Al Pacino’s unconventional delivery of the 2024 Oscars’ best picture winner Sunday night had some people in the audience wondering if the Godfather star was winging it with Oscar tradition, but Pacino says he was largely following the Academy’s own script.
“There seems to be some controversy about my not mentioning
every film by name last night before announcing the best picture award,” Pacino
said in a statement issued Monday. “I just want to be clear it was not my
intention to omit them, rather a choice by the producers not to have them said
again since they were highlighted individually throughout the ceremony. I was honored to be a part of the evening and
chose to follow the way they wished for this award to be presented.
“I realize being nominated is a huge milestone in one’s life
and to not be fully recognized is offensive and hurtful,” Pacino continued. “I
say this as someone who profoundly relates with filmmakers, actors and
producers so I deeply empathize with those who have been slighted by this
oversight, and it’s why I felt it necessary to make this statement.”
During the show, Pacino announced the winner of the biggest
award of the night by saying, “Ten wonderful films were nominated, but only one
will take the award for best picture.” He did not announce all the films in the
category, instead going directly to the envelope, which felt hurried and a
little anticlimactic to some. “I have to go to the envelope for that, and I
will,” Pacino said on the telecast. “Here it comes. And my eyes see
Oppenheimer. Yes. Yes.”
Throughout the night, the Academy had been paying tribute to
the individual best picture nominees with video clips, and producers felt that
those presentations had sufficiently done the job of acknowledging the films.
In the interest of keeping the show from running long, Oscars producer Molly
McNearney told Variety that, “We did not give [Pacino] a clip package. We did
not give him nominations to read. I apologize if our decision to not have to
read through all those nominations put him in a tough spot.”
Up until Tuesday, Pacino had been scheduled to co-present
best picture with his Scarface co-star Michelle Pfeiffer, but Pfeiffer ended up
staying in New York for a family matter, according to multiple sources. At
Oscar rehearsals at the Dolby Theatre on Saturday, Pacino practiced his
delivery solo, without the nominees’ names, as he would do on the telecast,
according to a source who was at rehearsals.
After the ceremony, Academy chief executive Bill Kramer
praised Pacino’s delivery to The New York Times. “Everything went beautifully,”
Kramer said. “He was just having fun up there.”
The hubbub over Pacino’s Oscar night delivery overshadowed another piece of news the actor made on Monday, the announcement that his memoir, Sonny Boy, will be published this fall by Penguin Press. On that text, at least, Pacino’s got the last say.