Showing posts with label ColinFirth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ColinFirth. Show all posts

Monday, February 28, 2011

King’s Speech crowned big winner at Oscars

Firth accepts an Oscar for his role in “The King’s Speech” during the 83rd Academy Awards, February 27, 2011


“The King’s Speech” won four Oscars including best film today (Sunday night local time) during Hollywood’s biggest night when many front-runners claimed glory including Colin Firth and Natalie Portman for best actor and actress.

The world’s top film honours from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences came packed with a lot of comedy onstage from show hosts Anne Hathaway and James Franco but the attention, as always, was on awards and winners.




Portman was named best actress for her role as a young ballerina who grows into womanhood in “Black Swan.” She wiped tears from her eyes onstage collecting her Oscar as she thanked her family, co-stars and director Darren Aronofsky.

“This is insane and I truly, sincerely wish the prize was to get to work with my fellow nominees,” she said.

Firth won best actor for playing stammering British King George VI in “The King’s Speech,” in which the monarch must overcome his speech impediment to lead his country.

“I have a feeling my career just peaked,” Firth joked.

When Tom Hooper was named best director, he thanked his mom for being first to suggest he make “The King’s Speech.”

“The moral of the story is, listen to your mother,” Hooper said.

Melissa Leo and Christian Bale, playing a tough-minded mom and her drug-addicted son in boxing movie “The Fighter,” won supporting actress and actor, while “King’s Speech” writer David Seidler” won for best adapted screenplay and Aaron Sorkin with “The Social Network” earned best original screenplay.

Franco and Hathaway, the first man and woman team to host the Oscars, got the show off to a comic start and continued to make audiences laugh. While they provided a youthful edge to the programme — Hathaway, 28, was the youngest host ever — many of the show’s sequences harkened back to Hollywood’s history.

And top actresses dazzled on the red carpet with bright and colourful fashion choices, a turnaround from more muted styles of recent years that reflected the world’s economic woes.


Photobucket Photobucket

Oscar 2011 The winners of the shortest frocks and celebrity oscar pictures.


 Different shades of black: Kate Beckinsale keeps it classy in black - unlike Jena  Malone who wore a see-through lace number



 Alone: Jessica Biel arrived at the party solo after her boyfriend Justin Timberlake took his mother rather than her to the Oscars ceremony earlier in the evening - but her singer boyfriend joined her later




 Young love: Selena Gomez and Justin Bieber were also on the red carpet at the Vanity Fair Oscars Party at the Sunset Tower in Los Angeles last night


 Still together: Jessica and boyfriend Justin Timberlake cosy up on the sofa at the Vanity Fair party




Back to black: Kate Beckinsale and her husband Len Wiseman looked loved up in matching black at the glitzy bash




 Party people: Mick Jagger and his model girlfriend L'Wren Scott were also on the red carpet, along with Jude Law and his friend Robert Downey Jnr and wife Susan


 

 Golden couples: True Blood's Stephen Moyer and his onscreen and offscreen partner Anna Paquin and Camila Alves and Matthew McConaughey 

 Bobbydazzlers: Taylor Swift, left, shimmered in a short gold strapless gown with matching shoes, whereas Cameron Diaz, right, was wearing a tight off-the-shoulder monochrome print dress with black shoeboots

 All that glisters: Golden girl Taylor made a grand entrance in her sparkling gold frock

 Ladies in red: Previous Academy Award winner Sandra Bullock looked stunning in vivid scarlet while comedy actress Leslie Mann was classy in claret 


 Time to shine: Glee star Lea Michele, Emma Roberts and Claire Danes all had different ideas of red carpet glamour 


 Contrasts: Emma Stone, who stars in the forthcoming The Amazing Spider-Man, wore an interested purple patterned dress, whereas former Road House and Drugstore Cowboy star Kelly Lynch kept it simple in black

Purple patch: 77-year-old Joan Collins looked glamorous as ever in a lilac gown and Rita Wilson was feeling the colour in a patterned silk frock too  


She's got legs: The star was one of the most dazzling at the magazine's post Academy Awards event


 Hot ticket: Colin Firth arrives with his Best Actor Oscar and wife Livia Giuggioli






 Just swell: A beaming Natalie Portman arrived at the bash proudly holding her Oscar for Best Actress for her role in Black Swan

 Past and present: Mick Jagger poses with Justin and then the teen star excitedly shows the snap to girlfriend Selena

 Odd choices: Designers Donna Karan, left, and Diane Von Furstenberg, both missed the mark when it came to style despite their day jobs



 Cam here often? Ms Diaz wasn't shy to show off her stunning physique at the West Hollywood party




Going for gold: Gwyneth Paltrow looked stunning in a shimmering gold asymmetric gown



Black tie, white tie: Mad Men star Jon Hamm and girlfriend Jennifer Westfeldt looked the business at the bash as Cameron caught up with friend Jude Law 





Young love: Selena Gomez and Justin Bieber were also on the red carpet at the Vanity Fair Oscars Party at the Sunset Tower in Los Angeles last night

Photobucket Photobucket

Oscar king Colin Firth says time to turn to comedy


Oscar winner Colin Firth said he wanted to play a comic role after winning widespread critical acclaim and a best actor Academy Award for his portrayal of the stammering King George VI in “The King’s Speech”.

