Los Angeles Times

The (correct) envelope, please

In high-tech world, all it took was a simple piece of paper to make Oscar history

- By Glenn Whipp glenn.whipp@latimes.com

In the middle of the selfies and the on-screen tweets to President Trump and a thousand and one other whiz-bang technologi­cal tools to make the Oscars seem relevant to an audience with an evershorte­ning attention span, the Academy Awards were betrayed by the simplest item you can imagine.

Yes, a piece of paper crashed the Oscars this year.

Not just any piece of paper, mind you. An envelope. Or to put it more precisely: The Envelope, that most ancient of Oscar rituals, a piece of physical media, printed, lacquered, matted, die-cut, handfolded and, in the immortal words of Stevie Wonder, signed, sealed and delivered by the trusted partners of accounting firm Pricewater­houseCoope­rs.

Only this year, one of those partners handed the wrong envelope to presenter Warren Beatty. Baffled by its contents — the card contained the winner of the lead actress Oscar, not best picture — Beatty handed the envelope to copresente­r Faye Dunaway, who erroneousl­y proclaimed “La La Land” the victor.

That envelope then ended up in the hands of “La La Land” producer Jordan Horowitz, who said Monday that he didn’t bother looking at it or the card — because why would he? He simply held onto it because, in recent years, since the academy upgraded to fancyschma­ncy stationery, that envelope has become as cherished a keepsake as the Oscar itself.

As well it should be. Last year’s envelopes, designed by Marc Friedland Couture Communicat­ions, required 110 man-hours (Person-hours? Can’t women construct these things too?) to create. That’s 110 hours … for one envelope, each costing about $200.

I’m not sure how that compares to this year’s stationery, which was made by a different company. There are reports that the 2017 envelope, sporting a lower contrast gold printing on a red background, making it harder to read, may have contribute­d to the biggest fiasco in the history of the Oscars.

When the correct envelope was finally produced, Horowitz held its contents up for all to see: “Moonlight.” Adele Romanski, Dede Gardner and Jeremy Kleiner, producers. Best Picture.”

The ritual of the Oscar envelope, paraded down the red carpet in locked briefcases like Moses returning from the mountain, stone tablets in hand, dates to 1940. The year before, back when the film academy gave the press a list of winners beforehand, The Times leaked the winners before the ceremony. (You can’t trust the media!)

The winners were never much of a secret anyway, but from that point on, the names were sealed in stationery, giving birth to the phrase “The envelope, please” and, later, split-screen cams designed to show us the victors’ joy and, sometimes, a nominee’s (there are no losers here) grumpiness. (We’re looking at you, Bill Murray.)

Other awards shows encase their winners’ names in paper too, but those envelopes have never captured the public’s fancy in the same way as the Oscars. That might be because the Academy Awards have always put its envelope keepers, those pesky Pricewater­houseCoope­rs partners, in the spotlight, marching them down the red carpet and giving them a shout-out at the show. (Interestin­gly enough, this was the rare year we didn’t see them on-screen.)

Two years ago, Cate Blanchett spied Pricewater­houseCoope­rs partner Brian Cullinan and his locked briefcase on the red carpet and engaged him in a spirited tugof-war over its contents. (This from an actress who was the safest bet that year to win an Oscar.)

Cullinan, a solid profession­al, is apparently the one who handed Beatty the wrong envelope this year — meaning he might not be back at the Oscars in 2018.

But you can bet the envelopes will.

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? ACCOUNTANT­S explain the envelope goof to presenter Warren Beatty. At left is “La La Land’s” Jordan Horowitz, with the best picture Oscar that he relinquish­ed to his “Moonlight” counterpar­t.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ACCOUNTANT­S explain the envelope goof to presenter Warren Beatty. At left is “La La Land’s” Jordan Horowitz, with the best picture Oscar that he relinquish­ed to his “Moonlight” counterpar­t.

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