Dubai Telegraph - Thank you! Oscars speeches over the years

EUR -
AED 3.844084
AFN 76.916481
ALL 99.092401
AMD 411.846897
ANG 1.888849
AOA 958.77574
ARS 1110.715045
AUD 1.663224
AWG 1.886674
AZN 1.778173
BAM 1.95366
BBD 2.116102
BDT 127.330523
BGN 1.954731
BHD 0.394448
BIF 3104.129408
BMD 1.046698
BND 1.402877
BOB 7.242033
BRL 6.074826
BSD 1.048062
BTN 91.308545
BWP 14.446451
BYN 3.429759
BYR 20515.289648
BZD 2.105214
CAD 1.502195
CDF 3004.024864
CHF 0.938638
CLF 0.025706
CLP 986.45038
CNY 7.61593
CNH 7.613025
COP 4296.519204
CRC 530.029536
CUC 1.046698
CUP 27.737509
CVE 110.143823
CZK 24.935479
DJF 186.627352
DKK 7.458286
DOP 65.329063
DZD 141.170312
EGP 52.950276
ERN 15.700477
ETB 135.376203
FJD 2.41018
FKP 0.824558
GBP 0.826965
GEL 2.946425
GGP 0.824558
GHS 16.244129
GIP 0.824558
GMD 74.842813
GNF 9063.158846
GTQ 8.08011
GYD 219.258778
HKD 8.137657
HNL 26.796903
HRK 7.523906
HTG 137.129789
HUF 399.493337
IDR 17207.042187
ILS 3.724624
IMP 0.824558
INR 91.288695
IQD 1372.902687
IRR 44079.090394
ISK 145.49083
JEP 0.824558
JMD 165.070759
JOD 0.742637
JPY 156.309794
KES 135.341442
KGS 91.533868
KHR 4202.396714
KMF 492.474973
KPW 942.023427
KRW 1509.768302
KWD 0.322802
KYD 0.873348
KZT 524.408071
LAK 22751.187137
LBP 93715.355869
LKR 309.792135
LRD 209.079976
LSL 19.28287
LTL 3.090628
LVL 0.633137
LYD 5.112449
MAD 10.394564
MDL 19.545683
MGA 4945.677029
MKD 61.545783
MMK 2196.902098
MNT 3629.904388
MOP 8.391548
MRU 41.774639
MUR 48.598296
MVR 16.099799
MWK 1817.344015
MXN 21.382691
MYR 4.653617
MZN 66.894394
NAD 19.28287
NGN 1568.62429
NIO 38.568121
NOK 11.693244
NPR 146.095364
NZD 1.842634
OMR 0.40298
PAB 1.048047
PEN 3.857175
PGK 4.219459
PHP 60.617465
PKR 293.318705
PLN 4.139274
PYG 8302.984275
QAR 3.820796
RON 4.977014
RSD 117.171627
RUB 90.879154
RWF 1475.597735
SAR 3.925476
SBD 8.81528
SCR 15.057801
SDG 629.065774
SEK 11.162772
SGD 1.40368
SHP 0.831734
SLE 23.969496
SLL 21948.749078
SOS 598.949636
SRD 37.105471
STD 21664.544668
SVC 9.169999
SYP 13608.924292
SZL 19.291237
THB 35.489879
TJS 11.423332
TMT 3.663445
TND 3.31795
TOP 2.451475
TRY 38.158125
TTD 7.11524
TWD 34.363633
TZS 2715.135553
UAH 43.624448
UGX 3855.758002
USD 1.046698
UYU 44.750766
UZS 13498.214119
VES 67.156617
VND 26753.612418
VUV 128.98835
WST 2.954162
XAF 655.245507
XAG 0.032971
XAU 0.000362
XCD 2.828755
XDR 0.798341
XOF 655.245507
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.822347
ZAR 19.312387
ZMK 9421.540212
ZMW 29.685766
ZWL 337.036474
  • RBGPF

