Oscars always succeed in exciting the world and the film industry across the globe every year. The ceremony is full of fun with pieces of trouble, spells of emotion, and a bag of winners. So now, sit back to learn all about the Oscar ceremony.
The Oscars are the Academy Awards for the film industry’s artists, makers, and technicians. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presents awards once a year in recognition of the achievements of the artists and technicians. The decision is made by voting by the members of the association. The Oscar awards are regarded highly by the American film industry and others worldwide. Interestingly the Oscar Statuette depicts a knight holding a crusader’s sword.
Oscars 2023: Must-See Moments!
Usually, the awards ceremony is conducted during Feb and March and is the oldest award function for entertainment. The first Oscar Award ceremony was held in 1929 and was telecasted on television for the first time in 1953. The other equivalent award ceremonies in America are Emmy Awards for television series and programs, the Tony Awards for theater, and the Grammy awards for music.
History of Oscars
The Academy award ceremony was first held in 1929 on May 16 at a private dinner party at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel with just 270 people as audience. The cost of the guest ticket for the 15-minute show then was $5. Fifteen artists, including directors and technicians, were awarded for their work released in 1927-28. The winners were announced to the media three months before the first ceremony. Later, from the second year and for almost ten years, the announcement was made precisely at 11:00 pm on the night of the ceremony.
The History of the OSCARS | Academy Awards
In 1940, the Los Angeles Times revealed the winners’ names before the ceremony began, becoming the reason for announcing the winners from a sealed envelope. History does have its crazy part. Interestingly, the name Oscar was registered by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS). Yet, in Italy, the word Oscar refers to awards in any field.
How are the winners decided?
The AMPAS consists of more than 10,000 members from all 17 departments. These members of the relevant department decide the nominations. As the nominations are decided, the members of different departments, such as directors, producers, etc., cast their votes through the ballot system. The members are added every year due to the criticism of all-white acting nominees. The voting will begin a few days before the ceremony.
How The Oscars Work: From Nominations to Best Picture Voting
The voting for the 2023 Oscars opened on March 2 and closed on March 7, five days before the grand ceremony. So, once the votes are cast, the nominee who gets the most votes wins. After that, the nominees are ranked by preference by the voters. With more than 50% of the first-place votes in the first round, the film wins. Still, if none of the films receives that many votes, the one with the fewest first-place votes is removed, and those voters’ votes will be transferred to their second choices. The cycle continues until a movie receives a majority.
What is the Statuette of the Oscars?
The AMPAS held a dinner party at the Crystal Ballroom of the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles shortly after it was founded in 1927 to lay out its objectives. One of the themes explored that evening was how to recognize exceptional filmmaking accomplishments and promote excellence in all phases of motion picture production. After deciding to start an annual award, the group focused on designing an appropriately regal trophy. MGM art director Cedric Gibbons created a figurine of a knight with a crusader’s sword standing on a film reel. The world-famous sculpture was created when the Academy brought in Los Angeles sculptor George Stanley to bring the idea to life in three dimensions.
How the Oscars statuette is made
The Prestigious Knight
More than 3,000 statuettes have been given out since the first awards banquet on May 16, 1929, held in the Blossom Room of the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. In the Hudson Valley of New York, the Polich Tallix Fine Art Foundry casts new golden statuettes every January. Oscar stands 13½ inches tall and weighs around 8½ pounds. The five spokes on the film reel stand for the five founding branches of the Academy:
- Authors
- Producers
- Technicians
- Directors
- Actors
Although the statuette still reflects the original design, the base size kept changing until the current standard was set in 1945.
Oscar is a more popular nickname for the statuette, also known as the Academy Award of Merit. Although the origins of the name Oscar are unclear, a well-known myth claims that Margaret Herrick, an Academy librarian who would later become executive director, remarked that the trophy reminded her of her uncle, Oscar, when she saw them the first time. But the name wasn’t adopted by the Academy until 1939. However, the name was widely known in due course, and Sidney Skolsky, a Hollywood columnist, used it in a story about Katharine Hepburn’s first Best Actress victory in 1934.
What are the statuettes made of?
The statuettes have a 24-karat gold finish over solid bronze construction. For three years, Oscars were fashioned of painted plaster due to a lack of metal during World War II. The Academy offered recipients the opportunity to exchange their plaster figures for gold-plated metal ones after the war.
Quick Facts about the Statuette
- Official Name: Academy Award of Merit
- Height: 13 .5 inches
- Weight: 8.5 pounds
- Material: Bronze coated with 24-karat gold
- Number of Awards Presented: 3,140
- First Recipient: Emil Jannings named Best Actor for “ The Last Command” and “The Way of All Flesh” in 1929.
