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Olivia Colman crowned queen of the Oscars with shock win

The British actress triumphed over Glenn Close at the ceremony.

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Olivia Colman

Olivia Colman was crowned queen of the Oscars as she beat Glenn Close to the best actress prize.

The star of The Favourite triumphed over The Wife’s Close, as well as Lady Gaga, Melissa McCarthy and Yalitza Aparicio for an unexpected win at the ceremony, where Green Book was named best picture.

Colman was visibly shocked as her name was called and was helped to her feet by her husband Ed Sinclair and co-star Emma Stone, who planted a kiss on her cheek.

Taking to the stage, she said: “It’s genuinely quite stressful. This is hilarious. I got an Oscar!

“OK, I have to thank lots of people. If, by the way, I forget anybody I’m going to find you later and I’m going to give you all a massive snog and I’m really sorry if I
might forget now.”

Paying tribute to her director Yorgos Lanthimos as well as Stone and fellow co-star Rachel Weisz, she added: “Yorgos, my best director and the best film, and with Emma and Rachel, the two loveliest women in the world to fall in love with, and to go to work with every day, I mean, you can imagine, it wasn’t a hardship.

“And to be in this category with these extraordinary women, and Glenn Close… you’ve been my idol for so long and this is not how I wanted it to be and I think you’re amazing and I love you very much.”

British wins at the Oscars since 2000
(PA Graphics)

She added that she hoped her children were watching and said: “If you’re not, then, well done, but I sort of hope you are. This is not going to happen again.

“And any little girl who is practising their speech on the telly, you never know. I used to work as a cleaner and I loved that job, I did spend quite a lot of my time imagining this.”

Green Book won the biggest prize of the night as the surprise winner of best picture, a category largely expected to go to Roma.

91st Academy Awards – Show
Director Peter Farrelly with the cast and crew of Green Book (Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

The film about a black jazz musician and a white driver travelling through the segregated US deep south also won the best supporting actor Oscar for Mahershala Ali, as well as best original screenplay.

Rami Malek was named best actor for his role as Freddie Mercury in the Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody and planted a passionate kiss on the lips of his girlfriend and co-star Lucy Boynton before making his way to the stage.

91st Academy Awards – Show
Rami Malek kisses Lucy Boynton (Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

Regina King took the best supporting actress prize for her role in If Beale Street Could talk, leading to the most diverse group of acting winners in the history of the Oscars.

Shallow from A Star Is Born was named best original song and Lady Gaga addressed her director and co-star Bradley Cooper as she collected the gong, saying: “Bradley, there is not a single person who could have sang this song with me but you. Thank you for believing in me.

“If you are at home sitting on your couch and watching this now, all I can say is this is hard work.

“I’ve worked hard for a long time. This is not about winning, what it’s about is not giving up. If you have a dream fight for it.

“It’s not about how many times you are rejected and how many times you fall down, it’s how many times you stand up and keep going.”

Cooper and Gaga also performed the song at the ceremony, with the pair looking intently into each other’s eyes during the duet before Cooper sat next to her at the piano.

Oscar for best supporting actor and actress: winners by ethnicity
(PA Graphics)

History was made earlier in the night when Ruth Carter became the first black winner to collect the best costume design prize, while Hannah Beachler became the first black winner of the production design gong, both for their work on Black Panther.

The Marvel superhero movie was also recognised for its original score.

The black-and-white, Spanish-language film Roma won three prizes, collecting the best director prize for Alfonso Cuaron, best cinematography, also for Cuaron, and best foreign language film.

Bohemian Rhapsody was the most awarded film at the ceremony, with prizes for Malek, film editing, sound mixing and sound editing.

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