Everything you need to know about this year’s Oscars ceremony
FILE - Oscar statuettes appear backstage at the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles on Feb. 28, 2016. (Photo by Matt Sayles/Invision/AP, File)
After a winter barrage of award shows — the Emmys, the Golden Globes, the Grammys – the grandaddy of them all, the Academy Awards, is here.
The 96th Oscars may be a coronation for , which comes in with a leading 13 nominations, though other films, including , and are in the mix.
Here is everything you need to know about this year’s show.
The Oscars will be held on Sunday March 10 at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.

The award ceremony takes place on Sunday night from about 11pm. ITV, UTV, and YouTube will have live broadcasts of various parts of the awards. RTÉ2 will have a highlights show on Monday night.
Yes, all the original song nominees will be performed on the show. That means Ryan Gosling will serenade everyone with Mark Ronson and Andrew Wyatt’s Barbie power ballad , and Billie Eilish will sing , which she co-wrote with Finneas O’Connell.
The other nominated songs include Diane Warren’s , from Flamin’ Hot, to be performed by Becky G, Jon Batiste and Dan Wilson’s from American Symphony, and Scott George’s from Killers Of The Flower Moon.
Last year’s big acting winners are all coming back to present at the show (a tradition), including Brendan Fraser, Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan and Jamie Lee Curtis.
The academy also announced that co-stars Michelle Pfeiffer and Al Pacino will hand out awards as well — probably not together, however.
Other celebrities to grace the Dolby stage include Zendaya, Matthew McConaughey, Jessica Lange, Nicolas Cage, Mahershala Ali, Sam Rockwell and Luptia Nyong’o. More names will be disclosed as show day gets closer.
Jimmy Kimmel, who hosted last year’s ceremony, will emcee for the fourth time.
That ties him with fellow four-timers Whoopi Goldberg and Jack Lemmon, and leaves Kimmel trailing only Johnny Carson (five), Billy Crystal (nine) and Bob Hope (11) among repeat Oscar hosts.

“I always dreamed of hosting the Oscars exactly four times,” said Kimmel.
The ten nominees for best picture are , , , , , , , , and .
Christopher Nolan’s is the frontrunner. Nolan, the best director favourite, is also poised to win his first Oscar.
The best actress category could be a nail-biter between Lily Gladstone ( ) and Emma Stone ( ). If Gladstone were to win, she would be the first Native American to win an Oscar.
Best actor, too, could be a close contest between Cillian Murphy ( ) and Paul Giamatti ( ). Both would be first-time winners.

Giamatti’s co-star Da’Vine Joy Randolph is favoured to win best-supporting actress, while Robert Downey Jr ( ) is expected to win best-supporting actor. His closest competition is considered Ryan Gosling for .
While , 2023’s biggest box-office hit, comes in with eight nominations, much discussion has revolved around the nominations the film did not receive.
Greta Gerwig was left out of the directing category and Margot Robbie missed out on best actress.

In those omissions, some have seen reflections of the misogyny parodied in Barbie, while others have noted the tough reception comedies have historically had at the Oscars.
The nominations for include best-adapted screenplay (by Gerwig and Noah Baumbach), best supporting actress for America Ferrera and two best song nominees in Billie Eilish’s and the Mark Ronson and Andrew Wyatt composition .
Though recent Oscars have been marked by everything from slaps, envelope snafus and controversies over which awards are presented live during the telecast, this year’s show comes in with no big changes, besides starting an hour earlier.
All of the awards are to be broadcast live, though honorary prizes remain separated in the earlier, untelevised Governors Awards. The academy is adding a new award for best casting, but that trophy will not be presented until the 2026 Oscars.
Composer John Williams is nominated for his record 49th best-score Oscar, for , and 54th overall.
Godzilla is going to the Oscars for the first time, with , notching a nomination for best visual effects.
For the first time, two non-English language films are up for best picture – the German language Auschwitz drama and the French courtroom drama .
