69th Academy Awards

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69th Academy Awards
Date Monday, March 24, 1997
Site Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, California
Host Billy Crystal
Producer Gil Cates
Director Louis J. Horvitz
Duration 3 hours, 29 minutes

The 69th Academy Awards were dominated by movies produced by independent studios, financed outside of mainstream Hollywood, leading to 1996 being dubbed "The Year of the Independents". All but one of the nominees for Best Picture were low-budget independent movies.

The big winner at the ceremony was Anthony Minghella's The English Patient, which had received 12 nominations and won 9 awards including Best Picture.

Other notable movies to be honoured at the ceremony included Fargo, which had been nominated for 7 awards and won 2, Shine, which had been nominated for 7 awards and won just one, and Jerry Maguire, which had been nominated for 5 awards and also won just one.

Contents

[edit] News and recap

Shortly before the ceremony, two light aircraft flew over the auditorium streaming banners behind them. The first appeared as Larry Flynt, the subject of the Oscar-nominated film The People vs. Larry Flynt, arrived, which read "Columbia Studios Sucks — Larry Flynt". The second banner read "Disney uses sweatshops — 30 cents an hour in Haiti", criticising Walt Disney Studios about the conditions under which some of its movie merchandise are allegedly produced.

The Awards marked one of the greatest upsets in Oscar History as most had predicted Lauren Bacall would win Best Supporting Actress for "The Mirror Has Two Faces." Instead, the Oscar went to Juliette Binoche for "The English Patient."

[edit] Notable Quotes

[edit] The Awards

[edit] Feature Films

[edit] Acting

[edit] Direction

[edit] Writing

[edit] In Memoriam

Presented by Angela Bassett. A tribute remembering those memorable movie icons that left us in the past year: Jo Van Fleet, Tupac Shakur, Brigitte Helm, Dorothy Lamour, screenwriter Sterling Spillphant, designer Saul Bass, screenwriter Steve Tesich, Juliet Prowse, cinematographer Joseph Biroc, Howard E. Rollins Jr., Jack Weston, director Krzysztof Kieslowski, director Fred Zinnemann, Ben Johnson, Gene Nelson, art director Edward C. Carfagno, Joanne Dru, cinematographer John Alton, Greer Garson, producer Albert R. Broccoli, producer Pandro S. Berman, Lew Ayres, Sheldon Leonard, Claudette Colbert and Marcello Mastroianni.

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