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Oscars 2013: Daniel Day-Lewis makes Hollywood history

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Oscars 2013: Daniel Day-Lewis makes Hollywood history

 

Daniel Day-Lewis has made Oscars history by becoming the first person to win the best actor prize three times.

 

The British-born star, who had been the runaway favourite, was rewarded for his role in Steven Spielberg's Lincoln. "I really don't know how any of this happened. I do know I've received much more than my fair share of good fortune in my life," he said.

 

Ben Affleck's Iran-set rescue thriller Argo beat Lincoln to the top prize for best picture. In a live broadcast from the White House, First Lady Michelle Obama joined Jack Nicholson to help present the best picture prize at the end of the night.

 

Argo is the first best picture winner not to have a concurrent nomination for best director since 1989's Driving Miss Daisy. But despite Affleck's omission from the best director category, the film had been widely-tipped to take the top prize. Oscars host Seth MacFarlane joked at the start of the ceremony: "Argo's story is so top-secret that its director remains unknown to the Academy."

 

Accepting his award alongside fellow producers George Clooney and Grant Heslov, Affleck paid tribute to the "genius" Steven Spielberg who lost out in the same category. Referring to his previous Oscar success with 1997's Good Will Hunting, he said: "I never thought I would be back here and I am because of so many of you who are here tonight".

 

He added: "It doesn't matter how you get knocked down in life, all that matters is that you get up."

 

The Oscar victory for Daniel Day-Lewis puts him ahead of Hollywood legends Jack Nicholson, Marlon Brando, Dustin Hoffman and Tom Hanks - who all have two best actor wins to their name. Day-Lewis, who holds UK-Irish citizenship, previously won for My Left Foot (in 1990) and There Will Be Blood (2008) and has a reputation for immersing himself in his roles.

 

Jennifer Lawrence won the Oscar for best actress for her role as a troubled young widow in Silver Linings Playbook. The 22-year-old actress, who stumbled over her dress on her way to the stage, joked: "You guys are just standing up because you feel bad that I fell over and that's embarrassing."

 

Surveying the huge audience in Hollywood's Dolby Theatre, she added: "This is nuts." It was the first Oscar win for Lawrence, who was previously nominated for best actress in 2011 for her performance in Winter's Bone.

 

Anne Hathaway won the Oscar for best supporting actress for her role as tragic factory worker Fantine in movie musical Les Miserables. With her cropped hair and gaunt face, Hathaway's teary version of I Dreamed a Dream had made her an Oscar favourite. "It came true," the actress said when she collected her statuette.

 

Hathaway's Oscar was her first, the actress having been previously nominated in 2008 for Rachel Getting Married. Hathaway said: "Here's hoping that someday in the not too distant future, the misfortunes of Fantine will only be found in stories and not in real life."

 

British singer Adele won the Oscar for best original song for her Bond theme Skyfall, which she also performed during the show. She struggled through tears to thank the Bond producers and her co-writer Paul Epworth, who collected the award alongside her.

 

Ang Lee won his second Oscar for directing Life of Pi, the adaption of Yann Martel's fantasy novel about a boy stranded in a lifeboat with a Bengal tiger. The film won four Oscars in total, more than any other film. The Taiwanese-born director, who won previously for Brokeback Mountain (2006), exclaimed: "Thank you, movie god!"

 

Life of Pi picked up two Oscars in the early stages of the awards for cinematography and visual effects. Cinematographer Claudio Miranda admitted in an emotional acceptance speech: "This movie was quite a beast to make." Later, Mychael Danna picked up the statuette for Life of Pi's original score.

 

Christoph Waltz won his second Oscar for best supporting actor in a Quentin Tarantino film, this time as a German bounty hunter in the slave revenge story Django Unchained. Picking up the first award of the night, Waltz offered thanks to his character Dr King Schultz and to "his creator and the creator of his awe-inspiring world, Quentin Tarantino."

 

The Austrian actor won his first Oscar as a Nazi colonel in Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds in 2010. Tarantino won the original screenplay prize for Django Unchained, adding to the Oscar he won for writing Pulp Fiction in 1994. "I have to cast the right people to make those characters come alive and boy this time did I do it," he said.

 

The best adapted screenplay Oscar went to Chris Terrio for Ben Affleck's Iran-set siege thriller Argo. The best short animated film category was won by Paperman, while Pixar's Scottish adventure Brave won best animated feature. The award for costume design went to Briton Jacqueline Durran for Anna Karenina. She described the win as "completely overwhelming" and paid tribute to her children who were "fast asleep in England".

