Bridesmaids, Baby Yoda and ballet bites back - the bits of the Oscars you might have missed
One Battle After Another led the night, taking six Oscars, including best picture, best director and best supporting actor.
Sinners followed in second place, with four wins, then Frankenstein with three, but of course, the Oscars are about more than just numbers. Here are our stand-out moments for 2026.
Timmy, Leo and Ted get roasted Second-time host Conan O'Brien did not hold back in his opening monologue. Taking a swipe at Timothee Chalamet's recent comment that "nobody cares" about opera and ballet, he joked: "I should tell you, security is tight tonight, I'm told there are concerns about attacks from both the opera and ballet communities." O'Brien added, "They're just mad you left out jazz".
A close-up of the audience showed a laughing Chalamet, sitting next to his girlfriend, Kylie Jenner, who was wearing a sparkling red gown with a plunging neckline. Leonardo DiCaprio got similar treatment, as O'Brien took a moment to restock the actor's already plentiful supply of memes, asking him to portray "The feeling when you didn't agree to this".
A bemused DiCaprio gestured with his hands as he looked to the camera. Cutting away, O'Brien said: "We'll sort it in the edit".
The streamers came in for some harsh words, too. Zoning in on Netflix boss Ted Sarandos, who nearly bought Warner Bros earlier this year, O'Brien joked: "It's the first time he's in a theatre".
He added that Sarandos was thinking, "What are they all doing, enjoying themselves? They should be home where I can monetise it!" O'Brien also lamented the lack of nominees for Amazon MGM: "Why isn't the website I order toilet paper from winning more Oscars?" A real Hollywood power couple While Chalamet and Jenner have been together for around three years - which some would say is a long time in Hollywood - the real props have to go to Hollywood power couple Amy Madigan and Ed Harris. Exactly 40 years after she was nominated for her first Oscar for the 1985 film Twice In A Lifetime, Madigan finally won her first Oscar, bagging best supporting actress for her stellar turn as creepy Aunt Gladys in Weapons.
It's the record for the longest time between first nomination and first win. The 75-year-old star, who admitted to being "flummoxed" and "overwhelmed.
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