Steve Martin, Alec Baldwin to co-host Oscars
By SANDY COHEN
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin are taking on
the Oscars.
The two Hollywood veterans will share hosting duties at the 82nd
Academy Awards, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
said Tuesday.
Telecast producers Bill Mechanic and Adam Shankman said Martin
and Baldwin are ``the perfect pair of hosts for the Oscars.'' The
producers have said they hope to resurrect Oscar's ratings and make
the show more fun by building on the changes introduced at
February's ceremony, which tinkered with the way awards were
presented and featured Broadway-style musical interludes.
Bringing in a pair of hosts, while not unprecedented, continues
that theme of change.
``Very early on, we talked about a pairing as part of our
concept of the show, having tradition and also freshness walking
hand in hand,'' Shankman said in an interview Tuesday. ``Steve
anchors it in so much tradition and Alec ... besides being a former
Oscar nominee, he is just hot, hot, hot right now. And the two of
them I know adore each other.''
A pair of hosts helmed the inaugural Oscar ceremony in 1929:
Douglas Fairbanks and William DeMille, then president and vice
president of the film academy, co-hosted the show. The last time
multiple hosts graced the Oscar stage was in 1987, when Chevy
Chase, Goldie Hawn and Paul Hogan shared hosting duties.
``In the modern television era, this is the first time there
will be two co-hosts on the same stage,'' academy spokeswoman
Leslie Unger said Tuesday.
Hugh Jackman sang and danced as host of last year's Academy
Awards, which saw a ratings boost from the previous year. The
41-year-old actor declined to reprise his hosting role before
Mechanic and Shankman were named as producers.
Splitting hosting duties between two funny fellows ups the
show's fun factor, Mechanic said - ``taking a little starch out of
the shirts, so to speak.''
``We can move things along more easily by taking out some of the
stilted banter that goes on between presenters and let the hosts
guide us through the evening,'' he said Tuesday.
Martin has hosted the show twice before, in 2001 and 2003, and
has appeared as a presenter several times. Baldwin is a first-timer
as Oscar host, but was a co-presenter in 2004.
Baldwin, 51, who stars on NBC's ``30 Rock,'' called the Oscar
gig ``the opportunity of a lifetime.'' He was nominated for an
Academy Award in 2003 for his supporting role in ``The Cooler.''
Martin said that he is ``happy to co-host the Oscars with my
enemy Alec Baldwin.'' The 64-year-old entertainer is currently on
tour in support of his latest banjo album. He and Baldwin share the
screen in Nancy Meyers' film ``It's Complicated,'' due in theaters
next month.
Besides the dual-host approach, the 2010 Oscars have already
undergone a major makeover. The academy moved its honorary Oscars,
often a long-winded affair that bogged down the ceremony, to a
separate event in November.
And in the biggest change in decades, the academy doubled the
number of best-picture nominees from five to 10. Academy overseers
hope that might open the top category to a wider range of films,
including commercial movies that could attract more TV viewers.
Telecast plans are shaping up well, said Mechanic, who made
three promises about the 82nd Academy Awards ceremony on March 7,
2010: ``It will be more fun this year, it will be faster this year
and it will be the best of the best.''
On the Net:
www.oscars.org
11/03/09 20:55
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