Forum Views ()
Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
Looking back at Oscar's biggest goof
Yahoo!
My Yahoo!
Mail
More Yahoo! Services
Account Options
New User? Sign Up
Sign In
Help
Yahoo! Search
web search
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Asia Pacific
World
Looking back at Oscar's biggest goof
Reuters - Tuesday, March 2
Send
IM Story
Print
By Gregg Kilday
LOS ANGELES - Oscar's campaign season officially ends on Tuesday evening, when ballots are due at Academy headquarters.
But for Bill Mechanic and Adam Shankman, producers of Sunday night's 82nd annual Academy Awards, the anxiety is just beginning. Although they've adopted the motto "expect the unexpected" to generate viewer interest in the broadcast, that doesn't mean they themselves want to be surprised.
But Oscar shows rarely stick to the script.
Weatherunderground.com predicts a 40% chance of showers and a chilly red-carpet. World events also can intervene. That last happened in 2003, when the U.S. invaded Iraq five days before the show, and the Academy shut down the red carpet altogether.
The real nightmare that haunts every Oscar producer is that the show itself turns into a globally broadcast pratfall.
The 61st Academy Awards ceremony, held March 29, 1989, at the Shrine Auditorium, stands as the great object lesson.
"Rain Man" was named best picture, and that movie's Dustin Hoffman and "The Accused's" Jodie Foster won the top awards.
But that's not why the evening is remembered. Instead, Oscarologists still shake their heads over the infamous opening production number in which Merv Griffin sang "I've Got a Lovely Bunch of Coconuts!" amid an onstage re-creation of the Cocoanut Grove nightclub before turning the stage over to a high-pitched Snow White, who boogalooed with Rob Lowe to the tune of "Proud Mary."
As producer of that year's show, Allan Carr was the man responsible. As author Robert Hofler writes in a dishy new biography of Carr, "Party Animals: A History of Sex, Drugs, and Rock 'n' Roll Starring the Fabulous Allan Carr," which Da Capo Press is publishing this month, "Allan tried to reinvent the Oscars through camp comedy." But the Academy's old guard saw it differently.
In an open letter, 17 prominent Hollywood figures, including past Academy president Gregory Peck, proclaimed the ceremony "an embarrassment to both the Academy and the entire motion picture industry. It is neither fitting nor acceptable that the best work in motion pictures be acknowledged in such a demeaning fashion."
Was it really as bad as all that? Certainly, earlier Oscar shows had seen their share of misconceived production numbers. But, yes, the 61st opener did manage to combine over-the-top excess with breathtakingly amateur execution.
To be sure, that wasn't the initial plan.
Carr accepted the challenge because he was nothing if not a showman. He'd parlayed a career as a manager, turning performers like Ann-Margret into Las Vegas mainstays, into a successful gig as producer of "Grease," which, at $188 million, still holds the domestic title of top-grossing movie musical. He'd also scored a hit on Broadway with the musical "La Cage aux Folles."
But his luck ran out with 1980's "Can't Stop the Music," in which he tried to package the Village People for mainstream consumption just at the moment disco died.
An inveterate party-giver, who'd entertained most of Old and New Hollywood at his Hillhaven Lodge in Benedict Canyon, Carr viewed the Oscars as the ultimate party at which he'd mix old-time stars with up-and-comers.
His biggest mistake was falling in love with San Francisco's long-running musical revue "Beach Blanket Babylon," inviting its producer and creator Steve Silver to devise the opening number. But what worked in a Frisco nightclub simply didn't translate to the expansive stage of the Shrine. The nominees, just settling into their seats, didn't know what to make of Ellen Bowman's simpering Snow White. And while five years later Disney would bring dancing silverware to Broadway in its musical version of "Beauty and the Beast," the dancing tables that took over the stage on Oscar Night just looked silly.
