Art & Culture
A payback kiss, a surprise win, and defying gravity at the Oscars
Et harum quidem rerum facilis est et expedita distinctio. Nam libero tempore, cum soluta nobis est eligendi optio.
An audible gasp was made by journalists in the winners’ room (where I was) when Mikey Madison was announced as the best actress winner.
Demi Moore was the favourite for much of this campaign. Things did shift after Madison’s Bafta win, but the race remained incredibly tight.
In the end, it was Madison’s night and marked an incredible moment for a 25-year-old actress who was relatively unknown before her role in Anora.
This is exactly the type of rags-to-riches story that awards ceremonies love – and the film itself celebrates.
The film tells the story of Madison, who plays a sex worker, who has a whirlwind ill-fated romance with the spoilt son of a Russian oligarch,
Edie Turquet, one of the young female dancers and strippers in the film, text me to say it was “insane” that a film about sex workers could win best picture at the Oscars.
“Hopefully this will lead to some amount of societal humanisation,” she said.
Cynthia and Ariana defy gravity

We all knew it was coming but Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande belting out Wicked’s anthem Defying Gravity was even better than we could have hoped for.
As Erivo, in a white gown, hit that final iconic note, the audience stood in applause.
The co-stars performed a medley of songs, including Somewhere Over the Rainbow, which Grande sang to open the show wearing a gorgeous red sequined dress.
Earlier in the night, Grande stunned on the red carpet with a champagne Schiaparelli gown, which leaned into her role as Glinda the Good Witch in the film.
“It’s giving chandelier,” one reporter said to me backstage. On social media the big question was: “How is she going to sit down in that dress?”

A payback kiss… 22 years later

On the red carpet, there was quite a moment when Halle Berry ran up to Adrien Brody and gave him a big kiss.
It recreated a moment at the 2003 Academy Awards, when Brody – having just won best actor for his performance in The Pianist – turned and kissed Berry, who had presented the award to him.
She told Variety: “I had to pay him back”.
Speaking to Extra, she added that the only reason she did it was because Brody’s girlfriend, Georgina Chapman, “was fine” with the scheme.
The Oscars wrote on X with a clip of the kiss: “A reunion 22 years in the making”.
A Timothee and Kylie kiss

Berry and Brody weren’t the only two seen locking lips.
Inside the ceremony at the Dolby Theatre, lovebirds Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet were photographed sharing a kiss and laughing together.
Reality star and makeup mogul Jenner was there to support her boyfriend who was up for best actor – but ended up losing out to… Brody.
Adam Sandler storms out?

Actor Adam Sandler was in on the ongoing jokes about his typically casual attire.
Early on in the night, host Conan O’Brien called him out, saying he was “dressed like a guy playing video poker at 2am”.
(For reference, Sandler was in the audience wearing a blue hoodie and shorts, an ensemble that looked more at home on the basketball court).
Following a playful back and forth between the two, the actor walked into the aisle of the theatre and said he was “leaving” before going over to Timothee Chalamet and shouting his surname, in the way he previously did on Saturday Night Live.
Chalamet laughed along.
Los Angeles wildfires

This year’s Oscars race has played out against the grim backdrop of devastating wildfires in Los Angeles, which killed 29 people.
The Grammys and Golden Globes both made the fires a central theme of the show.
The Academy Awards mentioned it only a handful of times, signalling Hollywood is moving on.
There was, however, one powerful moment, when host Conan O’Brien welcomed some of the firefighters who fought the blazes on stage, with the audience clapping and giving the emergency workers a standing ovation.
O’Brien called them “heroes”, adding: “On behalf of everyone… thank you for all that you do,” he says.
He said there are some jokes that even he isn’t brave enough to tell – and asked some of the firefighters to read them out instead. He insists the crowd will have to laugh.
Los Angeles Fire Captain Erik Scott read one joke off a teleprompter that said their hearts go out to everyone who lost their homes – including the makers of Joker 2.
It gets a big laugh and O’Brien calls it the best joke delivery of the night.
Zoe Saldaña thanks her mommy
It was Zoe Saldaña’s first Oscar, winning best supporting actress for Emilia Pérez – a musical about a transgender Mexican drug lord – and it marked one of the most powerful and emotional speeches of the night.
She broke down in tears immediately, crying out “Mommy”, to her mother in the audience.
“I am floored by this honour,” she wept, paying tribute to her fellow nominees for their “loving and community”, saying “I will pay it forward”.
Praising the film’s cast and crew, she got emotional as she talked about her family.
“Everything brave, outrageous and good I’ve ever done in my life is because of you,” she said, praising her husband, his “beautiful hair” and their three sons.
“My grandmother came to this country in 1961 – I am a proud child of immigrant parents with dreams and dignity and hardworking hands.
“I’m the first American of Dominican origin to accept an Academy Award and I know I won’t be the last.
“Getting an award where I got to sing and speak in Spanish – this is for my grandmother.”
‘We couldn’t get a visa’

The month-long saga to obtain a US visa by two Iranian filmmakers ended in the pair winning the best animated short film Academy Award – with them rushing to even make the ceremony in Hollywood.
Hossein Molayemi and Shirin Sohani arrived at Los Angeles airport just hours before the Oscar award ceremony as due to begin.
After their plane landed, they quickly changed outfits in a public restroom and made it with only moments to go before they would win their award for their film, In the Shadow of the Cypress.
“It’s not our fault we are so late,” Sohani said on stage. “We couldn’t get a visa. It’s a difficult relationship” between the US and Iran, she explained.
“We are going to dedicate our award just to the fact we managed to make this film under the extraordinary circumstances of our country; until yesterday we hadn’t obtained our visa and now we are standing here with this statuette in our hands,” said Molayemi.
“It’s a miracle, and speaking in front of this expectant audience is very hard for us,” Molayemi said in his acceptance speech. “Yes, if we preserve and remain faithful, miracles will happen.”
‘Standing up to a powerful Russian’

As ever, politics reared its head during Sunday night’s ceremony.
Oscars host Conan O’Brien made a quip about how Anora was “having a good night”, before saying: “I guess Americans are excited to see somebody finally stand up to a powerful Russian.”
O’Brien must have been writing his monologue up to the very last minute, because the joke appeared to be a nod to the White House spat between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and US President Donald Trump.
Meanwhile, the No Other Land documentary team descended on the red carpet wearing Palestinian scarves and Kufiya. Their film is set in the occupied West Bank. After they won for the film, the team took the stage and called out US policy in the region.
Kill Bill star Daryl Hannah also veered into politics while on stage. She referenced the war in Ukraine, saying “Slava Ukraini”, the country’s salute, as she presented an award.
But one person wasn’t mentioned.
Here in liberal Hollywood, you may have expected jokes and barbs toward US president Donald Trump – but his name didn’t come up even once.
Taken From BBC News
Art & Culture
“The Backyard Ballet: Cat and Crow in Comic Courtship — A Poem by Zeenat Iqbal Hakimjee”
My backyard is livened up
By the cat and the crow.
From a distance they for each other
A liking show.
Caw Caw, Meow Meow they hark & howl.
A din enough, to disturb the neighbouring fowl
Both of them perched on the dustbin.
Turn by turn.
Waiting for a morsel, from the kitchen to return.
Up goes the left over meat, in the air,
What ensues would ashame ‘The battle for the chair
Art & Culture
What’s Cooking: A Lively Dance of Flames and Flavors in the Heart of a Homely Kitchen — A Whimsical Reflection by Zeenat Iqbal Hakimjee from Harmony
la Ra Rum go the prancing, dancing,
Flames of the stove,
Amused by this scenario, is the meat
Being cooked above.
The groin softens to the warmth of the fire,
With the cabbage and potato.
It forms an empire.
The unveiling of the platter,
Reveals, fit for a king, matter.
Copied from television this recipe
Is a treat, When near and dear ones,
Altogether do meet.
Art & Culture
PAKISTAN PRESENTS LANDMARK ISLAMIC ARTWORK TO OXFORD CENTRE FOR ISLAMIC STUDIES
PAKISTAN HIGH COMMISSION
LONDON
Press Release
The Government of Pakistan presented a major contemporary Islamic artwork to the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies, marking the first-ever representation of Pakistan in the Centre’s permanent collection.
The gift was presented by High Commissioner, Dr. Mohammad Faisal, along with his spouse Dr. Sarah Naeem, in a graceful event that was attended by Lord Wajid Khan, academics and scholars, faculty of OCIS, officers of Pakistan High Commission and friends of Pakistan.
The gifted sculpture, created by renowned Pakistani artist Mr. Amin Gulgee, is from his acclaimed Zero Gravity II series. The work features the fifth verse of Surah Al-Alaq – one of the earliest verses revealed to the Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) – عَلَّمَ ٱلۡإِنسَٰنَ مَا لَمۡ يَعۡلَمۡ “[He] taught humankind what they knew not” (Quran 96:5) – rendered in elegant Naskh calligraphy and dramatically deconstructed into seven floating, interconnected components that appear to defy gravity.

Speaking at the presentation ceremony, Dr. Mohammad Faisal, High Commissioner of Pakistan to the United Kingdom said that it was a great honour and personal pleasure to represent the Government and people of Pakistan on the occasion. “To have Pakistan’s artistic voice now resonate within these walls is a matter of immense national pride. This gift is not a one-time event, but the beginning of a lasting relationship between Pakistan and the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies”, the High Commissioner stated. Dr. Faisal expressed the hope this artwork will serve as a bridge – opening doors to deeper collaboration in research, scholarship, academic exchange, and cultural dialogue for many years to come.

The High Commissioner extended warm gratitude to Director OCIS Dr. Farhan Ahmad Nizami and the management of the Centre for accepting the gift and to Mr. Amin Gulgee for creating a work that “so beautifully embodies the Pakistani spirit of creativity rooted in faith.” He concluded by expressing hope that the sculpture would inspire visitors to remember that the pursuit of knowledge is a sacred journey, one that began with the divine command “Iqra” – Read – and continues through institutions such as the Oxford Centre and through the growing partnership between Pakistan and the Centre.

Dr. Farhan Nizami, Director OCIS thanked the people and Government of Pakistan for the gift and expressed the hope that collaboration between Pakistan and the Centre will further strengthen.
The Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies is recognized worldwide as a leading institution for the multi-disciplinary study of Islamic culture, civilization, and contemporary Muslim societies.
Oxford
20th November, 2025
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