Oscars seem insignificant amid the clamor. But they roll along in sequins and swag, offering rehearsed outrage but mostly escape for the collective soul.
— Jeffrey Fleishman
Phantom Bread, Get Trout and more dishes for your Oscar viewing party
The 90th Academy Awards ceremony is nearly upon us, which means itâs time to indulge your inner Frances McGourmand and Foodie Harrelson and host a very special Oscar-themed banquet. Starved for inspiration? Feel free to try any of the dishes below. (Special thanks to my wife for her contributions to the menu.)
Appetizers
Escargot Robbie
Guillermo del Toro Sashimi
Tom Yum Koong
Lady Birdâs Nest
Salad Hawkins (with Lettuce Leaf Manville and The Shape of Watercress)
Willem Dafoie Gras
Oscars flashback: âTitanicâ towers over the competition, winning 11 awards
Believe it or not, itâs already been 20 years since âTitanicâ established itself as one of the most decorated Oscar films of all time.
At the 70th Academy Awards in 1998, James Cameronâs ship of dreams sailed away with 11 Oscars, including honors for picture, director, score and song.
Though decades have passed, the impact of the film remains as strong as ever.
Fans were thrilled before the 2016 Academy Awards ceremony when âTitanicâ stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet reunited on the red carpet and even more tickled when Winslet made her way backstage after the ceremony to congratulate her friend on winning his first Oscar for âThe Revenant.â (Winslet nabbed her Oscar in 2009 for âThe Reader.â)
And if fan fervor werenât enough to cement the legac of âTitanic,â hereâs how some of The Timesâ film experts weighed in on the best best-picture winner of all time.
For more historical Academy Awards moments, check out The Timesâ Oscar timeline.
Oscars add 6 new envelope rules to prevent another flub
After taking responsibility for the epic best picture flub at the Oscars last year, Tim Ryan of PwC got down to business.
He grilled the partners who made the gaffe, then personally reached out to the dozens of people affected by it: the showâs producers, presenters and stage managers and the filmmakers behind âLa La Landâ and âMoonlight.â
In the months that followed, PwC met with the academy many times to come up with new protocols and safeguards to prevent such a blunder in the future. Ryan revealed six new reforms to the Associated Press. They include a new process in which the celebrity presenter will confirm they have the correct envelope before stepping onstage, PwC partners attending rehearsals, as well as measures to quickly correct any mistake.
There are eight first-time Oscar nominees for acting this year â can you guess who?
Sure, itâs Merylâs Streepâs 21st Oscar nomination â yawn. But for eight actors, Sunday is the first time under the nominee spotlight in the circusâ biggest tent.
So which performers are up for their first-ever Oscar? There are three men and five women, from seven different films. Five of those films â âCall Me By Your Name,â âGet Out,â âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,â âPhantom Threadâ and âLady Birdâ â are nominated for best picture.
Hint: One of the newbie nominees is Laurie Metcalf, for âLady Bird,â but you probably guessed that already, given that we have her photo right up there.
Dying to know the rest? Simply read on âŚ
Whoâs performing at the Oscars?
The three-hour Academy Awards ceremony is peppered with musical numbers from this yearâs crop of Oscar-nominated songs.
Slated to perform between award presentations are Mary J. Blige, Keala Settle, Sufjan Stevens, Common with Andra Day, Natalia LaFourcade, Miguel and Gael GarcĂa Bernal.
Bernal, LaFourcade and Miguel will perform âRemember Meâ from the animated film âCoco.â
Blige, a supporting actress nominee, will perform âMighty Riverâ from the sharecropping drama âMudbound,â a song she co-wrote with Raphael Saadiq and Taura Stinson.
Common, who earned an Academy Award for âSelmaâ in 2015, and Day will perform âStand Up for Somethingâ from the Thurgood Marshall biopic âMarshall.â Common wrote the lyrics with celebrated songwriter Diane Warren, who also wrote the music.
Settle will perform âThis Is Meâ from the P.T. Barnum musical âThe Greatest Showman,â and Stevens will perform âMystery of Love,â written for the romantic drama âCall Me by Your Name.â
Since itâs the 90th anniversary of the ceremony, itâs likely that producers could throw in a couple of historical montages and surprise appearances to spice things up.
How to get on the Oscars guest list
Over the last two years, most everyone has applauded the motion picture academyâs decision to add nearly 1,500 new industry professionals as a long-needed step toward diversifying the groupâs ranks.
