Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

BACK TO A GLITTERING NIGHT

- Sutirtho Patranobis letters@hindustant­imes.com

Nomadland emerged as the big winner at the 93rd Academy Awards on Sunday with three major prizes, including a history-making award for director Chloe Zhao, as Hollywood celebrated its most glamorous night with a unique pandemic-era gala.

MOVIE OF ITS OWN

The unorthodox Oscars ceremony was moved from a Hollywood theater to a glammed-up downtown train station to abide by strict Covid-19 protocols, and reunited Tinseltown A-listers for the first time in more than a year. The ceremony was fashioned as a movie of its own and styled as a laid back party

WOMEN TAKE THE NIGHT

China-born Chloé Zhao became the first woman of color to win best director. “This is for anyone who has the faith and the courage to hold on to the goodness in themselves and to hold on the goodness in other no matter how difficult it is to do that,” she said while accepting the award

Youn Yuh-jung (best supporting actress, Minari) became the first Asian actress to win an Oscar since 1957 and the second in history.

Hairstylis­ts Mia Neal and Jamika Wilson of “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” became the first Black women to win in makeup and hairstylin­g. Ann Roth won for the film’s costume design to become the one of the oldest Oscar winners ever – at 89

INDIANS REMEMBERED

The Academy honouring actor Irrfan Khan and costume designer Bhanu Athaiya in the ‘In Memoriam' segment. It also honoured Soumitra Chatterjee, Rishi Kapoor, Shashikala as well as Sushant Singh Rajput, stars that Indian cinema lost in the last year, on their website's lookback section though their names were not in the video montage.

BEIJING: Beijing-born Chloe Zhao on Monday became the first woman of colour to win the Oscar for best director, but the country of her birth censored the news of her victory as leading Chinese staterun media avoided reports on her historic win.

As of late on Monday, official news agency Xinhua, national broadcaste­r CCTV and the Communist Party of China’s (CPC) mouthpiece, People’s Daily, did not report on the big success of Zhao’s film -- Nomadland -- at the Academy Awards. Previous posts on Chinese social media websites had been blocked as well.

Zhao on Sunday night became the second woman ever to win the coveted award at the Oscars, as her film Nomadland -- about marginalis­ed Americans roaming the West -- bagged best picture and its lead, Frances McDormand, won best actress.

According to a Reuters report, a live-stream of the Academy Awards in Shanghai hosted by alumni of Zhao’s alma mater ran into China’s censors, with the organiser saying access to his virtual private network (VPN) service was blocked for nearly two hours.

“One of the exceedingl­y rare pieces of coverage, on private news site 163.com, actually used the occasion of her victory as an opportunit­y to not-so-subtly assert one of China’s most important — and contentiou­s — geopolitic­al priorities,” the Hollywood Report said in an article. Beijing’s anger on Zhao stems from an interview she gave to the Filmmaker magazine in 2013 where she said China is “…a place where there are lies everywhere”.

Until the speech resurfaced recently, Zhao and her work had been praised even by Xinhua. “The evocative feature film, Nomadland, the latest effort by insightful Chinese female director, Chloe Zhao, is sweeping the awards circuit in the United States, putting her on the fast track for Oscar contention… Zhao has a unique vision which is serving her in good stead

LATER ON MONDAY, THE NATIONALIS­TIC TABLOID GLOBAL TIMES PUBLISHED REPORTS ON ZHAO’S VICTORY, ALMOST GRUDGINGLY PRAISING HER WORK.

now,” Xinhua wrote in a gushing piece in December. Twitter-like Weibo was initially flooded with posts praising Zhao on Monday morning, while others decried censorship. “Chloe Zhao becomes the first Asian diaspora/Chinese female filmmaker to win the best director Oscar in history,” wrote an entertainm­ent blogger, before the tweet was deleted. “China’s public opinion control is outrageous. After Chloe Zhao’s starling Oscars win, there is not even a fart on Weibo,” wrote an outraged user

State-backed opinion on her quickly changed after the interview was found and shared on Chinese social media.

Later on Monday, the nationalis­tic tabloid Global Times published reports on Zhao’s victory, almost grudgingly praising her work.

Zhao’s acceptance speech showed her Chinese cultural roots when she quoted the classic Chinese philosophi­cal ethos that people are born with goodness and kindness within them.

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 ?? AFP ?? Zhao won the best picture award for Nomadland.
AFP Zhao won the best picture award for Nomadland.

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