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Watch Anthony Hopkins Accept His Oscar, Pay Tribute to Chadwick Boseman: “At 83 Years of Age I Did Not Expect To Get This Award”

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Sir Anthony Hopkins didn’t expect to win the Oscar for his landmark work in “The Father.” He went on a trip to his homeland of Wales instead. Like all of us, he thought Chadwick Boseman would win the Oscar for Best Actor. Hopkins paid tribute to him this morning on Instagram. It’s Hopkins’ second Oscar. His first was for the 1991 “Silence of the Lambs.” He was 53 then, and had labored for decades under the shadow a more famous Welsh actor, Richard Burton. But Hopkins has exceeded Burton, giving memorable performances in so many films like “Remains of the Day,” “Howard’s End,” “Shadowlands,” and so on. Bravo!

As for Boseman, it seems as though many Academy voters got cold feet in the last couple of weeks. A feeling that the vote would be “wasted” was heard a lot, even though everyone admired his work in “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom.” He and Viola Davis won the Screen Actors Guild Award for that film, and I thought that would repeat at the Oscars. So that theory is out the window.

Watch Elton John & Dua Lipa Perform “Bennie & the Jets” at Oscar Party That Raised $3 Million

Great news from Elton John. His pre-Oscar party was an enormous hit, raising $3 million in one for his Elton John AIDS Foundation. Dua Lipa performed, Neil Patrick Harris hosted, and there appearances by very special guests including Lady Gaga, Cynthia Erivo and the cast of It’s a Sin, among others.

For the first time, EJAF supporters worldwide were invited to attend the famed Oscar party by joining a 60-minute pre-show special produced by Fulwell 73 at Rosewood London. The one-of-a-kind Pre-Party was powered by Cisco Webex to securely bring the event to audiences.

Guests at the Pre-Party received a warm welcome from Sir Elton John and David Furnish, as well as special appearances from the likes of Olly Alexander, Nathaniel Curtis, Omari Douglas, Cynthia Erivo, Callum Scott Howells, Elizabeth Hurley, David Williams, Lydia West, and others. Neil Patrick Harris brought humor to the show and Dua Lipa lit up the virtual Pre-Party with performances of her chart-topping hits including, “Levitating,” “Pretty Please,” “Hallucinate” and “Don’t Start Now.” Guests were also treated to an extra-special duet with Sir Elton John and Dua Lipa performing “Bennie and the Jets” and “Love Again.” Following the Pre-Party, the live Oscars telecast portion of the evening was hosted by Emmy® Award-winning actor Eric McCormack and featured a performance by country singer MacKenzie Porter for donors and supporters.

‘We haven’t missed a year yet and we certainly weren’t going to miss our 29th annual Oscar Party to benefit my Foundation – even if it meant going virtual,’ Elton says. “It was so much fun to perform with the gorgeous Dua Lipa and open up our Party to supporters all over the world. I’m so grateful to Neil for hosting, everyone who attended and all my friends who participated so that we could continue this legendary event to raise vital funds to end the AIDS epidemic.”

Told Ya! Anthony Hopkins Won Best Actor After All But Didn’t Show — He Was in Wales on Holiday

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I told you this morning Anthony Hopkins wasn’t coming to the Oscars,

He won anyway.

But as I reported this morning he was in Wales, where he’s been on holiday. This morning he visited his father’s grave.

He’s been blissfully oblivious to the Oscars.

Everyone thought Chadwick Boseman would win posthumously for “Ma Rainey.” But in the, Hopkins’ tour de force performance was too much to overcome. Boseman will always be remembered in this highest regard.

The Oscar producers assumed Boseman would win, and changed the order of the show. They made Best Actor last , hoping to get a huge standing ovation for the late actor. But it backfired. And the final award had no winner present.

Next year, back to the old order, please.

Oscar Prognosticators Were Wrong About Most Everything: SAG Winners Lose, Stalwarts Win, Show was Refreshing

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All the Oscar prognosticators were wrong. Frances McDormand and Anthony Hopkins won Best Actress, old stalwarts who already had Oscars.

The Academy added thousands of multi cultural people and still came up with conventional but deserving and talented winners.

Carey Mulligan did not win, despite a lot of hype.

Viola Davis and Chadwick Boseman, who won the SAG Awards, lost. So much for the theory that SAG predicts the Oscars.

McDormand, looking unhappy and unkempt, still won the night by howling like a wolf when “Nomadland” won Best Picture.