But the ever-increasing enrollment has created one small problem:
Itâs almost impossible to get a ticket to the Oscars these days unless youâre willing to beg or engage in some serious wheeling and dealing.
The Oscars have always been the toughest ticket in town, and, as the academy has promised to keep adding new members in an effort to double the number of women and minorities in its ranks by 2020, the seating inventory will be squeezed even tighter with each passing year.
âUnfortunately, itâs only going to get harder,â says an academy spokesperson who was not authorized to speak on the record about ticketing.
Why #TimesUp will not be protesting on the Oscars red carpet
We are not an awards show protest group. So we stand down this time
— Ava DuVernay, filmmaker
The women behind #TimesUp first made their mission clear to the world at an awards show â wearing black to the Golden Globes on Jan. 7 in solidarity with victims of sexual harassment and assault. But the leaders of the organization say they have made a conscious choice to âstand downâ at this weekendâs Academy Awards.
âWe are not an awards show protest group,â explained filmmaker Ava DuVernay. âSo we stand down this time.â
Just days before the Oscars, the âWrinkle in Timeâ director and a handful of other Timeâs Up members â Shonda Rhimes, Laura Dern, Tessa Thompson, Bad Robot co-CEO Katie McGrath and attorney Tina Tchen â met with about a dozen members of the media on Thursday to discuss what the group has accomplished in its first 60 days.
The meeting, held at the West Hollywood office of publicity firm Sunshine Sachs, lasted roughly an hour as representatives discussed everything from the Timeâs Up Legal Defense Fund (which has amassed $21 million in donations) to recent allegations of sexual misconduct against Ryan Seacrest.
Watch âGet Outâsâ alternate ending, one of the great scenes cut from this yearâs Oscar nominees
Just because youâve fallen in love with one of this yearâs best picture Academy Award nominees doesnât mean youâve actually seen the whole film. As with any production, there are incredible moments that make it all the way to the edit suite â but not to the final cut. We spoke with five directors and editors responsible for the Oscar-nominated versions of the films to tell us about the scenes that just didnât pass the final audition.
âGet Outâ
Whatâs missing: The original ending in which Chris (Daniel Kaluuya) is not saved by the timely arrival of his friend Rod, but is instead caught by the police and put in jail; later Chris is shown dissuading Rod from investigating the case further.
Why cut it? âIt was a beautifully performed scene, a sad scene and very poignant and honest about what happens to so many people who find themselves in the wrong place at the wrong time,â says writer-director Jordan Peele. âBut I realized I had asked the audience to sit through so much tension and claustrophobia, and to deny them that victory, it didnât make sense. The ending we got, the moment that [what appears to be a police] car comes, the audience gets that whole original ending in that moment. Thatâs more powerful than if Iâd told them what happened.â
âStrong Islandâ director Yance Ford has already made Oscars history
On Oscars nomination morning, Yance Ford made history as the first openly transgender filmmaker to have a film nominated, âStrong Islandâ for best documentary. Itâs an honor he doesnât take lightly as a member âof the generation that took back âqueer,ââ he said.
âIf my making history makes it easier for a trans kid at home somewhere to feel more at home in their skin, then Iâm so excited about that,â he said. âIf I can use this moment to remind folks that trans people are subject to violence at greater rates than any other group in this country, Iâm happy about that. If I can help one family embrace their child and not displace them and throw them out, Iâm happy about that.â
11 politically charged moments from Oscar history
The 2017 Screen Actors Guild Awards turned out to be one of the most politically charged in memory, with multiple winners taking the opportunity to challenge President Trumpâs policies.
Since then, the atmosphere has only heightened â think #MeToo, Timeâs Up â and Hollywood is unlikely to stay out of the fray on Oscar night. But if things get political, it certainly wonât be the first time the event has been used as an amplifier for activism.
Read on for 11 of Oscarâs most notable political moments:
How the Oscars best picture voting works
We can debate the reasons why âMoonlightâ prevailed over âLa La Landâ in last yearâs best picture race â maybe it was the movie that better reflected the moment, perhaps new voters gravitated toward a new sensibility, possibly an aversion to Ryan Gosling mansplaining jazz.
But thereâs no argument as to how âMoonlightâ won. More academy members ranked Barry Jenkinsâ intimate coming-of-age story higher on their ballots than Damien Chazelleâs retro-leaning, romantic musical.
With its 14 nominations, âLa La Landâ may well have had more No. 1 votes for best picture than âMoonlight.â PricewaterhouseCoopers wonât spill the beans on that count.
