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Ralph Fiennes and Cynthia Erivo earn Oscar nominations

The Academy Awards ceremony will take place on March 2.

Wicked star Cynthia Erivo
Wicked star Cynthia Erivo (Matt Crossick/PA)

British stars Ralph Fiennes and Cynthia Erivo have earned best acting Oscar nods, as Emilia Perez dominated the nominations, leading with 13.

Fiennes, who is nominated for Conclave, will face off against Adrien Brody for immigrant tale The Brutalist, Timothee Chalamet for Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown and Colman Domingo for Sing Sing, about prisoners becoming part of a theatre group, at the Oscars ceremony in March.

Sebastian Stan is also up for the category for playing Donald Trump before he became the US president in The Apprentice.

Ariana Grande, right, with Cynthia Erivo
Ariana Grande, right, with Cynthia Erivo (Christophe Petit Tesson/PA)

Also leading the nominations are Wicked, based on the West End and Broadway musical of the same name, and The Brutalist on 10 nods, while Conclave, about the election of a Catholic pope in the Vatican, and A Complete Unknown are named in eight award categories.

They have all been nominated for the best picture, and acting categories, while The Brutalist, A Complete Unknown and Emilia Perez secured directing nods.

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The nominations for the 97th Oscars were announced on Thursday at the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theatre in Los Angeles, after being postponed twice amid the wildfires in Los Angeles.

Fiennes was last nominated in 1997 for his leading role as a Hungarian pilot and desert explorer in The English Patient, which came after his first nod in 1994 for war drama Schindler’s List, in which he played an Austrian Nazi official.

Also with a return to the Academy Awards acting race is Brody, who has only won and been nominated before for 2002 Holocaust film The Pianist. He called the honour “extraordinary” after a career of four decades with “peaks and valleys”.

The American actor, whose family is from a Polish Jewish and Hungarian background, added on Instagram: “It’s given me perspective and a tremendous appreciation and respect for this moment.

“Portraying (Hungarian architect) Laszlo Toth, and representing the hardships and yearnings of so many, including the very struggles of my own family, has rekindled my own sense of being and belonging, and believing again.”

Ralph Fiennes
Ralph Fiennes (Ian West/PA)

Up for a best actress Oscar is Erivo, who secured her second acting Oscar nod for musical The Wizard Of Oz prequel Wicked, along with new nominations for Mikey Madison for playing a stripper who falls for a Russian oligarch’s son in Anora, and Hollywood actress Demi Moore for body horror The Substance.

Spanish star Karla Sofia Gascon, who became the first transgender actress to be nominated, is also in the category for Emilia Perez alongside Brazilian actress Fernanda Torres for Portuguese-language film I’m Still Here, about a mother coping with the disappearance of her husband in 1970s authoritarian Brazil.

Torres, whose mother Fernanda Montenegro was nominated more than two decades ago for best actress for road trip movie Central Station, said: “To stand here today, representing Brazil in a lineage that began with my mother’s trailblazing journey, is both surreal and deeply moving.”

She also said portraying Brazilian lawyer Eunice Paiva “was an immense privilege, as it allowed me to embody a woman whose life was defined by extraordinary resilience and a quiet, unwavering strength”.

Erivo previously secured two Oscar nods for Harriet, along with the song from the film, Stand Up, after playing the American abolitionist Harriet Tubman in the 2019 film.

In the supporting actor categories, The Brutalist’s Felicity Jones has landed her second Oscar nomination as former Succession stars Jeremy Strong and Kieran Culkin secured their first Academy Awards nods.

This is Jones’s first nod in a decade after she received a best actress nomination for her role as Jane Hawking, the wife of British theoretical physicist and cosmologist Stephen Hawking, in biopic The Theory Of Everything.

Former Succession star Kieran Culkin
Former Succession star Kieran Culkin (Isabel Infantes/PA)

Jones will compete against Emilia Perez star Zoe Saldana, for her role in the Netflix thriller about a Mexican drug lord who changes gender, and Italian-born US star Isabella Rossellini for playing a nun in papal election drama Conclave.

Also nominated in the category is US pop singer Ariana Grande for playing Glinda the good witch, an early friend to Erivo’s green-skinned character in Wicked, and Monica Barbaro for A Complete Unknown.

Grande wrote on Instagram that she “cannot stop crying” after the “unfathomable recognition”.

She also said that she was “humbled and deeply honoured to be in such brilliant company”, and thanked director Jon M Chu for casting her.

Grande also said Erivo’s brilliance was “never ending”, and added: “I love you unconditionally, always.”

