A star among stars: Tom Cruise turns lunch for Oscar nominees into meet-and-greet

Sixty-year-old actor nominated this year as a producer of best picture contender Top Gun: Maverick

Elvis star Austin Butler finally got an audience with Tom Cruise. Photograph: Sinna Nasseri/The New York Times

For the privileged few embarking on an Oscar campaign, the path to a nomination asks you to hobnob with so many of the same people that over the course of many months, your competitors can begin to feel like classmates.

But on Monday afternoon, at a luncheon held in Beverly Hills, California, for this year’s Oscar nominees, the arrival of a new student caused quite a stir.

That would be Tom Cruise, nominated this year as a producer of the popular best picture contender Top Gun: Maverick. He was among the first notable names to walk into the ballroom of the Beverly Hilton. The 60-year-old star had sat out the Golden Globes and the Critics Choice Awards this season, so many of his fellow nominees were encountering him for the first time. Before long, the ballroom had turned into a meet-and-greet.

Together in the ballroom crush: Michelle Williams, Hong Chau, Steven Spielberg, Jamie Lee Curtis and Tom Cruise. Photograph: Sinna Nasseri/The New York Times
The Fabelmans castmates Judd Hirsch and Michelle Williams share a moment at the luncheon. Photograph: Roger Kisby/The New York Times

“I love you, I love you, oh, my God!” said Everything Everywhere All at Once star Ke Huy Quan, who hopped in place, exclaiming, “I want a picture with this man!” before seizing a selfie with Cruise. Director Guillermo del Toro went over for an embrace, as did nominated actors Brendan Fraser, Angela Bassett and Michelle Williams. Cruise even posed for pictures with Steven Spielberg, a once-frequent collaborator whom the star has not been publicly photographed with in over a decade.

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The nominees luncheon is supposed to be an egalitarian affair where big stars and behind-the-scenes technicians are on equal footing, but there was no mistaking Cruise as the ballroom’s top dog: He had the gravitational pull of the sun and its burnt-orange countenance, too. Any of the nominees who might have pulled focus from Cruise had declined to attend: Original-song contenders Lady Gaga and Rihanna were busy with other obligations (including, for the latter, a just-concluded Super Bowl stint), and even surprise best actress nominee Andrea Riseborough was missing in action.

A caterer brings out appetisers at the luncheon in Beverly Hills. Photograph: Roger Kisby/The New York Times
Jerzy Skolimowski, the director of EO, taking a break at the event. Photograph: Sinna Nasseri/The New York Times

Still, simply making it to Cruise took some time: In the schmoozy hour before lunch was served, he was so mobbed by his fellow nominees that he was hardly able to move more than a few feet. I watched for a while as Elvis star Austin Butler drifted with slow, inexorable determination toward Cruise, who finally pulled the younger man toward him by clamping a hand on his shoulder like a stapler. For several minutes, they were locked in such a tight bro embrace that it was impossible to discern what they were talking about (or, more important, whether Butler was still speaking in his Elvis drawl).

Tár actor Cate Blanchett. Photograph: Roger Kisby/The New York Times

So instead, I made my way to Top Gun: Maverick producer Jerry Bruckheimer, who observed the scene serenely just a few feet away. “It’s my first time at the luncheon,” said the newly nominated producer, who’s better known for making explosive action movies than Oscar fare. “After 50 years in the business, I finally get here.”

Malala Yousafzai, there on behalf of the documentary short Stranger at the Gate, speaking with The Whale star Brendan Fraser. Photograph: Sinna Nasseri/The New York Times
Stephanie Hsu of Everything Everywhere All at Once who is a supporting actress nominee. Photograph: Sinna Nasseri/The New York Times

It was not the first time at the luncheon for songwriter Diane Warren, who has been nominated for an Oscar 13 times before and is back in contention this year for the song Applause, from the film Tell It Like a Woman.

“It’s my favourite day,” Warren said. “No one’s a loser yet, everybody’s a winner.” I noted that Warren had received an honorary Oscar in November, and asked whether it had dimmed her desire to win a competitive statuette. “No, I still want to win,” she said, grinning. “He wants a friend!”

Black Panther star Angela Bassett with Tom Cruise while Top Gun: Maverick screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie and Austin Butler chat. Photograph: Sinna Nasseri for The New York Times

As the nominees and their guests took their seats to eat mushroom risotto, the academy president, Janet Yang, came to the stage and addressed the fallout from the organisation’s handling of the Will Smith slap at last year’s ceremony.

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“It was inadequate,” Yang said. “We learned from this that the academy must be fully transparent and accountable in our actions, and particularly in times of crisis, we must act swiftly, compassionately and decisively.”

One unrelated tweak has already been made: Unlike last year, when eight below-the-line Oscars were presented just before the telecast began, Yang promised that each category would be aired live during the March 12th telecast. Because of that, Yang pleaded with the nominees to keep their speeches short: “We need to be sensitive to our running time,” she said. “This is live television, after all.”

Nominees from Everything Everywhere All at Once included, Jamie Lee Curtis, directors Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert and producer Jonathan Wang. Photograph: Roger Kisby/The New York Times
Steven Spielberg with Ke Huy Quan, who as a child starred in the director’s Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Photograph: Sinna Nasseri/The New York Times

With that settled, the nominees were called one by one to the front of the stage, where they would pose together for one big “class photo.” The first name announced was Jamie Lee Curtis, who had earned her first Oscar nomination this year for Everything Everywhere All at Once.

“I’ve been acting since I was 19 and I’m 64 – do the math,” Curtis said. “That’s many years of watching this photograph being taken.” Her late parents, actors Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh, had been Oscar nominees. “To be connected through this legacy of their work and my work and now being included here, it’s very powerful,” she said.

Michelle Yeoh, who features in Everything Everywhere All at Once, and The Banshees of Inisherin actor Brendan Gleeson. Photograph: Roger Kisby/The New York Times
Causeway star Brian Tyree Henry. Photograph: Roger Kisby/The New York Times

Eventually, with all the nominees assembled, producer and academy governor DeVon Franklin counted down to a flashbulb – pop! – then counted down again as the academy photographer took another picture. “All right, three more,” Franklin said.

“I’ve got one more expression,” shouted best-actor nominee Colin Farrell for The Banshees of Inisherin.

Moments earlier, Farrell had been in an animated conversation with Warren, who was standing on the riser behind him. When the pictures were finished and the attendees started to make their way out of the ballroom, I asked Warren what they had discussed.

“We talked about how we both did very badly at school,” she said, “and now here we are, at the coolest graduation picture ever.” – This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Steven Spielberg with Tom Cruise at the luncheon. Photograph: Sinna Nasseri/The New York Times

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