But the firmâs accountants do readily acknowledge that the Oscar winner sometimes isnât the movie that is most passionately loved. Often, itâs the picture that is most generally liked â or, for those glass-half-empty types, the picture that is least disliked.
Whatâs the best best picture? And what movie shouldâve won an Oscar but didnât? Our critics would love to tell you
As the Academy Awards celebrate a milestone 90th anniversary, the legacy of the best picture award is set to enter a new era. But how many of the previous 89 best picture winners are we still watching today? And what are the movies that Oscar voters missed? (Surely âSinginâ in the Rainâ won an Oscar, right? Not so fast.)
Since one of the most enjoyable parts of any Oscar season is the healthy debate these awards provoke, The Timesâ film critics and reporters offer up their personal favorites among the academyâs chosen best pictures, as well as picks for the votersâ biggest oversight.
Five ways this yearâs Oscars could make history
Every year as the Academy Awards begin, hardcore Oscar nerds get out their score cards and prepare to note every fresh benchmark and noteworthy stat.
Last year, for example, the musical âLa La Landâ set a record for the most nominations â 14 â without winning best picture, and the documentary âO.J.: Made in America,â with a running time of nearly eight hours, became the longest film ever to win an Academy Award.
Hereâs a heads up on five possible ways that this yearâs Oscars could make history.
1. Should she win, âMudboundâ cinematographer Rachel Morrison would become the first woman to ever to win the Oscar for best cinematography. Morrison has already made history as the first female director of photography to score a nomination.
2. âCall Me By Your Nameâ screenwriter and co-producer James Ivory and âFaces Placesâ writer-director Agnès Varda â both 89 â are the oldest male and female Oscar nominees ever, respectively. If either were to win, theyâd become the oldest Academy Award winner in history, edging out composer Ennio Morricone, who was 87 when he earned an Oscar for âThe Hateful Eight.â (In the event that they both won, Varda would hold the record by dint of being eight days older than Ivory.)
3. If he wins the documentary prize for âStrong Island,â Yance Ford would become the first openly transgender filmmaker to take home an Oscar. âIf my making history makes it easier for a trans kid at home somewhere to feel more at home in their skin, then Iâm so excited about that,â Ford told The Times last month.
4. âMudboundâ writer-director Dee Rees could become the first African American woman to ever win the Oscar in a screenplay category. In the entire history of the Oscars, only one other black woman has ever received a screenplay nomination: Suzanne de Passe, who earned an original screenplay nod for co-writing 1972âs âLady Sings the Blues.â
5. Should he pull out an upset win for his performance in âCall Me by Your Name,â 22-year-old TimothĂŠe Chalamet would set a record as the youngest-ever best actor winner, taking the title from Adrien Brody, who was 29 when he won the prize for âThe Pianist.â
Watch the key scenes that could win the lead acting nominees an Oscar
Of course, it takes a fully realized performance to win an Academy Award, but sometimes it takes just a single scene to win the heart of an audience member â or an Oscar voter. But which scene is that âkeyâ one â the prize-winning moment? Here, the 10 directors and producers behind this yearâs lead actor and actress nominees offer up the scenes where their leads rose to the challenge â and showed off truly award-worthy acting chops.
Sally Hawkins, âThe Shape of Waterâ
Key scene: Having learned that the life of the sea creature she loves is in danger, mute Elisa (Hawkins) demands that her neighbor and best friend Giles (Richard Jenkins) help her to save him.
What makes it great: âEverything Sally does in the movie is so critical; she has to do it all with her eyes and movement,â says producer J. Miles Dale. âSheâs saying, âMy whole life people have seen me for what I lack; he sees me for what I am.â Sheâs so emphatic, and smacking her hands, and she just jumps off the screen in this scene.â
Having learned that the life of the sea creature she loves is in danger, mute Elisa (Sally Hawkins) demands that her neighbor and best friend, Giles (Richard Jenkins), help her save him.
The red carpet isnât actually red, and other Academy Awards secrets
There is only one Academy Awards and there is only one color of red used for the showsâ red carpet. Installers from Signature Systems Group talk about what it takes to lay down the red carpet at the Academy Awards.
There is perhaps no more famous a red carpet in show business â and the world â than the one unfurled in front of the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood for the Academy Awards.
Signature Systems Group, a flooring company with offices in Santa Fe Springs, is responsible for making sure that the 50,000-square-foot carpet not only shines, but also doesnât trip up any starlets during Sundayâs awards show. The company has handled the painstaking task of installing the Oscars carpet since 2008, when it acquired American Turf & Carpet, a local outfit and longtime show vendor.
