Oscars 2023: Relive the ceremony, as it happened
Updates from Chelsea Bailey in the Oscars winners' room, Colin Paterson and Ben Derico at the Vanity Fair watch party, Peter Bowes and Tom Brook at the Roosevelt Hotel. Analysis from Helen Bushby, Emma Saunders and Sophie Long.
Live Reporting
Edited by Marianna Brady, Alexandra Fouché, Jessica Murphy and Emma Owen
All times stated are UK
Idris Elba on diversity - and on being part of Oscar win
Helen Bushby
Entertainment reporter
Idris Elba was at his first Oscars ceremony, and told the BBC's Colin Paterson why he thought Everything Everywhere All at Once's success was so crucial.
Speaking on the Vanity Fair red carpet, the actor said: "It’s so important, the diversity of it.
"The film is about exploration of ideas. We can tell stories of torment and conflict, but that story's about the celebration of imagination."
Elba also voiced the Fox, for The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse, which won best animated short.
"I feel very proud to be part of it," he said, adding: "Its narrative really touched our world [during the Covid pandemic]. It's about kindness and human beings."
What else has Jamie Lee Curtis been nominated for?
Helen Bushby
Entertainment reporter
Jamie Lee Curtis has won her first Oscar aged 64 for Everything Everywhere All At Once, but she's not a newcomer by any means when it comes to award ceremonies.
She was nominated for a Bafta this year for the same film, and also for A Fish Called Wanda in 1988 and Trading Places in 1983.
Away from the awards circuit, she reprised her role as Laurie Strode in the terrifying Halloween films back in 2020, having appeared in seven of them, including the original in 1978.
She also appeared in 2019's whodunnit film Knives Out, and starred in action film True Lies with Arnold Schwarzenegger back in 1994.
'You guys made India proud'
India won its second Oscar of the night with The Elephant Whisperers clinching Best Documentary Short Film.
It was shot in the picturesque Nilgiri mountains in southern India and explores the precious bond an injured baby elephant shares with its caretakers.
It beat contenders like Stranger at the Gate and How do you Measure a Year? to become the first Indian production to bag a win in this category.
Many Indians have taken to Twitter to congratulate the team.
"You guys made India proud," wrote one user. Another hailed the director for "dedicating the award to motherland India".
See more reactions here.
All the best red - or should we say, champagne - carpet looks
Emma Saunders
Entertainment reporter
If you missed some of the glitz and glamour pre-ceremony, step this way.
We have a cracking red (champagne) carpet picture gallery so you can pick your favourite looks from the night.
Cheers for Brendan Fraser's comeback
Peter Bowes
North America correspondent
There was no big end-of-night surprise after all.
The watch party room emptied quickly after Everything Everywhere All At Once was crowned the undisputed winner.
There were also huge smiles and the biggest cheer of the night when Brendan Fraser took the award for best actor for The Whale.
His comeback story really resonated with our film industry insiders, many of whom understand what it's like to feel down and out in Hollywood. It can be a cruel business.
For Everything Everywhere to sweep the board in such a spectacular fashion could be a signal that the American Academy is catching up with the increasingly international flavour of film-making.
And as our party ends, others are just kicking off around town.
Some of the best moments at this year's Oscars
The 2023 Academy Awards were full of emotional acceptance speeches, surprising turns and out-of-this-world movies.
Some of the best moments from the night included Ke Huy Quan delivering an emotional acceptance speech when he won for best supporting actor - after a two-decade break from performing - and saying: "Mom, I just won an Oscar!"
For more of the evening's best moments, read our piece here.
Academy Awards inching towards inclusivity
Tom Brook
Reporting from Los Angeles
My closing thoughts on this year’s Oscars is that the Academy Awards are inching towards inclusivity.
Everything Everywhere All at Once winning the top award made history by becoming the first best picture winner to feature a primarily Asian-American family with a strong LGBT storyline.
Also, the Academy seemed eager to embrace a German-language film, All Quiet on the Western Front, giving it four trophies. And Indian cinema won two awards: best original song for RRR, and best documentary short for The Elephant Whisperers.
For years, the Academy has resisted the wonders of Indian cinema, and this year’s victories may portend a change of heart.
But while this year’s ceremony was indicative of great inclusivity, there’s still a long way to go because black nominees and female film-makers were sidelined.
Overall, I would rate this as quite a solid Oscar ceremony, with Jimmy Kimmel doing a fine job as master of ceremonies - but how many US viewers will have tuned in to watch? Not enough I fear.
The Academy still needs to reinvent the Oscars so it reaches a younger audience. It’s a formidable challenge in an era when interest in awards shows is declining.
Still for me, Hollywood’s biggest night of the year was not a disappointment. I’m going home now singing Naatu Naatu - I love that song!
Ke Huy Quan and Harrison Ford moment we've been waiting for
Emma Saunders
Entertainment reporter
After starting out as a child actor in 1984's Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, followed by the Goonies the following year, the work dried up for Ke Huy Quan.
But now he's an Oscar winner, and who better to celebrate with than Mr Indiana Jones himself, Harrison Ford?
