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79th Academy Awards Information

The 79th Academy Awards ceremony (also known as the Oscars), honored the best films of 2006 and took place on February 25, 2007 at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, California on ABC. Ellen DeGeneres hosted the ceremony for the first time.[1] The producer was Laura Ziskin.[2] The announcers were Don LaFontaine and Gina Tuttle.

The nominees were announced on January 23 at 5:38 a.m. PST (13:38 UTC) by Academy president Sid Ganis and actress Salma Hayek, at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in the Academy's Beverly Hills headquarters. Bolstered by three nominations for Best Song, the musical Dreamgirls received eight nominations, becoming the first film ever to receive the most nominations in a particular Academy Awards ceremony without being nominated for Best Picture. Babel received the second highest number of nominations with seven.

The Departed was the evening's biggest winner taking home four awards including Best Picture, and a long awaited Best Director award for Martin Scorsese. For Scorsese, this was his first victory after losing five nominations in the Best Director category for Raging Bull, The Last Temptation of Christ, Goodfellas, Gangs of New York, and The Aviator, and losing in screenwriting categores for Goodfellas, and The Age of Innocence.

For the second consecutive year, both acting awards for leading roles went to performers portraying real people.

On February 10, 2007, in a ceremony at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Beverly Hills, California, the Academy Awards for Technical Achievement were presented by host Maggie Gyllenhaal.[3]

Contents

Major awards

Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface.

Best Picture Best Director
Best Actor Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Best Supporting Actress
Best Original Screenplay Best Adapted Screenplay
Best Animated Feature Best Foreign Language Film

Other awards

Best Documentary Feature Best Documentary Short
Best Live Action Short Best Animated Short
Best Original Score Best Original Song
Best Sound Editing Best Sound Mixing
Best Art Direction Best Cinematography
Best Makeup Best Costume Design
Best Film Editing Best Visual Effects

Special honors

Academy Honorary Award
The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award
In Memoriam
The Academy takes a moment to remember those in the film industry that passed away in the previous year: Glenn Ford, Bruno Kirby, Alida Valli, songwriter Betty Comden, Jane Wyatt, Don Knotts, Red Buttons, director Gillo Pontecorvo, Darren McGavin, director Richard Fleischer, cinematographer Sven Nykvist, producer/cartoonist Joseph Barbera, Tamara Dobson, set designer Gretchen Rau, June Allyson, director Gordon Parks, Philippe Noiret, Maureen Stapleton, Jack Wild, director Vincent Sherman, James Doohan, director Shohei Imamura, producer Carlo Ponti, Peter Boyle, cinematographer James Glennon, screenwriter Sidney Sheldon, Jack Palance, Mako, Jack Warden, composer Basil Poledouris, art director Henry Bumstead, screenwriter Jay Presson Allen, and director Robert Altman.

Films with multiple nominations

Eight
  • Dreamgirls
Seven
Six
Five
Four
Three
Two

Films with multiple wins

4 awards
3 awards
2 awards

Presenters and performers

Presenters (in order of appearance)
Presenter(s) Category
Daniel Craig Nicole Kidman Best Art Direction
Maggie Gyllenhaal Gordon E. Sawyer Award
Will Ferrell Jack Black John C. Reilly Best Makeup
Abigail Breslin Jaden Smith Best Animated Shot Film Best Live Action Short Film
Steve Carell Greg Kinnear Best Sound Editing
Jessica Biel James McAvoy Best Sound Mixing
Rachel Weisz Best Supporting Actor
Al Gore Leonardo DiCaprio Announcement regarding the Academy's plans to help the environment
Cameron Diaz Best Animated Feature
Ben Affleck Introduced writers film montage
Helen Mirren Tom Hanks Best Adapted Screenplay
Emily Blunt Anne Hathaway Best Costume Design
Tom Cruise The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award
Gwyneth Paltrow Best Cinematogrophy
Naomi Watts Robert Downey, Jr. Best Visual Effects
Catherine Deneuve Ken Watanabe Introudced past Best Foreign Language Film winners montage
Clive Owen Cate Blanchett Best Foreign Language Film
George Clooney Best Supporting Actress
Eva Green Gael García Bernal Best Documentary Short Subject
Jerry Seinfeld Best Documentary Feature
Clint Eastwood Academy Honorary Award to Ennio Morricone
Hugh Jackman Penélope Cruz Best Original Score
Sid Ganis Spoke during a sequence highlighting the Academy's preservation and educational work
Tobey Maguire Kirsten Dunst Best Original Screenplay
Jennifer Lopez Introduced the Dreamgirls performances
Queen Latifah John Travolta Best Original Song
Will Smith Introduced a montage of films dealing with American politics
Kate Winslet Best Film Editing
Jodie Foster In Memoriam Tribute
Phillip Seymour Hoffman Best Actress
Reese Witherspoon Best Actor
Francis Ford Coppola Steven Spielberg George Lucas Best Director
Jack Nicholson Diane Keaton Best Picture
Performers (in order of appearance)

William Ross, Harold Wheeler, and Marc Shaiman were musical arrangers. Other performers included:

Performer(s) Song
Pilobolus Interpretive depictions of films' titles and logos
Will Ferrell Jack Black John C. Reilly Marc Shaiman "Comedian at the Oscars"
Sound effects choir Steve Sidwell Performed voice effects to a montage of classic films
James Taylor Randy Newman "Our Town"
Melissa Etheridge "I Need to Wake Up"
Celine Dion "I Knew I Loved You"
Jennifer Hudson Beyoncé Knowles Anika Noni Rose Keith Robinson "Love You I Do" "Listen" "Patience"

Voting trends

For the second year in a row, no film received more than eight nominations, with the selections scattered among numerous films. Continuing a trend of the previous two years in the major nominations, Academy voters favored films which had struggled at the U.S. box office, although the Best Picture nominees performed slightly better than those of the previous year due to the presence of one sizable hit. The Departed had the best showing through January 21 with $121.7 million, placing the film 17th among the year's releases. However, the next best showing among the five nominees was that of Little Miss Sunshine, which placed 50th with $59.6 million. The Queen ($35.6 million), Babel ($23.7 million) and Letters from Iwo Jima ($2.4 million) completed the Best Picture field, but did not place among the year's top 80 box office hits.

Among the rest of the top 50 releases of 2006 in U.S. box office through the weekend before the nominations, only The Pursuit of Happyness (12th), Borat (15th), The Devil Wears Prada (16th) and Dreamgirls (28th) received nominations for directing, acting or writing, with only Dreamgirls gaining more than one nomination in those areas. The top sixteen films in box office received a total of only thirteen nominations, with four going to the year's top hit, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, and two others in the category of Animated Feature. Six of the ten nominations for Best Actor and Best Actress went to films which had grossed less than $8 million each.

For the second consecutive year, four of the Best Picture nominees were rated R (under 17 requires accompanying adult). Of the 88 nominations awarded to non-documentary feature films (apart from the Foreign Film category), a majority of 56 went to R-rated films (up from 43 one year earlier), 28 to films rated PG-13, two to PG-rated films (down from 16 the year before, and both for Animated Feature) and two to a G-rated film (the final nominee for Animated Feature). In a precise duplication of the previous year, R-rated films captured 32 of the 40 nominations for Best Picture, directing, screenwriting and acting. Non-R-rated films received exactly half of the nominations (24 of 48) in the remaining categories, primarily those in "below the line" areas (the editing, original score and sound editing categories accounted for 13 of the 24 nominations for R-rated films, while the categories for costume design, song, visual effects and animated feature accounted for 14 of the 24 nominations for non-R-rated films).

Peter O'Toole – who received his first nomination for Best Actor 44 years earlier – set a record for most years between a first and most recent nomination in that category, breaking Henry Fonda's record of 41 years (Katharine Hepburn received Best Actress nominations 48 years apart). Kevin O'Connell increased his number of nominations to 19 in the Best Sound Mixing category. He is still without a win.

For the second year in a row, no film received more than four awards, and the awards for Best Picture and the four acting categories again went to five different films. Forest Whitaker won for his performance as Idi Amin, and Helen Mirren won for her role as Queen Elizabeth II, making it the sixth time – and second consecutive year – that both lead acting awards went to performers playing real people; it was also the sixth time in eight years that the Best Actress award has gone to someone playing a real person. No individual person won more than one award.

Ethnic diversity, Mexican and British presence

With five blacks, two Hispanics and an Asian, it was the most ethnically diverse lineup ever among the 20 acting nominees. After decades in which the Oscars were a virtual whites-only club, with minority actors only occasionally breaking into the field, the awards have featured a much broader mix of nominees in the last few years.

A record number of 10 Mexicans received a total of 12 Academy Award nominations. Cinematographer Guillermo Navarro and production designer Eugenio Caballero ended up winning, for their work in Pan's Labyrinth:

Numerous nominees were British; however, only one (Helen Mirren) ended up winning.

Notable events

I guess with a billion people watching, it's as good a time as any. So my fellow Americans, I'm going to take this opportunity right here and now to formally announce my intentions ...,
Gore announced, his voice then trailing away as the orchestra cut him off. After accepting Best Documentary along with Davis Guggenheim, he finished his earlier "incomplete" speech that global warming is a moral issue.[4]

Eventually, John C. Reilly rose from his seat and told the two that instead of fighting, they should star in both comedic and dramatic roles, much like he did ("I chose to be in both Boogie and Talladega Nights"). Black and Ferrell realized that if they took Reilly's advice, an "Helen Mirren and an Oscar will be coming home with me". When Reilly appeared, Ferrell nearly called him "Jack Black", stopping just before he finished the name.

Mistakes

As sometimes happens with live (no-retake) shows, a few problems occurred.

Ratings

The ceremony attracted 39.92 million viewers with 23.65% of households watching, slightly higher than the last year's ceremony. Among the key audience of adults aged 18 to 49, the Oscars notched a 14.0 rating, essentially flat with the previous year.[7]

Advertisers

At least two advertisers produced special commercials for the Oscar show

See also

Academy Award portal

References

  1. ^ "Ellen DeGeneres to Host 79th Academy Awards Presentation". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. 2006-09-07. http://www.oscars.org/press/pressreleases/2006/06.09.07.html. Retrieved 2007-01-12.
  2. ^ "Laura Ziskin Returns As Telecast Producer for 79th Academy Awards". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. 2006-07-21. http://www.oscars.org/press/pressreleases/2006/06.07.21.html. Retrieved 2007-01-12.
  3. ^ "2006 Scientific and Technical Awards". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. 2007-02-12. http://old.oscars.org/scitech/2006/index.html. Retrieved 2009-07-28.
  4. ^ Yahoo.com. Violent thriller "Departed" blows away Oscars competition (Yahoo! News with Reuters). Accessed February 26, 2007.
  5. ^ IMDb.com, IMDb's News archives., accessed February 26, 2007.
  6. ^ Oscar.com [1], accessed December 17, 2007.
  7. ^ The Envelope: Oscar telecast ratings
  8. ^ AFSP.org (2007-02-06). "AFSP Issues Statement to General Motors Regarding Super Bowl Ad". http://www.afsp.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=home.viewpage&page_id=93CA6FF0-7E90-9BD4-C1D8809C1CBC8069. Retrieved 2007-02-09.

External links

Wikinews has related news:
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  • Scorsese finally scores Oscar gold with "The Departed"
Official websites
News resources
Analysis
Other resources
Academy Awards
Portal · Category · History of film
Merit awards

Best Picture · Best Director · Best Leading Actor · Best Leading Actress · Best Adapted Screenplay · Best Original Screenplay · Best Supporting Actor · Best Supporting Actress · Best Animated Feature · Best Art Direction · Best Cinematography · Best Costume Design · Best Documentary Feature · Best Documentary Short Subject · Best Film Editing · Best Foreign Language Film (Winners and nominees) · Best Makeup · Best Original Score · Best Original Song · Best Animated Short Film · Best Live Action Short Film · Best Sound Mixing · Best Sound Editing · Best Visual Effects

Special awards

Academy Honorary Award · Special Achievement Academy Award · Academy Scientific and Technical Award · Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award · Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award · Gordon E. Sawyer Award

Retired awards

Best Assistant Director · Best Dance Direction · Best Director of a Comedy Picture · Best Engineering Effects · Best Short Subject, Two-reel · Best Short Subject, Color · Best Short Subject, Novelty · Best Original Story · Best Title Writing · Best Unique and Artistic Quality of Production · Academy Juvenile Award

Award ceremonies

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Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) · Records

Categories: Academy Awards ceremonies | 2006 film awards

 

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