Los Angeles Times

Oscars flip the script again

After outcry, the film academy says it will keep every award as part of live telecast.

- By Josh Rottenberg

Film academy shelves controvers­ial plan to remove four key awards from broadcast.

Bowing to fierce blowback from the film industry — and throwing yet another wrench into an already tumultuous Oscar season — the motion picture academy announced Friday that it is shelving a controvers­ial plan to move the presentati­on of four key awards to commercial breaks during this year’s telecast.

The decision follows several days of outcry that pitted the academy’s leadership against some of the organizati­on’s most distinguis­hed members, as hundreds of Hollywood luminaries rallied against a proposal that, while intended to help limit the notoriousl­y lengthy telecast to three hours, was widely regarded as representi­ng a slight against some of filmmaking’s most vital crafts.

In an official statement, the academy’s leadership said, “The Academy has heard the feedback from its membership regarding the Oscar presentati­on of four awards — Cinematogr­aphy, Film Editing, Live Action Short, and Makeup and Hairstylin­g. All Academy Awards will be presented without edits, in our traditiona­l format. We look forward to Oscar Sunday, February 24.”

The reversal followed an emergency meeting held Thursday evening involving the academy’s chief executive, Dawn Hudson, and president, John Bailey, and a handful of prominent members of the cinematogr­aphy community: American Society of Cinematogr­aphers President Kees van Oostrum and cinematogr­aphers Hoyte van Hoytema (“Dunkirk”), Emmanuel Lubezki (“The Revenant”) and Rachel Morrison (“Black Panther”).

“I didn’t know where it was going to go — it could have gone the other way,” Van Oostrum, who became the de facto leader of the campaign opposing the plan, told The Times in the wake of the decision.

“I think we made very clear that we feel that cinematogr­aphers and all the crafts need to be respected in the proper way,” he continued. “But at the same time we were also concerned because the grass-roots [campaign] went so wide and so deep with so many people that in the end we said, ‘We don’t want to hurt

the academy. And the academy will be hurt by this decision if they don’t reverse it.’

“So I’m very, very glad because the academy is a great institutio­n. It’s an extremely important organizati­on for our city, for our people and for our filmmakers.”

First announced by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ board of governors in August — with specific categories unveiled on Monday — the plan would have shifted the presentati­on of the awards for cinematogr­aphy, editing, hairstylin­g and makeup and live-action short to commercial breaks. The winners’ speeches would have been edited into a later portion of the broadcast.

In future years, four to six other categories would be rotated out of the live telecast in a similar fashion, although the four categories affected in 2019 would have been guaranteed traditiona­l presentati­ons in 2020.

“Viewing patterns for the Academy Awards are changing quickly in our current multimedia world, and our show must also evolve to successful­ly continue promoting motion pictures to a worldwide audience,” Bailey wrote in a letter to members explaining the move, even as he assured them that the group was “still honoring the achievemen­ts of all 24 awards on the Oscars.”

The flap is just the latest in a string of crises that have roiled this awards season, whipsawing academy members and longtime Oscar observers alike.

In September, the academy’s leadership scrapped a much-criticized plan to create a new “best popular film” category for this year’s Oscars just weeks after it had been announced. In December, Kevin Hart stepped down as the announced host of the show amid an uproar over past homophobic tweets and jokes, leaving the Oscars without a formal host for the first time in 30 years. The academy’s leadership expected some degree of resistance to the idea of shifting some awards out of the live telecast. But it was unprepared for the overwhelmi­ng tide of antipathy it received from boldfaced names from across the movie business.

The vocal industry protest became a severe publicrela­tions crisis for an organizati­on that considers itself the public face and ultimate champion of the film industry. Many members found the selection of the four specific categories surprising and baffling, particular­ly given that Bailey is himself a cinematogr­apher and his wife, Carol Littleton, is an editor. “How many people have seen the shorts — maybe 2,000? And that’s including academy members, by the way,” one academy member told The Times earlier this week. “Keeping those on the show and throwing aside cinematogr­aphy and editing doesn’t make any sense.”

Hundreds of directors, actors and other film profession­als, including past Oscar winners as notable as Martin Scorsese, Robert De Niro and Meryl Streep and current nominees such as Alfonso Cuarón, Emma Stone, Spike Lee and Glenn Close, signed an open letter calling the plan “nothing less than an insult to those of us who have devoted our lives and passions to our chosen profession.”

Various guilds including the American Society of Cinematogr­aphers, Internatio­nal Cinematogr­aphers Guild, American Cinema Editors and the Make-Up Artists and Hair Stylists Guild (IATSE Local 706) also made public statements in opposition.

In a statement, the American Cinema Editors guild endorsed the decision, thanking “the Academy for hearing and acting on the concerns of the industry and the artists who are such a vital part of the filmmaking process. We are pleased that the film editing award, along with all other categories, will be presented in its entirety. We would also like to express enormous gratitude to the many prominent filmmakers and industry leaders who stood up and spoke out for the recognitio­n of our craft.”

With the ratings for last year’s telecast hitting an alltime low, many within the academy’s leadership returned to the argument that trimming some awards out of the live broadcast, while painful, was necessary. But in a 91-year-old organizati­on that proudly guards its tradition, reaching consensus on how to do that has proved next to impossible. In 1992, for instance, the board of governors voted to remove the live-action short film and documentar­y short-film categories from the ceremony. High-profile academy members including Scorsese, Steven Spielberg and Robert Redford protested, and the move was reversed, never going into effect.

“The problem over the years is that the academy has — correctly, I believe — added more branches to recognize the input of the discipline­s to the moviemakin­g process,” producer and former studio executive Bill Mechanic, told The Times earlier this week.

The reversal of the academy’s decision means the telecast will likely risk running over its self-appointed three-hour limit, something which ABC, the ceremony’s longtime network home, had strongly advocated as a means to help boost the show’s flagging ratings.

“We are committed to a three-hour show,” Bailey told The Times last September. “It’s necessary. I feel we have a responsibi­lity to the people who watch that show in the Eastern time zone, which is a huge market, to have that show ended by 11.”

Ratings concerns aside, Van Oostrum said he hopes the outcome is a healthy sign for the academy. “The academy has returned to its roots,” he said. “If you look to its mission statement, it’s exactly this. The mission statement has nothing to do with entertaini­ng the people — it has all to do with honoring the creative arts of the people that make movies. And I’m thrilled that it’s back to that.”

 ?? Carlos Somonte ??
Carlos Somonte
 ?? Palace Films ?? OSCAR contenders for cinematogr­aphy, which will be part of the live telecast after the film academy reversed course: “A Star Is Born,” clockwise from top left, “The Favourite, “Roma,” Cold War” and “Never Look Away.”
Palace Films OSCAR contenders for cinematogr­aphy, which will be part of the live telecast after the film academy reversed course: “A Star Is Born,” clockwise from top left, “The Favourite, “Roma,” Cold War” and “Never Look Away.”
 ?? Clay Enos Warner Bros. Pictures ??
Clay Enos Warner Bros. Pictures
 ?? Atsushi Nishijima Fox Searchligh­t Films ??
Atsushi Nishijima Fox Searchligh­t Films
 ?? Sony Pictures Classics ??
Sony Pictures Classics

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