Enterprise-Record (Chico)

DiCaprio, Zellweger and more Oscar hopefuls attend luncheon

- By Jonathan Landrum Jr.

LOS ANGELES >> Renée Zellweger, Al Pacino and dozens of other Academy Award nominees bowed their heads in a moment of silence Monday for Kobe Bryant to open the annual Oscars luncheon, a somber moment in an otherwise sunny annual affair that serves as a meet-andgreet, celebratio­n and training session for each year’s class of nominees.

Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences President David Rubin asked the audience to honor the NBA star and 2018 Oscar winner, and his daughter, who were among nine people killed in a helicopter crash on Sunday.

“With all the success he had on the court, he was the most excited person in the room that day,” Rubin said of Bryant at the 2018 luncheon. Bryant went on to win an Oscar for best animated short for “Dear Basketball.”

The group of both longtime Oscar luminaries and first-time hopefuls broke into applause to end the silence.

Leonardo DiCaprio, Laura Dern, Robert De Niro and Quentin Tarantino were all set upon by groups of photograph­ers as they walked into the luncheon being held just a few steps from the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, home to the 92nd Academy Awards on Feb. 9.

Tarantino, nominated for best director for “Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood,” stood for just a few photos before heading to join his fellow nominees at lunch tables.

“One more, Quentin, come on,” one photograph­er said.

Inside the ballroom, Brad Pitt and Tarantino autographe­d a “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” movie poster brought by the film’s sound engineer Mark Ulano, who is nominated for his work in three films in the best sound mixing category.

Taika Waititi, whose film “Jojo Rabbit” is nominated for six Oscars, walked in and shared a hug with Bong Joon Ho, whose “Parasite” earned nomination­s for best director, best internatio­nal film and best picture.

Both congratula­ted each other on their awards season recognitio­n.

The luncheon is an annual chance for all Oscar nominees to rub shoulders, celebrate the status many will only have once, and take a class picture, after a roll call of all the nominees summons them to the front of the ballroom. Among those standing near the center of the frame were Pacino, Diane Warren and “Frozen II” songwriter­s Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez.

In another annual ritual, they were told to keep their acceptance speeches short at the Oscars, ideally 45 seconds or less, and were urged to appoint one person to speak for a group of winners.

Democratiz­ed seating arrangemen­ts at the luncheon often pair littleknow­n nominees in categories like documentar­y short or sound-design with major stars nominated in acting categories.

Warren, an 11-time nominee who this year is competing for best original song with “I’m Standing With You” from “Breakthrou­gh,” chatted with newbie nominee director Matthew Cherry, telling him and producer Karen Rupert Toliver that their animated short “Hair Love” was “amazing.”

 ?? PHOTO BY DANNY MOLOSHOK — INVISION ?? Diane Warren, left, and Renee Zellweger take a selfie at the 92nd Academy Awards Nominees Luncheon at the Loews Hotel on Monday in Los Angeles.
PHOTO BY DANNY MOLOSHOK — INVISION Diane Warren, left, and Renee Zellweger take a selfie at the 92nd Academy Awards Nominees Luncheon at the Loews Hotel on Monday in Los Angeles.

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