The unique nature of the Academy Awards extends to its carpet: It isnât even a traditional red.
Instead, the carpet is closer to burgundy and has been for the last 15 years. The exclusive shade â called Academy Red â is supposed to flatter the A-list actors who are photographed and filmed walking on it. Itâs a secret color, one whose precise specifications the showâs organizers wonât reveal for fear of copycats.
The secrecy surrounding the carpet illustrates the exacting nature of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the organization behind the annual awards show. And itâs just one quirk of the custom carpet.
And the Oscars presenters are...
Rumor has it that Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway will return to present the best picture Oscar again despite last yearâs envelope flub, but ABC and the academy have yet to confirm their appearance.
As usual, the star-studded roster includes Academy Award winners and past and present nominees, as well as a major player who helped orchestrate the downfall of a perennial Oscars fixture, disgraced producer Harvey Weinstein. (Weâre looking at you, Ashley Judd.)
This yearâs confirmed presenters are:
- Mahershala Ali
- Emily Blunt
- Chadwick Boseman
- Sandra Bullock
- Dave Chappelle
- Viola Davis
- Eugenio Derbez
- Laura Dern
- Ansel Elgort
- Jane Fonda
- Jodie Foster
- Gal Gadot
- Jennifer Garner
- Greta Gerwig
- Eiza GonzĂĄlez
- Tiffany Haddish
- Armie Hammer
- Mark Hamill
- Tom Holland
- Oscar Isaac
- Ashley Judd
- Nicole Kidman
- Matthew McConaughey
- Lin-Manuel Miranda
- Helen Mirren
- Rita Moreno
- Kumail Nanjiani
- Lupita Nyongâo
- Margot Robbie
- Gina Rodriguez
- Eva Marie Saint
- Emma Stone
- Wes Studi
- Kelly Marie Tran
- Daniela Vega
- Christopher Walken
- Zendaya
Hereâs the cocktail the stars (and plus-ones) will be drinking at the Oscars
Are you going to an Oscars party? Throwing one yourself? Or just watching at home in your PJs?
Hereâs the recipe for the sparkling signature cocktail that will be served on Sunday, when celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck will oversee food and drink for Hollywoodâs A-listers.
Itâs the perfectly bubbly beverage to serve at your own Oscars party, even if itâs just a party of one. Read on for the recipe.
Read MorePHOTOS: A SNEAK PEEK AT THE 90TH OSCARS GOVERNORS BALL >>
Will âGet Outâ win best picture? Critics Kenneth Turan and Justin Chang think it might
Who will win? And who should win? Our critics Kenneth Turan and Justin Chang sat down to swap predictions and favorites in the top eight categories: best picture, director, lead actor, lead actress, supporting actor, supporting actress, original screenplay and adapted screenplay.
KENNETH TURAN: Ready or not â and, frankly, by this time people are likely more than ready â the Oscars ceremony is upon us. Weâre both going to be glued to our TVs on Sunday, but before that happens we thought weâd take one last look at the nominees in the major categories and talk a little about both who weâd like to win and who we think will win, which are often not the same thing at all.
JUSTIN CHANG: With the exception of one or two categories, I doubt there will be any overlap between my favorites and the academyâs. Iâm not complaining, really: Itâs good to be going into the night with few expectations, and if a pleasant surprise awaits, so much the better. Shall we begin with the screenplay races?
TURAN: Good idea, though the original screenplay category is looking tougher every day. Initially, it looked like Martin McDonaghâs pyrotechnic script for âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ was the likely winner, but there seems to be momentum building for Jordan Peele and âGet Outâ after its Writers Guild of America victory, so Iâm calling it a toss-up.
As to my personal favorite, however, that is clear: Greta Gerwigâs writing on âLady Bird,â her ability to make something weâve seen endless times before seem dazzlingly new, just knocked me out.
A spoiler-free look inside the star-studded Oscar rehearsals
âMeryl Streep!â the 7-year-old shouted. âIâve met Meryl Streep!â
Viola Davisâ daughter, Genesis, bounded down the steps of the Oscars stage and hopped into the seat where âThe Postâ star would sit just a day later. With roughly 24 hours left until the Dolby Theatre opened its doors to for the Academy Awards, the auditorium was filled with production staffers, seat holders featuring the images of nominees and one very excited kid.
One might imagine that the child of an Oscar-winning actress might be unfazed by celebrity. Not Genesis. As she watched her mother rehearse her presentation for Sundayâs show, she was wide-eyed, taking note of all the stars who would be in attendance.
