A highly respected lighting director for feature film is
hired to work on a big-budget “Courtroom Drama” set in 2014. Before the film starts shooting, he meets
with the movie’s director, to receive his instructions.
WHAT THE DIRECTOR
SAYS:
“I want naturalistic lighting. On cue, the lights to go on – and the lights
to go off.”
WHAT THE LIGHTING
DIRECTOR HEARS:
“No Oscar.”
The Film Editor meets with the director:
WHAT THE DIRECTOR
SAYS:
“Linear storytelling.
Nothing fancy.”
WHAT THE FILM
EDITOR HEARS:
“No Oscar.”
A renowned Costume Designer takes her turn with the director:
WHAT THE DIRECTOR
SAYS:
“Contemporary attire.
Shoes. Shirts. Dark suits and ties.”
WHAT THE CONSTUME
DESIGNER HEARS:
“No Oscar.” (You cannot win an Oscar with a tie.)
The cinematographer sits down with the director:
WHAT THE DIRECTOR
TELLS HIM:
“I want it clean, and I want it simple.”
WHAT THE
CINEMATOGRAPHER HEARS:
“No Oscar.” (“And boy, do I miss Fellini!")
The “Special Effects” Guru comes in for a meeting:
WHAT THE DIRECTOR SAYS:
“I don’t even know what you’re doing here. This is a
‘Courtroom Drama’!”
WHAT THE SPECIAL
EFFECTS GURU HEARS:
“No job". (And
consequently, of course, no Oscar.)
My point being:
You can do impeccable work in your area of expertise. But if there is no demonstrable “flash” in
your assignment....
There is no “Acceptance Speech” in your immediate future.
And, may I say, because this is where I’ve been heading with
this all along, you can “Ditto” and double that for acting.
In my exhaustive research on this matter – and by
“exhaustive” I mean, I did it till I got tired of it – I have discovered that
the best – nay, the only – okay, let
me quality – the virtually only way of obtaining any Oscar consideration whatsoever is to nab a role playing a character
who is either, sensory deprived, mentally troubled, some form of an addict, or
a larger-than-life figure who actually existed.
Evidence:
The following actors were either nominated or won Oscars for the following performances,
all of which fall into the above-mentioned categories: (NOTE: If you can think of any other “Slam-Dunk”
categories for sure-fire Oscars consideration,
feel free to pass them along.)
Sensory Deprived: (A partial smattering)
Al Pacino – Scent of a
Woman – won an Oscar, playing a
blind man.
Jane Wyman – Johnny
Belinda – won an Oscar, playing a
deaf girl.
Patty Duke – The
Miracle Worker – won a Oscar
playing Helen Keller, who was deaf, dumb and
blind. (I don’t know why the other candidates in her category even
bothered to show up.)
MENTALLY TROUBLED: (To mention only four of what I am sure
is a considerably longer list)
Russell Crowe – A
Beautiful Mind – garnered an Oscar
nomination for playing a crazy mathematician.
Jessica Lange – Frances
– nominated for an Oscar for
playing a seriously trouble actress.
Bette Davis – who, I believe, was “nutso” in every role she
ever played – eleven Oscar
nominations, two wins.
Cate Blanchett – Blue
Jasmine – Keep your eyes open.
ADDICTS: (A selected three, of substantially more)
Ray Milland – The Long
Weekend – Oscar winner, for playing an alcoholic.
Lee Marvin – Cat
Ballou – Oscar winner, for
playing an alcoholic.
Jamie Foxx – Ray –
Oscar winner, for playing a rock ’n
roller who took a boatload of drugs.
(Observation: Addiction
may be the most certain path of all to the Oscars
podium.)
LARGER-THAN-LIFE FIGURES WHO ACTUALLY EXISTED: (In on way comprehensive; I do have a life.)
Daniel Day Lewis – Lincoln
– Oscar winner, playing arguably, if
you don’t ask anyone from the South, our greatest president.
Paul Muni – The Story
of Louis Pasteur – Oscar winner,
for the man who made cow milk safe to drink. (Unless you’re allergic.) (A substantial portion of Paul Muni’s career
involved playing Larger-Than-Life Figures Who Actually Existed; Muni also starred
as Mexican revolutionary Benito Juarez, and as French novelist and Dreyfus
defender Emile Zola, the latter earning him yet another Oscar nomination.)
And since we are rapidly losing steam here, let’s pluck down
Jamie Foxx - who, in Ray,
does “double-duty”, both as an “Addict” and
as a “Larger-Than-Life Figure Who Actually Existed.” Which category earned him the Oscar, it is impossible to say.
Okay, now, for those of you fuming at home, yes,
award-winning dramatic performances require the characters to participate in,
let’s say, harrowing or, if you wish, challenging situations, for which, I
imagine you would agree, “sensorially impaired”, “addicted”, “losing your mind”
and “running a country that is coming apart at the seams” would definitely
qualify.
Drama equals extremes.
True.
But not exclusively true.
Some of our best actors excelled at playing ordinary
people. Jimmy Stewart, Cary Grant, to
name but two, though they are part of a much larger contingent. (Robert Cummings, Joel McCrea.)
Both Stewart and Grant enjoyed long and industrious
careers. However, Jimmy only won only one
Oscar, Cary Grant, only an honorary Oscar.
Nobody thinks they were bad actors. The trouble was, they invariably portrayed regular
people, who, in films I really like, like North
By Northwest (Grant) and The Man Who
Knew Too Much (Stewart), got caught up in dramatic situations.
That’s the other
kind of drama – the kind where people “just like us” – not crazy, not addicted,
not in the history books, not blind – are faced with extraordinary
circumstances when they are unexpectedly drawn into some serious shenanigans.
Grant’s and Stewart’s performances in the above-mentioned
movies were wonderful.
But there was not a glimmer of love for them from the
“Academy.”
What I am saying is,
There is no award for being “brilliantly ordinary.”
And I am thinking there should be.