Los Angeles Times

# OscarsSoWh­ite? Chris rocked it

- By Greg Braxton greg. braxton@ latimes. com

Chris Rock was in a hard place Sunday night at the Oscars. A furor over the ceremony’s lack of diversity among its acting nominees ( all of those nominated were white) seemed to overshadow the excitement of the show itself going into the 88th Academy Awards.

Rock, 51, wasted no time in addressing the so- called elephant in the room.

Entering to the tune of Public Enemy’s “Fight the Power,” Rock called the evening “the white people’s choice awards” and made several jokes about the all- white slate of acting nominees: “You realize, if they nominated hosts, I wouldn’t even have this job.”

The audience, a who’s who of Hollywood elite, reacted with somewhat nervous laughter during his opening monologue, offering a living example of how divisive and complex the issue of race in Hollywood — and America — has become.

The academy sought equilibriu­m and perhaps a bit of healing by showcasing diversity among its presenters such as Michael B. Jordan and Kevin Hart. They also dropped continual references, often funny, throughout the show regarding the exclusion of people of color in feature f ilms and in the nominee choices.

One skit in particular showed a f ictional scenario where black actors f illed the lead roles in f ilms that were up for top prizes this year. Tracy Morgan wore a dress for “The Danish Girl.” Jeff Daniels and Kristen Wiig considered leaving Rock in outer space for “The Martian.”

But Rock also struck a more serious tone during his hosting gig when he asked for more opportunit­ies for blacks, “the same opportunit­ies as white actors.”

Rock made race the center of his humor in his first Oscar stint in 2005. His opening monologue touched on the African American nominees that year, who included lead actor nominee Jamie Foxx (“Ray”) and supporting actor nominee Morgan Freeman (“Million Dollar Baby”). “It’s a great night tonight — we have four black nominees tonight,” he said. “It’s like the Def Oscar Jam” ( both Foxx and Freeman won).

But this hosting round comes at a time when race is at the top of the national conversati­on. Rock’s monologue drew praise from several celebritie­s in the Dolby Theatre, including winners and nominees.

“I thought it was really great,” said Adam McKay, who won an Oscar for original screenplay along with Charles Randolph for “The Big Short.” “I thought it was jabbing at Hollywood and at the same time, even- handed.”

Alicia Vikander, who won a supporting actress Oscar for “The Danish Girl,” said backstage after winning her award that the comedian “brought up a lot of laughs and reality issues [ sic] and I’m very happy he’s the host tonight.”

Bryan Cranston, who was nominated for lead actor in “Trumbo,” gave Rock a big thumbs up.

“If you hire Chris Rock, he’s not going to pull punches. And that’s a good thing,” Cranston said as he took a break to sip some water during the show. “He can illuminate the issue with humor in a way almost no one else can. Who else could do what he just did?”

But the praise was not unanimous. In his opening monologue, Rock asked why the Oscars were so controvers­ial this year when the awards had historical­ly paid little attention to blacks. “Why we protesting. That’s the big question, why this Oscars?” Pointing out that there were no protests in 1962 or 1963 when there were no black nominees, he said it was because “we had real things to protest at the time. Too busy being raped and lynched to care about who won best cinematogr­apher.”

Tweeted Going Naked TV: “Did Chris Rock just undermine what people of color are experienci­ng today by stating, ‘ back then people had real things to protest?’ ”

Some viewers also noted how Rock did not include minorities other than African Americans in his diversity comments. In turning the diversity controvers­y into a black- and- white issue, he appeared to ignore other people of color, including Asians, Latinos and Asian Americans.

The evening ended with Rock inviting the audience to the BET Awards next summer, adding a f inal shout- out to # BlackLives­Matter.

As the credits rolled, “Fight the Power” played again as a crowd of mainly white winners congratula­ted one another, and Rock, on stage.

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