 

The make-up and hairstyling award went to fellow Brits Lisa Westcott and Julie Dartnell for Les Miserables. Tom Hooper's musical also picked up the Oscar for sound mixing. Unusually, there was a tie in the sound editing category - the Oscar was shared by Zero Dark Thirty and Skyfall.

 

Searching for Sugar Man, which tells the story of musician Rodriguez who disappeared from public view in the early 1970s but developed a cult following in South Africa, won the Oscar for best documentary. Producer Simon Chinn said: "Rodriguez isn't here tonight because he didn't want to take any of the credit himself."

 

Austrian drama Amour won the Oscar for best foreign language film. The French-language film, directed by Michael Haneke, portrays the indignities of an elderly Parisian couple - Anne and Georges - as they cope with Anne's wish to die after a stroke. Host Seth MacFarlane kicked off the ceremony at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles with the quip: "I honestly cannot believe I'm here. It's an honour that everyone else said 'no'".

 

After an exchange with William Shatner, who appeared as Star Trek's Captain Kirk, the Family Guy creator launched into a satirical song about topless appearances by actresses in the movies. Almost an hour into the three-and-a-half hour show, Halle Berry introduced a tribute to the James Bond franchise, followed by Dame Shirley Bassey who sang her theme song to the 1960s Bond classic Goldfinger.

 

The show also featured a salute to movie musicals of the past decade, with Chicago Oscar-winner Catherine Zeta-Jones and Dreamgirls winner Jennifer Hudson joining Les Miserables cast members that included Hugh Jackman, Anne Hathaway, Russell Crowe, Helena Bonham Carter and Amanda Seyfried.

 

During the section of the show that pays tribute to those who died in 2012, Barbra Streisand sang the late Marvin Hamlisch's The Way We Were, from the 1973 romantic drama in which she starred with Robert Redford. It was Streisand's first Oscars performance for 36 years.

 

Oscars 2013: Full list of winners

 

A full list of recipients at the 2013 Oscars. Winners' names appear in bold, followed by their fellow nominees.

 

BEST FILM

 

Argo

 

Amour

 

Beasts Of The Southern Wild

 

Django Unchained

 

Les Miserables

 

Lincoln

 

Life Of Pi

 

Silver Linings Playbook

 

Zero Dark Thirty

 

BEST DIRECTOR

 

Ang Lee - Life of Pi

 

Michael Haneke - Amour

 

David O Russell - Silver Linings Playbook

 

Steven Spielberg - Lincoln

 

Benh Zeitlin - Beasts of the Southern Wild

 

BEST ACTOR

 

Daniel Day-Lewis - Lincoln

 

Bradley Cooper - Silver Linings Playbook

 

Hugh Jackman - Les Miserables

 

Joaquin Phoenix - The Master

 

Denzel Washington - Flight

 

BEST ACTRESS

 

Jennifer Lawrence - Silver Linings Playbook

 

Emmanuelle Riva - Amour

 

Jessica Chastain - Zero Dark Thirty

 

Naomi Watts - The Impossible

 

Quvenzhane Wallis - Beasts of the Southern Wild

 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

 

Christoph Waltz - Django Unchained

 

Alan Arkin in Argo

 

Philip Seymour Hoffman in The Master

 

Robert De Niro in Silver Linings Playbook

 

Tommy Lee Jones in Lincoln

 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

 

Anne Hathaway - Les Miserables

 

Amy Adams - The Master

 

Helen Hunt - The Sessions

 

Jacki Weaver - Silver Linings Playbook

 

Sally Field - Lincoln

 

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

 

Amour

 

A Royal Affair

 

Kon-Tiki

 

No

 

War witch

 

BEST ANIMATED FILM

 

Brave

 

Frankenweenie

 

Paranorman

 

Pirates! Band of Misfits (UK title: Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists)

 

Wreck-it Ralph

 

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

 

Django Unchained - Quentin Tarantino

 

Amour - Michael Haneke

 

Flight - John Gatins

 

Moonrise Kingdom - Wes Anderson and Roman Coppola

 

Zero Dark Thirty - Mark Boal

 

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

 

Argo - Chris Terrio

 

Beasts Of The Southern Wild - Lucy Alibar and Benh Zeitlin

 

Life Of Pi - David Magee

 

Lincoln - Tony Kushner

 

Silver Linings Playbook - David O Russell

 

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

 

Life of Pi - Claudio Miranda

 

