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Your Oscar speech: How not to blow it
By Jim Emerson Special to MSN Movies
The main thing to remember when you win your Oscar (and you know you
will win your Oscar one day -- admit it, you've even practiced your
acceptance speech) is that you are immediately faced with 45 seconds during
which you can either display grace under pressure or make a complete ass of
yourself.
Contrary to Academy legend, Sally Field did not do the
latter when she gave the most parodied and ridiculed acceptance speech in Oscar
history in 1985. "I haven't had an orthodox career, and I've wanted more than
anything to have your respect," she said. "The first time I didn't feel it, but
this time I feel it, and I can't deny the fact that you like me, right now, you
like me!"
Now, that last part, which came out a bit squeaky, wasn't as bad as many
later made it out to be. It wasn't, after all, "You like me! You really like
me!" My theory is that the repetitive phrase was memorized in advance (it sounds
a bit canned) and that she simply oversold it in the excitement of the moment.
Instead of making it sound more spontaneous, her delivery underscored (genuine
though the sentiment might be) that this was, in fact, another performance,
which felt kind of embarrassing to watch. And audiences can really resent it if
you embarrass them, to the point where they respond defensively with scathing
sarcasm and mockery.
Don't let this happen to you. Here's some advice for giving your Oscar
speech, when the time comes.
1. Get a Grip Why is it that the only people who really
appear to lose control when they accept their statuette are the actors? Why
don't the art directors and sound editors sputter and wail as if they'd just
been spared from lethal injection? If anything, you'd think the actors would be
better able to control their emotions than most people.
And you'd be right. You see, actors dig emotional meltdowns, on screen and
off. They do it on purpose. It's almost a form of noblesse oblige -- a generous
Acting Gratuity (more than 20 percent), if you will: "I will now treat you to an
extraordinary demonstration of how deeply I am moved!" And, at the same time,
it's a form of grandiose self-inflation and self-abasement: "I scrape and bow to
acknowledge how much you have honored me!"
Of course, Gwyneth Paltrow (Best Actress, "Shakespeare in Love," 1998) just stood there and squeaked like
a broken drip-irrigation node, but at least she had the decency to be horrified
and humiliated about it later, claiming she'd put her Oscar at the back of a
bookcase because it brought back painful memories of her big, pink weep-down.
One of the most divisive Oscar speeches of recent years (some were moved,
some were appalled) was the tornado of tears Halle Berry whipped up around herself when she won
Best Actress for "Monster's Ball" in 2001. Berry's Interminable
Moment-of-Special-Pleading was a gale-force ego storm that threatened to suck up
the entire universe. It was like the Big Bang in reverse: "Oh, my God. Oh, my
God. I'm sorry. This moment is so much bigger than me," blubbered Berry, trying
desperately to make the moment big enough for her.
"This moment is for Dorothy Dandridge, Lena Horne, Diahann Carroll," she continued, in a
name-dropping paroxysm that cried out, instead, for Lloyd Bentsen. "It's for the
women that stand beside me, Jada Pinkett, Angela Bassett, Vivica Fox. And it's for every nameless, faceless
woman of color that now has a chance because this door tonight has been opened."
Yes, because now all nameless, faceless women of color could grow up to be Best
Actress Oscar winners, just like their universal idol, Halle Berry!
"Thank you. I'm so honored. I'm so honored," Berry further honored herself.
"And I thank the Academy for choosing me to be the vessel for which His blessing
might flow." Which brings us to our next piece of advice ...
2. Don't Assume That God Voted for You No incarnation of
the Creator of All Things is registered as a member of the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences, and nowhere on the Academy ballots is there a
category for Best Vessel Through Whom God's Blessings Might Flow. (There remains
some question, however, about whether Jesus Christ personally chooses the Grammy
winners.) Winning an Oscar does not make you a special agent of God's will or
the divine favorite over your fellow nominees -- or, for that matter, over the
lepers in your category who must suffer the enduring shame of not even being
nominated. (Didn't Jesus say that the un-nominated would inherit the earth?) Do
not demean the concept of the Almighty by implying that either you, or the
members of the Academy who voted for you, are somehow helping to implement God's
Mysterious Plan so that you all can bring about the End Times. Even if it's
true, don't. It's just bad form.
3. Brevity Is Good Do you want to be remembered for
making everyone resent that you won? If so, be like Greer Garson (Best Actress, "Mrs. Miniver" 1942), who took the stage at approximately 1
a.m., blabbered on for a record five and a half minutes and whipped up a room
full o' hate that made her the butt of long-winded jokes for the rest of her
career.
Otherwise, you could let your filmed performance speak for itself by
graciously refusing to hog the spotlight. Like Clark Gable (Best Actor, "It Happened One Night," 1934) who said, memorably: "Thank you."
Or Joe Pesci (Best Supporting Actor, "GoodFellas," 1990), whose entire speech was: "This is an honor
and privilege. Thank you very much."
4. Prepare You're not fooling anyone. We all know you've
been hoping, fantasizing, rehearsing. Winners who get up there and say they
didn't prepare anything because they didn't expect to win should be yanked
offstage and whisked by limo to the nearest Jamboree, where they should be
forced to write the Boy and Girl Scout motto 1,000 times on 1,000 separate cue
cards until they've memorized it: "Be prepared." (If you're a gay man, the Boy
Scouts wouldn't allow you at their Jamboree but, if you're out, you already know
that nobody would believe you hadn't prepared an Oscar speech, anyway.)
Picking up the award for Best Director (for "A Beautiful Mind" in 2001), Ron Howard confessed: "I'm not a good
enough actor anymore to be able to stand up here and make you believe that I
haven't imagined this moment in my mind over the years and played it out over a
thousand times." If Opie isn't a good enough actor anymore, then neither are you
-- even if you win an Oscar.
For those genuinely "unprepared" Oscar moments, when you really didn't think
you were going to win and suddenly you do, see Joe Pesci's ideal speech in the
previous item.
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