Rossellini, whose mother Ingrid Bergman was a three-time Oscar winner, and father Roberto Rossellini, an Academy Award nominee, said she wishes “my parents were alive to celebrate with me”.

She also wrote on Instagram that the “joy in my mind can’t help lingering in the beyond to David Lynch”, her former partner and Blue Velvet director who died earlier this month aged 78.

In the supporting actor category, Culkin, for playing a cousin to Jesse Eisenberg’s character who goes on a trip to retrace his Jewish grandmother’s past escaping the Holocaust in Poland in A Real Pain, and Strong, who portrayed former Trump mentor Roy Cohn in The Apprentice, are going head-to-head.

Ralph Fiennes, Isabella Rossellini and Stanley Tucci, who were in Conclave
Ralph Fiennes, Isabella Rossellini and Stanley Tucci, who were in Conclave (Ian West/PA)

They were nominated alongside Russian actor Yura Borisov for Anora, and Edward Norton for A Complete Unknown and Australian star Guy Pearce for The Brutalist.

Meanwhile, Sir Elton John has secured his fifth original song nod after the release of his music documentary song Never Too Late for the Disney+ film Elton John: Never Too Late, about his Farewell Yellow Brick Road concert tour.

The British singer-songwriter was nominated three times for The Lion King, winning for Can You Feel The Love Tonight, and also snapping up the gong for a second time with Sir Elton biopic Rocketman’s (I’m Gonna) Love Me Again.

He will face competition from Emilia Perez, who has two songs El Mal, and Mi Camino up for original song, along with Sing Sing’s Like A Bird, and The Six Triple Eight’s The Journey.

Sir Elton hailed his latest Oscar nod as an “incredible honour” on Instagram, along with paying tribute to his collaborators Brandi Carlile, Bernie Taupin and Andrew Watt, and “to everyone who helped bring this beautiful song to the world”.

The best picture category is a crowded field with Anora, The Brutalist, A Complete Unknown, Conclave, Emilia Perez, I’m Still Here, The Substance, and Wicked all nominated.

David Furnish and husband Sir Elton John
David Furnish and husband Sir Elton John (Ian West/PA)

Also up for the prize is Chalamet-starring science fiction blockbuster Dune: Part Two, and Nickel Boys, based on the Colson Whitehead book of the same name about children sent to an abusive reform school in the 1960s.

James Mangold, who previously secured an adapted screenplay nod for co-writing Logan and a best picture nomination for producing Ford V Ferrari, has earned his first directing nod for A Complete Unknown.

The category also includes first time nominees Sean Baker for Anora, Brady Corbet for The Brutalist, Jacques Audiard for Emilia Perez and Coralie Fargeat for The Substance.

British screenwriter Peter Straughan, who brought Robert Harris’s novel Conclave to the big screen, called the film a “labour of love from the beginning” after his nomination for best adapted screenplay, where he competes against A Complete Unknown, Emilia Perez, Nickle Boys, and Sing Sing.

His statement to the PA news agency added: “I am mindful that the backdrop to these nominations is the ongoing threat to communities posed by the wildfires and my thoughts are very much with the people of LA at this terrible time.”

For animated feature film, Wallace And Gromit are once again nominated for an Oscar gong after the release of the BBC Christmas hit Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl – which sees the return of evil penguin Feathers McGraw from Academy Award-winning short The Wrong Trousers.

They will compete against Latvian cat film Flow, Inside Out 2, the second film from Disney that dramatises emotions in the brain, Memoir Of A Snail, starring Succession star Sarah Snook, and The Wild Robot.

Karla Sofia Gascon, Selena Gomez, Jacques Audiard, Zoe Saldana and Adriana Paz
Karla Sofia Gascon, Selena Gomez, Jacques Audiard, Zoe Saldana and Adriana Paz (Jeff Moore/PA)

Those who had been in the running for awards, but missed out on nominations include Oscar winner Nicole Kidman for erotic thriller Babygirl, and James Bond star Daniel Craig for Mexico-set Queer, about an older man pursuing the love of a young man.

Also left out of the acting categories are Pamela Anderson for playing a faded showgirl in The Last Showgirl along with her supporting co-star Jamie Lee Curtis, and Angelina Jolie for portraying the final days of dramatic opera singer Maria Callas in Maria, along with Selena Gomez for Emilia Perez.

The Academy Awards ceremony will take place on March 2 at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, with first-time host Conan O’Brien taking over the helm this year.

British TV presenter Jonathan Ross will return as host of ITV’s Oscars companion show this March for the second year running, accompanied by celebrity guests and film experts to discuss nominated films on the night.