when Palisades Fire blazed in Los Angeles last Tuesday, Hollywood’s awards season was in full swing. The Golden Globes And it happened less than 48 hours ago a series of banquets sprinkled with prizes they continued in the following days.
But the enormity of the destruction in Southern California has quickly taken away all the festivity from the film industry’s celebratory season. At one point, the flames entered the hill above the Dolby Theatre. Oscar Awards.
The fires strike at the core of a film industry still trying to stabilize after the pandemic, labor disruptions and technological disruptions. Not for the first time this decade, the Oscars have faced the following question: should the show go on? And if so, what do they mean now?
“With all due respect during Hollywood’s celebratory season, I hope that one of the networks televising the upcoming awards will seriously consider NOT televising it and instead donate the proceeds to the fire victims and firefighters,” “Hacks” star Jean Jean. Smart, the last Globe winner, he wrote on Instagram.
The Oscars go on as planned, but they are sure to be transformed by the fires, and much of the grandeur of the red carpet that usually stretches until then will be reduced if not canceled altogether. With so many left homeless near the fires, there’s little enthusiasm for the season’s traditional car-happy parades.
Instead, the spotlight has turned to what the Oscars might symbolize for a traumatized Los Angeles. The Oscars have never meant less, but at the same time, they may be more important than ever as a beacon to the emotional capital of film.
Film academy on Monday for the second time postponed the announcement of nominations. The nominations will be announced almost on February 23. The Academy also canceled it annual luncheon of the candidates and said he plans to honor frontline workers and support relief efforts.
“Together we will succeed and bring a sense of healing to our global film community,” vowed academy CEO Bill Kramer and academy president Janet Yang.
The wildfires, one of the costliest natural disasters in US history, continue. The ongoing nature of the crisis, which has killed at least 25 people, has made rebuilding well-laid plans a moving target. The Critics Choice Awards have been postponed. Nominations for the Producers Guild Awards have been postponed twice with no new dates set. On Tuesday, the confraternity established a fund to help producers affected by the fires.
The 67th Grammy Awardswhich will be held on February 2nd in downtown Los Angeles, they are going ahead, albeit with significant changes. Harvey Mason Jr., CEO of the Recording Academy and Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Tammy Hurt, said this year’s Grammys will have “a renewed purpose: to raise additional funds to support wildfire efforts and to honor the courage and dedication of first responders who risk their lives to protect ours.”
There’s also sure to be some telethon-like element to the Oscars. In recent days, many across the industry have offered suggestions on how broadcasting can be rethought. Meanwhile a different process took place Oscars 2021, who were it has been postponed until the end of April Due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Academy Awards have been moved several times throughout history, including in 1938, when the show was delayed a week due to historic flooding in Los Angeles.
For the Academy of Cinema Arts and Sciences, the fires have been very personal. Four of the academy’s 55-person governing board lost their seats, according to The Hollywood Reporter, including producer Lynette Howell Taylor, visual effects governor Brooke Breton, sound governor Mark P. Stoeckinger and animation governor Jinko Gotoh. Pacific Palisades, which was largely destroyed by fire, was home to many stars and directors.
For potential candidates, it would usually be when they are most active, campaigning in Q&Other events related to the important election voting period. All of this has been interrupted. Isabella Rossellini, who is favored to be nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her performance “Conclave”, He posted a photo on Instagram an Oscar lying in ashes. The photo was fake, but it accurately captured the current mood in Hollywood.
Several high-profile television series were forced to halt production due to the fires, but few film shoots were affected. That, in itself, is a reflection of a Hollywood that has seen the majority of film production seek tax incentives in other states.
His work in the film and television industry has not bounced back 2023 strikesleaving many crew members unemployed. The studios are so quiet that actress Natalie Morales (“Grey’s Anatomy”) has called for the studios to turn empty soundstages into makeshift classrooms in the wake of the fires, for children who burned down schools built by out-of-work craftsmen. .
He reminded many in the film industry that they need all the work they can get, including all the work that comes with the Oscars. In addition to the Academy Awards being a vital spotlight on a wide range of films that may struggle to find an audience, the awards provide plenty of work for an award-season industry crowd of staff, stylists and vendors.
With so many out of work before the fires, Silvina Knight, an Emmy-winning makeup artist, calls this latest crisis “another setback — a big one.” He is currently working on “Suits LA”, one of the series that stopped filming due to the fires.
“I’m not sure how people are going to feel about dressing up and having just lost everything,” the Oscar winner said. “But I don’t know, when we come back it could be a show of strength. Yes, this is tragic, but we are all pulling together. Even going home the other night, the bikers were being very considerate of each other, which is unusual for Los Angeles.’