"Nomadland" was the big winner at Sunday night's Academy Awards.
The film won three of the night's major awards, including best picture. Its director, Chloé Zhao, became the first woman of color and the first woman of Asian descent to win the Oscar for best director. The film's star, Frances McDormand, won her third best actress Oscar, putting her second all-time behind Katharine Hepburn.
The Oscars are usually handed out in February, but this year's ceremony was pushed back a couple of months because of the Covid-19 pandemic. The eligibility period was also extended to 14 months. This was the first time since 1934 that films from two different calendar years were eligible for awards in the same ceremony.
The show took place in Los Angeles at both the Dolby Theatre and Union Station. It was preceded by a scaled-down red-carpet event. In keeping with Covid-19 protocols, only the nominees, their guests and presenters attended in person.
A trio of Oscar winners -- from left, Yuh-jung Youn, Daniel Kaluuya and Frances McDormand -- pose together in the press room. Youn won best supporting actress for her role in "Minari." Kaluuya won best supporting actor for his role in "Judas and the Black Messiah." And McDormand won best actress for "Nomadland."
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Actor Bryan Cranston recognizes some of the vaccinated front-line workers who were at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday night. Cranston was presenting the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award to the Motion Picture and Television Fund for the group's help and assistance to productions during the coronavirus pandemic.
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Yuh-jung Youn holds her best supporting actress Oscar as she stands next to presenter Brad Pitt in the press room.
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People watch Youn's acceptance speech from a railway station in Seoul, South Korea. She's the first South Korean actress to win an Oscar.
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Actress Olivia Colman poses for a photo while attending an Oscars screening in London.
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Travon Free, left, and Martin Desmond Roe accept the Oscar for the short film "Two Distant Strangers." Their shoes and the inside of their jackets carried the names of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and other people killed by police violence. Todd Wawrychuk/AMPAS/Getty Images
Nominees attend an Oscars screening in Paris.
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From left, Jon Batiste, Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross enter the press room after winning the Oscar for best original score ("Soul").
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Lakeith Stanfield, a best supporting actor nominee, is interviewed in London. Many of the nominees were in Los Angeles, but some appeared remotely because of the Covid-19 pandemic.
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Actress Reese Witherspoon enters the Oscars press room. She was one of the award presenters.
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Best actor nominee Gary Oldman was among those in London.
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Chloé Zhao accepts the best director Oscar for "Nomadland." She is the first woman of color and the first woman of Asian descent to win best director. "This is for anyone who has the faith and the courage to hold out to the goodness in themselves and to hold out to the goodness in each other, no matter how difficult it is to do that," she said in her acceptance speech. "You inspire me to keep going."
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Anders Hammer, director of the Oscar-nominated documentary "Do Not Split," takes part in the show from Oslo, Norway.
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From left, Mia Neal, Jamika Wilson and Sergio Lopez-Rivera pose with the Oscars they won for best makeup and hairstyling ("Ma Rainey's Black Bottom").
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Director Thomas Vinterberg accepts the Oscar for best international feature film, which went to his film "Another Round." He said this was "beyond anything I could ever imagine -- except this is something I've always imagined, since I was 5." AMPAS/ABC/Getty Images
Phillip Bladh, holding the best sound Oscar for "Sound of Metal," enters the press room in Los Angeles.
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Florian Zeller, speaking remotely from Paris, holds the Oscar he won for best adapted screenplay ("The Father").
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Songwriters Fat Max Gsus, left, and Savan Kotecha appear on the show from Stockholm, Sweden.
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Daniel Kaluuya examines his best supporting actor Oscar, which he won for his role as Black Panther leader Fred Hampton in "Judas and the Black Messiah."
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"Pinocchio" makeup artist Dalia Colli and hair designer Francesco Pegoretti appear on the show from Rome.
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Emerald Fennell won the first Oscar of the night, for best original screenplay ("Promising Young Woman"). "I'm trying very hard not to cry because, as an English person ... I don't cry ever," she joked.
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Actor Sacha Baron Cohen is cleaned up by his wife, Isla Fisher. They appeared on the show from Sydney.
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People attend a drive-in Oscar party in West Hollywood.
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Actress and director Regina King opened the show at Union Station. She delivered a hopeful monologue and said that if things had gone differently in the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, she probably would have been out marching instead of presenting. "As a mother of a Black son, I know the fear that so many live with -- and no amount of fame or fortune changes that," she said.
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Attendees prepare for the beginning of the show at Union Station in Los Angeles.
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From left, Nina Parker, Brad Goreski and Zanna Roberts Rassi were part of the panel for the E! channel's red-carpet show.
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Actress Laura Dern walks the red carpet before the show.
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Best actress nominee Viola Davis and her husband, Julius Tennon, are seen on the left after arriving on the red carpet.
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