“I want to do comedy,” Firth (picture) told BBC radio early today after winning his Oscar late yesterday.

“I think gravitas is hugely over-egged and I would like to do something that amuses me now, change the pace, change the tone and I think it’s time to continue my long tradition of making a fool of myself.”

The 50-year-old Briton has already enjoyed success in lighter roles, notably as Mark Darcy – the top human rights lawyer who is hapless at love in the “Bridget Jones” series.




That role was a nod to his breakthrough as an actor, playing the aloof Mr Darcy in a 1995 television adaptation of the Jane Austen novel “Pride and Prejudice”.

Asked whether his Oscar might help him shake off some of the associations with that role, Firth replied:

“I think Mr Darcy will be alive and well for the rest of my life. I’d be rather sad to see him go. I think there’s a bit of a misconception that I’m disgruntled about the Darcy thing and I’m not remotely bothered by it.

“I would hate to see that tag leave me, so I’m very happy for it to follow me around.”

He described the feeling of being on stage to receive the highest movie accolade as “reeling backwards through space”.

“I realised when I got up there why some people completely fall apart,” he said.

“You’re reeling backwards through space. People don’t really want to see that, so you have to do your best to do your job with as much as grace as you can possibly muster.”

Firth was nominated for an Oscar last year in the same category, for his role as a closeted gay professor in the drama “A Single Man.”

Firth’s rivals this year were previous Oscar winners Javier Bardem for “Biutiful” and Jeff Bridges for “True Grit”; Jesse Eisenberg for “The Social Network”; and Oscars host James Franco for “127 Hours.”










Photobucket Photobucket

OSCAR WINNERS 2011 and pictures

Group effort: Geoffrey Rush congratulates Tom Hooper as he accepts the Oscar for best director

Kiss for the wife: Firth is congratulated by Livia, who he thanked for putting up 'with my delusions of royalty'




'My career has peaked': Colin Firth had the audience laughing as he picked up his Oscar for best actor

The cast and crew of The King's Speech: Iain Canning, Emile Sherman and Gareth Unwin, and the producers, celebrate their trophy for Best Picture

Great night for British film: Tom Hooper accepts his Oscar for best director as David Seidler accepts best original screenplay; both for The King's Speech

The Oscar winners: Best supporting actor Christian Bale, best actress Natalie Portman, best supporting actress Melissa Leo and best actor Colin Firth celebrate backstage at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood

I did it! Natalie accepts her Oscar for best actress for her role in Black Swan at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles

We're the winners: Hathaway, Franco and the winners celebrate at the end of the show


The show: Hosts James Franco and Anne Hathaway speak onstage at the Kodak Theatre

 'I'm a married man': Presenters Russell Brand and Helen Mirren joke around onstage, with Brand implying that Mirren has a crush on him



It's all mine: Best Actor winner Colin First holds up his award after getting it engraved at the Governors Ball following the awards ceremony



New haircut: A freshly shorn Scarlett Johansson and Matthew McConaughey walk on stage to present the Oscar for best sound mixing



 Presenter Josh Brolin dances with fellow presenter Javier Bardem as they make their way onto stage

Cross dressers: Anne and Franco swap outfits; Franco joked that he had received a text from Charlie Sheen

This one's mine! Natalie seen later at the Governors Ball where she had her award engraved

 Winner for best foreign language Film, Susan Bier accepts her award for her Danish movie In A Better World

 We've got Oscars! Lora Hirschberg, Ed Novick, Gary A Rizzo and presenters Matthew McConaughey and Scarlett Johansson pose backstage after Hirschberg, Novick and Rizzo win the Oscar for achievement in sound mixing for Inception


Shock: Leo holds her face in horror after realising she has sworn onstage as Douglas holds her Oscar

 No Machine: British singer Florence Welch performs If I Rise from the motion picture 127 Hours, a nominee for best original song

The crowd of Oscar nominees and winners watch as Firth gives his thank you speech

 Fellow Australians: Hugh Jackman and Nicole Kidman arrive on stage to present the Oscar for best original score

 Silver ladies: Celine Dion performs onstage, while Hilary Swank presents the Oscar for best director

Your honour: Melissa bows to Kirk Douglas as she joins the 94-year-old screen icon onstage

 Good news: Reese Witherspoon holds her precious golden envelope, while Mila Kunis and Justin Timberlake prepare to announce the winner of the best animated feature and best animated short film

 Nominees: Mandy Moore and Gwyneth Paltrow perform tracks nominated for best original song





 Presenters: Oprah Winfrey presents the award for best documentary to Inside Job, while Cate Blanchett presents the Oscar for best makeup to Wolfman



No hard feelings: Amy Adams congratulates Melissa Leo after The Fighter star won the Oscar for best supporting actress

Tributes: Jennifer Hudson announced an award, while Halle Berry paid tribute to trailblazing actress Lena Horne, the first black woman to sign a contract with a studio


Now for her next role: With her first child on the way, Natalie said she wasn't sure whether she would ever work on another movie like Black Swan



Tearful: Dancer Benjamin Millepied embraces his fiancé Natalie as her win is announced

Photobucket Photobucket