LOS ANGELES β The day after the Oscars, executive producer and showrunner Raj Kapoor is feeling a bit exhausted. After preparing for Hollywoodβs biggest night for months and months, it can feel a little surreal to realize that itβs over. But heβs also feeling good about what he and hundreds of others put together, not just for the nominees and winners but for the millions watching around the world.
βI feel really good,β Kapoor told The Associated Press on Monday. βIt is one of those things where you work so hard on putting something together and the next day youβre absolutely exhausted and can barely talk. But itβs still kind of an amazing feeling.β
Recommended Videos
And no matter how much they planned, the thing that Kapoor, who won an Emmy for the 96th Oscars two years ago, and fellow producer Katy Mullan know is that thereβs only so much control one has when producing a live television show. And they are always expecting the unexpected.
How Kumail Nanjiani handled the tie
Perhaps the most surprising part of the night was when Kumail Nanjiani opened the envelope for best live-action short and announced that there was a tie. βIβm not joking,β he said from the stage.
Kapoor said that Nanjiani was given a heads up from Oscar accountants PricewaterhouseCoopers that it was a tie moments before he walked onstage. No one coached him about what to do. And Nanjiani handled the unusual situation calmly and deftly, saying he would announce the winners one at a time, giving both their moment onstage.
βHe was kind of like the perfect person to do that at that time,β Kapoor said. βI was so impressed with just how he handled it, how our team handled it. Itβs a very fast moving show and itβs really complex from automation to stage cues to our trophy presenters and it is a whole night of choreography. So anytime something unusual happens I just have to give full credit to our full production team of just how aware they are to make those pivots and changes at the last minute.β
Did Conan always know when he was on camera?
Some viewers watching from home wondered whether returning host Conan OβBrien always knew when he was on camera. There were moments when it seemed like he had been caught in a private moment, reacting to what was happening onstage, like during the live-action short speech that was almost cut short.
Kapoor said he canβt speak to that moment because even heβs not sure whether the host was caught off guard.
βConan is the master of improv and heβs the master of reaction. And sometimes, you know, I, like, I honestly could not tell,β he said. βI heard the cue go out. But the way that Conan played that bit, it could have been a Conan bit. He is one of those people that are so talented. And sometimes you really donβt know what he has planned.β
The βSinnersβ moment that didnβt want to end
Those in the audience knew that the βSinnersβ performance carried on after the broadcast cut to commercial. Kapoor said they did always have a reprise planned for the juke joint recreation.
βThere were so many talented musicians in that segment and I think they were just really living in that moment and wanting to have the party continue because I think the energy in the room felt electric and I really think between the audience and the performers onstage, nobody really wanted it to end,β Kapoor said. βUnfortunately, we had to change over our stage, otherwise we would have left them there a little longer.β
Tough choices and cuts
The producers are constantly monitoring the showβs timing, and while they have a little bit of wiggle room with Disney and ABC, they are always trying to come in at 3 Β½ hours or under.
βItβs our responsibility to keep the train on its tracks,β he said. βBut really more than halfway during the show is when more crucial decisions have to be made. If we are continually stretching and adding more time, we have to start reining it in.β
One of those tough decisions happened when βGoldenβ won best original song, and they made the call to cut the speech at the designated time. It wasnβt a slow fade either, but a definitive cut microphone and a full volume orchestra.
βAll the nominees are given guidelines of how long they have to speak and ultimately, in a lot of categories where thereβs multiple nominees, weβve asked for them to designate somebody to speak on behalf of everybody thatβs nominated in that category,β Kapoor said. βItβs that moment where somebody feels like theyβre done and the music has already been called to play. So at that point, the orchestra is playing, we are now moving on to the next segment. But ultimately, at that time in the show, we are now very, very extremely conscious of time. And want to be fair to all the nominees, so that ends up being a tough decision to make.β
Yes, they hoped the in memoriam made you cry
One of their proudest, and most delicately planned, moments was the in memoriam, which included gathering a slew of stars to celebrate Rob and Michele Reiner, as well as Barbra Streisand for Robert Redford.
βThe in memoriam this year was really, really special for us,β he said. βItβs one of the most delicate and thought through pieces of the show, because we know how much it means to people. Between our filmmakers, between our orchestrations, between the presenters that actually came on stage. Itβs just, yeah, itβs something that we hold very dear and we want to make sure that resonates with not only people in the room, but people at home.β
He added: βUltimately, if it brings a little tear to your eye thatβs kind of us all feeling like weβve all done a good job to make something memorable happen.β
The importance of good speeches
One thing producers know they definitely donβt have control over is the content of speeches. But last night, Kapoor said, βall the winners really delivered some exceptional speeches,β noting lead acting winners Michael B. Jordan and Jessie Buckley specifically.
βI think they spoke to so many different people around the world from βSentimental Valueβ to βKPopβ to, you know, thanking mothers,β Kapoor said. βIt just shows you that even though we are celebrating film thereβs probably a message for almost everybody around the word to celebrate and to feel connected and to come together.β
Hundreds of people behind the scenes
Kapoor wanted especially to recognize the over 700 people who worked on the show behind the scenes, from editors, to caterers, to makeup artists, to costume designers.
βThis particular show really employs so many people in Los Angeles,β he said. βItβs so great for the city of Los Angeles, itβs so great for the film community, itβs so great for television. Katy and myself are honored to work with the academy, with Conan and to be able to produce a show that still means so much to people around the world.β
Will Conan return for the 99th Oscars?
Well, weβll just have to wait and see. As Kapoor said, itβs the day after the Oscars and βI donβt think Conan is taking anybodyβs calls.β
But he and Mullan loved working with him again.
βWe have been so blessed to work with him these past two years, him and his team, and itβs just a really lovely relationship, and I could not ask for anything better,β Kapoor said.
