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5 Of The Weirdest Oscar Hosts Ever

Now we know that Anne Hathaway and James Franco are hosting the 2011 Academy Awards, NY Mag decided to take a look at the 5 weirdest people to ever taking the hosting duties at the Oscars and here they are…

Paul Hogan

Will it be awkward for James Franco to host the show the same year he’s expected to receive an Oscar nomination? At least a precedent has been set: In 1987, Paul Hogan co-hosted the ceremony and he, too, was up for an Oscar that night. Yes, that Paul Hogan. Yes, the star of Crocodile Dundee and noted tax dodger. Yes, he began his hosting patter with “G’day, viewers.” Alas, Hogan lost in the Best Original Screenplay category to Woody Allen (sure, why not).

Donald Duck

Animated characters often make a cameo at the Oscars (think of the tuxedo-clad Pixar characters who turn up when the nominees for Best Animated Film are called), but in 1957, Donald Duck was an actual co-host, appearing at the ceremony on film. Like Franco and Hathaway, Donald proved that the Academy is quick to reward actors who frequently go bottomless.

Bob Hope, David Niven, Tony Randall, Mort Sahl, Laurence Olivier, Jerry Lewis

Why have one Oscar host when you can have six? In 1959, the ceremony went with the odd combination of five funnymen and the dead-serious Olivier. Even with six hosts, the ceremony finished twenty minutes early — a near-inconceivable feat in the modern-day era of bloated award shows — and NBC had to cut to a sports rerun to fill the dead air.

Frank Capra

When the Oscars were in their infancy, there wasn’t any conventional wisdom on who should host (nor was there a telecast to worry about), and so it was that one of the biggest directors of the era, Frank Capra, ended up presiding over the eighth Academy Awards in 1936. It may have been a good career move: Capra had taken home the Best Director award the year before for It Happened One Night, and he got another one the following year for Mr. Deeds Goes to Town. (Capra also hosted the first ceremony where the trophies were actually dubbed “Oscars,” a nickname that became officially enshrined three years later.)

No Hosts

The Oscar-hosting gig might be a prestigious one, but for three of the most pivotal years in American history, no one took it. From 1969 to 1971, the Oscars went host-less (this, after a four-year run from Bob Hope), meaning no one was around to comment on unlikely victories like Midnight Cowboy’s X-rated triumph or the 1969 Best Actress tie between Katharine Hepburn and Barbra Streisand. The ceremony has forgone a host only once since; unfortunately, it was in 1989, when the show instead opened with a famously misbegotten musical number starring Rob Lowe and Snow White. (At least the Oscars recovered quickly: The next year, Billy Crystal hosted for the first time.)

Pretty good list in my opinion.

source: The Five Weirdest Oscar Hosts Ever [NY Mag]

 

Anne Hathaway and James Franco To Host The Oscars

Anne Hathaway and James Franco have been announced as the hosts for the 2011 Academy Awards and both are highly tipped to be nominated for best actor and actress at the awards show.

Franco is expected to be nominated for best actor for his role in 127 Hours while Hathaway is expected to be nominated for her role in Love and Other Drugs, which you can see her naked in. A press release says…

“James Franco and Anne Hathaway personify the next generation of Hollywood icons— fresh, exciting and multi-talented. We hope to create an Oscar broadcast that will both showcase their incredible talents and entertain the world on February 27,” said Cohen and Mischer. “We are completely thrilled that James and Anne will be joining forces with our brilliant creative team to do just that.”

The Oscars will take place on Sunday, February 27, 2011, at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood. Kind of a random selection but it makes sense, what do you think of this years hosts?

source: Franco, Hathaway to Host Oscar® Show [Oscars]

 
 


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