Brad Pitt back on top with Oscar win

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HOLLYWOOD, United States, Feb 10, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Brad Pitt’s Oscar win on
Sunday marks a fitting comeback for the veteran actor whose personal life,
rather than his on-screen roles, have dominated headlines in recent years.

Pitt won the golden statuette for his role as a laid-back fading stuntman
in Quentin Tarantino’s ode to 1960s Tinseltown, “Once Upon a Time … in
Hollywood.”

“This is incredible, really incredible,” the 56-year-old said as he
accepted the award — his first Academy Award for acting after more than 30
years in showbiz and three previous performance nominations.

“They told me I only have 45 seconds up here, which is 45 seconds more
than the Senate gave John Bolton this week,” he said, in reference to
President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial.

“I’m thinking maybe Quentin does a movie about it — in the end, the
adults do the right thing.”

His quips were the latest in a string of pithy, often funny speeches
delivered as he swept a glut of prizes this award season including a Golden
Globe, targeting everything from divorce to Prince Harry. On Sunday, he
bested a crowded field of four former Oscar winners — Joe Pesci and Al
Pacino for Martin Scorsese’s “The Irishman,” Anthony Hopkins (“The Two
Popes”) and Tom Hanks (“A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood”).

But it was not his first Oscar — he won a best picture prize in 2014 as
one of the producers of “12 Years a Slave.”

Pitt’s performance in “Once Upon a Time…” earned him rave reviews, with
Britain’s Sunday Times describing it as the best by a movie star in 2019.

The award is a well-earned win for the Hollywood heartthrob, who has kept
a low profile since 2016 as he went through a messy divorce with Angelina
Jolie and a bitter custody battle over their six children.

Pitt faced accusations of child abuse, heavy drinking and drug use.

Since then, he has talked at length about getting sober, and attending
Alcoholics Anonymous meetings for a year and a half after having “taken
things as far as I could take” them.

“This is for my kids who color everything I do. I adore you,” he said
Sunday.

Even before his relationship with Jolie, Pitt has endured the constant
tabloid spotlight — especially during his engagement to Gwyneth Paltrow and
subsequent marriage to Jennifer Aniston.

“In the 90s, all that attention really threw me,” Pitt told The New York
Times in an interview last year.

“It was really uncomfortable for me, the cacophony of expectations and
judgments. I really became a bit of a hermit and just bonged myself into
oblivion.”

– Focus on producing –

Raised in Springfield, Missouri, Pitt was the eldest of three children
whose father owned a trucking company and aspired to give his kids a better
life.

Pitt moved to Los Angeles in the 1980s on a whim, dropping out of college
just two credits shy of earning a degree in journalism.

After doing some odd jobs, including dressing as a chicken for a fast-food
restaurant, he started getting small TV roles, including on “Dallas” and “21
Jump Street.”

His breakout role came in 1991 as a sexy hustler in Ridley Scott’s smash
hit “Thelma & Louise” starring Geena Davis and Susan Sarandon.

That success propelled him to a series of bigger roles — “A River Runs
Through It” directed by Robert Redford, “Interview With the Vampire” opposite
Tom Cruise, “Legends of the Fall” with Hopkins, and thriller “Se7en” all by
1995.

His first Oscar nod came for another 1995 film, the off-kilter “Twelve
Monkeys” directed by Terry Gilliam.

By that time, Pitt was a bona fide A-lister.

After that, he showed versatility in his roles, starring in crime caper
“Ocean’s Eleven” with George Clooney, psychological drama “Babel” and
Tarantino’s “Inglorious Basterds.”

His other Oscar acting nods came for “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button”
and “Moneyball,” a film he also produced.

Apart from “Once Upon a Time,” his comeback to the big screen in 2019 also
included a critically acclaimed performance in space drama “Ad Astra,” in
which he plays astronaut Roy McBride.

Going forward, Pitt — whose interests include sculpting and landscaping –
– has said he plans to increasingly focus on producing movies rather than
appearing in front of the camera.

“It’ll be fewer and farther in between for me, just because I have other
things I want to do now,” he told the Times.

“When you feel like you’ve finally got your arms around something, then
it’s time to go get your arms around something else.”

BSS/AFP/MSY/0831 hrs