- Design: A knight holding a crusader’s sword on a film reel with five spokes that signifies the five branches of the Academy, such as actors, directors, producers, technicians, and writers. The statuette was designed without any reference to any model.
Oscar 2023
The 95th Academy Awards was held at Dolby Theatre at Ovation Hollywood on March 12, 2023, honoring the movies released in 2022.
Winners and Nominees 2023
Category | Winner | Nominees |
Actor in a Leading Role | Brenden Fraser- The Whale |
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Actress in a Leading Role | Michelle Yeoh in Everything Everywhere All at Once |
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Actor in a Supporting Role | Ke Huy Quan- Everything Everywhere All at Once |
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Actress in a Supporting Role | Jamie Lee Curtis – Everything Everywhere All at Once |
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Best Animated Feature film | Guillermo Del Toro’s Pinocchio– Guillermo del Toro, Mark Gustafson, Gary Ungar, and Alex Bulkley |
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Best Cinematography | All Quiet On the Western Front – James Friend |
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Costume Design | Black Panther: Wakanda Forever – Ruth Carter |
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Directing | Everything Everywhere All At Once – Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert |
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Documentary Feature Film | Navalny – Daniel Roher, Odessa Rae, Diane Becker, Melanie Miller, and Shane Boris |
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Documentary Short Film | The Elephant Whisperers – Kartiki Gonsalves and Guneet Monga |
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Film Editing | Everything Everywhere All At Once – Paul Rogers |
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International Feature Film | All Quiet On The Western Front – Germany |
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Makeup And Hairstyling | The Whale – Adrien Morot, Judy Chin, and Annemarie Bradley |
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Music (Original Score) | All Quiet On the Western Front – Volker Bertelmann |
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Music (Original Song) | Naatu Naatu – RRR; Music by M.M. Keeravaani; Lyric by Chandrabose |
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Best Picture | Everything Everyone All At Once – Daniel Kwan, Daniel Scheinert, and Jonathan Wang, Producers |
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All Quiet On The Western Front – Production Design: Christian M. Goldbeck; Set Decoration: Ernestine Hipper |
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Short Film (Animated) | The Boy, The Mole, The Fox, And The Horse – Charlie Mackesy and Matthew Freud |
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Short Film (Live-Action) | An Irish Goodbye – Tom Berkeley and Ross White |
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Sound | Top Gun: Maverick – Mark Weingarten, James H. Mather, Al Nelson, Chris Burdon, and Mark Taylor |
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Avatar: The Way Of Water – Joe Letteri, Richard Baneham, Eric Saindon, and Daniel Barrett |
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Writing (Adapted Screenplay) | Women Talking – Screenplay by Sarah Polley |
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Writing (Original Screenplay) | Everything Everywhere All At Once – Daniel Kwan & Daniel Scheinert |
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Academy Honorary Awards |
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Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award | Michael J. Fox |
Presenters
Name | Role |
Sylvia Villagran | Announcer for the 95th Academy Awards. |
Emily Blunt Dwayne Johnson | Presented the award for Best Animated Feature. |
Ariana DeBose Troy Kotsur | Presented the awards for Best Supporting Actor and Best Supporting Actress. |
Cara Delevingne | Introduced the performance of “Applause.” |
Riz Ahmed Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson | Presented the award for Best Documentary Feature and Best Live Action Short Film. |
Halle Bailey Melissa McCarthy | Presented preview for The Little Mermaid. |
Michael B. Jordan Jonathan Majors | Presented the award for Best Cinematography. |
Donnie Yen | Introduced the performance of “This Is a Life.“ |
Jennifer Connelly Samuel L. Jackson | Presented the award for Best Makeup and Hairstyling. |
Morgan Freeman Margot Robbie | Presented the Warner Bros. 100 Years Tribute. |
Paul Dano Julia Louis-Dreyfus | Presented the award for Best Costume Design. |
Deepika Padukone | Introduced the performance of “Naatu Naatu.“ |
Eva Longoria Janet Yang | Presented at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures. |
