Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Pawscars Honour Top Animal Actors, Including Prolific Primate For Lifetime Achievement

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Feb, 2015 11:15 AM
    LOS ANGELES — Honouring actors brings out red carpets, couture and — sometimes — creatures.
     
    A monkey who's starred in 25 movies over two decades was top dog at the sixth annual Pawscars, the animal version of the Oscars. Waving a statue over her head in triumph, a beaming Crystal accepts the "lifetime diva achievement award" looking every bit the part in a pink, floor-length gown and necklace during the show streaming online Wednesday.
     
    The Capuchin monkey, who played a Ben Stiller-slapping, key-stealing primate in "Night at the Museum" and a drug-dealing monkey in "Hangover Part II," is "the Angelina Jolie of animal stars," said "NCIS" actress Pauley Perrette, who is hosting the show with teen actor Lou Wegner.
     
    Holding her tiny hand, Perrette asks the prolific primate: "So Crystal, you have starred with some of the top leading men of all times — Bradley Cooper, Ben Stiller, Matt Damon, Robin Williams — did you have a favourite?"
     
    Crystal nods and chitters as her "answer" appears on screen: "Robin did call me his favourite leading lady, but my favourite leading man has to be my trainer Tom Gunderson."
     
    The show airs four days before the Academy Awards and honours other animal actors in categories such as best puppy under pressure and best supporting equine.
     
    As pets become more important parts of everyday life, including on film and TV, animal award shows have grown in popularity. Pets already took the limelight at the World Dog Awards, the Puppy Bowl and Kitten Bowl on Super Bowl Sunday, and the Westminster dog show.
     
    Like the Oscars, the Pawscars wrap up awards season but are far more low-key. The hosts announce the awards from armchairs in Perrette's Hollywood guest house, while Crystal perches on a nearby ottoman. Other winners are sent an official Pawscars certificate and special treat.
     
    Praise for animals on set doesn't come without detractors: People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals says live animals don't belong in film and TV work. The American Humane Association, the group hosting the Pawscars, has a 75-year-old program that ensures the safety of animal actors and gives its approval by allowing the familiar "No Animals Were Harmed" tagline to roll in movie credits.
     
    Other Pawscars include:
     
    BEST YOUNG ANIMAL PERFORMER
     
    A trio of pit bull puppies won for their work in the late James Gandolfini's last film, "The Drop." It took T, Puppers, Ice and a makeup artist to bring to life Rocco, a dog that appears in the mob drama. Puppies grow so fast that the film needed three and non-toxic makeup to make them match.
     
    BEST SUPPORTING EQUINE
     
    The award goes to Dale, a horse in "Dawn of the Planet of the Apes" who carries the apes' leader. It looks like the apes ride bareback, thanks to special-effects markers on the saddles that are removed in post-production, Perrette said. In scenes where the horses appear to be jumping over fire, they are actually jumping over a foot-high bar with flickering lights.
     
    BEST AQUATIC PERFORMANCE
     
    The honour goes to Savannah, who plays a dolphin that dies in "Dolphin Tale 2," but she avoided having to learn a death scene thanks to animatronics. As for the other marine life, the American Humane Association made sure no animal worked more than an hour without a break.
     
    BEST ENSEMBLE
     
    The animals of "Wild" prevail: Muffet the horse, Dharma the fox, Fred the rattlesnake, Tess the dog, Sport the rabbit and Taiga the llama. In the film about a woman's solo hike along the Pacific Crest Trail, 40 frogs cover a sleeping Reese Witherspoon, but a foot-high barrier surrounding her meant no single frog was lost, Wegner said.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Shocking Revelation: Why America is losing out on female athletes

    Shocking Revelation: Why America is losing out on female athletes
    Pervasive, subtle gender biases and stereotyping by media is hampering the performance of American female athletes, a study contends....

    Shocking Revelation: Why America is losing out on female athletes

    'Sexual orientation not a choice, influenced by genetics'

    'Sexual orientation not a choice, influenced by genetics'
    In the largest study of its kind, genetic analysis of 409 pairs of gay brothers, including sets of twins, has linked sexual orientation in men with two regions...

    'Sexual orientation not a choice, influenced by genetics'

    Unveil Your Mind At First-ever Sex Exhibition in London

    Unveil Your Mind At First-ever Sex Exhibition in London
    With over 200 erotic objects, a sex exhibition titled "The Institute of Sexology" was Thursday opened for public at the prestigious Wellcome Collection in London.

    Unveil Your Mind At First-ever Sex Exhibition in London

    Eye for emotions ups your earnings

    Eye for emotions ups your earnings
    The researchers used a validated collection of images and recordings of actors and children - that is, of people who have learned to clearly express their feelings ...

    Eye for emotions ups your earnings

    Tough jobs may protect memory

    Tough jobs may protect memory
    If you hate your job because it requires complex work with other people or data, you may now discard the negative thoughts as researchers have found that complex......

    Tough jobs may protect memory

    Ladies! High Heels Bring Men To Their Knees

    Ladies! High Heels Bring Men To Their Knees
    If you need help from men on the road, wear high heels. This is the message from a new study, revealing that how the height of a woman’s shoe heel influences how men behave towards her....

    Ladies! High Heels Bring Men To Their Knees