FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Communications Coach Has One Word of Advice for Oscar Nominees
Los Angeles, California (PRWEB) February 3, 2004. They represent
the highest level of their craft, the pinnacle of their art,
and they’ve just snagged the top honor in their industry.
A simple 45-second speech should be a piece of cake, right?
Wrong. The failure of Oscar winners to give a good acceptance
speech is legendary.
Why do these highly talented
people fail so miserably at this simple task? Executive communications
coach, author and commentator, LeeAundra Temescu, is convinced
it’s because they simply don’t take the time to
prepare. “It’s painfully obvious these people don’t
have a clue what to say when they’re up there.”
The result: a rambling, mind-numbing recitation of thank yous
that has long been one of the biggest complaints of Oscar viewers.
That many of these same
tongue-tied artists make a living performing the spoken word
is just one of the ironies of the situation. “I understand
the pressure is intense and their nerves are probably raw.”
Temescu says, “But I’ve never understood why Oscar
nominees, who spend hundreds of hours and thousands of dollars
on stylists, makeup artists, and clothes to present the perfect
image for Oscar night, rarely, if ever, spend even a few minutes
thinking about what they are going to say in front of the biggest
audience many of them will ever have.”
Why don’t nominees
prepare? Some are superstitious and feel that “preparing
for a win” jinxes them. Adrian Brody admitted in his acceptance
speech for the Best Actor Oscar in “The Pianist”
(2002) that he didn’t write a speech because "every
time I've done that in the past I didn't win.” Some may
be too busy. But at Oscar time, the stakes are high and a good
acceptance speech is remembered often times as much as the achievement
that won it. Sometimes more.
At the 1997 Academy Awards
after receiving the Oscar for Best Short Subject Documentary,
Jessica Yu quipped, "What a thrill. You know you've entered
new territory when you realize that your outfit cost more than
your film." Temescu says that line got her worldwide attention
and a spot in a national Coach purse ad campaign, “surely
more exposure than even an Oscar-winning short-subject would’ve
gotten her.”
According to Temescu,
the best acceptance speeches such as those given by Tom Hanks
(Best Actor, “Philadelphia”), Jodie Foster (Best
Actress, “Silence of the Lambs”) and Steven Soderburg
(Best Director: “Traffic”) are "short, sincere
and eloquent. They said something meaningful about the process
of making movies and about the speaker themselves. Plus, you
get bonus points for being funny. You can’t do all those
things off-the-cuff.”
So her advice is simple:
“Prepare. It’s only 45 seconds, for heaven’s
sake! That’s six or seven sentences, tops. It won’t
take that long to sketch out something really good. And the
payoff could be huge.”
And what about the laundry
lists of names? Should winners jettison all the thank yous?
“Never!” says Temescu. “A endless stream of
thank yous will kill you but you must always, always thank your
mom.”
The Contrary Public
Speaker is an executive communications coaching firm based in
Los Angeles. Founded by national award winning public speaker,
author and commentator, LeeAundra Temescu, it provides high-level
presentation skills, in-the-moment training and executive presence
for top-level managers and professionals.
CONTACT INFORMATION:
LeeAundra Temescu
The Contrary Public Speaker
(310) 578-9212
www.thecontrarypublicspeaker.com
###
Press
Contact: Leeaundra Temescu
Company Name: THE CONTRARY PUBLIC SPEAKER
Email: pr@thecontrarypublicspeaker.com
Phone: 310 578 9212
Website: www.thecontrarypublicspeaker.com