Edmonton Journal

Oscar’s joke man

Vilanch knows how to work the star-studded room

- LYNN ELBER

Put comedy writer Bruce Vilanch on the spot by asking if he has a political gag suitable for the Oscars, and he makes a game try.

“There’s probably a joke in Trump buying three billboards outside Ebbing, Missouri,” Vilanch said, “because that’s all he does is publicize himself. So it seems to me you have a nice, clean shot on the ninth hole.”

He doesn’t have to sweat polishing the riff on best-picture nominee Three Billboards. While he’s crafted one-liners for hosts and presenters for 23 Oscar shows, this year he’ll be watching comfortabl­y at home with Koosh balls at the ready.

“So you can throw them at the screen when people you don’t like win,” Vilanch said. The ceremony airs March 4 on ABC.

He isn’t playing at being a critic: He used to write film reviews and celebrity profiles for the Chicago Tribune. He and rising star Bette Midler clicked during an interview, and he helped shape her comic stage persona on his way to becoming an in-demand writer for TV shows and big-ticket events including the Tonys and Grammys.

Admirers sang his praises in the 1999 documentar­y Get Bruce! about his life and work.

“Part of the way people view me is because of how Bruce has written for me,” Whoopi Goldberg says in the film. “And I’m very grateful for that, because it makes me actually look much smarter than I am.”

Viewers got acquainted with the mop-topped, bespectacl­ed man himself in a late 1980s revival of Hollywood Squares.

After writing for a quarter of all Oscar ceremonies and winning two Emmys along the way, Vilanch is uniquely positioned to size up the grande dame of Hollywood awards shows, and how it and repeat host Jimmy Kimmel can serve TV viewers and the anxious stars who fill the theatre. One hint: The jaw-dropping best-picture envelope mix-up of last year is pretty much a gift to Kimmel.

Social media is routinely incorporat­ed now in awards shows, but Vilanch says the Academy Awards are in a league of their own.

“The thing about the Oscars is it’s the biggest one. … I would love to see them do more to own the past and the history of the movies,” he said, acknowledg­ing that the passing years stand in the way.

“As you get farther and farther from the Golden Age, fewer and fewer people (in) the audience, outside of the theatre, are getting who you’re referring to ... There will be a component of the audience saying, ‘Audrey Hepburn? Was she the one in the boat with the guy? Oh, she was Tiffany,’” he said, adding, unhappily, “It’s real.”

For an industry in the midst of confrontin­g alleged misconduct by major figures, how can Kimmel acknowledg­e the crisis yet keep it from overshadow­ing the show?

Golden Globes host Seth Meyers handled the issue deftly with quips about Harvey Weinstein and others facing accusation­s, Vilanch said. Calling out individual­s who are under a cloud and are past Oscar winners is an intersecti­on that could prove embarrassi­ng, Vilanch said.

“The more general, the better. Now that I’ve said that, who knows what Jimmy Kimmel will do,” he said. He lauded the ABC late-night host for “brilliantl­y” handling last year’s best-picture disaster and suggests Kimmel “can spend time on that, which kind of deflects everything else. … It’s almost like a gift.”

 ??  ?? Bruce Vilanch
Bruce Vilanch

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