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The Oscar moments you didn’t see on TV
Sandy Cohen
LOS ANGELES—Most of the action on the Oscar stage is choreographed and
rehearsed. Backstage is another story. In the wings of the Kodak
Theatre, stars grapple with nerves, have impromptu meetings with
colleagues and make last-minute adjustments to their hair and makeup.
Presenters and performers mingle with brand-new Oscar winners while
dodging props and cameramen.
What you see on TV is Hollywood magic. Backstage is like a home movie,
where everybody knows each other and they’re all excited about putting
on a show. OSCAR SHOCK: As Marion Cotillard stepped offstage with the
best-actress Oscar for “La Vie En Rose,” Forest Whitaker enveloped her
in a hug that lasted at least a minute.
Then they looked at each other and laughed. “I’m shaking, like wow,”
Cotillard trembled. Stopping by the backstage “thank you” cam, she
expressed her gratitude in French and studied her Oscar.
“I’m shaking so much I think I can’t talk,” she said. Whitaker led her
arm-in-arm behind the stage on the winner’s walk. “This is huge, this is
huge,” she gushed as backstage workers applauded. At a stop for a makeup
touch up she tried to breathe deeply.
“This is crazy, this is totally crazy. Ooh la la la la! It’s totally
surreal,” she said. Tilda Swinton was so stunned by her win for
supporting actress in “Michael Clayton” that she could only keep
repeating “wow, wow” as she walked offstage.
Presenter Alan Arkin chased her with the winner’s envelope. “Oh yes,
this is the proof,” Swinton said, leaving arm-in-arm with Arkin.
JITTERS: Katherine Heigl wasn’t kidding when she told the Oscar audience
she was nervous. Behind the scenes, a stagehand asked if she was OK. “I
just need a cigarette,” she said, bumming one from a security guard and
heading out to a loading dock. Cameron Diaz also had a bad moment when
she couldn’t quite say the word “cinematography” on stage, and she was
slow to recover from the flub afterward.
“I couldn’t say my category,” Diaz said to Amy Adams.
“You did great,” Adams reassured. Later in the evening, Diaz confessed
her mistake again to Jennifer Garner. “It made you charming,” Garner
soothed. “It made you cuter, like the world didn’t know you were cute.”
NO BUSINESS LIKE SHOE BUSINESS: Adjusting her dress as she stepped into
the theatre wings and prepared to take the stage, Jennifer Garner
confessed to the stage manager: “I’d like to take my shoes off.”
“We could do it,” he replied.
Instead, she looked skyward and said, “I didn’t mean it, karmic dressing
gods,” and walked in a small circle. “I’m just going to make sure I’m
not going to fall,” she explained. Renee Zellweger had slung her silver
Christian Louboutins over her shoulder when Johnny Depp ran into her.
“I like your shoes,” Depp said. “Thanks man,” Zellweger replied. “I used
to like the shoes.” STAR CLUSTERS: At times it seemed there were as many
stars in the green room as in the audience.
Penelope Cruz sat by her sister, Monica, and fanned herself. They were
joined by Miley Cyrus, Johnny Depp and companion Vanessa Paradis, and
Forest Whitaker. Marion Cotillard was about to join them when she
learned she would have to smoke outside. In a hallway, Patrick Dempsey
and “Grey’s Anatomy” co-star Katherine Heigl met up with “Enchanted”
star Amy Adams, and all agreed that appearing at the Academy Awards is
no easy task.
“It’s surreal,” said Adams.
Later, she met her “Charlie Wilson’s War” co-star Tom Hanks in the wings
of the Kodak. Hanks complimented Adams on her outfit and her performance
of “Happy Working Song.” “I’m so relieved,” she said. Hanks said that as
he watched her he thought, “Wow, they make her do it all by herself.”
“No costume, no anything,” she replied. “It’s like, ‘Sell it, girl.’”
CELEBRITY PLUMBING: The restroom just offstage was another Kodak Theatre
hotspot.
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