Antonio Banderas Salma Hayek Pinault | Presented the award for Best International Feature Film. |
Elizabeth Olsen Pedro Pascal | Presented the awards for Best Documentary Short Film and Best Animated Short Film. |
Lady Gaga | Introduced the performance of Hold My Hand. |
Hugh Grant Andie MacDowell | Presented the award for Best Production Design. |
John Cho Mindy Kaling | Presented the award for Best Original Score. |
Elizabeth Banks | Presented the award for Best Visual Effects. |
Danai Gurira | Introduced the performance of Lift Me Up. |
Andrew Garfield Florence Pugh | Presented the awards for Best Original Screenplay and Best Adapted Screenplay. |
Kate Hudson Janelle Monae | Presented the award for Best Sound and Best Original Song. |
John Travolta | Presented the “In Memoriam” segment. |
Zoe Saldana Sigourney Weaver | Presented the award for Best Film Editing. |
Idris Elba | Presented the award for Best Director. |
Halle Berry Jessica Chastain | Presented the awards for Best Actor and Best Actress. |
Harrison Ford | Presented the award for Best Picture. |
Performers
Name | Role | Performance |
Rickey Minor | Music director | Orchestral |
Sofia Carson Diane Warren | Performers | “Applause” from Tell It Like a Woman |
David Byrne Stephanie Hsu Son Lux | Performers | “This Is a Life” from Everything Everywhere All at Once |
Kaala Bhairava Rahul Sipligunj | Performers | “Naatu Naatu” from RRR |
Lady Gaga | Performer | “Hold My Hand” from Top Gun: Maverick |
Rihanna | Performer | “Lift Me Up” from Black Panther: Wakanda Forever |
Lenny Kravitz | Performer | “Calling All Angels” during the annual “In Memoriam” tribute |
Videos on Oscars 2023
Jimmy Kimmel’s Oscars Monologue 2023
RRR moments from the 95th Oscars
Brendan Fraser’s acceptance speech for Best Actor at 2023 Oscars
Oscars 2023: Best Moments of the Night
Rihanna – Lift Me Up (Oscar 2023 Performance)
Oscars 2023 Natu Natu dance performance at Oscar Award Function # RRR # Oscar awards
Oscar 2023 Highlights
- Everything Everywhere All At Once won seven Awards at the Oscars, including Best Picture.
- Michelle Yeoh is the first Asian to win the Best Actress for “ The Whale”.
- The Daniels are the third duo to win the Oscars in direction.
- The nominees wore blue ribbons to support the refugees who fled war, persecution, and conflict.
- Brendon Fraser wins the Best actor award.
- Oscars paid tribute to the artists who passed away in the past year.
- The song Naatu Naatu from RRR won Best Original Song.
- Rihanna took the stage and performed “Lift me Up” from Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.
- Lady Gaga impressed the audience with “Hold My Hand”.
- Jamie Lee won her first Oscar for Best Supporting Actress.
Watch The Biggest Moments Of Oscars | RRR Wins Best Original Song In Oscar 2023 & More
Oscar 2022
Category | Winner | Nominees |
Actor In a Leading Role | Will Smith- King Richard |
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Actor In a Supporting Role | Troy Kotsur – Coda |
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Actress In a Leading Role | Jessica Chastain – The Eyes of Tammy Faye |
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Actress In a Supporting Role | Ariana Debose- West Side Story |
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Animated Feature Film | Jared Bush, Byron Howard, Yvett Merino, and Clark Spencer – Encanto |
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Cinematography | Dune – Greig Fraser |
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Costume Design | Cruella– Jenny Beavan |
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Directing | The Power Of The Dog – Jane Campion |
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Documentary (Feature) | Summer Of Soul – Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, Joseph Patel, Robert Fyvolent, and David Dinerstein |
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Documentary (Short Subject) | The Queen Of Basketball – Ben Proudfoot |
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Film Editing | Dune – Joe Walker |
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International Feature Film | Drive My Car – Japan |
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Makeup and Hairstyling | The Eyes Of Tammy Faye – Linda Dowds, Stephanie Ingram, and Justin Raleigh |
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Music (Original Score) | Dune – Hans Zimmer |
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Music (Original Song) | No Time To Die – No Time to Die; Music and Lyric by Billie Eilish and Finneas O’Connell |
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Best Picture | Coda – Philippe Rousselet, Fabrice Gianfermi, and Patrick Wachsberger, Producers |
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Production Design | Dune – Production Design: Patrice Vermette; Set Decoration: Zsuzsanna Sipos |
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Short Film (Animated) | The Windshield Wiper – Alberto Mielgo and Leo Sanchez |
