Marlon Brando rejected an Oscar in 1973. His authentic story is worthy of the best thriller film

On March 27, 1973, Marlon Brando rejected the Oscar for Best Actor for ‘The Godfather’ as a protest against the treatment of Native Americans. What no one knew then is that the statuette would not disappear, but would tour through some very famous hands in Hollywood, among others Roger Moore and Charlie Chaplin. This is the story of a prize that never existed and, even so, was doubled The rejection. On March 27, 1973, before an audience of 85 million viewers, Sacheen Littlefeather took the stage at the 45th Oscars ceremony and rejected the Best Actor award for ‘The Godfather’ on behalf of Marlon Brando. The gesture was historic: it was the first live political speech at the gala, although not the first time that someone rejected the statuette (Brando was preceded by screenwriter Dudley Nichols in 1936 – out of solidarity with the Writers Guild – and actor George C. Scott in 1971 – who called the ceremony “a two-hour meat parade” -). But what happened to the statuette after that night was a mystery that lasted decades. What no one saw. Sacheen Littlefeather never touched the statuette. Roger Moore (a few months away from debuting as James Bond, but already famous for his television role as The Saint) supported her throughout the speech. When Littlefeather left the stage, Moore followed her with the trophy in her hand and verified that no one had devised any protocol for collecting a rejected Oscar. So he took it with him. The 1616. As reconstructed by Bruce Davis, former executive director of the Academy, the statuette (serial number 1616, not 1601 as was believed for years, a failure whose explanation we will now see and which still contaminates multiple chronicles of the journey of this award) accompanied Moore to several parties after the gala. In this way, he presided over tables full of food and drink and received “almost Bondian attention from a good number of women” before stopping for two weeks at the mansion of producer Albert Broccoli. Eventually, Moore’s publicist, Jerry Pam, returned her to the Academy. Jump to 1995. The story seemed closed until, in 1995, the actor turned agent Marty Ingels called a press conference with an explosive statement: a client of his owned the Oscar rejected by Brando and was willing to auction it to benefit a charitable cause. The Academy responded bluntly: that Oscar did not exist. And technically, the Academy was right. Or not at all. Two 1601s. Ingels revealed the trophy’s serial number: 1601. Academy records indicated that number corresponded to a statuette on loan at an exhibition in New York, and a phone call confirmed that it was still there. But then Ingels sent a photograph of the trophy in his possession and indeed, it could be seen that the engraved number was 1601: there were two statuettes with the same number. Something that had never happened since the Academy began recording serials on the trophies in 1950. The explanation for the mess appeared in a record book prior to the computerization of the archives. Above the entry indicating the loan of the 1601 statuette was another line erased with white concealer. Viewed against the light, the page revealed the original text: “1601 — missing during the 45th Oscar ceremony.” The most likely hypothesis, according to Davis, is that the person responsible for the inventory of figurines that night had a duplicate made of the number 1601 and quietly returned it to the archives. But… why? What else happened in that ceremony that led to a duplicate being made? First robbery. The 1601 that Ingels had was not Brando’s Oscar. It was the duplicate of another trophy stolen that same night: video images of the ceremony show that one of the statuettes for the best documentary award, ‘Marjoe’, was left forgotten on the podium when the lights went out for an advertising break. It is, according to Academy records, the only theft of an Oscar directly from the stage in its entire history. Now, Chaplin. While the riddle of the 1601 was being solved, the fate of Brando’s authentic Oscar (the 1616 returned by Moore) took another turn. Charlie Chaplin had won his first Oscar that same year for the soundtrack of ‘Footlights’, a 1952 film that, due to a regulatory loophole already resolved the following year, was eligible twenty years after it was filmed. The Chaplin figurine was mailed to Europe and arrived damaged. Chaplin’s family returned it to the Academy asking for a replacement, and the Academy engraved Chaplin’s name on Brando’s Oscar and sent it to London. Fifty years later. In August 2022, Academy President David Rubin issued a formal apology to Littlefeather in which he called the treatment received for his statements on Brando’s behalf (boos and stamping from the Academy’s leading men) “disproportionate and unjustified” and acknowledged that the damage to his career was “irreparable.” Littlefeather replied wryly.: “It’s only been 50 years. We have to keep our sense of humor; it’s our survival method.” He died on October 2 of that same year, a few weeks after the tribute ceremony that the Academy held in his honor. The trophy marked 1601(A), the duplicate manufactured to cover the theft, never appeared in public again. In Xataka | The 30 best gangster movies: gangsters, triads, camorra and yakuza show the guts of organized crime

Marlon Humphrey is tired of the Chiefs’ dominance in the NFL: “We can’t let them get away with this”

Marlon Humphreystar cornerback of the Baltimore Ravensrepresented a large sector of NFL fans who are already tired of the dominance in the NFL of the Kansas City Chiefswho have won four of the recent five American Conference (AFC) finals and three Super Bowls since 2020, and launched a publication supporting any team that faces them to prevent them from winning the Vince Lombardi again. humphrey He even called himself an “enemy” of the Kansas City team and encouraged the Bills to defeat them. despite the fact that it was the team that eliminated the Ravens last weekend in the divisional round and that will face the Chiefs in the American Conference finals. “I have no reason to say this except that I am your enemy. The Bills, in the AFC final, or any other team in the National Conference have to beat the Chiefs“, stated the defender in a post on his X account. I have no reason to say this other than being a hater. The Bills or whatever NFC team gotta beat the Chiefs. We can’t let them keep getting away with this — marlonhumphrey.eth (@marlon_humphrey) January 21, 2025 The Ravens fell last Sunday 27-25 to the Buffalo Bills in the AFC divisional round, which prevented Baltimore from reaching the AFC title game for the second consecutive year to try to avenge the loss suffered against the Chiefs last season. “We cannot allow them to continue getting away with this.“Insisted the 28-year-old four-time Pro Bowler. Kansas City is the current dominant dynasty in the NFL and the favorite team to become champion again, led by Andy Reid, a coach who reached 300 victories last weekend with his team’s victory against the Houston Texans in the divisional round . Under Reid’s command and led by Patrick Mahomes, three-time Super Bowl MVP, and Travis Kelce, considered the best tight end in the NFL today, Kansas City will play its seventh consecutive AFC final against the Bills next Sunday. If he wins, he will reach his fifth Super Bowl since 2020. It has triumphed in its presentations in the 2020, 2023 and 2024 editions, and is fighting to become the first NFL team to win three Super Bowls in a row, something that Humphrey wants to be prevented at all costs. His request is directed first to the Bills, who will face the Chiefs in the AFC final this Sunday, but in case they fail, it also includes the winner between the Philadelphia Eagles and Washington Commanders, who will play for the NFC title and the pass to the next edition of the Super Bowl, which will be played on February 9 at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans. *With information from EFE. Keep reading:· This is how the NFL Conference Finals look like: Schedules, dates and transmission· Kansas City Chiefs advance to seventh Conference final with victory against Texans· Kansas City Chiefs break audience record in game with Taylor Swift in the stands· Rams sink against Eagles in snowstorm in Philadelphia

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