Culture
Sean Baker Wins Best Director Oscar for ‘Anora’
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Whoever won the prize for best director on Sunday night was going to receive a first directing Oscar, but no nominee has labored as a filmmaker more single-mindedly for a longer time than Sean Baker, the creative force behind “Anora.”
By winning the Oscars for director, original screenplay, film editing and best picture (as a producer), Baker tied the record for most Oscars won by an individual in one year with a very famous name. Walt Disney won four awards for four different films in 1954, none of them particularly well remembered today.
“Anora,” a Cinderella story that foregrounds hot topics like class, immigration and global capitalism through the story of a stripper who initially accepts money for sex, is in many ways typical of Baker’s oeuvre. Like several of his past movies, including “Tangerine” (2015) and “The Florida Project” (2017), it blends comedy and drama, depicts sex workers sympathetically and makes copious use of nonprofessional actors.
But “Anora” signaled Baker’s mainstream recognition. Nearly a year ago, the film won the Palme d’Or, the top prize at the Cannes Film Festival; more recently, it picked up top prizes from the directors and producers guilds. On Sunday, the movie’s star, Mikey Madison, received the Oscar for lead actress.
Baker beat out the directors Jacques Audiard, for “Emilia Pérez”; Brady Corbet, for “The Brutalist”; Coralie Fargeat, for “The Substance”; and James Mangold, for “A Complete Unknown.”
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