Security boosted for accountants involved in Oscar gaffe

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(FILES) This file photo taken on February 26, 2017 shows PriceWaterhouseCooper representatives Martha L. Ruiz (L) and Brian Cullinan (R), the only two people who know the results carry two briefcase with the winning envellopes before the 89th Annual Academy Awards at Hollywood & Highland Center, in Hollywood, California. The two accountants involved in the embarrassing mix-up at Sunday's Oscars will not be invited back to the show, a spokesperson for the Academy told AFP on March 1, 2017. Brian Cullinan and Martha Ruiz from PricewaterhouseCoopers -- the firm responsible for tallying and safeguarding Oscar votes and results -- were in charge of handing out the winning envelopes to presenters at the ceremony.However a mix-up resulted in Cullinan handing Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway a duplicate of the best actress envelope -- instead of the one that showed "Moonlight" winning best picture.The fiasco marked the most embarrassing mistake in Oscars history, with the musical "La La Land" briefly declared the winner for best picture before organizers realized the error. / AFP PHOTO / VALERIE MACON

 

LOS ANGELES- Security has been stepped up for the two accountants responsible for botching the Oscar best picture announcement, their company said on Thursday (March 2), as the ceremony’s stage manager said the pair had to be pushed onstage to set things right after the gaffe.

Accountancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) said security was provided at the homes of Brian Cullinan and Martha Ruiz following Sunday’s blunder, in which an envelope mix-up led to the announcement of the wrong film as best picture winner during the live TV broadcast.

PwC gave no details but celebrity website TMZ.com said the pair had received death threats on social media and that photos of their homes had been posted online.

Cullinan, who posted a now-deleted backstage photo of Emma Stone on Twitter just before the gaffe, and Ruiz were barred on Wednesday by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences from taking part in the Oscars ceremony or ballot counting ever again.

Oscar show stage manager Gary Natoli told Hollywood website TheWrap that the two had frozen backstage when things went wrong during the climax of Sunday’s ceremony.

Natoli said he was standing near Ruiz when actors Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway incorrectly announced on stage that musical La La Land had won the top award for best picture.

The winner of best picture was African-American independent film, Moonlight.

“We watched for about 10 more seconds, and during that entire time, Martha was no more than five feet away from us. When La La Land was announced, she did not try to get my attention, she did not say anything. And she’s supposed to have memorised the winners,” Natoli told TheWrap.

More than a minute passed before Cullinan said backstage that something was wrong.

Backstage crew were “trying to get Brian to go on stage, and he wouldn’t go,” Natoli said. “And Martha wouldn’t go. We had to push them on stage, which was just shocking to me.”

“I still do not understand the delay,” Natoli said. “Brian should have run out there on his own. Martha should have run out there.”

Natoli also blamed smaller, less legible writing on the winner envelopes.

“We know that Brian was taking pictures backstage when he should not have been, and not paying attention… And there was the new design of the envelope, which we had complained about to the Academy,” Natoli said.

PwC, which has overseen Oscar balloting for 83 years, said on Thursday the two accountants were still employed by the company.

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Friday, March 3, 2017 – 09:31
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