Adrien Brody and Mikey Madison lead Oscar wins as Anora emerges victorious

Sean Baker became the first person to win four Oscars for a single film at one ceremony
Mikey Madison, winner of the award for best performance by an actress in a leading role for Anora (Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)

Mikey Madison, winner of the award for best performance by an actress in a leading role for Anora (Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)

American actors Adrien Brody and Mikey Madison were among the big winners at the Oscars on a night which saw Anora leading the pack with five wins.

Madison, 25, beat Hollywood stalwart Demi Moore to take home the best actress gong for her role in the comedy Anora, in which she plays a stripper who falls for the son of a Russian oligarch.

The film also won best picture, film editing, original screenplay and best director for Sean Baker, who used his speech to make a plea for the return of theatregoers to cinemas following the pandemic.

Baker has become the first person to win four Oscars for a single film at one ceremony. Previously Walt Disney won the same amount in one night but for different films.

Madison, who was the youngest in the best actress category this year, said the win was “very surreal” and she also paid tribute to the sex worker community saying she would “continue to support (them) and be an ally”.

Brody, 51, now a double-Oscar winner, took home the leading actor gong for The Brutalist, a film about a Jewish-Hungarian architect who flees the horrors of the Second World War for a better life in the US.

On stage, Brody said he felt “so fortunate” adding: “Acting is a very fragile profession. It looks very glamorous and (at) certain moments it is, but the one thing that I’ve gained, having the privilege to come back here, is to have some perspective.”

Adrien Brody accepts the award for best performance by an actor in a leading role for The Brutalist (Chris Pizzello/AP)

As music played him off stage mid-speech, he added: “I’m here once again to represent the lingering traumas and the repercussions of war and systematic oppression and of antisemitism and racism and of othering and I pray for a healthier and a happier and a more inclusive world.”

American actress Zoe Saldana declared she is a “proud child of immigrant parents” during a tearful acceptance speech after winning the best supporting actress Oscar.

Zoe Saldana, winner of the award for best performance by an actress in a supporting role for Emilia Perez, poses in the press room at the Oscars (Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)

Saldana, 46, was named the winner in the category over stars including actor and singer Ariana Grande, Felicity Jones, Monica Barbaro and Italian stalwart Isabella Rossellini.

She won the Oscar, her first, for her role in Netflix’s Spanish-language film Emilia Perez, in which she plays a lawyer called Rita who helps a Mexican drug lord change gender.

The film, which had led the Oscar nominations with 13, did not emerge as a leader on the night, with only two wins, after one of its stars, Karla Sofia Gascon, made headlines over historic social media posts.

Kieran Culkin, 42, won the best supporting actor Oscar early on in the evening, beating Edward Norton, Guy Pearce and his Succession co-star Jeremy Strong in the category, as the 97th awards show got under way in Los Angeles.

He scooped the gong for A Real Pain, the Jesse Eisenberg-directed film about two cousins who go to their grandmother’s home country of Poland to trace their roots.

Culkin also joked during his speech that his wife, Jazz Charton, had promised him a fourth child if he won an Oscar.

Kieran Culkin, winner of the award for best performance by an actor in a supporting role for A Real Pain, poses in the press room (Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)

British composer Daniel Blumberg won original score and Lol Crawley, who grew up in Wales, won the cinematography Oscar, both for The Brutalist.

Writer Peter Straughan won the adapted screenplay gong for papal drama Conclave.

The night’s host, US comedian Conan O’Brien, kicked off the ceremony with a recreation of a gruesome scene from body horror The Substance.

His opening monologue referenced the controversy surrounding Emilia Perez, and later in the evening he appeared to make reference to criticism of US President Donald Trump’s views on Russian President Vladimir Putin amid the war with Ukraine.

Actress and singer Grande opened the show singing The Wizard Of Oz song Somewhere Over The Rainbow, and was later joined by her co-star Erivo for a duet of Defying Gravity from Wicked.

Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande perform Defying Gravity (Chris Pizzello/AP)

Another musical tribute saw singers Raye, Blackpink member Lisa and US rapper and singer Doja Cat perform a James Bond tribute.

The performance honoured James Bond producers Michael G Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, who were announced as winners of the Academy’s Irving G Thalberg Memorial Award in 2024 and given Oscar statuettes at the Governors Awards.

Last month, Amazon MGM Studios announced they would take creative control over the 007 character with a new venture that will see them co-own the franchise rights with Wilson and Broccoli.

Oscar winner Morgan Freeman introduced the In Memoriam segment and paid tribute to actor Gene Hackman, who was last month found dead along with his wife, Betsy Arakawa and their dog, at their home in New Mexico.

Morgan Freeman speaks about Gene Hackman during the Oscars on Sunday (Chris Pizzello/AP)

Multiple nominees including Chalamet-starring A Complete Unknown, prison-set Sing Sing, The Apprentice, about Trump’s early years as a real estate developer, Nickel Boys, based on the novel from Colson Whitehead, and vampire film Nosferatu went home empty-handed on the night.

