I'm not in the habit, as some online pundits are, of dissing articles written by other people but two articles just published enraged me. ...I exaggerate. They made my skin crawl from their indifference and hypocrisy. Let's get the indifference out of our system first.
Variety's "Long and Honorable History of Category Fraud" - Tim Gray
Gray immediately pisses the reasonable Oscar-lover off with the way he begins this defense of Category Fraud, a topic birthed and coined right here at The Film Experience years ago since nobody else was willing to get riled up about it and make it a cause. He introduces the topic in the the context of real world problems with life & death consequences as a way to insure that any complaints about the topic are, in the grand scheme of things, entirely irrelevant. Yes, it's true, Tim. Category Fraud does not lead to car accidents (unless Nathaniel is enraged and driving) and it doesn't threaten the world's natural resources. But this is a cheap argument. Imagine the rage you'd conjure in the reader if you used this same tactic when speaking about the lack of diversity in casting and directing jobs in Hollywood. The same is, in fact, true. Nobody will die and it won't cause starvation or droughts if people of color don't get acting jobs and women aren't considered for directing big budget Hollywood movies. But that is absolutely no reason to not care about these problems!
Every topic will seem small when placed against death and disaster. By this logic the Oscars aren't worth talking about either! But that does not mean that the topics are unimportant within their own "ecosystems." That's Gray's choice of word so let's use it. [More...]
A lot of what Gray does in the article is map out past instances of category fraud and why it happens and he's absolutely right about this point...
Definitions have been fuzzy for decades and actors are generally placed in the supporting category for four reasons: age, star power, ensemble casts or business considerations.
But where he goes wrong is in suggesting that it all balances out (citing the meager lot of arguably supporting roles that went lead of which there are very very few -- screentime is only part of it, people). Where he goes even more terribly wrong is in concluding with this neat bit of rationalization that you can vote for leading roles like Rooney Mara's in supporting whenever you want...
...with a clear conscience. Because Oscar history is on your side.
Believing that something is okay because it has been done for a long time does not mean that it is OK. It merely means that you are complacent or that you just don't care. And if you don't care about the Oscars, move along... we're done here.
A correction that few people seem to realize: this is not always the way it's been. We are dealing with a distortion of history brought on by exactly this kind of anything-goes complacency. Category Fraud has gotten much worse in the past twenty-five years which is why we complain about it so much. It's one thing to accept the rare instances when a child leads a film and is demoted to supporting. The Film Experience accepts that this is almost always the way it's been... even if we don't agree with it. But it's quite another to nominate bonafide adult stars in supporting when they are the protagonist of their film (Jamie Foxx, Collateral anyone) or to refuse to acknowledge that same-gendered double acts are both lead. If Thelma & Louise (1991) or Amadeus (1984) or Terms of Endearment (1983) were released today, the last three instances of double lead nominations in the same category in Oscar history, the studios would pretend that one of the stars in each was "supporting" the other. People would have laughed you out of the room if you had said this in 1983... even in 1991 if you had claimed that.
Things have definitely gotten worse and the gaming more egregious over the years. Awards bodies with consciences must keep an eye on these types of abuses. The Academy has changed many rules over the years -- such as curtailing certain types of campaigning -- to insure that they stay legit and respectable. The Emmy governing body recently had to change the rules on "Guest Actor" because people had been abusing the category so much campaigning in "Guest" and winning when they were obviously "recurring" characters in every episode. That was a clearly fraudulent practice. They finally had put a stop to it.
So the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences needs to do something as we've been reaching peak fraud for some time. My suggestion is an executive committee that makes rulings on the lead vs supporting cases. Our other suggestion --that leading actors pretending to be supporting actors for the sake of prizes have to give back their lead salary perhaps to SAG to support out of work character actors -- and accept whatever salary they might have been offered for a non-headlining role in its place.) The Tony Awards already have a committee to make these determinations. The committee's choices are sometimes controversial but for the most part the system works and the stars of Broadway shows are not allowed to pretend that they're not one of the headliners if they think they'd have a better chance of winning that way.
Finally it's worth noting -- and we don't care if we sound like a broken record people -- that the Supporting Category was created when people in Hollywood noticed a vacuum. There was no way for character actors to be honored since only stars were given Oscars as there was only prizes for leading players. Back in the studio system the lines between headliners and characters actors were much less blurry but no matter: The Academy Awards should stay true to the spirit of the definition of supporting actor and the original purpose of the category's creation.
Then they can feel free to vote with a clear conscience.
P.S. Despite my anger, I would like to thank Tim Gray for this following bit of trivia that I had either forgotten or never knew. It's just wonderful and true to its film.
In 1964’s “Dr. Strangelove,” Peter Sellers played three roles, so Columbia had four campaigns: One as lead actor, and three pushes in the supporting category, for each of the characters. Nowadays, the studio would be endlessly blasted on Twitter and in blogs, but you have to admit, it’s a pretty fun idea and in keeping with the anarchic spirit of the film. (For the record, Sellers was nominated once, as lead.)