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Showing posts with label oscar 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oscar 2012. Show all posts

Halle Berry missed Oscar ceremony due to injured leg

Monday, February 27, 2012

Actress Halle Berry pulled out of the Oscars ceremony due to her broken foot.

The 45-year-old was set to present alongside actor Tom Hanks at the 84th Annual Academy Awards in Hollywood Sunday but cancelled her appearance because of the injury, reports thesun.co.uk.

Halle suffered the injury back in September whilst filming Cloud Atlas in Spain.

The accident occurred while she was walking in Majorca on a day off from filming, said a statement from Warner Bros.

Even after six months, Halle, who is rumoured to be planning to move to France to be with boyfriend French actor Olivier Martinez, was pictured wearing a brace boot on her right leg just last week, reports The Hollywood Reporter.

It is not the first time that she has hurt herself on set.

She broke her arm whilst making Gothika in 2003, during a 'physical scene', and she is also believed to have been hit by a boom on the set of 2004's Catwoman, said a spokesperson from Warner Bros.

Halle won the Oscar for the best actress in 2002 for her work in Monster's Ball.
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List of Oscar Award Winners of 2012

Here is the complete list of Oscar award winners of 2012


Best Picture - The Artist
Best Art Direction - Dante Ferretti and Francesca Lo Schavo for "Hugo"
Best Cinematography - Robert Richardson for "Hugo"
Best Supporting Actress - Octavia Spencer for "The Help"
Best Costume Design - Mark Bridges for "The Artist"
Best Makeup - Mark Coulier and J. Roy Helland for "The Iron Lady"
Best Foreign Language Film - A Separation
Best Editing - Kirk Baxter and Angus Wall for "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo"
Best Sound Editing - Phillip Stockton and Eugene Gearty for "Hugo"
Best Sound Mixing - Tom Fleischman and John Midgley for "Hugo"
Best Documentary - Undefeated
 Best Animated Feature - Rango
Best Visual Effects - Hugo
Best Supporting Actor - Christopher Plummer for "Beginners"
Best Original Score - Ludovic Bource for "The Artist"
Best Original Song - Bret McKenzie for "Man or Muppet"
Best Adapted Screenplay - Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash for "The Descendants"
Best Original Screenplay - Woody Allen for "Midnight in Paris"
Best Live Action Short - The Shore
Best Documentary Short - Saving Face
Best Animated Short - The Fantastic Flying Books Of Mr. Morris Lessmore
Best Director - Michel Hazanavicius for "The Artist"
Best Actor - Jean Dujardin for "The Artist"
Best Actress - Meryl Streep for "The Iron Lady"
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Meryl Streep won the 3rd acting Oscar award for 'Iron Lady'

Well this is the third time that Meryl Streep won the oscar award. She won this award for the film "Iron Lady" on sunday. Her role in 'Iron Lady' as strident Margaret Thatcher. Streep as Thatcher is the backbone of a nation that goes to war over the distant Falkland Islands after Argentina invades in 1982.

She won as best actress for her 17th Oscar nomination, and she is only the one who has been nominated most of the times by the Academy.

Now she has been included in that category who all are won the oscar third time like Jack Nicholson, Walter Brennan and Ingrid Bergman.
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Moments to remember from Oscar 2012

Source: Associated Press

The Oscar telecast takes hours, but it's the moments we remember.

Just a few of them, of course -- ones that are so emotional, funny, or bizarre that they'll stand out in our collective memories, candidates for future Oscar montages, of course, but also for office watercooler talk. Here's a running look at some of the Oscar moments we may be talking about in the morning:

And He's Back!

Last year, the joke-starved Oscar audience was so thrilled to see Billy Crystal by the time he showed up, they gave him a standing ovation before he even said a word. This time, now back as host, he was greeted warmly if less ecstatically as he launched into his timeworn routine: first the montage where he inserts himself into films -- he even got a kiss from George Clooney in his The Descendants hospital bed -- and then his medley of songs. "You didn't think I wasn't gonna do this, did ya"? he quipped. No, we didn't.

