Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

It’s Oscars time again. Wake me up when it’s over

Hollywood awards shows are absurdly overblown and — that slap notwithsta­nding — boring

- ROBIN ABCARIAN @AbcarianLA­T

Call it Oscar exhaustion. Emmy antipathy. Grammy burn out.

I’ve spent a good chunk of my profession­al life covering various awards shows, and now I can barely stand to watch them. There was just always so much stress involved: the struggle for credential­s, the parking hassles, rushed red carpet interviews and brutal deadlines. Really, the best part about covering an awards show was telling friends and family about it afterward.

On Sunday, I won’t get worked up about whether “Everything Everywhere All at Once” will beat “Tár” for best picture. (It will.) Or whether Jamie Lee Curtis will finally get the career respect she deserves in the shape of a golden statuette. (Could be Kerry Condon’s year.)

My awards show mantra: Just wake me up when it’s over.

Come Monday morning, I will look at slideshows of stick figures in gorgeous clothes and chuckle at the fashionist­as who proclaim that this was the year of cleavage, the color yellow or the return to elegance. As if the themes that crop up on the red carpet are anything more than simple coincidenc­e and product placement for thirsty designers who often pay a hefty price to be “worn.”

I will scan the list of winners, rooting only for one film, the documentar­y “Navalny,” because an Oscar for best documentar­y might serve as a kind of life insurance for the anti-Putin dissident, who sits in prison as the Russian strongman tries to destroy him and the democratic movement he built. (The film is a riveting account of how Alexei Navalny, his colleagues and the incredible internet sleuths of Bellingcat identify, then confront the men who poisoned him with a nerve agent in 2020.)

It’s not often that the Oscar stakes are as dramatic as life and death, although winning awards can certainly make or break a career, and the whole spectacle is a subindustr­y unto itself. The show generates millions of dollars for city coffers, and in ad revenue for ABC. Studios spend millions on lobbying in the run-up to Sunday. I respect that. I just don’t really care anymore.

In 1985, I covered my first Academy Awards as a reporter for the Los Angeles Daily News. I pushed my way onto the rope line outside the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion on a tiny patch of real estate allegedly reserved for me, jostled by sharp-elbowed photograph­ers, hoping to get something more meaningful than a designer endorsemen­t out of the celebritie­s sweeping by. (Although, to be honest, “Who are you wearing?” was a handy enough question if you couldn’t think of anything else to ask.)

I’ve been outside the Oscar auditorium and inside the Oscar auditorium, outside the Governors Ball and inside, outside the Vanity Fair party and inside, where reporters were forbidden to carry notebooks and were forced to run to the bathroom to write down things they didn’t want to forget.

At the party in 2006, I sat next to Russell Simmons, who was smoking a joint and abruptly turned away when I identified myself. I bumped into Jacqueline Bisset in the loo. Near a bar, I stood next to Michelle Williams, who was grossed out by lollipop party favors featuring the face of thenundera­ge Dakota Fanning. “That’s almost pornograph­ic!” Williams exclaimed at the thought of people sucking on little Dakota’s face.

I was at the first post-#MeToo Oscars in 2018, when Hollywood was still in shock and just starting to come to grips with its reflexive protection of powerful men who behave very, very badly. The town was still in a state of moral confusion.

After all, that year it awarded an Oscar to Kobe Bryant for his short, “Dear Basketball,” despite his having been charged with raping a woman in Colorado in 2003. (The charges were dropped when the victim, whose life had been threatened and who had attempted suicide, stopped cooperatin­g with prosecutor­s. Bryant publicly apologized to her.)

But just a year before that, the writer/ director/actor Nate Parker was snubbed for his remake of “The Birth of a Nation.” Parker’s film was a Sundance Film Festival sensation, and at a time when the #OscarsSoWh­ite hashtag had gone viral, the success of the film and its auteur were viewed as an important corrective. “Birth” was supposed to be a major Oscar contender. In interviews for the film, Parker acknowledg­ed that he

Before the Slap, of course, there was the Kiss. Both were acts of aggression, though the unwoke 2003 Oscars audience did not seem to perceive the embrace as a moral breach.

had been charged with rape in 1999 while a student at Penn State; he was acquitted. But Parker was deemed unsuitably defensive after news surfaced that the alleged victim had died by suicide in 2012. Hollywood shunned him; the film sank with hardly a trace.

In my view, Bryant’s Oscar triumph taken together with Parker’s bizarre cancellati­on is a shining example of Hollywood hypocrisy.

This unfortunat­e quality was also on display in the aftermath of last year’s infamous slap, when Will Smith took offense at Chris Rock’s joke about his wife, Jada Pinkett Smith, and strode onstage mid-ceremony to assault the host. I was stunned by the number of people who made excuses for Smith’s reprehensi­ble behavior.

Dramatic, unscripted moments like that can turn a dull event into a spectacle. Before the Slap, of course, there was the Kiss.

Both were acts of aggression, though the unwoke 2003 Oscars audience did not seem to perceive the full-body embrace that

Adrien Brody forced upon Halle Berry as a moral breach.

“Bet you didn’t know that was part of the gift bag,” Brody joked, as if Berry were the equivalent of a gift certificat­e to Spago. Berry, for her part, looked stunned.

In the newsroom that night, I remember enthralled page designers and editors deciding to blow the photo up for the cover of the Calendar section. It was definitely the evening’s most dramatic image.

Berry later said it had been a shock. She went with it, she told an interviewe­r, but her main reaction was “what ... is happening?”

Later, I came to feel that we had valorized a form of assault.

On Sunday evening, I will be at home, in front of a fire, probably watching a movie. Good luck to all the nominees, but especially to the reporters, editors and photograph­ers facing their impossible deadlines. I wouldn’t trade places with you for anything.

 ?? Kevork Djansezian Associated Press ?? ADRIEN BRODY surprises presenter Halle Berry after he won the Oscar for lead actor at the 75th Academy Awards. Top, Will Smith slaps Chris Rock onstage during the 94th Academy Awards.
Kevork Djansezian Associated Press ADRIEN BRODY surprises presenter Halle Berry after he won the Oscar for lead actor at the 75th Academy Awards. Top, Will Smith slaps Chris Rock onstage during the 94th Academy Awards.
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 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ??
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times

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