By Merlin Lessler
I watched the Academy Awards the other
night. I’m not an adoring fan of the Hollywood set, but the
“Oscars” usually provide a gaff or two that make it worth
watching. Oh sure, I appreciate a good acting performance, just like
I appreciate the plumber when he fixes my sink (especially after I
tried and failed) and the guy who makes my pizza. They’re great at
what they do, as much or more so than the actor or actress that hits
their mark on a stage or studio set. But, I’m at odds with the
people who put movie starts on a pedestal, above the guy who fixes
their car.
Just once, I’d like to see a winner
accept the Oscar, turn to the audience, Say, “Thank you,” and
walk off the stage. Instead of going through an endless list of names
that nobody in the viewing audience knows or wants to know, thanking
them for their help, without which they couldn’t have performed so
excellently; the make up person, the director, the screen play
writer, (everyone but the security guard at the studio gate). Just
say, “Thank you,” and SHUT UP! Instead, we are treated to an
unending stream of incoherent drivel until the stage crew drags the
ego in a suit (or dress) off the stage.
What a horrible world it would be if we
all acted that way. “Dear, that was a great dinner!” – “Why
thank you. And the electrician that connected the stove, the grocery
store clerk that bagged the ingredients, the old coot who stopped his
car before backing over me in the parking lot and my mom and dad for
teaching me to open a can and use the microwave and blah, blah,
blah.”
Even a simple thing like holding a door
open for a person would turn into an elongated acceptance speech, “I
owe it all to the carpenter who installed the hinges and the knob,
the architect who made the space wide enough to fit through, but most
of all, to my third grade teacher, who taught me how to turn a knob
and inspired me to keep working until I mastered the skill.
Oh yes, the Academy Awards offer so
many examples of how not to behave; it’s definitely worth watching,
especially if you’re out of the loop and forced to keep asking, Who
is that?” and, “What are they talking about?” You do it so
often that everyone in the room eventually turns to you and says,
“Would you please shut up!” Which is exactly what you’d like
the audience at the Oscars to say to the winner 15 seconds into an
acceptance speech. And now, I’ll take my own advice, and shut up.