Indians celebrate Naatu Naatu win
It’s a big day for India after the song Naatu Naatu won a historic Oscar for the Best Original Song.
A track from the hit Telugu-language film RRR – short for Rise Roar Revolt – Naatu Naatu beat heavyweights like Lady Gaga and Rihanna to become the first Indian film song to win an Academy Award. Its singers also performed at the award ceremony earlier today.
Many Indians have taken to Twitter to express their happiness about the song's win.
N Chandrababu Naidu, an influential politician from the two southern Indian states where Telugu is spoken, said on Twitter that the song had "sealed its place in history".
Composed by MM Keeravani with lyrics penned by Chandrabose, Naatu Naatu already made history once in January when it won the Golden Globe for best original song. The same month, the song also won the Critics’ Choice award for the best song.
We have more reaction here.
The night's biggest winners
Emma Saunders
Entertainment reporter
Three films won big tonight at the 95th Academy Awards - none more than the multiverse epic Everything Everywhere All At Once.
Here is the tally for the films that won more than once at this year's awards show:
See the full winners' list here
Matt Smith thrilled for best film winners
Ben Derico
Reporting from Los Angeles
Dr Who - aka actor Matt Smith - has arrived! Not in a blue phone booth, but on a blue carpet. Close enough.
Speaking to the BBC's Colin Paterson at the Vanity Fair after-party, Smith says he was thrilled for the winners of Everything Everywhere All at Once.
When asked if Dr Who had met in the multiverse, he laughed and said: “We should make that film.”
A historic night for Irish actors and filmmakers
Chelsea Bailey
Reporting from Los Angeles
It's been a historic awards season for Irish actors and film-makers, with a quarter of all the actors nominated for Oscars hailing from Ireland.
But if you ask the stars themselves, they'll tell you the recognition comes as no surprise.
"They're brilliant," actress Kerry Condon told BBC News at the annual Oscar Wilde awards earlier this week. Condon was competing in a closely watched race for best supporting actress for her role in The Banshees of Inisherin.
Tom Berkeley and Ross White were on hand to celebrate their Oscar-nominated short film, An Irish Goodbye, along with the film's stars James Martin and Seamus O'Hara. Martin told BBC News ahead of the event he planned to celebrate his 31st birthday at tonight’s ceremony.
"It's not every day that your birthday comes up and you get to come to America and your movie is up for an Oscar, so it would be nice to put that icing on my birthday cake.”
Quiet before storm at Vanity Fair after-party
Ben Derico
Reporting from Los Angeles
It’s the quiet before the storm here at the Vanity Fair after-party. The show may have just ended across town, but here in Beverly Hills the party hasn’t even started yet.
How to watch this year’s Oscars films
Helen Bushby
Entertainment reporter
Well, that was fun! Now we FINALLY know who the big winners are, you may want to know how to see some of the films you may have missed.
Worry not, here's our guide on how to watch them - click here to find out.
Triumphant night for Everything Everywhere
Everything Everywhere All at Once had a big, very winning night.
The multiverse film won seven Oscars, and they were some of the biggest awards of the night too.
Right off the bat, Ke Huy Quan and Jamie Lee Curtis won their first Oscar statues for their supporting roles. The film also bagged best editing, best screenplay, best director, best film and the historic best actress win for Michelle Yeoh.
Ceremony ends, but our coverage does not
Whew, what a night! The credits are rolling and the stars are getting ready for the after parties meaning the 95th Academy Awards are coming to a close.
But our coverage doesn't end here. It's nearing bedtime in the US but much of the world is just waking up. We'll be bringing you recaps of the night and interviews from the Vanity Fair party red carpet.
Stay tuned.
It's the big one
Emma Saunders
Entertainment reporter
Lucky seven for Everything Everywhere All at Once! And it saved the best until last - best picture.
No surprises here – this eccentric sci-fi comedy drama isn’t obvious Oscar fare but it’s swept the board at many other award ceremonies this year and was largely expected to repeat its success tonight.
It’s absurdist humour may be a little off the wall for some but the film also has an emotional intergenerational family drama at its heart for those voters who like a little more convention.
Personally, I’m still having nightmares about those rubbery hot dog fingers.
BreakingBest Picture
The final award of the night goes to Everything Everywhere All at Once.
Best Picture
We're now on to the final award, Best Picture.
The nominees are:
Michelle Yeoh is the first Asian woman to win best actress
Helen Bushby
Entertainment reporter
Michelle Yeoh's win is highly significant - she is the first Asian winner for best actress.
Halle Berry, who is on stage presenting her award, was the first woman of colour to win a best actress Oscar in 2002 for Monster's Ball.
"Ladies don't let anyone ever tell you you're past your prime," Yeoh, aged 60, says.
She thanks the women of Hong Kong: "Thank you for letting me stand on your shoulders, for giving me a leg up," she says.
"This is history in the making."
This award should have been presented by last year's best actor winner Will Smith, but he was banned by the Academy for 10 years after slapping Chris Rock during the ceremony.