Los Angeles Times

Nominees make a lunch date

Stars get to gawk over fellow stars as a compressed awards season nears its peak.

- BY JOSH ROTTENBERG

Quentin Tarantino breezed through the starpacked crowd, taking daytime formal to uncharted territory in a black-and-orange bowling shirt. Greta Gerwig chatted with Cynthia Erivo. Charlize Theron sat between her proudly beaming mother on one side and Taika Waititi on the other.

In all, 162 of this year’s Oscar contenders gathered on Monday afternoon at the annual nominees luncheon to celebrate their achieve

ments — and smile for what is perhaps Hollywood’s most exclusive group photo.

With this year’s compressed awards season hurtling toward its climax at the Academy Awards on Feb. 9, the luncheon at the Hollywood & Highland’s Dolby Ballroom — one of the only stops on the Oscars calendar at which a majority of the nominees are actually in the same room — offered the chance for those who might otherwise never cross paths to rub elbows and chat.

There, just days before the Oscar voting period begins on Thursday, Marc du Pontavice, nominated for the animated feature “I Lost My Body,” could geek out over “Parasite” director Bong Joon Ho and “Jojo Rabbit” costume designer Mayes C. Rubeo could surreptiti­ously snap a photo of “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” star Leonardo DiCaprio, seated with his father at the next table.

Despite the otherwise festive atmosphere, the event began on a somber note as Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences President David Rubin asked attendees to observe a moment of silence in memory of NBA legend Kobe Bryant, his daughter Gianna and seven others who died in a helicopter crash in Calabasas on Sunday. Just two years ago, Rubin noted, Bryant had attended the luncheon as a nominee for producing and writing the animated short film “Dear Basketball,” posing for selfies with starstruck fans like Steven Spielberg and Timothée Chalamet. Bryant’s film went on to win the Oscar.

“With all his mega-success on the court, he was possibly the most excited person in the room to be a nominee,” Rubin recalled. “I know we all send his family our deepest heartfelt condolence­s.”

With the 92nd Academy Awards scheduled earlier than ever, this year’s campaign circuit has been unusually hectic and dizzying, with events scheduled practicall­y on top of one another. Perhaps owing to that stacked schedule, a handful of prominent contenders, including Joaquin Phoenix (“Joker”), Saoirse Ronan (“Little Women”), “The Irishman” director Martin Scorsese and “Marriage Story” stars Scarlett Johansson and Adam Driver, were no-shows.

Hot off Saturday’s Directors Guild Awards, when Sam Mendes won the feature film prize for “1917,” a number of nominees will fly to England for the BAFTAs later this week while others will attend the Writers Guild Awards before turning right around to go to the

Oscars the following weekend.

Noah Baumbach, who wrote and directed the divorce drama “Marriage Story,” said he would be going to both back to back. “We fly to New York for the Writers Guild Awards and then go straight to the BAFTAs,” he said with a slight note of weariness.

Asked if he was feeling burned out from the endless screening Q&As and red carpets and cocktail parties, he paused a beat. “Yes,” he said. “But, I mean, at the same time, this has all been amazing.”

As much as the nominees have been heeding a sometimes punishing schedule, the producers of this year’s Oscar telecast, Stephanie Allain and Lynette Howell Taylor, are facing their own time pressures. For the second year in a row, the academy has pledged to keep the show, which has struggled with declining ratings and frequent criticisms of being bloated and dull, to a strict three-hour time limit. With the ceremony set to proceed for the second year in a row without a formal host, they noted, the spotlight will be that much brighter on the awards.

To keep things moving, Allain and Howell Taylor urged nominees, should they find themselves onstage as winners, to be prepared and keep their acceptance speeches short and sweet. “Get to the stage quickly,” Howell Taylor said. “You have one minute from the time your name is called to complete your speech. When you have 45 seconds remaining, you will see a countdown, and we don’t want to play you off.”

“No pressure, but millions of people will be watching and it’s an entertainm­ent show,” Allain said.

As the nominees were called to arrange themselves on risers for the annual group photo, Netflix Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos — whose streaming giant easily outpaced the competitio­n with 24 nomination­s — snapped photos on his phone of the talent from his company’s releases like a proud dad.

For one of those Netflix nominees, Steven Bognar, who co-directed the documentar­y feature “American Factory” with his partner Julia Reichert, the luncheon was just the latest in a series of pinch-me experience­s.

“It’s been an intense few months but it’s been great to get to know a lot of the nominees,” said Bognar, who was thrilled to have met “1917” cinematogr­apher Roger Deakins that afternoon. “Leonardo DiCaprio just told me, ‘I love your movie, man.’ That was sweet.”

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? DIRECTORS
Taika Waititi, left, and Bong Joon Ho mingle with other nominees.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times DIRECTORS Taika Waititi, left, and Bong Joon Ho mingle with other nominees.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? ACTORS Cynthia Erivo and Brad Pitt have a discussion Monday at the Academy Awards nominees luncheon.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times ACTORS Cynthia Erivo and Brad Pitt have a discussion Monday at the Academy Awards nominees luncheon.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? ROBERT DE NIRO stops by the luncheon, where nominees get to know each other before the Oscars Feb. 9.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times ROBERT DE NIRO stops by the luncheon, where nominees get to know each other before the Oscars Feb. 9.
 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? RENÉE ZELLWEGER, left, Quentin Tarantino and Florence Pugh are among the gathering’s 162 contenders.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times RENÉE ZELLWEGER, left, Quentin Tarantino and Florence Pugh are among the gathering’s 162 contenders.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ??
Al Seib Los Angeles Times
 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ??
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times

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