âDenzel! Imagine if he won!â she mused, pointing to Denzel Washingtonâs saved seat. Davis, meanwhile, finished running through her lines, and so her daughter was told it was time to âgo see Mommy now.â
Here is the complete list of Oscar nominees
Guillermo Del Toroâs sci-fi romance âThe Shape of Waterâ leads the pack of nominees with 13 nominations and is trailed by Christopher Nolanâs World War II epic, âDunkirk,â and Martin McDonaghâs satirical crime drama âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ with eight and seven nominations, respectively.
The academy already made some historic choices with this yearâs crop of nominees: âGet Outâ director, writer and producer Jordan Peele became the first African American to earn those three nominations for a single film. It nominated its first female cinematographer, âMudboundâsâ Rachel Morrison, and âLady Birdâ director Greta Gerwig became only the fifth woman recognized in the directing category.
Here is the complete list of nominees:
Best picture
- âCall Me by Your Nameâ
- âGet Outâ
- âLady Birdâ
- âThe Postâ
- âPhantom Threadâ
- âDunkirkâ
- âThe Shape of Waterâ
- âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ
- âDarkest Hourâ
Lead actor
- TimothĂŠe Chalamet, âCall Me by Your Nameâ
- Denzel Washington, âRoman J. Israel, Esq.â
- Daniel Day-Lewis, âPhantom Threadâ
- Gary Oldman, âDarkest Hourâ
- Daniel Kaluuya, âGet Outâ
Lead actress
- Sally Hawkins, âThe Shape of Waterâ
- Margot Robbie, âI, Tonyaâ
- Frances McDormand, âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ
- Saoirse Ronan, âLady Birdâ
- Meryl Streep, âThe Postâ
Director
- Paul Thomas Anderson, âPhantom Threadâ
- Jordan Peele, âGet Outâ
- Guillermo Del Toro, âThe Shape of Waterâ
- Christopher Nolan, âDunkirkâ
- Greta Gerwig, âLady Birdâ
Oscars host Jimmy Kimmel is still messed up from last yearâs best picture snafu, secretly hopes for another one
Jimmy Kimmel is back as the 2018 Oscars host and ready in case thereâs another best picture snafu after last yearâs âMoonlightâ/âLa La Landâ mix-up.
Oscars producers Michael De Luca and Jennifer Todd invited the âJimmy Kimmel Liveâ star back as this yearâs host â despite the envelope drama, which he had nothing to do with but did a decent job of handling in its wake.
But that doesnât mean Kimmel isnât rooting for something similar to happen this year.
âThis year, weâre going to plant the wrong envelope in a number of categories, just to keep people on their toes. And then weâll be going into the crowd and pulling Oscars from people,â Kimmel joked in an interview with the Associated Press.
Given the political climate and watershed #MeToo and Timeâs Up movements, the comic plans to set the right tone by making people laugh and honoring âthe people who have been dreaming of this night for their whole lives.â
What time do the Oscars start?
The 2018 Oscars will begin at 5 p.m. Pacific and will be broadcast live on ABC from the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood.
The ceremony, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel and televised in more than 225 countries and territories worldwide, will stream depending on your local cable provider, and ABC has planned additional coverage that will stream live, too.
The networkâs Emmy-winning âThe Oscars: All Accessâ will feature red-carpet highlights, exclusive footage from backstage and live âlook-insâ during the Oscars telecast that will stream live on the academyâs page on Facebook Watch, ABCâs Facebook page, Oscar.com and ABCNews.com, beginning at 3:30 p.m. (Pacific).
Also on social media, Oscars presenter and âAvengers: Infinity Warâ star Tom Holland will be taking over Instagramâs official stories, bringing glimpses of the star-studded affair to users throughout the evening. (Spidey-webbed fingers crossed that he goes live while he presents.)
Be sure to follow the Los Angeles Times and L.A. Times Entertainment on Instagram and Facebook for additional dispatches from the scene. More updates will be coming through on this page as well.
Back on television, red-carpet coverage rolls out at 3:30 p.m. Pacific on ABC and will be hosted by âGood Morning Americaâsâ Michael Strahan, âThe Goldbergsâ star Wendi McLendon-Covey, âThe Viewâ co-host Sara Haines, Vanity Fairâs Krista Smith and IMDbâs Dave Karger.
ABCâs telecast will be the only one broadcasting live from the red carpet in the lead-up to the ceremony from 4 to 5 p.m. Pacific.