    67.1300

    67.13

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    8

    -0.25%

  • CMSD

    -0.0200

    23.65

    -0.08%

  • RELX

    -1.4500

    48.25

    -3.01%

  • SCS

    -0.1100

    12.42

    -0.89%

  • RIO

    -0.5300

    61.58

    -0.86%

  • CMSC

    -0.0700

    23.58

    -0.3%

  • GSK

    -0.9600

    37.4

    -2.57%

  • NGG

    -0.1700

    62.56

    -0.27%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    8.7

    -0.57%

  • AZN

    0.1200

    75.52

    +0.16%

  • BTI

    0.3000

    38.86

    +0.77%

  • BP

    -0.5500

    32.68

    -1.68%

  • BCC

    -2.3600

    104.07

    -2.27%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.73

    -0.16%

  • BCE

    -0.5500

    23.36

    -2.35%

Thank you! Oscars speeches over the years
Thank you! Oscars speeches over the years / Photo: Robyn BECK - AFP/File

Thank you! Oscars speeches over the years

At the Oscars over the years, we have seen it all with the winners' speeches, ranging from dull, endless, cringe, heartwarming or, when we're lucky, hilarious.

Text size:

A few stick in the mind, from the astounded gasps of an 11-year-old Anna Paquin to Patricia Arquette's rousing feminist oration that brought Meryl Streep to her feet for a standing ovation.

But, taken together, an AFP analysis of nearly 2,100 speeches dating back to March 1953, of which 80 percent are by men, reveals winners most often thank the Academy, their family, the film crew or a movie influence.

- Pithy and epic -

Speeches averaged nearly three sentences in the 1950s but since winners have become more talkative on stage: in 2024 they reached 15 sentences. On Tuesday, this year's nominees were urged to stick to a 45-second speech.

Daniel Kaluuya, Best Supporting Actor for "Judas and the Black Messiah" in 2021, delivered the most epic speech ever, running for almost 70 sentences.

In three minutes 30 seconds, the British actor who has Ugandan parents thanked some 30 people from God to his team, taking in his family and "everyone (he) loves, from London Town to Kampala".

At the other extreme, nearly 200 winners took the fast route back to their seats, delivering one-sentence speeches.

In 1954 when "Titanic" trio Charles Brackett, Walter Reisch and Richard Breen won Best Original Screenplay, Brackett barely got out a "Thank you" before the trio was ushered aside on stage.

Women, meanwhile, are the longest orators, averaging over nine sentences compared to seven for men.

By category, Best Actress winners deliver the longest speeches, with 18 sentences, two and a half more than their male counterparts.

- All about gratitude -

Naturally most thank-you speeches are all about saying thanks -- the word "thank" appears in nearly 95 percent of all speeches in AFP's analysis.

Of the five percent remaining, some were being more imaginative in their choice of words -- Vincente Minnelli for example expressed his "gratitude" in 1959 when he received the Best Director Oscar for "Gigi".

Arthur Harari won in 2024 with Justine Triet for Best Original Screenplay ("Anatomy of a Fall") -- his partner had given all the thank-yous.

Looked at by category, the Best Actresses with their longer speeches are also the ones who say thank you the most, using "thank" 6.2 times on average.

Positively loquacious with her more than 60 sentences, Halle Berry dedicated half of those to thanks in 2002 when she became the first Black actress in Oscar history to win, for "Monster's Ball".

After opening with two "Oh my Gods" followed by "this moment is so much bigger than (her)," she dedicated her award to "every nameless, faceless woman of color that now has a chance because this door tonight has been opened".

In contrast Frances McDormand, not one to mince her words, almost skipped the "thanks" entirely when she won her first of three top actress awards for "Fargo" in 1997 by the Coen brothers.

She did slip one in right at the end -- "Thank you for acknowledging our work" -- and had dished out a congratulation to producers for "allowing directors to make autonomous casting decisions based on qualifications and not just market value".

- From God to Spielberg -

The giver of the golden statuette, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, is the most frequently cited entity in speeches.

In the 1950s it features in one out of 12 speeches; in the last decade, one out of two.

Another frequent reference is to "God," appearing nearly 190 times in over 140 speeches.

More than six out of 10 occurrences refer to the religious figure, among which slightly less than half are as part of phrases with "God bless" to the audience, America, the Academy...

Among all instances of "God", one in five corresponds to the phrase "Oh (my) God", which does not directly refer to the religious figure.

Among individuals, Hollywood titan Steven Spielberg -- a nominee 23 times and winner three -- is the most mentioned name, coming up around 40 times.

A.El-Sewedy--DT