Anna Karenina - Seamus McGarvey

 

Django Unchained - Robert Richardson

 

Lincoln - Janusz Kaminski

 

Skyfall - Roger Deakins

 

BEST SOUND MIXING

 

Les Miserables - Andy Nelson, Mark Paterson and Simon Hayes

 

Argo - John Reitz, Gregg Rudloff and Jose Antonio Garcia

 

Life Of Pi - Ron Bartlett, DM Hemphill and Drew Kunin

 

Lincoln - Andy Nelson, Gary Rydstrom and Ronald Judkins

 

Skyfall - Scott Millan, Greg P Russell and Stuart Wilson

 

BEST SOUND EDITING (Joint winners)

 

Skyfall - Per Hallberg and Karen Baker Landers

 

Zero Dark Thirty - Paul NJ Ottosson

 

Argo - Erik Aadahl and Ethan van der Ryn

 

Django Unchained - Wylie Stateman

 

Life Of Pi - Eugene Gearty and Philip Stockton

 

BEST ORIGINAL SONG

 

Skyfall (Skyfall) - Music and Lyric by Adele Adkins and Paul Epworth

 

Before My Time (Chasing Ice) - Music and Lyric by J. Ralph

 

Everybody Needs A Best Friend (Ted) - Music by Walter Murphy, Lyric by Seth MacFarlane

 

Pi's lullaby (Life Of Pi) - Music by Mychael Danna, Lyric by Bombay Jayashri

 

Suddenly (Les Miserables) - Music by Claude-Michel Schonberg, Lyric by Herbert Kretzmer and Alain Boublil

 

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE

 

Life Of Pi - Mychael Danna

 

Anna Karenina - Dario Marianelli

 

Argo - Alexandre Desplat

 

Lincoln - John Williams

 

Skyfall - Thomas Newman

 

BEST COSTUMES

 

Anna Karenina - Jacqueline Durran

 

Les Miserables - Paco Delgado

 

Lincoln - Joanna Johnston

 

Mirror Mirror - Eiko Ishioka

 

Snow White and the Huntsman - Colleen Atwood

 

BEST DOCUMENTARY FILM

 

Searching For Sugarman

 

5 Broken Cameras

 

The Gatekeepers

 

How To Survive A Plague

 

The Invisible War

 

BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT

 

Inocente

 

Kings Point

 

Mondays at Racine

 

Open Heart

 

Redemption

 

BEST FILM EDITING

 

Argo - William Goldenberg

 

Life of Pi - Tim Squyres

 

Lincoln - Michael Kahn

 

Silver Linings Playbook - Jay Cassidy and Crispin Struthers

 

Zero Dark Thirty - Dylan Tichenor and William Goldenberg

 

BEST ANIMATED SHORT FILM

 

Paperman

 

Adam and the Dog

 

Fresh Guacamole

 

Head Over Heels

 

Maggie Simpson in The Longest Daycare

 

BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM

 

Curfew

 

Asad

 

Buzkashi Boys

 

Death of a Shadow (Dood Van Een Schaduw)

 

Henry

 

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS

 

Life Of Pi - Bill Westenhofer, Guillaume Rocheron, Erik-Jan De Boer and Donald R Elliott

 

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey - Joe Letteri, Eric Saindon, David Clayton and R Christopher White

 

Marvel's The Avengers (UK title: Marvel's Avengers Assemble) - Janek Sirrs, Jeff White, Guy Williams and Dan Sudick

 

Prometheus - Richard Stammers, Trevor Wood, Charley Henley and Martin Hill

 

Snow White and the Huntsman - Cedric Nicolas-Troyan, Philip Brennan, Neil Corbould and Michael Dawson

 

BEST MAKE-UP

 

Les Miserables - Lisa Westcott and Julie Dartnell

 

Hitchcock - Howard Berger, Peter Montagna and Martin Samuel

 

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey - Peter Swords King, Rick Findlater and Tami Lane

 

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN

 

Lincoln - Rick Carter and Jim Erickson

 

Anna Karenina - Sarah Greenwood and Katie Spencer

 

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey - Dan Hennah, Ra Vincent and Simon Bright

 

Les Miserables - Eve Stewart and Anna Lynch-Robinson

 

Life Of Pi - David Gropman and Anna Pinnock

 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-20973004

I LOVE JENNIFER LAWRENCE! ps. Can't believe she is just 22!

I think I must like Jennifer Lawrence as I felt sorry for her when she fell over instead of laughing, then again it wasn't quite.

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