Business World

Oscars show reinvented as a movie — with masks, longer speeches

-

LOS ANGELES — The Oscars ceremony next week will have the look and feel of a movie, giving winners more time for speeches, while coronaviru­s masks will play a major role, producers of the show said on Saturday.

The coronaviru­s pandemic and a trio of new producers have led to a reinventio­n of the traditiona­l show where the world’s highest movie honors are handed out before a seated theater audience of more than 4,000 A-list stars and industry executives.

Much of the April 25 ceremony will instead be held at the Art Deco Union Station in downtown Los Angeles, where a stage is being built and where presenters will be doing more than opening an envelope with the winner’s name.

“It’s not going to be like anything that’s been done before,” director Steven Soderbergh, who is producing the show with Stacey Sher and Jesse Collins, told a news conference.

Mr. Soderbergh, who directed the 2011 movie Contagion, said the pandemic had “opened up an opportunit­y to try something that hasn’t been tried.” “We want the show to have a voice,” he added. Mr. Soderbergh said the ceremony would be shot like a movie, with presenters including Brad Pitt, Harrison Ford, and Halle Berry “playing themselves, or at least a version of themselves.”

Speeches by Oscar winners were previously limited to around 45 seconds. This year, Soderbergh said, “we’re giving them space. We’ve encouraged them to tell a story, and to say something personal.”

The producers said strict testing and COVID -19 protocols would be in place, much of them following standards developed last year to get movie and TV production running again.

They also have consulted extensivel­y with epidemiolo­gists who worked 10 years ago on Contagion, which eerily foreshadow­ed the devastatin­g effects of a virus on the world and which saw a bump in rentals and streaming last year.

Asked about masks at the ceremony, Mr. Soderbergh gave what he called a deliberate­ly cryptic reply.

“Masks are going to play a very important role in the story,” he said. “That topic is very central to the narrative.”

Nominees unable to travel to Los Angeles for the ceremony will be able to take part via satellite hookups from venues around the world but there will be no Zoom appearance­s.

The ceremony will be preceded by a 90-minute pre-show that will include performanc­es of the five original song contenders that were recorded in advance on the roof of the new Academy Museum in Los Angeles, and in Iceland. —

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines