In a night of firsts, the 2019 Oscars saw historically underrepresented communities and their stories ascend to the top of Hollywood’s glitziest awards show.
Green Book’s win caught many by surprise with favorites Roma and Black Panther leading best picture speculation going into a night that was marked in many ways by an ever-present absence.
This year’s Academy Awards went without a host after Kevin Hart withdrew from the show amid controversy. He was replaced by not one individual, but an ensemble of presenters.
But it was the night’s diversity that took center stage.
“WE MADE A FILM ABOUT AN IMMIGRANT”
Among the night’s top winners, Rami Malek, the son of Egyptian immigrants, won the best actor for his portrayal of musical phenom Freddie Mercury in the Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody. The film took home the most awards on the night, netting four in total including sound editing, sound mixing and film editing.
“We made a film about a gay man, an immigrant, who lived his life just unapologetically himself,” Malek said while accepting his award. “The fact that I’m celebrating him and this story with you tonight is proof that we are longing for stories like this.”
CUARON IS THE FIRST LATINO WHO WON THE AWARD
Mexican director Alfonso Cuaron won his second best director award for his semi-autobiographical black and white film Roma, which chronicles the life of a live-in housekeeper in 1970s-era Mexico City. He is the first Latino to have won the award.
“I want to thank the academy for recognizing the film centered around an indigenous woman. One of the seventy million domestic workers in the world without worker’s rights,” Cuaron said. “As artists, our job is to look where others don’t.”
Here is a list of some of the night’s top prizes
Best Picture: Green Book
Director: Alfonso Cuaron, Roma
Lead Actor: Rami Malek, Bohemian Rhapsody
Lead Actress: Olivia Colman, The Favourite
Supporting Actor: Mahershala Ali, Green Book
Supporting Actress: Regina King, If Beale Street Could Talk
Original Screenplay: Green Book
Adapted Screenplay: BlacKkKlansman