The Borneo Post

Deaf actor Troy Kotsur makes himself heard with Oscar win

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HOLLYWOOD: Troy Kotsur made history Sunday as the first deaf male actor to earn an Oscar, winning over voters with a funny, assured and authentic turn as the father of a loving family in the heartfelt indie drama ‘CODA.’

Deaf since birth, the 53-yearold has been an establishe­d stage actor for decades, with a lead role on Broadway on his resume, and was previously best known on the big screen for a supporting role in Jim Carrey thriller ‘The Number 23.’

But his performanc­e in ‘CODA’ alongside Marlee Matlin — the only other deaf actor to win an Oscar, in 1987 for ‘Children of a Lesser God’ — has catapulted him to a historic Academy Award win.

“This is dedicated to the deaf community, the CODA community and the disabled community. This is our moment,” Kotsur said as he accepted his award.

Kotsur beat rival nominees Jesse Plemons and Kodi SmitMcPhee (both ‘The Power of the Dog’), Ciaran Hinds (‘Belfast’) and JK Simmons (Being the Ricardos).

In ‘CODA’ — an acronym for child of deaf adult — Kotsur plays Frank Rossi, whose family fishing business is struggling under the weight of bureaucrac­y and the changing climate.

The family faces the added challenge of being deaf in a tough blue-collar world, where authoritie­s are unwilling to make allowances for their lack of hearing. They rely on hearing daughter Ruby (played by breakout young actress Emilia Jones), who struggles to balance the demands of translatin­g for the family with her own ambitions to sing.

‘CODA’ also triumphed on Sunday for best picture and best adapted screenplay.

Finally part of the family

The film became an instant phenomenon following the Sundance film festival in January 2021, where its premiere sparked a frenzied bidding war eventually won by Apple TV+ for a record US$25 million.

The relative newcomer to the streaming wars released the film worldwide last summer, and Kotsur — a regular performer at Los Angeles’ Deaf West Theater known to television viewers for turns in ‘The Mandaloria­n’ and ‘CSI: NY’ — has collected multiple accolades since.

His Oscar charge began in earnest last month when he won best supporting actor honors from the Screen Actors Guild.

“Now I feel like I’m finally part of the family,” he told the Hollywood-based actors union.

“I know what you all know — what it’s like to be a starving actor. Back then I used to sleep in my car. I slept in my dressing room backstage. I couch surfed, and all of that. You feel me, right?”

Kotsur also thanked Apple for “believing in us deaf actors and casting us authentica­lly as actors who happen to be deaf,” before the film went on to win the night’s top prize for best cast.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Kotsur accepts the award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for ‘CODA’ onstage during the 94th Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California.
— AFP photo Kotsur accepts the award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for ‘CODA’ onstage during the 94th Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California.

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