The Philippine Star

Hit songs from the Oscars

- BABY A. GIL

The nominees this year are all deserving. Mighty River performed and written by R&B diva Mary J. Blige. She was positively gorgeous in that red gown at the Academy Awards held last Sunday at the Dolby Theater in Los Angeles. There is also Mystery Of Love from Call Me By Your Name by the reclusive Sufjan Stevens who also gladly came to perform.

Then Remember

Me from the animated Disney picture Coco and composed by the winning tandem for Let It Go from Frozen for the year 2013, Kristen AndersonLo­pez and Robert Lopez which I must say sounds doubly touching in Spanish. Stand Up For Something, written by frequent nominee Diane Warren and hip-hop star Common, was sung by the incredible Audra Day.

Plus of course, This Is Me from the blockbuste­r-selling soundtrack of The Greatest Showman, performed by Keala Settle and composed by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul who were winners last year for City Of Stars from

La La Land. Am so partial to the songs from this musical that I think more of them should have been nominated and as winner would have been popular choices. Why everybody is now singing A

Million Years and Rewrite The Stars.

But not everybody thinks the same way and there can only be one winner. And the Best Song from a Motion Picture in 2017 is Remember Me or Recuerdame from Coco. It was performed at the Oscars by the enchanting tandem of Gael Garcia Bernal, Miguel and Natalia Lafourcade. As it is, the song now has the distinctio­n of being the 83rd winner in this category given out during the Academy’s 90th-anniversar­y show.

Please note that while the Academy first gave out awards in 1929 and the Best Motion Picture Score was included from the beginning, it was only later in 1934 that the members of the Academy decided to add the Best Song award. It was only fair. That was surely an acknowledg­ement of the big role that songs play in enhancing or adding to the message of a photoplay.

It was decided then that as in the other categories, the songwriter/composer-members will choose the nomi-

nees but the entire body will vote for the winners. To qualify, a song must have been composed exclusivel­y for and used in a movie. The first winner was an upbeat tune The Continenta­l from the movie The Gay Divorcee which starred the singing and dancing pair of Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire.

Oscar voters are not infallible in matters of filmmaking excellence. Hence, they have made what I believe were booboos in their choices. Still, even those that I believe are undeservin­g now have the descriptio­n Academy Award winner attached to their titles. On the other hand though, the Oscars have also been responsibl­e for some of the most beautiful and most enduring songs of this lifetime.

Among the Best Song winners that remain top

favorites to this day are: The Way You Look Tonight, Swing Time, 1936; Over The Rainbow, The Wizard Of Oz, 1939; When You Wish Upon A Star, Pinocchio, 1940; White Christmas,

1942; Baby It’s Cold Outside, Neptune’s Daughter, 1949; Love Is A Many Splendored Thing, 1955; All The Way, The Joker Is Wild, 1957.

Moon River, Breakfast At Tiffany’s, 1961; Shadow Of Your Smile, The Sandpiper,

1965; Windmills Of Your Mind, The Thomas Crown Affair, 1968; Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head, Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid, 1969; For All We Know, Lovers And Other Strangers,

1970; The Way We Were, 1973; Evergreen, A Star Is Born, 1976.

Fame, 1980; Arthur’s Theme (Best That You Can Do), Arthur, 1981; Up Where We Belong, An Officer And A Gentleman, 1982; I Just Called To Say I Love You, Woman In Red, 1984; Say You Say Me, White Nights, 1985; Take My Breath Away, Top Gun, 1986; I’ve Had The Time Of My Life, Dirty Dancing 1987; Under The Sea, The Little Mermaid, 1989.

Beauty And The Beast, 1991; A Whole New World, Aladdin,

1992; Streets Of Philadelph­ia, Philadelph­ia, 1993; Can You Feel The Love Tonight, The Lion King, 1994; My Heart Will Go On, Titanic, 1997; You’ll Be In My Heart, Disney’s Tarzan, 1999; Lose Yourself, 8 Mile, 2002; Jai Ho, Slumdog Millionair­e, 2008; Skyfall, 2012; Let It

 ??  ?? Gael Garcia Bernal performs the winning song Remember Me during the 90th Annual Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center. — AP Photo
Gael Garcia Bernal performs the winning song Remember Me during the 90th Annual Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center. — AP Photo
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