Awards, Academy and Guild Hall
Maybe I'm suffering from award deprivation as opposed to the usual fatigue, but I found the Academy Awards show unsurprising but satisfying, from Barbara Walters' pre-event interview with the modest Ellen Page, to Marion Cotillard's win. Wearing a white, detailed Jean Paul Gaultier gown, Cotillard has old school glamour; having met her on opening night of last year's Rendez-Vous with French Cinema (this year's opens this Friday) when “La Vie en Rose” premiered, I knew she was charming and fresh. I was pleased to have Forest Whitaker's prediction affirmed--that he would be handing the statue to her.
The academy did not spread the wealth. Often the major writing, directing, and best film honors are divided, but hey, just the idea that the Coens' quirky, indie sensibility could reign supreme at the venerable Oscars is ok by me. I just wish Julian Schnabel's “Diving Bell and the Butterfly” had received greater recognition. Among his important credits, the outsized painter is responsible for having put Javier Bardem on American radar, as Cuban writer Reinaldo Arenas, caught in Castro's revolution! I got every word of Javier's Best Supporting acceptance speech for playing the creepy villain in “No Country for Old Men”-his salute to mom and country--and I don't know Spanish!
As for satisfying awards events, you cannot beat Guild Hall's gala, held every year at The Rainbow Room. Great people, food, and speeches. Yes, speeches. But with this year's Lifetime Achievement Awards going to artist David Salle, playwright Joe Pintauro, and filmmaker Mel Brooks-yes, that Mel Brooks, this year's event on March 3 will be extra hilarious, and also a reminder of what an excellent arts institution can provide a community. At a pre-awards cocktail party at the Core Club last month, David Salle and I talked about an extraordinary dance performance held last summer in Tony Ingraio's East Hampton sculpture garden. Salle had created a silver tree for the bare stage, a luminous tree that made everything around it shine. That's a great metaphor for Guild Hall.