A second number -- featuring such young actors as Patrick Dempsey, Christian Slater and Ricki Lake cavorting around the stage as they sang of dreams of becoming an Oscar winner -- was almost as much of a bomb.
And the morning after the show, Carr's phone was virtually silent instead of ringing off the hook with the customary kudos. A few days later, Disney sued the Academy for copyright infringement for inviting Show White to its ball, forcing the Academy to make a formal apology.
Never one to shy away from hyperbole, Carr told The Hollywood Reporter in advance of the show: "If nothing else, this will be the most beautiful Academy Awards of all time. It will be the antithesis of tacky."
When it turned out to be exactly the opposite, the Hollywood establishment pounced -- the producer's partisans suspected a certain amount of homophobia was directed at the unapologetically gay Carr -- and his career was effectively over. His party days behind him, Carr retreated into relative seclusion until his death in 1999.
The irony, though, is that for all his missteps, Carr introduced elements that since have become awards-show staples.
Hofler credits him with changing the presenter's mantra "And the winner is ..." to "And the award goes to. ..." Carr drafted Rodeo Drive retailer Fred Hayman to urge designers to dress the stars. He emphasized the red carpet arrivals during the first minutes of the show, an element that has since been spun off into its own preshow. And his broadcast actually saw the best ratings the Oscars had seen in five years.
In the process, though, Carr learned the hard way a fact that every Oscar producer since has had to be wary of: When it comes to injecting showmanship into the Academy Awards, you can be damned if you don't but also damned if you do.
Recommend
Send
IM Story
Print
Related Articles
US-ENTERTAINMENT Summary Reuters - 1 hour 32 minutes ago
Top court sides with publishers on $18 million deal Reuters - 1 hour 32 minutes ago
Economic crisis silences Romania rock festival AFP - 2 hours 3 minutes ago
French medieval statues march in New York AFP - Wednesday, March 3
Looking back at Oscar's biggest goof Reuters - Tuesday, March 2
News Search
Top Stories
EU authorises GMO potatoes
Japan passes record $1 trillion budget
GM to more than triple Opel investment
Common weed-killer chemically castrates frogs: study
NASA radar finds ice on moon's north pole
More Top Stories »
ADVERTISEMENT
Most Popular
Most Viewed
Most Recommended
NASA radar finds ice on moon's north pole
World's most powerful atom smasher restarts: CERN
Common weed-killer chemically castrates frogs: study
Be of good heart: Happiness helps ward off cardiac disease
Vast iceberg could disrupt ocean currents, weather
More Most Viewed »
Florida killer whale to stay in park after deadly attack
DNA reveals some mystery on King Tut, raises questions
First footage of clouded leopard captured in Borneo
Scientists recreate Big Bang heat of 4 tln degrees C
More Most Recommended »
Elsewhere on Yahoo!
Financial news on Yahoo! Finance
Stars and latest movies
Best travel destinations
More on Yahoo! News
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Subscribe to our news feeds
Top StoriesMy Yahoo!RSS
» More news feeds | What are news feeds?
