What's an Academy Award worth to a Canadian? We asked 5 Oscar winners - Action News
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What's an Academy Award worth to a Canadian? We asked 5 Oscar winners

Several Canadians will attend the Academy Awards in Los Angeles on Sunday hoping to take home a gold statue and an impressive title: Oscar winner. But after the glitz and glamour of the ceremony is over, what does winning an Oscar really get you? Five Canadians share how it impacted their lives.

Taking home the top award in film got these Canadians TV series, movies and more

How Oscar wins changed the lives of these Canadian filmmakers

6 months ago
Duration 3:02
Canadians have made a strong showing in this year's Academy Award nominations and many winners in years past say a win at the Oscars supercharged their careers.

Several Canadians will make their way to the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles on Sunday hoping to come home with a gold statue and an impressive title: Oscar winner.

But afterthe winners' names are called, the speechesare made,thephotos are snappedand thegold statue is tucked away on a shelf what does being an Oscar-winner really mean?

"You definitely get your calls returned quicker, I will say that,"said J. Miles Dale, a Toronto film producer who won a best picture Oscar with Guillermo del Toro for The Shape of Water in 2018.

"I think there's no version where it doesn't somehow elevate you in the eyes of other people in the business, whether that's right or wrong, whether that's perception, reality."

A bearded man with glasses and a bald man, both wearing tuxedos, hold up three Oscar statuettes in front of a larger ornamental Oscar statue.
Director and co-producer Guillermo del Toro, left, and Toronto co-producer J. Miles Dale pose with their Oscars after winning best picture for The Shape of Water in 2018. (Mike Blake/Reuters)

Dale remembers as soon as the Ontario-shot film hit festivals, something felt different. Audiences and critics were responding, and momentum built as the movie debutedat different festivals.

Months later, the film was nominated for 13 Academy Awards, including best picture.Dale was sitting in the audience withhis mom when his name was called as one of the winners.

"It's like, 'Oh my God,' and then you're up on stage and you're looking out and it's like, 'There's Spielberg! And there's Meryl Streep!' and it's like, 'What am I doing here?' " said Dale. "It all goes in slow motion, but it's kind of the best car crash."

He said the Oscar winput an entire Canadian crew of filmmakers on the map.

That meant that back home in Toronto, Dale could use the new status tomake another del Toro movie Nightmare Alley, starring Bradley Cooper and Cate Blanchett. Itgot four Oscar nominations including another best picture nod.

A man with glasses and a scruffy beard and greying hair smiles as he speaks to a bald man who stands with his arms crossed.
Del Toro and Dale talk on the set of their movie Nightmare Alley, which would go on to be nominated for best picture at the 2022 Academy Awards. (Kerry Hayes/20th Century Studios)

Now, Dale is working on del Toro's Frankenstein.The project, set to starOscar Isaac, Christoph Waltz and Jacob Elordi,is shooting in Toronto this month.

Looking back,Dale says The Shape of Water's win was "a wonderful affirmation" of the work of Canadian filmmakers and crews.

"To be able to shine a light on those people and their careers and their accomplishmentswas really gratifying," said Dale.

'How good are you right now, today?'

Composer Mychael Danna agrees "the effect it has on the people around you" isby far the most lasting part of winning an Oscar.

Danna, whowon best original score in 2013 for his work on Life of Pi, says anOscar win acts as a career buoy for everyone involved.

Canadian composer Mychael Danna holds his Oscar while standing next to his wife Aparna Danna.
Canadian composer Mychael Danna, with wife Aparna Danna, holds his Oscar after winning the best original score award for the film Life of Pi, at the Governor's Ball in Hollywood following the 85th Academy Awards in 2013. (Lucas Jackson/Reuters)

"We recorded musicians in Toronto. We recorded the orchestra here [in Los Angeles] at the Fox Studios, a big band of 100 people, the choir in London, musicians in India, Indonesia, Middle East," he said. "I still get emails from the engineer we had in Madras I mean, it means something."

But hesays translating anOscar win to further success can bemore complicated.

"An Oscar means kind of everything and nothing in this town," said Danna, who now lives in Los Angeles.

