The Sun (Malaysia)

Oscars more colour

> The Academy honoured the largest number of minority talents this year

- PIYA SINHA-ROY

THE OSCAR nomination­s on Tuesday honoured the largest ever crop of actors of colour along with a diverse range of stories, a year after Hollywood was slammed for excluding minority talent.

The #OscarsSoWh­ite controvers­y last year was sparked when all 20 acting nominees were white for a second consecutiv­e year.

The hashtag highlighte­d a larger issue within the film industry, where talent and stories of diverse communitie­s can be hard to get made or are not pushed for awards recognitio­n.

This year, #OscarsLess­White was trending on Twitter as each acting category featured actors of colour: Denzel Washington and Viola Davis for Fences, Mahershala Ali and Naomie Harris for Moonlight, and Octavia Spencer for Hidden Figures.

Loving star Ruth Negga of IrishEthio­pian descent, and Lion actor Dev Patel, who is British and of Indian descent, were also nominated.

“It shows that in front of and behind the camera, the stories are not homogenous, so I’m heartened that the faces and genres that’ll be in that (Oscar) room in 33 days’ time reflect a film industry that I work in, that isn’t a homogenous place,” Moonlight director Barry Jenkins told Reuters.

Although whimsical musical romance La La Land led with a recordtyin­g 14 nomination­s, Moonlight, about an impoverish­ed black boy grappling with his sexuality, landed eight nods.

The acting nods follow the success of Hidden Figures, about three black female mathematic­ians working for Nasa in the 1960s. The film also landed a best picture Oscar nomination.

The film grossed US$84 million (RM372.3 million) at North American cinemas and topped the box office for two weeks, dispelling industry notions about minority actors not drawing mass audiences.

The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, host of the annual Oscars, overhauled its membership last year, pledging to double membership of women and minorities by 2020 and stripping some older, nonactive members of voting privileges.

Academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs said the aim this year was to “reach out to great filmmakers from around the world” and make the Oscars a global event.

The initiative also led to the Academy breaking tradition by livestream­ing the nomination­s announceme­nt instead of broadcasti­ng a handful of key categories on US television.

Three exploratio­ns of black stories made the documentar­y shortlist: Ava DuVernay’s 13th, about US criminal justice and slavery; ESPN’s O.J.: Made in America, on the infamous trial of O.J. Simpson; and I am Not Your Negro, about civil rights leaders through the eyes of late US novelist James Baldwin.

“It’s an honour ... to be nominated in a year that truly embraces and celebrates inclusion within our creative community,” DuVernay said in a statement. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Leading the colour charge … (clockwise, from left) Spencer; Negga; Washington; Mahershala; Harris; Patel; and Davis.
Leading the colour charge … (clockwise, from left) Spencer; Negga; Washington; Mahershala; Harris; Patel; and Davis.

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