Full list of Oscar winners 

Best picture 

  • Winner: Anora 
  • The Brutalist 
  • A Complete Unknown 
  • Conclave 
  • Dune: Part Two 
  • Emilia Pérez 
  • I'm Still Here 
  • Nickel Boys 
  • The Substance 
  • Wicked

Best actress 

  • Winner: Mikey Madison - Anora 
  • Cynthia Erivo - Wicked 
  • Karla Sofía Gascón - Emilia Pérez 
  • Demi Moore - The Substance 
  • Fernanda Torres - I'm Still Here

Best actor 

  • Winner: Adrien Brody - The Brutalist 
  • Timothée Chalamet - A Complete Unknown 
  • Colman Domingo - Sing Sing 
  • Ralph Fiennes - Conclave 
  • Sebastian Stan - The Apprentice

Best supporting actress 

  • Winner: Zoe Saldaña - Emilia Pérez 
  • Monica Barbaro - A Complete Unknown 
  • Ariana Grande - Wicked 
  • Felicity Jones - The Brutalist 
  • Isabella Rossellini - Conclave

Best supporting actor 

  • Winner: Kieran Culkin - A Real Pain 
  • Yura Borisov - Anora 
  • Edward Norton - A Complete Unknown 
  • Guy Pearce - The Brutalist 
  • Jeremy Strong - The Apprentice

Best director 

  • Winner: Sean Baker - Anora 
  • Jacques Audiard - Emilia Pérez 
  • Brady Corbet - The Brutalist 
  • Coralie Fargeat - The Substance 
  • James Mangold - A Complete Unknown

Best international feature 

  • Winner: I'm Still Here - Brazil 
  • The Girl with the Needle - Denmark 
  • Emilia Pérez - France 
  • The Seed of the Sacred Fig - Germany 
  • Flow - Latvia

Best animated feature 

  • Winner: Flow 
  • Inside Out 2 
  • Memoir of a Snail 
  • Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl 
  • The Wild Robot

Best original screenplay 

  • Winner: Anora - Sean Baker 
  • The Brutalist - Brady Corbet and Mona Fastvold 
  • A Real Pain - Jesse Eisenberg 
  • September 5 - Moritz Binder, Tim Fehlbaum, Alex David 
  • The Substance - Coralie Fargeat

Best adapted screenplay 

  • Winner: Conclave - Peter Straughan 
  • A Complete Unknown - Jay Cocks and James Mangold 
  • Emilia Pérez - Jacques Audiard 
  • Nickel Boys - RaMell Ross and Joslyn Barnes 
  • Sing Sing - Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar

Best original song 

  • Winner: El Mal - Emilia Pérez 
  • Never Too Late - Elton John: Never Too Late 
  • Mi Camino - Emilia Pérez 
  • Like A Bird - Sing Sing 
  • The Journey - The Six Triple Eight

Best original score 

  • Winner: The Brutalist 
  • Conclave 
  • Emilia Pérez 
  • Wicked 
  • The Wild Robot

Best documentary feature 

  • Winner: No Other Land 
  • Black Box Diaries 
  • Porcelain War 
  • Soundtrack to a Coup d'Etat 
  • Sugarcane

Best costume design 

  • Winner: Wicked 
  • Nosferatu 
  • A Complete Unknown 
  • Conclave 
  • Gladiator II

Best make-up and hairstyling 

  • Winner: The Substance 
  • A Different Man 
  • Emilia Pérez 
  • Nosferatu 
  • Wicked

Best production design 

  • Winner: Wicked 
  • The Brutalist 
  • Dune: Part Two 
  • Nosferatu 
  • Conclave

Best sound 

  • Winner: Dune: Part Two 
  • A Complete Unknown 
  • Emilia Pérez 
  • Wicked 
  • The Wild Robot

Best film editing 

  • Winner: Anora 
  • The Brutalist 
  • Conclave 
  • Emilia Pérez 
  • Wicked

Best cinematography 

  • Winner: The Brutalist 
  • Dune: Part Two 
  • Emilia Pérez 
  • Maria 
  • Nosferatu

Best visual effects 

  • Winner: Dune: Part Two 
  • Alien: Romulus 
  • Better Man 
  • Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes 
  • Wicked

Best live action short 

  • Winner: I'm Not a Robot 
  • Anuja 
  • The Last Ranger 
  • A Lien 
  • The Man Who Could Not Remain Silent

Best animated short 

  • Winner: In the Shadow of the Cypress 
  • Beautiful Men 
  • Magic Candies 
  • Wander to Wonder 
  • Yuck!

Best documentary short 

  • Winner: The Only Girl in the Orchestra 
  • Death by Numbers 
  • I Am Ready, Warden 
  • Incident 
  • Instruments of a Beating Heart

x

More in this section

Scene & Heard

Newsletter

From music and film to books and visual art, explore the best of culture in Munster and beyond. Selected by our Arts Editor and delivered weekly.

Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited