Chicago Sun-Times

Oscars will show all winners live on telecast

- BY ANDREW DALTON AP Entertainm­ent Writer

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — The slap sat front and center at Monday’s Oscar nominees luncheon.

So much so that motion picture academy president Janet Yang neither had to describe it nor say the names Will Smith or Chris Rock for the ballroom full of award hopefuls to know what she was talking about when she aired her regrets.

“I’m sure you all remember we experience­d an unpreceden­ted event at the Oscars,” Yang told a crowd that included Tom Cruise, Angela Bassett, Cate Blanchett and Steven Spielberg during her opening remarks. “What happened onstage was wholly unacceptab­le and the response from our organizati­on was inadequate.”

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences did little in response to Smith storming the stage and slapping Rock during last year’s Oscars telecast or in the immediate aftermath. It was nearly two weeks before its board of governors voted to ban Smith from the Oscars for 10 years.

“We learned from this that the academy must be fully transparen­t and accountabl­e in our actions,” Yang said, “and particular­ly in times of crisis you must act swiftly, compassion­ately and decisively for ourselves and for our industry. You should and can expect no less from us going forward.”

Yang, who was not president at the time, was interrupte­d by a mild round of applause, and moved on to happier topics.

She was met with whooping applause when she told the nominees that all categories will be shown live on the March 12 ABC telecast. Last year, in a controvers­y largely eclipsed by the slap, several Oscars were handed out in a pretelecas­t ceremony and edited versions of winners’ speeches were squeezed into the main show.

The luncheon is a warm, feelgood affair where nominees are in general treated with equality, and a relative unknown up for best animated short might be seated next to an A-lister up for best actor.

Tom Cruise, nominated as a producer for best picture candidate “Top Gun: Maverick,” managed briefly to mix in with the crowd in a ballroom at the Beverly Hilton before he attracted a crowd of gawkers.

The luncheon also functions as an Oscars orientatio­n for would-be winners. Yang emphasized that acceptance speeches at next month’s ceremony have to be kept to 45 seconds.

“Let’s say it together, 45 seconds,” she told the crowd, which repeated it back in unison.

 ?? VALERIE MACON/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? “Elvis” star Austin Butler and Tom Cruise at the Oscars Nominees Luncheon on Monday in Beverly Hills, California.
VALERIE MACON/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES “Elvis” star Austin Butler and Tom Cruise at the Oscars Nominees Luncheon on Monday in Beverly Hills, California.
 ?? ?? Janet Yang
Janet Yang

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