72nd Academy Awards

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72nd Academy Awards
Date Sunday, March 26, 2000 ABC Television
Site Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, California
Preshow Tyra Banks
Chris Connelly
Meredith Vieira
Host Billy Crystal
Producer Richard Zanuck
Lili Fini Zanuck
Director Louis J. Horvitz
Duration 4 hours, 4 minutes

The 72nd Academy Awards ceremony (also known as Oscars 2000) took place at Los Angeles' Shrine Auditorium, and was Billy Crystal's seventh time hosting the Awards. The ceremony attracted 46.53 million viewers, the third highest rated show next to the ones in 1998 and 1996.

The Academy Award ceremony was dominated by the movie American Beauty, which was nominated in 8 categories, and won 5 awards (including Best Director, Best Actor and Best Picture).

This was the first to receive a noteworthy certification TV-14 partially due to the showing of many American Beauty clips featuring scenes of sex, innuendo, and violence. Also the Oscar nominated song "Blame Canada" (from South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut) was peformed though it had offensive material (performer Robin Williams cleverly "hid" the single word). The first Oscar show to have a TV rating was 1997 but was rated TV-PG.

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[edit] Trivia

  • This was by far one of the most techincally ambitious and expensive Oscar productions ever staged. Conceived by late Production Designer Bob Keene, the stage featured five forty foot tall video towers each capable of producing imagery independently or one large image when grouped together. This scenic element was used to display images of previous Oscar appearances as presenters took the stage, nomination packages, and even the famous five-box when winners were announced. This show set a precedent for the convergence of video and staging technologies that have become nearly ubiquitous in modern concerts and events. This was the first time the ceremony used High Definition clip masters for nomination packages [1], though the show was not broadcast to the domestic ABC audience in High Definition. The first true HD telecast was in 2002.
  • This was also one of the longest Oscar productions on record clocking in at just over four hours. Twenty-two cameras covered the event for ABC Television, including six jib arms, two steadicams, one akela crane, and for the first time a rail-cam. There were nearly 200 microphones and over 600 moving light fixtures. The show had nine days of rehearsals.
  • It was during rehearsals for this show that the famous Whitney Houston meltdown occurred, leading show producers to replace her at the last minute with Faith Hill.
  • Producer Joel Gallen of MTV was tapped to produce a hipper preshow that was helmed by Chris Connelly, Tyra Banks and Meredith Vieira and transitioned directly to the show proper without a commercial break in between.
  • This was also the first occurrence of using famous faces to serve as the announcer for the telecast. Actor Peter Coyote handled the duties. Glenn Close and Donald Sutherland would announce the 74th show in 2002.
  • This was the first time a woman held the title of producer on a Oscar telecast. Producer Laura Ziskin would helm the show in 2002 and 2007.
  • Had the Award for Best Lead Actress gone to Annette Bening instead of Hillary Swank, then American Beauty would have been the fourth film to win all five major oscars.

[edit] Notable Quotes

  • "Who's in charge of security? Probably the same guys who protected Sonny Corleone at the tollbooth." - host Billy Crystal, making a reference to The Godfather commenting on Oscar statuettes being stolen before the ceremony.
  • "I am so in love with my brother right now. He just held me and told me that he loved me." - Angelina Jolie, upon winning Best Supporting Actress. The statement sparked rumors that she was involved in an incestuous relationship with her brother.

Michael Caine, upon winning Best Supporting Actor, paid tribute to all his fellow nominees individually, saying:

[edit] The Awards

This is a breakdown of only major winners. For a complete list of nominees and winners, see: 72nd Academy Awards nominees and winners.

[edit] Feature Films

Category Winner Producers/Country
Best motion picture of the year American Beauty Bruce Cohen and Dan Jinks
Best foreign language film All About My Mother Spain
Best documentary feature One Day in September Arthur Cohn and Kevin Macdonald

[edit] Direction

[edit] Acting

Category Winner Movie
Best actor in a leading role Kevin Spacey American Beauty
Best actress in a leading role Hilary Swank Boys Don't Cry
Best actor in a supporting role Michael Caine The Cider House Rules
Best actress in a supporting role Angelina Jolie Girl, Interrupted

[edit] Writing

Category Winner Movie
Original screenplay Alan Ball American Beauty
Adapted screenplay John Irving The Cider House Rules

[edit] In Memoriam

Presented by Edward Norton. The Academy remembers those persons involved in films that died in the previous year: Sylvia Sidney, Jim Varney, composer Ernest Gold, Ruth Roman, Henry Jones, director Robert Bresson, Desmond Llewelyn, screenwriter Mario Puzo, producer Allan Carr, Rory Calhoun, screenwriter Frank Tarloff, animator Marc Davis, Hedy Lamarr, Victor Mature, screenwriter Garson Kanin, director Roger Vadim, Mabel King, Oliver Reed, special effects expert Albert Whitlock, Ian Bannen, screenwriter Abraham Polonsky, Dirk Bogarde, director Edward Dmytryk, Lila Kedrova, Charles 'Buddy' Rogers, Madeline Kahn and lastly, George C. Scott.