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Short Film (Live Action) | The Long Goodbye – Aneil Karia and Riz Ahmed |
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Sound | Dune – Mac Ruth, Mark Mangini, Theo Green, Doug Hemphill, and Ron Bartlett |
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Visual Effects | Dune – Paul Lambert, Tristan Myles, Brian Connor, and Gerd Nefzer |
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Writing (Adapted Screenplay) | Coda – Sian Heder |
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Writing (Original Screenplay) | Belfast – Kenneth Branagh |
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Presenters and Performers
Name(s) | Role |
Janora McDuffie | Announced the 94th Academy Awards. |
Serena Williams Venus Williams | Introduced the performance “Be Alive.“ |
DJ Khaled | Introduced hosts Regina Hall, Amy Schumer, and Wanda Sykes. |
Daniel Kaluuya H.E.R. | Presented the award for Best Supporting Actress. |
Josh Brolin Jason Momoa | Presented the following awards filmed before the telecast: Best Animated Short Film Best Documentary Short Subject Best Film Editing Best Live Action Short Film Best Makeup and Hairstyling Best Original Score Best Production Design Best Sound |
Woody Harrelson Rosie Perez Wesley Snipes | Presented the award for Best Cinematography. |
Jacob Elordi Rachel Zegler | Presented the award for Best Visual Effects. |
Tony Hawk Kelly Slater Shaun White | Presented the 60th-anniversary tribute to the James Bond series. |
Stephanie Beatriz | Introduced the performance of “Dos Oruguitas.“ |
Halle Bailey Lily James Naomi Scott | Presented the award for Best Animated Feature. |
Youn Yuh-Jung | Presented the award for Best Supporting Actor. |
Tiffany Haddish Simu Liu | Presented the award for Best International Feature Film. |
Mila Kunis | Introduced the performance of “Somehow You Do.“ |
Ruth E. Carter Lupita Nyong’o | Presented the award for Best Costume Design. |
John Leguizamo | Introduced the performance of “We Don’t Talk About Bruno.“ |
Jennifer Garner Elliot Page J. K. Simmons | Presented the award for Best Original Screenplay. |
Shawn Mendes Tracee Ellis Ross | Presented the award for Best Adapted Screenplay. |
Rami Malek | Introduced the performance of “No Time to Die.“ |
Chris Rock | Presented the award for Best Documentary Feature. |
Sean Combs | Presented the 50th-anniversary tribute to The Godfather trilogy. |
Tyler Perry Bill Murray Jamie Lee Curtis | Presented eulogies to Sidney Poitier, Ivan Reitman, and Betty White during the “In Memoriam” segment. |
Jake Gyllenhaal Zoë Kravitz | Presented the award for Best Original Song. |
Kevin Costner | Presented the award for Best Director. |
John Travolta Samuel L. Jackson Uma Thurman | Presented the award for Best Actor. |
Anthony Hopkins | Presented the award for Best Actress. |
Lady Gaga Liza Minnelli | Presented the award for Best Picture. |
Performers
Name | Role | Performance |
Adam Blackstone | Musical arrangers | Orchestral |
Beyoncé | Performer | “Be Alive” by King Richard |
Sebastián Yatra | Performer | “Dos Oruguitas” from Encanto |
Reba McEntire | Performer | “Somehow You Do” from Four Good Days |
Adassa Stephanie Beatriz Mauro Castillo Carolina Gaitán Diane Guerrero Becky G Luis Fonsi Megan Thee Stallion | Performers | “We Don’t Talk About Bruno” from Encanto |
Billie Eilish Finneas O’Connell | Performers | “No Time to Die” from No Time to Die |
The Samples Jill Scott | Performers | “I Will Remember You”, “Spirit in the Sky”, and “Thank You for Being a Friend” during the annual “In Memoriam” tribute. |
Videos Oscar 2022
Oscars 2022: Must-See Moments!
Will Smith wins the Academy Award for Best Actor in King Richard
Oscars 2022 | Ariana DeBose : Best Supporting Actress – West Side Story as Anitadouble
CODA – Philippe Rousselet WIN Oscars 2022 | 94th Academy Awards | Best Picture
Billie Eilish, FINNEAS – No Time To Die (Live From The Oscars 2022)
Sebastián Yatra – Dos Oruguitas (Live from “The 94th Academy Awards”)
Highlights of Oscar 2022
- Will Smith won the best actor award for the movie King Richard. He accepted the award with tears and later apologized for crying on the stage.
- Will Smith lost his temper and slapped the actor Chris Rock when he joked about his wife’s appearance.
- The academy honored the people of Ukraine by holding a moment of silence.
- Steven Speilberg broke the record by becoming the first director nominated across six decades.
- Dune got ten nominations and won for best score, production design, sound, and film editing.
- Jane Campion won three awards and became the first woman to be nominated twice in the director category.
- The AMPAC was criticized for announcing eight awards before the live telecast began.
- The Academy revered the land owners on whose land the Dolby Theatre stands now.
- Ariana DeBose became the first woman of color to win the best supporting actress award.
- The Netflix-released motion picture, “The Power of the Dog”, was nominated for Best Picture.