BFF-04 Fun facts and trivia about the Oscars

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BFF-04

ENTERTAINMENT-US-FILM

Fun facts and trivia about the Oscars

HOLLYWOOD, United States, Feb 9, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Can the black comedy
“Parasite” win South Korea its first Oscar ever? Will Laura Dern become the
first in her acting family to nab an Oscar statuette?

Here’s a look at some interesting facts and trivia ahead of the 92nd
Academy Awards being held Sunday in Hollywood:

– ‘Parasite’ aims big –

“Parasite” already made history when it became the first South Korean film
nominated for best international feature film as well as for best picture and
best director.

The dark comedic thriller, which has taken the awards circuit by storm, is
tipped to win as best foreign-language film, but it also could make history
by becoming the first non-English-language production to win for best
picture.

– All in the family –

Dern, nominated for a best supporting actress award for “Marriage Story,”
comes from Hollywood royalty.

While dad Bruce and mom Diane Ladd are no strangers to the Oscars, Laura
would be the first in her family to actually win the award.

In 1992, Dern and Ladd became the first mother-daughter duo to receive
Oscar nominations for work on the same film — “Rambling Rose.” Ladd was
nominated two other times.

Bruce Dern has earned two Oscar nods during his decades-long career — in
1979 for “Coming Home” and in 2014 for “Nebraska.”

Dern, who was also nominated twice before this year, starred in two major
releases in 2019 — “Marriage Story” and the Academy Award contender “Little
Women.”

The only Oscar winner in history whose parents both also won Oscars is
Liza Minnelli, who won for best actress in 1973 for “Cabaret.”

Her mother Judy Garland — the subject of an Oscar-nominated film this
year (“Judy”) — received a special juvenile award in 1940, the year after
“The Wizard of Oz” was released.

Her father Vincente Minnelli won best director for “Gigi” in 1959.

– Uncle Oscar? –

Hollywood lore has it that the Academy Award was nicknamed Oscar after
Academy librarian Margaret Herrick — who eventually became executive
director — saw the trophy for the first time and thought it looked like her
uncle Oscar.

Hollywood legend Bette Davis allegedly claimed she had nicknamed the award
as it reminded her of her first husband, musician Harmon Oscar Nelson Jr, but
later withdrew that claim, according to IMDB.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences officially adopted the
nickname in 1939.

– Heavy prize –

The Oscar statuette is solid bronze and plated in 24-karat gold. It stands
13.5 inches (34 centimeters) tall and weighs 8.5 pounds (3.8 kilograms).

It takes three months for Polich Tallix Fine Art Foundry in New York to
manufacture a batch of 50 statuettes. More than 3,140 statuettes have been
handed out since 1929.

The trophy represents a knight holding a crusader’s sword standing on a
reel of film with five spokes that refer to the five original branches of the
Academy — actors, directors, producers, technicians and writers.

– Record nominations –

With 52 nominations, composer John Williams holds the record for the most
Oscar nominations for a living person, and second only to Walt Disney at 59.

His nomination this year is for best original score for the latest “Star
Wars” film, “Episode IX – The Rise of Skywalker.”

Williams celebrated his 88th birthday on Saturday.

– A whopping $44 million –

The glitziest Hollywood film award comes with a steep price tag of $44
million for the ceremony, according to the financial site WalletHub.

That includes $400 for each Oscar statuette and $24,700 for the 16,500-
square-foot red carpet.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 0855 hrs