Also on Yahoo
Answers
Groups
Mail
Messenger
Mobile
Travel
Finance
Movies
Sports
Games
» All Yahoo! Services
Site Highlights
Singapore
Full Coverage
Most Popular
Asia Entertainment
Photos
Copyright © 2010 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte. Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Service |
Privacy Policy |
Community |
Intellectual Property Rights Policy |
Help
Other News on Tuesday, 2 March 2010 Iran to cooperate with IAEA, continue talks
French rescuers search for more bodies after deadly storm
Chile rushes troops, aid to quake-stricken towns
|
US-TECH Summary
US consumer spending grows but incomes lag
Turkey warns U.S. against "genocide" bill in Congress
Spain accuses Venezuela over plot to kill Uribe
Freescale's new chip aims to lower e-reader price tag
Iran 'not cooperating' on nuclear issue: IAEA chief
Spanish court says Venezuela helped ETA, FARC
|
EU privacy body wants changes to Google Street View
One in four Germans wants microchip under skin: poll
EU membership a 'priority': Ukraine president
Dubai says hit team had 27th member
U.N. report on possible Iran bomb work factual: Amano
|
With new fighter in hand, Putin wants modern bombers
|
Yemeni forces clash with suspected rebels in south
|
UK arrests Bosnian ex-leader wanted by Serbia
|
Top US court dismisses Uighur Guantanamo appeal
Freescale's new chip aims to lower e-reader price tag
|
U.S., Russia arms teams pause before treaty push
Israel says China attentive to Iran sanctions plea
US plans 'dramatic' cuts in nuclear arsenal
Lockheed seeks to predict cybersecurity threats
|
Idol creator launches Dream interactive venture
|
Focus on rising Chinese political star Bo
Uzbekistan charges 200 with plotting alleged coup
Attacks kill 4 NATO personnel in Afghanistan
Indian PM visits Saudi Arabia
Pro-gov't party leads vote results in Tajikistan
Pixi discounts seen hurting Palm profits
|
Prudential buys AIG Asia for record 35.5 billion dollars
Toyota president apologizes to Chinese customers
Japan's new car sales up despite Toyota recalls
Japanese fishing town recalls horror of tsunami 50 years ago
Ailing Quebec churches undergo secular transformation
Spelling reform causing headaches in Portugal
TV's "Parenthood" revisits family life, 20 years on
Irish town snubs Israel envoy in protest: report
Former Bosnian leader Ganic arrested in London
Chile struggles to keep order in quake-hit city
|
Common weed-killer chemically castrates frogs: study
NASA radar finds ice on moon's north pole
Telco software groups line up facing Google, Apple
Russia says it may consider Iran sanctions
British scientist in climate row admits 'awful' emails
Afghanistan bans coverage of Taliban attacks
|
Obama plans 'dramatic reductions' in US nuclear weapons
Game on for PS3 users after Sony fixes bug
Medvedev moves Russia closer to Iran sanctions
Apple cracks down on labor abuses at gadget factories
Dubai murder suspects hiding out in Israel: police
EU ups pressure in Greece debt crisis
Medvedev in France backs sanctions on Iran
Intel's Maloney, possible CEO heir, suffers stroke
Afghan violence kills four NATO soldiers, 10 civilians
Anti-drug drive a challenge for Mexico: U.S. report
|
Russia says it may consider Iran sanctions
|
Sustainable Energy bets on Ontario solar market
Google buys photo editing site Picnik
Spain accuses Venezuela over assassination plot
Haitian-Americans aid quake recovery, eye future
|
"Idol" creator launches "Dream" interactive venture
German high-tech sector flat in 2010: trade body
Lockheed seeks to predict cybersecurity threats
Medvedev hopes for START successor deal soon
|
Game on for PS3 users after Sony fixes bug
Clinton balks at Argentine request for Falklands mediation
Obama plans 'dramatic reductions' in US nuclear weapons
Telco software groups line up facing Google, Apple
|
Protests by Muslims leave 2 dead in southern India
Intel's Maloney, possible CEO heir, suffers stroke
|
Malaysia confirms 1st swine flu death this year
Violence in India over Bangladesh writer
Japan will push to resume commercial whaling
Top China football officials charged in graft probe
Reports: 2 SKorea fighter jets crash into mountain
Indonesian police warn protesters against insults
U.S. seeks to smooth China ties, win backing on Iran
N.Korea cutting back on drug trafficking: US
Weather forecast for the Asia-Pacific region
Report: China drafts 10-year 'green energy' plan
Seoul shares rise 1.3 pct;chips gain, Hyundai down
Prudential taps Asia sovereign funds over AIA deal
NZ dollar eases after Australian rate hike
Toyota repairing leaky oil hoses in US, Japan
PAKISTAN
US seeks China, India, Brazil info on Doha deal
Korea Hot Stocks
S.Korea bonds edge down, Feb inflation seen slower
Japan's unemployment rate falls in January
Hollywood film tackles Taiwan's martial law era
NBC gets silver for Olympics, Seinfeld no medal
|
The Pacific a realistic view of American combat
|
Crazies remake influenced by post-9/11 world
|
Final Shrek movie to open Tribeca Film Fest
|
David Bowie's new makeover: Rock 'n' roll recluse
|
Wall Street is alive with the sound of ... Chopin?
