USA TODAY International Edition

Oscar hopefuls urged to ‘ stand up’

Academy president says nominees should tap into the power of art in turbulent times

- Bryan Alexander @BryAlexand USA TODAY

LOS ANGELES Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences president Cheryl Boone Isaacs gave an impassione­d appeal to fellow members to “stand up” in politicall­y turbulent times during her speech at Monday’s Oscars nominees’ luncheon.

Boone Isaacs devoted her time in front of the more than 165 Oscar nominees at the annual event to urging them to go political in their work and words, although no specific politician­s were mentioned. The academy has reacted strongly to President Trump’s executive order suspending immigratio­n from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries, which would have prevented Oscar- nominated Iranian director Asghar Farhadi from attending the Feb. 26 Oscars before a federal judge blocked the ban. Farhadi, a vocal critic of the policy, wasn’t at the luncheon at the Beverly Hilton hotel and has said he won’t attend the Oscars.

“Each and every one of us knows there are some empty chairs in this room, which have made academy artists activists,” Boone Isaacs said. “There’s a struggle globally today about artistic freedom that feels more urgent now more than any time since the 1950s. Art has no borders and doesn’t belong to a single faith. The power of art is that it transcends all of these things and strong societies don’t censor art. They celebrate it.”

Boone Isaacs told the room filled with the biggest stars in Hollywood — Ryan Gosling, Denzel Washington, Nicole Kidman, Matt Damon, Emma Stone, Justin Timberlake, Viola Davis and Octavia Spencer among them — that America should not be “a barrier, but a beacon.”

“We stand up to those who try to limit our freedom of expression,” Boone Isaacs said to applause. “And we stand up for this principle: that all creative artists around the world are connected by that unbreakabl­e bond more powerful and permanent than nationalit­y and politics. And, just as our work does not stop at borders, borders cannot be allowed to stop any of us.”

She noted the many films honored by the academy that address social change and tackle societal wrongs from “religious intoleranc­e to racism to sexism.”

“When we bring to the screen stories from around the world, we become agents of change,” Boone Isaacs said.

Nominees were reminded to keep their winning speeches short and meaningful. This message was brought home by producers Jennifer Todd and Michael De Luca, who said the theme of the show would be how movies inspire.

The producers showed a video of Saturday Night Live star Kate McKinnon as a self- obsessed 1938 Hollywood starlet, Gloria Concave, making every possible mistake in a speech.

“Don’t curse,” McKinnon’s Concave warned. “You’ll incur some heavy fines. I’m still donating plasma to pay mine off.”

The event was an opportunit­y for fellow nominees to socialize. Best- actress nominee Stone talked with director nominee Kenneth Lonergan before the show started, while Damon photo- bombed Casey Affleck and Timberlake nearby.

As each nominee was called to the podium for a class picture, director nominee Mel Gibson was seen talking animatedly with supporting- actor nominee Dev Patel, who stood next to his co- star Kidman.

 ??  ?? Nominees Octavia Spencer, Emma Stone and Viola Davis.
Nominees Octavia Spencer, Emma Stone and Viola Davis.
 ??  ?? Nominees for the 89th Oscars were celebrated at a luncheon Monday at the Beverly Hilton in Los Angeles.
Nominees for the 89th Oscars were celebrated at a luncheon Monday at the Beverly Hilton in Los Angeles.
 ?? DAN MACMEDAN, USA TODAY ?? Academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs
DAN MACMEDAN, USA TODAY Academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs

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