LOS ANGELES (AP) â" Hollywood named the  brutal, unshrinking historical drama "12 Years a  Slave" best picture at the 86th annual Academy  Awards.
  
  Steve McQueens slavery  odyssey, based on Solomon Northups 1853 memoir,  has been hailed as a landmark corrective to the  movie industrys virtual blindness to slavery,  instead creating whiter tales like 1940  best-picture winner "Gone With the Wind." 12 Years  a Slave" is the first best-picture winner directed  by a black filmmaker.
  
  "Everyone  deserves not just to survive, but to live," said  McQueen, who dedicated the honor to those, past  and present, who have endured slavery. "This is  the most important legacy of Solomon Northup."
  
  The normally reserved McQueen promptly  bounced up and down on stage, later  matter-of-factly explaining his joy physically  took over: "So, Van Halen. Jump."
  
  A  year after celebrating Ben Afflecks "Argo" over  Steven Spielbergs "Lincoln," the Academy of Motion  Picture Arts and Sciences opted for stark realism  over more the plainly entertaining candidates: the  3-D space marvel "Gravity" and the starry 1970s  caper "American Hustle."
  
  Those two  films came in as the leading nominee getters.  David O. Russells "American Hustle" went home  empty-handed, but "Gravity" triumphed as the  nights top award-winner. Cleaning up in technical  categories like cinematography and visual effects,  it earned seven Oscars including best director for  Alfonso Cuaron. The Mexican filmmaker is the  categorys first Latino winner.
  
  "It  was a transformative experience," said Cuaron, who  spent some five years making the film and  developing its visual effects. "For a lot of  people, that transformation was wisdom. For me, it  was the color of my hair." To his star Sandra  Bullock, the sole person on screen for much of the  lost-in-space drama, he said: "Sandra, you are  Gravity."
  
  But history belonged to  "12 Years a Slave," a modestly budgeted drama  produced by Brad Pitts production company, Plan B,  that has made $50 million worldwide â" a far cry  from the more than $700 million "Gravity" has  hauled in.
  
  Ellen DeGeneres, in a  nimble second stint as host that seemed designed  as an antidote to the crude humor of Seth  MacFarlane last year, summarized the academys  options in her opening monologue: "Possibility  number one: 12 Years a Slave wins best picture.  Possibility number two: Youre all racists."
   
  DeGeneres presided over a smooth if safe  ceremony, punctuated by politics, pizza and  photo-bombing. Freely circulating in the crowd,  she had pizza delivered, appealing to Harvey  Weinstein to pitch in, and gathered stars to snap  a selfie she hoped would be a record-setter on  Twitter. (It was: Long before midnight, the photo  had been retweeted more than 2 million times and  momentarily crashed Twitter.) One participant,  Meryl Streep, giddily exclaimed: "Ive never  tweeted before!"
  
  But in celebrating  a movie year roundly considered an exceptionally  deep one, the Oscars fittingly spread the awards  around. The starved stars of the Texas AIDS drama  "Dallas Buyers Club" were feted: Matthew  McConaughey for best actor and Jared Leto for best  supporting actor.
  
  McConaugheys  award capped a startling career turnaround, a  conscious redirection by the actor to tack away  from the romantic comedies he regularly starred  in, and move toward more challenging films.
   
  "It sort of feels like a culmination," he  said backstage.
  
  Leto passed around  his Oscar to members of the press backstage,  urging them to "fondle" it. The long-haired actor,  who has devoted himself in recent years to his  rock band 30 Seconds to Mars, gravely vowed: "I  will revel tonight."
  
  Cate Blanchett  took best actress for her fallen socialite in  Woody Allens "Blue Jasmine," her second Oscar.  Accepting the award, she challenged Hollywood not  to think of films starring women as "niche  experiences": "The world is round, people!" she  declared to hearty applause.
  
  Draped  in Nairobi blue, Lupita Nyongo â" the Cinderella  of the awards season â" won best supporting  actress for her indelible impression as the  tortured slave Patsey. Its the feature film debut  for the 31-year-old actress.
  
  "It  doesnt escape me for one moment that so much joy  in my life is thanks to so much pain in someone  elses, and so I want to salute the spirit of Patsy  for her guidance," said Nyongo. She also thanked  director Steve McQueen: "Im certain that the dead  are standing about you and they are watching and  they are grateful, and so am I."
  
   John Ridley won best adapted screenplay for "12  Years a Slave," shifting praise to Northup: "Those  are his words. That is his life." Spike Jonze took  best original screenplay for his futuristic  romance "Her," the category Russell had the best  chance of winning.
  
  Though the  ceremony lacked a big opening number, it had a  steady musical beat to it. To a standing ovation,  Bono and U2 played an acoustic version of  "Ordinary Love," from "Mandela: Long Walk to  Freedom." Pharrell Williams had Streep and  Leonardo DiCaprio dancing in the aisles with  "Happy" from "Despicable Me 2."
  
   Pink was cheered for her rendition of "Somewhere  Over the Rainbow," part of a 75th anniversary  tribute to "The Wizard of Oz." And Bette Midler  sang â" what else? â" "Wind Beneath My Wing" for  the in memoriam segment â" an especially  heartfelt one, considering the deaths of Philip  Seymour Hoffman, Harold Ramis, James Gandolfini  and others.
  
  Best documentary went  to the crowd-pleasing backup singer ode "20 Feet  From Stardom." One of its stars, Darlene Love,  accepted the award singing the gospel tune "His  Eye Is on the Sparrow": "I sing because Im happy/  I sing because Im free."
  
  Disneys  global hit "Frozen" won best animated film,  marking â" somewhat remarkably â" the studios  first win in the 14 years of the best animated  feature category. (Pixar, which Disney owns, has  regularly dominated.) The films hit single, "Let  It Go," won best original song.
  
   "Were all just trying to make films that touch  people," said co-director Chris Buck backstage.  "Once in a while, you get lucky."
  
   Though the Oscar ceremony is usually a glitzy  bubble separate from real-world happenings,  international events were immediately referenced.  In his acceptance speech, Leto addressed people in  Ukraine and Venezuela.
  
  "We are here  and as you struggle to make your dreams happen, to  live the impossible, were thinking of you," said  Leto.
  
  Russian state-owned  broadcaster Channel One Russia said it would not  broadcast the Oscars live because of the necessity  for news coverage of Russias invasion of Ukraines  Crimea peninsula. It will instead transmit the  Oscars early Tuesday morning, local time.
   
  Venezuelan protesters, via social media,  urged Oscar winners to bring attention to their  plight. Anti-government protests have roiled the  country in recent weeks.
  
  Italys  "The Great Beauty" won the Oscar for best foreign  language film. In accepting the award for his  rumination on life and Romes decadence, director  Paolo Sorrentino thanked his heroes, including  Federico Fellini, Martin Scorsese and soccer star  Diego Maradona.
  
  In her opening,  DeGeneres gently mocked Hollywoods insularity,  referring to the headlines that have swamped the  Los Angeles area lately with a slightly less  serious news event.
  
  "It has been  raining," said DeGeneres. "Were fine. Thank you  for your prayers."
  
  ABC, which aired  the ceremony, hoped the drama of a razor-thin  best-picture race would be enough to entice  viewers. The show last year drew an audience of  40.3 million, up from 39.3 million the year before  when the silent-film ode "The Artist" won best  picture.
  
  There was a sense of deja  vu Sunday. As she hit the red carpet, "American  Hustle" star Jennifer Lawrence briefly collapsed  in a heap of laughter, just as she tripped  ascending the stairs last year to accept best  actress for "Silver Linings Playbook."
  
  "If you win tonight," said DeGeneres, "I think  we should bring you the Oscar."
  
  No  delivery was needed, as the night belonged to "12  Years a Slave."
Saturday, May 16, 2015
12 Years a Slave rises up at Academy Awards
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