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Oscars open with triumph for Cruz | Oscars open with triumph for Cruz |
(10 minutes later) | |
Spanish actress Penelope Cruz has won the first major award of the night at the 81st Academy Awards in Hollywood. | Spanish actress Penelope Cruz has won the first major award of the night at the 81st Academy Awards in Hollywood. |
The 34-year-old star won her first Oscar for her performance as a passionate artist in Woody Allen's Vicky Cristina Barcelona. | The 34-year-old star won her first Oscar for her performance as a passionate artist in Woody Allen's Vicky Cristina Barcelona. |
"Has anybody ever fainted here. I might be the first one," said Cruz, who was previously nominated in 2007. | "Has anybody ever fainted here. I might be the first one," said Cruz, who was previously nominated in 2007. |
British film Slumdog Millionaire, from director Danny Boyle, is tipped to win the evening's top prize, best picture. | British film Slumdog Millionaire, from director Danny Boyle, is tipped to win the evening's top prize, best picture. |
British actress Kate Winslet is also expected to triumph, winning the best actress Oscar, while Mickey Rourke remains favourite to win best actor. | British actress Kate Winslet is also expected to triumph, winning the best actress Oscar, while Mickey Rourke remains favourite to win best actor. |
Australian star Hugh Jackman, who is hosting the awards at the Kodak Theatre, opened with a song medley paying tribute to the best picture nominees. | Australian star Hugh Jackman, who is hosting the awards at the Kodak Theatre, opened with a song medley paying tribute to the best picture nominees. |
British screenwriter Simon Beaufoy won the Oscar for best adapted screenplay for his work on Slumdog Millionaire. | |
"There are a few places I never imagined being... the moon, the South Pole, the Miss World podium and here," joked Beaufoy, previously best known for writing The Full Monty. | |
He paid tribute to Vikas Swarup, the author of the novel Q & A on which the film was based, as well as the actors, producer Christian Colson and director Danny Boyle - whom he dubbed "the other two musketeers". | |
The movie, a rags-to-riches tale set in the slums of Mumbai, has been named best film by the producers', writers', actors' and directors' guilds in the US. | The movie, a rags-to-riches tale set in the slums of Mumbai, has been named best film by the producers', writers', actors' and directors' guilds in the US. |
Boyle has attributed the film's popularity to people's desire "to root for the underdog". | |
Dustin Lance Black won best original screenplay for Milk, and paid emotional tribute to the gay rights activist Harvey Milk. | |
As anticipated, the Oscar for best animated feature went to robot comedy Wall-E. | |
Actors Freida Pinto and Dev Patel missed out on acting nominations | |
Boyle will battle it out with David Fincher for the best director Oscar, alongside fellow contenders Ron Howard, Stephen Daldry and Gus Van Sant. | |
Fincher, best known for Se7en and Fight Club, is nominated for his work on The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, which leads the field with 13 nominations including best picture. | Fincher, best known for Se7en and Fight Club, is nominated for his work on The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, which leads the field with 13 nominations including best picture. |
The film, which stars Pitt as a man who ages backwards, has had the most box office success - taking $242m (£169m) worldwide - but Academy voters will not necessarily see this as a reason to win. | The film, which stars Pitt as a man who ages backwards, has had the most box office success - taking $242m (£169m) worldwide - but Academy voters will not necessarily see this as a reason to win. |
Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt are both nominated in the top acting categories | Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt are both nominated in the top acting categories |
Other titles in the running for the main prize include The Reader, Milk and Frost/Nixon. | Other titles in the running for the main prize include The Reader, Milk and Frost/Nixon. |
Winslet's strongest competition comes from Meryl Streep, for her role as a nun who suspects sex abuse in Doubt, while Penn remains Rourke's closest rival for his role as gay rights activist Harvey Milk in the eponymous Milk. | Winslet's strongest competition comes from Meryl Streep, for her role as a nun who suspects sex abuse in Doubt, while Penn remains Rourke's closest rival for his role as gay rights activist Harvey Milk in the eponymous Milk. |
Heath Ledger, who died in 2008 of an accidental prescription drug overdose, is favoured for best supporting actor after his scene-stealing performance as the Joker in Batman movie The Dark Knight. | Heath Ledger, who died in 2008 of an accidental prescription drug overdose, is favoured for best supporting actor after his scene-stealing performance as the Joker in Batman movie The Dark Knight. |
Show secrets | Show secrets |
Details of this year's ceremony have been kept firmly under wraps as organisers try to claw back the ceremony's TV audience. | Details of this year's ceremony have been kept firmly under wraps as organisers try to claw back the ceremony's TV audience. |
Actor Mickey Rourke is tipped to win for his performance in The Wrestler | Actor Mickey Rourke is tipped to win for his performance in The Wrestler |
Last year's event watched by just 32m viewers in the US, down from 40m in 2007 and the lowest figure since 1974, when the current ratings system began. | Last year's event watched by just 32m viewers in the US, down from 40m in 2007 and the lowest figure since 1974, when the current ratings system began. |
Producers Laurence Mark and Bill Condon, who worked on Oscar-winning musical Dreamgirls, have promised sweeping format changes, and generally kept journalists and cameras away from the rehearsals. | Producers Laurence Mark and Bill Condon, who worked on Oscar-winning musical Dreamgirls, have promised sweeping format changes, and generally kept journalists and cameras away from the rehearsals. |
The show's grandiose set has been drastically revamped. "It's more like the nightclub of your dreams," Jackman said. | The show's grandiose set has been drastically revamped. "It's more like the nightclub of your dreams," Jackman said. |
"It's very intimate. It's got to be a lot closer." | "It's very intimate. It's got to be a lot closer." |