In a clever nod to the need for a bit o' youth, Crystal brought Justin Bieber into his Midnight in Paris bit. Later he was even blunter: "We're gonna slam the 78 to 84 demographic," he said. Next year, he added, we'd be in the Flomax Theater, referring to the prostate medication. The old-age reference became a running theme of the night. After 82-year-old Christopher Plummer won the supporting actor prize, Crystal quipped: "The average age for winners has just jumped to 67."

Meryl and Marriage

From longevity in life to longevity in marriage: One of the most moving moments of the night came when Meryl Streep, winning best actress for The Iron Lady, thanked her husband, Don Gummer -- not at the end, but at the beginning of her speech, so that the music wouldn't drown out the acknowledgement as it often does.

"Everything I value most in our lives, you gave me," Streep said tearfully.

Then she thanked her other partner: J. Roy Helland, her makeup artist on every movie for 37 years -- who had quite a night, also taking home a statuette for transforming Streep into Maggie Thatcher.

"Thanks Meryl, for keeping me employed for the last 37 years," said Helland, who won with Mark Coulier.

I'm Freaking Out!

The first emotional moment of the evening came with Octavia Spencer's expected yet still heartwarming supporting actress win for her turn as a tart-tongued maid in The Help. From tart-tongued to a little tongue-tied: "Please wrap up ...I'm wrapping up!" she cried. "I'm freaking out!"

Yes, Another One...

This could become a trend: For the second year in a row, a winner dropped an F-bomb. Last year it was supporting actress winner Melissa Leo; This year it was documentary feature winner TJ Martin, co-director of Undefeated, which documents a high school football team.

Martin confessed he'd been, er, defeated by his excitement. "That was not the classiest thing in the world," Martin said backstage. "However, it did come from the heart."

The Cutest Dog In The World

Uggie, the adorable dog in best-picture winner The Artist, got a deserved shout-out from the best director winner, Michel Hazanavicius. However, the director allowed that the canine star does have his limits. "I don't think he understands what I'm saying," Hazanavicius said. "He's not THAT good."

A Mess On The Carpet

Sacha Baron Cohen always has something up his sleeve. This year, the comic actor spilled it all over Ryan Seacrest's sleeves -- and the red carpet, too.

Parodying the Moammar Gadhafi-type dictator he plays in his upcoming film, The Dictator, Baron Cohen showed up carrying what he said were the ashes of the late North Korean leader Kim Jong Il. Then he spilled them all over the E! host's tuxedo.

Said Seacrest: "Anything can happen and it most certainly did, all over my lapel."

A Circus In The House

Wait, was that Spider-Man flying up to the rafters? No, this wasn't the Tonys, it was the Oscars, and those were Cirque du Soleil aerialists in a lavish tribute to the movies. Crystal noted the circus-like atmosphere when he quipped: "We've got puppets, acrobats ... we're a pony away from a bar mitzvah!"
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At the Oscars, even the jokes had wrinkles

Out with the new. Back with the old.

And that's not just because The Artist, a largely silent film set in 1920s Hollywood, won so many awards, including best picture, actor and director at the Academy Awards ceremony.

The Descendants was the only one of the nine films nominated for best picture set in the present. "The Help" took place in the Jim Crow South. Terrence Malick's Tree of Life was set in 1950 Texas -- with an occasional flip back to the Dinosaur Age.

The whole night looked like an AARP pep rally, starting with an introduction by Morgan Freeman, who was followed by Billy Crystal, returning to host his ninth Oscar ceremony.. And age was his theme of the night. He did his usual comic medley of movie moments, including a sketch with George Clooney in The Descendants, urging Mr. Crystal to host the show. He promised "the youngest, hippest writers in town" and the camera panned to a group of drooping, old white men from the film Moneyball.

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