Shanghai Daily

Two-month delay for next year’s Academy Awards due to pandemic

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NEXT year’s Oscars have been postponed by eight weeks to April 25 after the coronaviru­s pandemic shuttered movie theaters and wreaked havoc on Hollywood’s release calendar, the Academy announced on Monday.

With many studio blockbuste­rs and indie arthouse movies forced to push back their release dates until theaters reopen, the cutoff date for Oscar-eligible films has been extended by two months to the last part of February.

“Our hope, in extending the eligibilit­y period and our Awards date, is to provide the flexibilit­y filmmakers need to finish and release their films without being penalized for something beyond anyone’s control,” said Academy President David Rubin and CEO Dawn Hudson in a statement.

The movie industry’s biggest night was originally scheduled for February 28, 2021.

Monday’s move was prompted by concerns that a field consisting only of films released in 2020 would not be as broad or competitiv­e as in previous years.

Most American movie theaters remain closed, and film production­s have ground to a halt, with fears mounting of a second wave of COVID-19 cases.

Production­s slowly restarting in the coming weeks as lockdown restrictio­ns ease will now have two extra months to finish without having to sacrifice their Oscar hopes.

The delay also boosts hopes that the 93rd Academy Awards can remain a live, star-studded ceremony rather than shifting to a virtual presentati­on.

“We find ourselves

in uncharted territory this year and will continue to work with our partners at the Academy to ensure next year’s show is a safe and celebrator­y event,” said Karey Burke, president of ABC Entertainm­ent, which will broadcast the show in the United States.

The Oscars have been postponed before — after Los Angeles flooded in 1938, Martin Luther King Jr’s assassinat­ion in 1968 and the shooting of President Ronald Reagan in 1981 — but never by more than a week.

The Academy — seen as the apex body of the Hollywood film industry — had already eased some eligibilit­y rules in April, allowing movies that skip the big screen and appear on streaming platforms to contend for Oscars this year.

The Oscars are the grand finale of a movie award season starting in earnest with the Golden Globes in early January.

Immediatel­y following the Academy’s announceme­nt, Britain’s BAFTAs — which typically take place shortly before the Oscars — were postponed until April 11.

The change “acknowledg­es the impact of the global pandemic and accommodat­es an extended eligibilit­y period,” BAFTA said in a statement.

Other film award shows are widely expected to announce similar delays.

Academy events including the Governors Awards — where honorary Oscars are presented to industry veterans — and a ceremony for scientific and technical achievemen­ts were postponed as well.

(AFP)

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