PwC
accountants blamed for Oscar gaffe barred from future
shows
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[March 02, 2017]
By Piya Sinha-Roy
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The
two accountants found at fault for botching the
climactic announcement of the winner for best picture at
the Academy Awards have been officially declared unfit
for any future Oscar duty, organizers of the ceremony
said on Wednesday.
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Brian Cullinan and Martha Ruiz, blamed for the envelope
mix-up that led "La La Land" to be being erroneously named best
film before "Moonlight" was declared the actual winner, are
still employed as partners of the prestigious accounting firm
PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), a company spokesman said.
But the pair will no longer be permitted to tabulate Oscar votes
or hand out envelopes containing winners' names at Hollywood's
most highest honors, a spokesperson for the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts & Sciences said.
PwC, the overseer of Oscar balloting for 83 years, had earlier
taken full responsibility for Sunday's unprecedented gaffe,
which stunned the star-studded Dolby Theatre crowd in Hollywood
and a live television audience of millions worldwide.
PwC said Cullinan had mistakenly handed best-picture presenters
Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway the back-up envelope for best
actress in a leading role, an award bestowed on Emma Stone for
"La La Land" a short time earlier.
Beatty, admittedly befuddled at seeing the card he pulled from
the envelope, hesitated for several moments before handing it to
Dunaway, who immediately announced "La La Land" as the winner.
The "La La Land" cast and producers were already on stage giving
acceptance speeches when the mistake was recognized, leaving it
to the musical's producer, Jordan Horowitz, to interrupt the
proceedings with the announcement that "Moonlight" really had
won.
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"Once the error occurred, protocols for correcting it were not
followed through quickly enough by Mr. Cullinan or his partner," the
accounting firm said in a statement.
Cullinan was found to have posted a now-deleted backstage photo of
Emma Stone on Twitter just after she won her Oscar minutes before
the mix-up -- a departure from official duties widely seen as likely
to have distracted him.
By tradition, two sets of sealed envelopes containing the names of
all 24 Oscar winners are held by two PwC accountants on opposite
sides of the stage, to be handed out to the respective presenters as
each category is announced. The two accountants also are supposed to
memorize the winning names.
A day after the incident, the Academy apologized to all affected,
including presenters Beatty and Dunaway, and said it will "determine
what actions are appropriate going forward."
(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Steve Gorman and Sandra
Maler)
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