Versuchen GOLD - Frei
THE ART OF WINNING
THE WEEK India
|March 09, 2025
The real drama of the Oscar race happens before the envelope opens
The Oscar season unfolds like a three-act movie—setup, buildup, payoff.
Most people only tune in for the payoff—the star-studded night at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood. Nominees sit in suspense as the presenter announces the winner. Cheers erupt, tears flow, gratitude pours out. If the audience is lucky, they get an awkward moment or a blunder that fuels weeks of water-cooler conversation.
But the real drama? That happens long before the envelopes are opened.
Like any great film, the Oscars begin with the setup. Take last year: seven months after Oppenheimer premiered, its star Cillian Murphy sat down for a quiet CBS interview. He spoke about his wife of 20 years, their two teenage sons, and Scout, their Labrador (named after the character in To Kill a Mockingbird). The timing was no accident—it was December, the start of the Oscar season. From that moment on, the bright-eyed Cillian (pronounced “Kill-ee-an”, meaning bright-headed in Irish) was everywhere: talk shows, magazine covers, roundtables, red carpets. Until, finally, he stood on stage at the Dolby Theatre, Oscar in hand, and said, “I am a very proud Irishman standing here tonight…. Go raibh míle maith agat.” Or, in English: “Thank you very much.”Karla Sofía Gascón could have been this year’s Cillian. Nominated for Best Actress for Emilia Perez, she delivered a career-defining performance as a notorious drug lord who transitions into a woman. As a trans woman playing a trans character in Jacques Audiard’s genre-blending crime-comedy-musical, Gascón became the first openly trans actor nominated for an Oscar. Liberals championed her. The setup was perfect.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 09, 2025-Ausgabe von THE WEEK India.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON THE WEEK India
THE WEEK India
The buzz is real
The investment announcements by Google and other companies in Andhra Pradesh are already yielding tangible results, triggering a real estate surge across Visakhapatnam's IT zones and adjoining districts.
1 mins
January 18, 2026
THE WEEK India
Legacy reloaded
From sugar mills in Uttar Pradesh to Mumbai's high-street retail, a new generation of scions is reshaping India's old businesses
7 mins
January 18, 2026
THE WEEK India
TRIAL IN THE US IS THE ONLY WAY TO GET RID OF MADURO
Mercedes Baptista Guevara is an attorney and diplomat based in Spain.
3 mins
January 18, 2026
THE WEEK India
Wrong decisions, right places
Sometimes a film, a book, and a bottle of vodka blend in ways so unexpectedly perfect that you feel grateful simply for having been present.
4 mins
January 18, 2026
THE WEEK India
TRUST FACTOR
Lokesh's willingness to listen, his comfort with detail, and his bias for execution create confidence
3 mins
January 18, 2026
THE WEEK India
March to Caracas—Yankee oil doo
Lefties and liberals want Narendra Modi to condemn Don Trump's invasion of Venezuela. All invasions are bad; innocents get shot. But if we condemn one, shouldn't we condemn all?
2 mins
January 18, 2026
THE WEEK India
Revision before the exam
BJP and Trinamool use SIR to kick-off state election campaign, but those affected by the exercise remain anxious about their future
5 mins
January 18, 2026
THE WEEK India
Nuclear governance: caution to confidence
Nuclear power has long occupied a singular and somewhat uneasy place in Bharat's public imagination. It has been viewed, often with pride, as proof of scientific achievement and strategic resolve, yet governed with a restraint that reflected a deeper discomfort with the diffusion of risk.
2 mins
January 18, 2026
THE WEEK India
I WANT TO BE KNOWN AS CHIEF JOB CREATOR
Historically, the Telugu Desam Party has been a regional party but it has always had the nation’s interest at heart.
12 mins
January 18, 2026
THE WEEK India
The battle of words
As young adults we certainly used abbreviations and cryptic phrases. But MC and BC did not stand for the master of ceremonies and the era before Christ. They stood for something else which, if said in full, would certainly have made our mothers make us rinse our mouths with soap. Once you have tasted soap, you would not want to taste it ever again.
4 mins
January 18, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