|
Winter Olympics pull impressive ratings for NBC
TLC dumps Miss America franchise
|
Keeping clean and healthy with cow dung and urine
Shutter Island still captivates moviegoers
|
US-ENTERTAINMENT Summary
Palm oil: environmental curse or a blessing?
"Crazies" remake influenced by post-9/11 world
US daredevil breaks Harley leap record twice in one hour
In Poland, Chopin's music defines a nation
Hollywood film tackles Taiwan's martial law era
Nepal's stolen children highlight flawed adoption system
Iraq war takes centre stage at Oscars
TLC dumps Miss America franchise
Pakistan seizes Taliban, Al-Qaeda base
Rwandan leader's widow arrested in France
GM recalls 1.3 mln American cars over power steering
General and prosecutor charged in Turkey plot case
Nokia starts new phone line with C5 model
Iran detains director Panahi
Ukraine coalition collapses, no-confidence vote due
|
Google launches 'Street View' charm offensive
GM to more than triple Opel investment
Dubai asks FBI to check credit cards in Hamas hit
Google acquires photo-editing site
Israel urges U.S. to adopt Cuba-like embargo on Iran
|
Karadzic denies Sarajevo, Srebrenica war crimes
|
Mayor delays divisive east Jerusalem park project
Award-winning filmmaker Panahi arrested in Tehran raid: son
North Korea presses direct nuclear talks with U.S
|
UK opposition says Labour victory would weaken pound
|
General and prosecutor charged in Turkey plot case
|
Sri Lanka to call dissolved parliament to extent emergency
|
Rwandan ex-president's widow arrested in France
|
Nokia starts new phone line with C5 model
Apple sues HTC for patent infringement
|
Nokia starts new phone line with C5 model
|
Google acquires photo-editing site
|
Turkmens aim to soften punitive system
2 South Korean fighter jets crash; 3 airmen killed
N.Korea says war games threaten nuclear disarmament
India's PM meets rebels in bid to end insurgency
Tajikistan's Islamic party to sue election board
North Korea presses direct nuclear talks with U.S.
India, Pakistan to attend US nuclear summit
Australia to extradite killer of famed surgeon
US envoys' visit to Beijing aims to heal ties
Bangladesh arrests man in '99 Indian Air hijacking
India exports rise for 3rd month, new orders peak
Pakistani rupee at closing low; o/n rates, stocks up
Taiwan banks' profits to rise, provisions too-Fitch
Japan's jobless rate down, but Toyota woes seen as threat
Europe has 'solid case' over China shoe dumping
Daimler, BYD to build electric car for Chinese market
S.Korea Feb inflation slows, but outlook higher
China high-speed railway firm plans to list: media
Philippine phone company's profit up 15 percent
Toyota fixing 1.3 million vehicles over oil leak
French medieval statues march in New York
China demand driving world wine market growth: study
Australia pays Indonesia $27 million to save trees
Looking back at Oscar's biggest goof
|
Durban's street vendors tackle new languages for WC fans
Looking back at Oscar's biggest goof
Rocks, tear gas fly outside Indonesian parliament
Indonesian-Australian carbon project in Sumatra
Top court sides with publishers on $18 million deal
|
Crisis-hit Russian city fears total shutdown
Indonesia bank bail-out: Protesters, police clash
David Bowie's new makeover: Rock 'n' roll recluse
|
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights