Oscar takeaways: panned by Trump, host Kimmel quips, 'Isn't it past your
jail time?'
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[March 11, 2024]
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -Hollywood's biggest stars gathered on
Sunday to celebrate the year's best accomplishments in film at the
annual Academy Awards.
Here are some takeaways from the 96th Oscars ceremony.
TRUMP REVIEWS KIMMEL
Late in the show, Jimmy Kimmel read aloud from a scathing online review
of his performance as Oscars host, revealing at the end that it was
written by former U.S. President Donald Trump.
"Has there EVER been a WORSE HOST than Jimmy Kimmel at The Oscars,"
Trump posted on his Truth Social social media platform, also criticizing
the show as "Disjointed, boring, and very unfair."
Tall show host Kimmel, who's long feuded with Trump, jokingly asked the
audience to guess which former president had written the post, and then
quipped: "Thank you, President Trump. Isn't it past your jail time?"
'I'M JUST KEN'
Ryan Gosling, who played Ken in the blockbuster "Barbie" movie,
delivered an energetic performance of the film's campy musical number
"I'm Just Ken" dressed in a hot pink suit and flanked by an ensemble of
male dancers.
He was joined by Guns n' Roses guitarist Slash and walked into the
audience to sing with his "Barbie" castmate Margot Robbie and director
Greta Gerwig. The song, written by Mark Ronson, was nominated for an
Oscar for best original song, while Gosling received a best supporting
actor nod for his role as Barbie's lovestruck sidekick.
Later in the show, best actress Oscar winner Emma Stone joked during her
acceptance speech that the back of her pale green gown had ripped during
the performance. She elaborated later backstage:
"I was so amazed by Ryan and what he was doing, and that number just
blew my mind," she said. "I was right there, and I just was going for
it, and, you know, things happen."
JOHN CENA RE-ENACTS A LEGENDARY OSCARS MOMENT
At the Oscars ceremony 50 years ago, a man ran across the stage naked
flashing a peace sign behind actor David Niven, a legendary piece of
Academy Awards history that host Kimmel said he wanted to commemorate.
To celebrate the anniversary, actor and wrestling star John Cena walked
on stage wearing nothing but the envelope containing the name of the
winner of the best costume Oscar.
"Costumes are so important," Cena deadpanned. "Maybe the most important
thing there is."
UKRAINE'S FIRST OSCAR
"20 Days in Mariupol" director Mstyslav Chernov delivered a powerful
speech in accepting his award for best documentary feature, Ukraine's
first-ever Oscar. Chernov's film documents his time as a video
journalist covering the first three weeks of Russia's siege of the
Ukrainian city.
"Probably I will be the first director on this stage that will say I
wish I never made this film," he said. "I wish to be able to exchange
this to Russia never attacking Ukraine, never occupying our cities ...
but I cannot change history. Cannot change the past.
"But we all together, you, some of the most talented people in the
world, we can make sure the history record is set straight and that the
truth will prevail and that the people of Mariupol and those who have
given their lives will never be forgotten. Because cinema forms
memories. And memories form history."
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John Cena performs on stage during the presentation of the Oscar for
Costume Design on stage during the Oscars show at the 96th Academy
Awards in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, U.S., March 10, 2024.
REUTERS/Mike Blake
PROTESTERS ON AND OFF THE CARPET
As stars began arriving to walk the red carpet, hundreds of
pro-Palestinian protesters angered by the Israel-Gaza conflict
shouted and slowed traffic in the blocks surrounding the Dolby
Theatre in Hollywood.
"While you're watching, bombs are dropping," one sign read.
On the red carpet, Oscar nominees, including Billie Eilish and Mark
Ronson, wore red lapel pins calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.
Actor Mark Ruffalo praised the protesters as he entered the theater
and raised a clenched fist. "We need peace," he said.
KIMMEL CELEBRATES STRIKE VICTORIES
Kimmel's opening monologue included the usual jabs at the Hollywood
elite with a reference to best supporting actor nominee Robert
Downey Jr.'s history of drug abuse and joking that "Barbie" co-stars
Margot Robbie, who was snubbed for a best actress nomination, and
Ryan Gosling, who is nominated for best supporting actor, had
already won "the genetic lottery."
He also celebrated the end of a difficult year in Hollywood, where
strikes by actors and writers halted production of movies and
television for months.
"Actors no longer have to worry about getting replaced by AI thanks
to this historic agreement. Actors are now able to go back to
worrying about being replaced by younger, more attractive people ...
"This long and difficult work stoppage taught us that this very
strange town of ours, as pretentious and superficial as it can be,
at its heart is a union town. It's not just a bunch of heavily
Botoxed, Hailey Bieber smoothie-drinking, diabetes
prescription-abusing, gluten-sensitive nepo babies with perpetually
shivering Chihuahuas. This is a coalition of strong, hard-working,
mentally tough laborers, women and men who would 100% sure die if we
even had to touch the handle of a shovel."
YOKO ONO GETS A MOTHER'S DAY SHOUT-OUT
Sean Ono Lennon, the son of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, asked the
audience to wish his famous mother a happy Mother's Day when he took
the stage with the winners of the best animated short Oscar for a
film he collaborated on, "War is Over! Inspired by the Music of John
& Yoko."
"My mother turned 91 this February, and today is Mother's Day in the
UK," Lennon said. "So would everyone please say 'Happy Mother's Day,
Yoko?'"
The audience obliged.
(Reporting by Nichola Groom; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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