Entertainment

Oscars to go without host for 1st time in 30 years

For the first time in three decades, this year's Oscars ceremony will go ahead without an official host, an ABC television executive said on Tuesday.

Feb. 24 show seeks to overcome 'messiness' of Kevin Hart's withdrawal as MC

An Oscar statue appears at the 91st Academy Awards Nominees Luncheon in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Feb. 4. Oscars organizers have decided to go without a host for the Feb. 24 ceremony. (Danny Moloshok/Invision/Associated Press)

For the first time in three decades, this year's Oscars ceremony will go ahead without an official host, an ABC television executive said on Tuesday.

Speaking just three weeks before the highest honours in the movie industry are handed out, ABC entertainment president Karey Burke said the Feb. 24 event would forgo a host and "just have presenters host the Oscars."

ABC, a unit of Walt Disney Co., televises the Oscars ceremony annually and is closely involved in planning the telecast.

Comedian Kevin Hart stepped down in December from hosting the ceremony after past homophobic tweets resurfaced. No replacement was announced, but there had been no official statements on how the ceremony would proceed.

The Oscars ceremony, now in its 91st year, has gone without a host before, but not in the past 30 years. The last time was in 1989 — widely considered the worst Oscars ever — when producer Allan Carr decided to go hostless in order to make room for more celebrity presenters.

Burke said this year's decision not to have a host for the show was taken after what she called "the messiness" over the Hart withdrawal and an attempt to revive his chances.

"After that, it was pretty clear that we were going to stay the course and just have presenters host the Oscars. We all got on board with that idea pretty quickly," Burke told reporters at the Television Critics Association meeting in the Los Angeles suburb of Pasadena. 

No host means shorter show

She said the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which organizes the Oscars, had promised ABC last year to keep the telecast to three hours — about 30 minutes shorter than in recent years.

"So the producers, I think, decided wisely to not have a host and to go back to having the presenters and the movies being the stars," Burke said.

The Oscars host traditionally opens the ceremony with a comedic monologue focusing on celebrities, the state of the movie industry as well as cultural and political issues.

Burke said she would hear details from the show producers later this week but said there were plans for "a pretty exciting opening" to the telecast.

Kevin Hart, seen here at the Los Anegeles premiere of 'Night School' in September, was originally tapped to host the Oscars, but stepped down late last year after a series of homophobic tweets he previously wrote resurfaced on social media. (Chris Pizzello/Invision/Associated Press)

She added that speculation over the shape of the ceremony was an encouraging sign that the Oscars were still relevant.

Audiences have dropped in recent years with the 2018 show attracting just 26.5 million viewers, the smallest number ever.

"I have found that the lack of clarity around the Oscars has kept the Oscars in the conversation and that the mystery has been really compelling. People really care," she said.

Mexican drama Roma and British historical comedy The Favourite lead the Oscars nominations with 10 nods apiece.

Burke noted that three of the other best picture nominees — Disney's Black Panther, Warner Bros' A Star is Born and the 21st Century Fox musical Bohemian Rhapsody — had each taken in more than $200 million US at the North American box office alone.

"I think we are going to see a big turnout for this because these are big popular movies that have been nominated," she 
said.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story stated the Oscars has only gone without a host once before. The awards show has, in fact, gone five times without a host.
    Feb 05, 2019 6:56 PM ET