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Entertainment Saturday, February 25th 2012 at 4:00 pm

11 Weird and Wonderful Facts About the Oscars

Begun in 1929, the Academy Awards and its iconic Oscar statues have become a high-water mark in terms of pagentry and the movies they honor. True, the awards are sometimes overshadowed by the films they snub, but the event continues to hold international attention and has given out 2,809 Oscars for 1,853 in the intervening 83 ceremonies. In that time, the event has picked up some pretty interesting stats and facts, which we’ve chronicled for your pleasure.

1. Oscar winners don’t really own their statues. Upon being presented with their award, winners must sign an agreement stating that they should they wish to sell their statuettes they must first offer them to the Academy for $1. If they refuse, they cannot keep their trophy. The rule has been in effect since 1950, which means that older statues do sometimes appear on the open market. Be prepared to pay a lot more than $1, though: Steven Speielberg bought Bette Davis’ Oscar for $578,000 in 2001 and donated it back to the Academy, and Michael Jackson paid over a million for David Selznick’s award in 1999.

2. The biggest loser in Oscar history is Kevin O’Connell, a sound re-recording engineer. Despite 20 nominations since his work on 1983′s Terms of Endearment, O’Connell has yet to win a single statue. O’Connell’s last nomination came in 2007 for his work on Transformers.

3. To even have your film considered for a nomination, it has to meet some fairly exacting standards: It must be 40 minutes long; on 35mm or 70mm film, or 24- or 48-frame progressive scan Digital Cinema format at a minimum resolution of 2048 by 1080 pixels; and must be screened for paid admission in Los Angeles for at least seven days. You can read all the rules here.

4. That last point about screening in L.A. is particularly interesting as it held up the Charlie Chaplin’s 1952 film Limelight from winning an academy award. When the movie was finally screened in L.A. in 1973, it was nominated and won for Best Original Score.

5. One of the stranger recipients of an Oscar was the British Ministry of Information for their 1941 docudrama Target for Tonight. Not everyday a country’s wartime propaganda organ wins a major award!

6. There has only been one Oscar winner named Oscar: Oscar Hammerstein II, who won two for best song.

7. While the pomp and circumstance of the award ceremony are certainly legendary, the scale of them can be shocking. At the reception afterward, the assembled diners will be presented with 1,200 bottles of champagne, 1,000 spiny lobsters, 1,200 Kumamoto Oysters, and 18kg of caviar. Add in about 7 kg of edible gold dust for the 4,000 chocolate Oscar statues.

8. The Kodak Theater, which has been the most recent home of the Oscars, seats 3,332 people. Of course, not everyone shows up — which is why those famous seat-fillers make $125 an hour making the place look full.

9. In addition to its occasional snubbing of worthy films, the Oscars have also become somewhat notorious for overly long and emotional acceptance speeches. This came to a head in 2002, where the ceremony ran an astounding four hours and twenty-three minutes. Since then, the Academy has enacted the 45-second rule, where speeches longer than 45 seconds will be cut off by the orchestra — which is only slightly less awkward then watching full grown adults sob and ramble to their hearts content.

10. On the subject of acceptance speeches, the record for shortest speech is shared by William Holden and renowned director Alfred Hitchcock. They both simply said, “Thank you.”

11. While the Oscar staute is perhaps the most recognizable icon of the event, the phrase “And the winner is…” is perhaps even more famous. Originally used by the award’s presenters to announce the recipient of an award, the phrase was quietly abandoned in 1989. Since then, the preferred lead-in has been “And the Oscar goes to…”, presumably to make the losers feel better.

(via Wikipedia, Oddee, About.com, Empire, BBC)

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  • Dr Coene

    Who the hell is Charlie “Chaplain”?

    Does nobody at Geekosystem know anything about film or film history?

  • Dr Coene

    Also, Hitchcock never won an Oscar. He was nominated four times for Best Director, but never won a single Oscar.

    His film “Rebecca” won Best Picture, but the award for Best Picture does not go to the director, but to the producer.

    He did, however, win an Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award, to which his acceptance speech said simply “Thank you.”

  • Courtney

    they simply spelled Chaplin wrong it’s not a big deal. nit wits there are times where the director of a film is one of the producers so therefor wins the best picture oscar if nominated and chosen like Tony Richardson was for Tom Jones in 1964. there are also times where they’re nominated for best picture and not best director Paul Newman in 1969 for Rachel Rachel and it was because of that his wife the star of the film Joanne Woodward threatened to leave the academy though she didn’t and is still a voting member now though she hasn’t since he was nominated for his last competetive award best supporting actor in 2003 and by the way the oscars started in 1928 not 29 that’s why it’s the 84th ceremony and not the 83rd. nor was there always the governors ball after the ceremony only since the 30th oscars

  • artyfartymovies

    Here is a fact. The Oscars is useless and the movies that are nominated are crap.

  • Max Eddy

    D’oh! Thanks for catching that. And actually, Chaplin is one of my favorites. I used to watch The Great Dictator all the time when I was a kid.

  • Max Eddy

    Thanks for clarifying that!

  • Mexjewel2003

    I have a few commas and periods I’d like to donate to Courtney.

  • Dr Coene

     No problemo.

    The Kid, Modern Times and City Lights are my favs :)

  • Dr Coene

    Alfred Hatchcock is really great, too.

  • Max Eddy

    Modern Times is an utter delight! I’ve been curious to see some of his later works for a while now, though.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/WDDLBGEAVGX33X4BWGCXATPHKY Chuck

    “Add in about 7,000 kg of edible gold dust for the chocolate Oscar statues” doesn’t sound right to me.. thats 246917oz * 1773$/oz = $437,783,841

  • Jcwilli2

    There is no way they have 7,000 kg of gold dust (around 15,000 lbs) for them to eat on chocolate statues. MAYBE grams, but not likely, and definitely not kg. 

  • Max Eddy

    Nice job crunching those numbers, and you’re right: it was way off! A bit of a cut and paste here. 7 kg of gold dust to decorate 4,000 chocolate statues.

  • Max Eddy

    It was Kg, but a bit of a cut and paste error rammed two numbers together. It should have read: 7kg of gold dust for 4,000 statues. Thanks for keeping our numbers honest!

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  • Anonymous

    good

  • bsevs

    To even be nominated for an Oscar is a big deal, but to be nominated 20 times is crazy! Kevin O’Connell is a master of his craft and while he has never won one, you simply cannot deny 20 separate nominations.

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