"You still have to get the job, and by the way, you could get fired in a minute and your Oscar wouldn't save you from that. It's always, 'How good are you right now, today?' "

WATCH | CBC's Eli Glasner gets ready to cover the Academy Awardsin Los Angeles:

CBC News' Eli Glasner at the Oscars

6 months ago
Duration 1:03
How does a reporter prepare to cover the Oscars? Eli Glasner takes us on his journey to Los Angeles.

Pay bumps and the 'Oscarcurse'

Economists, financial experts and pop-culture analysts have tried to come up with a quantifiable answer to what an Oscar is worth. Oneoft-cited analysis claims that winning an Oscar for best actress or actor increases a person'snet worth by more than 300 per cent.

On the other hand, many have speculatedaboutthe so-called "Oscarcurse," where a winner has a string of bad luck or bad roles, cutting a promising career short after a win.

Louise Fletcher, forexample,won best actress for playingNurse Ratchedin One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nestin 1976 and didn't have much of a movie career afterward.More recently,Adrien Brodyand Halle Berry have raised eyebrows over their tepid box office numbersfollowingtheir big wins in 2002 and 2003, respectively.

Much of the speculation about the worth of an Oscar winfocuses on the actors,actresses and directorswho take home top honoursand overlooks the producers, documentary makers, composers, animators and others who fill out the rest of thebroadcast.

A bearded man wearing glasses, a woman in a red top, a man in a suit and a woman with glasses and curly hair pose for a photo.
David Fine, far left, and Alison Snowden, far right, pose with Bradley Cooper and an Lily Snowden-Fine at an Oscars event. The Canadian couple won an Oscar for their 1995 animated short Bob's Birthday. (Submitted by Alison Snowden and David Fine)

Short films meant tangible goals

Like Dale,British Columbia-based filmmakers David Fine and Alison Snowden describetheir Oscar win as taking place in"slow motion."But instead of Spielberg, they rememberseeingTom Hanks and Sharon Stone in the audience.

The couplewon for their 1995 animated short Bob's Birthday, which featured a melancholy but funny story about love over time (and one animated penis). It would eventually become a beloved four-season TV series.

They credit the Oscar with helping them get the meeting they needed to turn Bob's Birthday into the series Bob and Margaret.

WATCH | The animated short Bob's Birthday won an Oscar in 1995:

"People went, 'Oh, you're an Oscar winner. OK. We'd love to hear what you're thinking," said Fine, whoremembers being a young filmmaker in Toronto and watching the Academy Awards on TV. He says he was most excited about the short film categories becausethey felt like a tangible goal.

"Your average young person can aspire to try and aim for an Oscar or awards or festivalsjust to get their voice heard," said Snowden.

Changing the course of history

Oscar-winner Ben Proudfoot is back in Los Angeles this week to try towin a second statue.

In 2021, he took home the Academy Award for best documentary short subject for The Queen of Basketball.

This year, the Haligonian filmmaker is nominated in the same category for The Last Repair Shop, about a group of people who repair musical instruments for students in Los Angeles.

A smiling man wearing a tuxedo with a rose pinned to his lapel holds an Oscar statuette in a crowded room under a canopy of lights.
Halifax's Ben Proudfoot won the Oscar for best documentary short subject for The Queen of Basketball in 2022. This year, he's nominated in the same category for The Last Repair Shop. (Mike Blake/Reuters)

For him, the Oscar has meant not only a boost for his resume and the crew behind the documentaries, but a spotlight on his subjects.

"They're literally toiling away for decades in a windowless warehouse fixing saxophones and violins, and in three days' time they're gonna be on the red carpet," said Proudfoot.

He says that even being nominated has resulted in life-changing moments for some documentary subjects, pointing to Bobi Wine: The People's President.The film, which documentsthe2021 Ugandan presidential bid of a famous Afrobeat musician,isnominated for best feature documentary.

According to Proudfoot, the morning the film was nominated for an Oscar, police withdrew their presence from Wine'shomein Kampala.

"The police that were surrounding that person's house left because they knew the world was watching, right? That's genuine impact," said Proudfoot. "It's the Oscars changing the course of political history, not just movie history."

The 96th Academy Awardsair Sunday, March 10 at7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT on ABC.