Glenn Close lost for the umpteenth time, but stole the show in a scripted bit that was hilarious. She’s a gem.

The show was a little different than past Oscar broadcasts but I liked it. It was unadorned and familial. The setting of Union Station was intimate and just right. Next year, though, they should include the Best Songs.

But the show was refreshing and hit the right tone during the pandemic. Kudos to the producers.

 

 

Oscars Winners: “Nomadland” Best Picture, Frances McDormand Wins Third Oscar, Best Actor Anthony Hopkins, Best Director Chloe Zhao, Daniel Kaluuya, Youn Yuh-jung, “Soul”

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UPDATE: Nomadland wins Best Picture. Producers give Best Picture before best actor and actress for the first time in modern memory. Frances McDormand speaks as a producer and howls like a wolf.

Chloe Zhao has won the Oscar for directing “Nomadland.” She’s the first Asian female to win the award. It’s groundbreaking. History.

Daniel Kaluuya has won Best Supporting Actor for “Judas and the Black Messiah.”

“Sound of Metal” Best Sound

“Promising Young Woman” Best Original Screenplay
“The Father” Best Adapted Screenplay
“Two Distant Strangers” Live Action Short
Animated Short: If Anything Happens, I Love You
Animated Feature: “Soul”
Documentary Short: “Colette”
Documentary Feature: “My Octopus Teacher”
Visual Effects: “Tenet”
Best Supporting Actress: Youn Yuh-jung
Production Design: “Mank”
Cinematography: “Mank”
Film Editing: “Sound of Editing”
Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award: Tyler Perry
Original Score: “Soul”
Original Song: HER MUSIC from “Judas”
Best Picture: “Nomadland”
Actress in a Leading Role: Frances McDormand
Actor in a Leading Role: Anthony Hopkins

keep refreshing…

Anthony Hopkins Not at the Oscars, But Quoting Dylan Thomas at His Father’s Wales Graveside

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Where is Oscar nominee Anthony Hopkins? Getting ready for the Oscars? No. He posted a Tweet from his father’s graveside in Wales. He’s quoting Dylan Thomas. And getting an Oscar for that as well as “The Father.” Beautiful.

Tonight’s Oscars Are About Great Movies, Not Box Office: It Was the Same in 1980 and Always Has Been

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I’m seeing articles lamenting that the Best Picture nominees for tonight’s Oscars weren’t popular or didn’t have big box office numbers.

The Oscars are not a popularity contest. They’re about awarding craftsmanship. The movies chosen in every Oscar year are meant to last, and grow, as pieces of art, kids. Commercial art, maybe, yes. But it’s not about how many seats they filled, or how often they were streamed.

And it’s been like that always. I’ve chosen 1980, a wonderful year for film, an an example.

The Best Picture nominees were “Kramer vs. Kramer,” “Apocalypse Now,” “Norma Rae,” “Breaking Away,” and “All That Jazz.”

The winner was “Kramer,” which made $11.6 million on its release and didn’t ultimately hit $106 million until well after Oscar nominations and the win.

Runner up was “Apocalypse Now,” which ultimately earned $89 million, didn’t break $100 million and lost money. It became a classic over four decades.

The remaining three were not widely seen at the time and didn’t make much money. The lovely “Breaking Away” earned $16.8 million. “Norma Rae” was about $23 million. “All that Jazz” did a little better with $37.8 million.

All of them, despite low numbers in 1980, are still seen today and highly regarded and even kind of loved.

That is the case for every year. Sometimes you get a big box office hit in the mix. More than often you don’t.

Keep that in mind. This year’s films, in an odd pandemic year, were really terrific. “Nomadland,” “Minari,” “Chicago 7,” “Ma Rainey,” “The Father,” “Promising Young Woman,” “Judas and the Black Messiah,” “Billie Holiday,” — there isn’t a clunker in the group. Even “Mank” will remain watchable, and maybe more so as time goes by. Did they set box office records? No. But they added to the human condition. And that’s what this is all about.

PS There will be a rush to post the ratings tomorrow morning, wait and see — headlines about lowest rated Oscars ever. Let’s concede that point now, and just enjoy the show.

Hollywood Oscar Eve Zoom Features Stunning Andra Day, Gary Oldman “Crooning,” Sensational Diane Warren Tribute, Macy Gray Unveiling Great New Single

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Last night’s Oscar-eve Zoom gala was The Night Before, the usually in person fundraiser for the Motion Picture Home in Woodland Hills, California.

