What time do the Oscars 2017 start tonight on TV? Academy Awards 2017 time, TV channel, live stream (02/26/2017)
Published 10:53 am Sunday, February 26, 2017
LOS ANGELES (AP) — It’s time for the Oscars tonight, and the 2017 Academy Awards will deliver the stars for film’s biggest awards.
The 89th Annual Academy Awards kick off at 8:30 p.m. ET tonight (Sunday, Feb. 26) on TV channel ABC; Coverage begins on the network at 7 p.m. ET. Jimmy Kimmel will host the 2017 ceremony live from the Dolby Theater in Hollywood.
You can live stream the Oscars at abc.com/watch-live and through the ABC app in select markets; sign-in with a participating TV provider is required. The app is available via Apple TV, Android, Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV/iPhone/iPad, Roku and XBox 360.
ABC’s website will also feature a live stream of “The Oscars: All Access.”
Dwayne Johnson posed for a solo pic on the Dolby Theatre stage. Taraji P. Henson pretended to run off with the wooden prop Oscar. And a makeup-free, casually clad Halle Berry made a rehearsal actor’s day when she kissed him on the cheek as he came onstage to accept an award.
“That’s Halle Berry!” the actor said, eyes wide.
Saturday is rehearsal day for Sunday’s Academy Awards, when a parade of superstar presenters comes through the Dolby Theatre to practice their lines — another famous face every 15 minutes. It’s also casual day at the Dolby, as most stars come dressed down — except for the women’s feet: Many actresses wear their show-day shoes to try them out on the Oscar stage.
Salma Hayek, however, was not dressed down. Wearing all black, from her blazer and blouse down to her stiletto-heeled boots, she looked like she just walked out of a magazine spread.
“OK, let’s do this,” she said from center stage.
Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone had fun with a microphone sound-check. Stone asked the stage manager if they should begin reading their lines and was surprised to hear her voice amplified to the room.
“Hot mike,” Gosling said, putting his mouth on the microphone.
“Sibilance,” Stone responded, invoking an old “Wayne’s World” sketch as she leaned into the mike.
“Sibilance,” Gosling replied.
Judd Apatow accompanied wife Leslie Mann to her read-through, and he documented the experience with his cellphone. He shot photos of Mann on stage and took pictures of her seat-saving placard. He also helped write her script for Sunday.
“I think we’re going to fix it up a little bit and practice for tomorrow,” Mann told a stage manager.
Vince Vaughn also plans to pen a portion of his Sunday night script, he said from the stage Saturday.
Amy Adams brought a very special guest along to rehearsals: her 6-year-old daughter, Aviana. Mother and daughter also wore matching outfits: Gray sweatshirts with rainbow-striped sleeves that read “Good vibes only.” Adams paired hers with skinny jeans and tall silver platform shoes.
When she finished her lines, her daughter came to meet her onstage, but nearly tripped on the way up.
“Her and Jennifer Lawrence, you know,” Adams joked, referencing Lawrence’s fall on her way to accept her Oscar in 2013.
“Fifty Shades of Grey” stars Dakota Johnson and Jamie Dornan looked out from the stage to try to find their seats in the theater, all marked by photo placards.
“Oh my God, I’m in the corner,” she said, smiling at having found it. “I’m way in the corner.”
“I’m probably up there,” Dornan said, pointing up to the balcony. (He’s actually seated near his co-star.)
Brie Larson wore an ACLU T-shirt under a denim jacket to rehearsals. Kate McKinnon paired black leggings and gray hoodie with towering black platforms, worn over socks. Samuel L. Jackson kept things relaxed, wearing a gray tracksuit and backward ball cap. He snapped a few cellphone photos of the stage after running through his lines. Scarlett Johansson didn’t bother with heels. She wore clogs with her black pants and white moto jacket, and took a moment to admire the stage when she walked onto it.
“It’s very beautiful,” she said.
Jason Bateman was in a joking mood. When a stage manager told him not to read the teleprompter lines in red, Bateman replied, “I say it louder, right? That’s why it’s in red.” David Oyelowo made rehearsals a family affair: his wife and four children sat in the theater as he rehearsed.
Other stars rehearsing Saturday included Jennifer Aniston, Chris Evans, Alicia Vikander, Felicity Jones and nominee Dev Patel, who confessed to a stage manager, “I’m very nervous.”
But the presenters who had the most fun at rehearsals were the stars of “Hidden Figures.” Henson and supporting actress nominee Octavia Spencer were all giggles onstage.
“I’d like to thank the academy for opening the curtains for such a grand entrance,” Spencer said, putting on a British accent.
“It was my idea!” Henson shouted. “Right, academy?”
Their co-star Janelle Monae, who looked camera-ready in a colorblock sweater, stayed quiet.
“She’s the straight man in this group,” Henson told a stagehand. But not so straight that she wasn’t willing to strike a “Charlie’s Angels”-style pose with Henson and Spencer when the curtains opened to reveal the women onstage.
They practiced their entrance before presenting the prop Oscar. As Henson handed it to the fake winners, she said, “You’re amazing. Hire me!”