A kind of un-Quarantunes, The Night Before was quirkily produced and in the end had some outstanding moments. And there was also Gary Oldman, crooning with a jazz band.

But the serious presentations were worth whatever it cost to log on to this thing. Andra Day gave an absolutely stunning performance of Billie Holiday’s “God Bless the Child” accompanied by Kris Bowers. (They are each Oscar nominees tonight.) Wow!

Twelve time Oscar nominee Diane Warren got a special tribute from LeAnn Rimes, who performed their hit, “How Do I Live” and El DeBarge, who came to the piano for his Warren hit, “Rhythm of the Night.” But it was Broadway’s Brandon Victor Dixon who stole the show with his version of Aerosmith’s “I Don’t Want to Miss a Thing.” Someone should release that recording as a single, pronto!

“The Night Before” took a while to get off the ground. Luckily Tony winner Lena Hall saved the pre-show entertaining guests with hits from Prince, Queen, and so on. Hall, who needs a hit show of her own, is a versatile entertainer and a good sport. She had to keep adding songs as the show’s take off was delayed. Luckily she had a nice A list audience sending in requests on the chat board.

Another highlight of the Zoom, which began at 11 pm Eastern, was Macy Gray introducing a great new single she dropped on Friday called “Thinking of You.” Macy has had an up and down career with one massive hit, “I Try,” and lots of good records. But this one I really liked, I wish radio would do something for her.

Eventually, I tuned out of this special because of the late hour. Certainly the oddest moment was Gary Oldman performing with a jazz combo. It was a little like Kevin Spacey doing his Bobby Darin imitation. Great actors can “do” singers even when it verges on self-parody. But he looked like he was having fun. There’s nothing wrong with that.

But just to reiterate: if the Motion Picture Home wants to make some money, release those Andra Day-Kris Bowers and Brandon Victor Dixon videos. Sensational!

PS Okay one funny thing. Comedian Jeff Ross did a little stand up with Diane Warren, at her expense. Thank god she has a sense of humor. Ross noted that Warren (who does curse like a sailor) was a fan of George Carlin’s Seven Words You Can’t Say On Television.

Cracks Ross: “You know seven other words you won’t hear on television tomorrow night? And the Oscar goes to Diane Warren!”

Warren laughed, she couldn’t believe it. You could hear people in the room do spit-takes.

Ouch!

Photo c2021 Showbiz411 by Paul Antonelli

Watch Lindsey Graham Tell Chris Wallace That “We Just Elected a Two Term African American President”

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read the rest of today’s entertainment headlines here

Lindsey Graham, who I think is a United States Senator, seems confused today about who recently won the Presidential election. He tells Chris Wallace on Fox News Sunday that “we just elected a two term African American president.” He’s unaware of Joe Biden having been elected.

Lady G, as he’s known in some circles, may have been time traveling back to 2012 during his interview. Experts also said this week that not enough sleep can cause dementia. Is Lady G not getting enough sleep before interviews? Was he up late Saturday night watching TCM?

All I know is, Roger Ailes woke up in his hot surroundings and said Obama still president? Let’s get rid of him!

UPDATE “CBS Sunday Morning” Glossed Over Jon Voight’s Crazier Aspects, Referred to Him as a Trumper

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Here’s an update on the “CBS Sunday Morning” profile of Jon Voight.

TCM’s Ben Mankiewicz (grand-nephew of “Mank’) glossed over Voight’s loonier stuff and stuck to his career. He did called Voight a “Trumper,” and mentioned his nutty “Roe v. Wade” movie, but didn’t get into it very deeply.

On the Trump front, Mankiewicz omitted Voight’s real devotion to Trump, how he spoke at the 2016 Inauguration — lone among actors — and eventually was rewarded with a Presidential Medal of Freedom. Voight did not get to opine on a number of things that would have made “Sunday Morning” viewers’ hair stand up straight.

Voight is real dilemma because he is charming and an excellent actor. When you talk to him in person, he glows, and he’s a lot of fun. But then the politics start, and you want to run for the hills. The “Roe v. Wade” movie is an abomination. But if there’s more “Ray Donovan,” and he returns, that’s always welcome.

I must say, I enjoyed the pieces this morning on Merry Clayton and Russ Tamblyn a lot more. Buy Merry’s album on Amazon. It’s wonderful.