‘American’ a beauty with Academy voters By John Hartl Knight-Ridder Tribune “American Beauty,” a soulful satire about suburbia, led the way when the 72nd annual Academy Award nominations were an nounced Tuesday in Los Angeles. The DreamWorks production re ceived eight nominations, includ ing best picture, actor (Kevin Spacey), actress (Annette Bening), director (Sam Mendes), screen writer (Alan Ball), cinematography (Conrad Hall), editing (Tariq An war) and score (Thomas Newman). Also nominated for best picture were Lasse Hallstrom’s adaptation of John Irving’s novel, ’The Cider House Rules”; Michael Mann’s ’The Insider,” a fact-based drama about an expose of the tobacco industry; M. Night Shyamalan’s ’’The Sixth Sense,” a box-office blockbuster about a boy who sees dead people; and Frank Darabont’s three-hour prison drama, ’The Green Mile.” Hallstrom, Shyamalan and Mann were nominated for best di rector, but Darabont was replaced in that category by Spike Jonze, who made the surrealistic come-' dy ’’Being John Malkovich.” Bening, who plays Spacey’s un happy wife in “American Beauty,” faces equally tough competition: Janet McTeer’s spirited — if imma ture — mother in “Ttimbleweeds,” Julianne Moore as a wartime adul teress with a spiritual side in “The End of the Affair,” Hilary Swank as the cross-dressing Teena Brandon in “Boys Don’t Cry” and Meryl Streep as a dedicated music teacher in ’’Music of the Heart.” For best supporting actress, the nominees include Angelina Jolie, as a mentally disturbed girl in “Girl, Interrupted”; Toni Collette as the boy’s mother in “The Sixth Sense”; and Samantha Morton as Sean Penn’s girlfriend in “Sweet and Lowdown.” Chloe Sevigny, who plays Swank’s sexually confused lover in “Boys Don’t Cry,” is also nominated in this category, along with Catherine Keener, who plays a similarly mixed-up office worker in “Being John Malkovich.” Tom Cruise earned his third nomination, this time in the sup porting category, for his work as a misogynistic motivational speak er in “Magnolia.” His competition includes Michael Caine, as an abortionist in “The Cider House Rules”; Haley Joel Osment, as the perceptive child in “The Sixth Sense”; Michael Clarke Duncan as a death-row miracle worker in “The Green Mile”; and Jude Law as a hedonistic ex-patriate in “The Talented Mr. Ripley.” Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor were nominated for best adapted screenplay for their work on the high-school satire, “Election,” based on Tom Perrota’s novel. Also in that category are Anthony Minghella, for his adaptation of Patricia High smith’s “The Talented Mr. Ripley”; Michael Mann and Eric Roth for “The Insider,” based on Marie Bren ner’s magazine article; John Irving, working from his own novel, “The Cider House Rules”; and Darabont for his adaptation of Stephen King’s novel, “The Green Mile.” The race for best original screen play appears to be a toss-up be tween Alan Ball’s script for “ Ameri can Beauty” and Charlie Kaufman’s “Being John Malkovich.” Also in the running are Paul Thomas An derson’s “Magnolia,” M. Night Shyamalan’s “The Sixth Sense” and Mike Leigh’s “Topsy-'I\irvy.” Spain’s “All About My Mother,” directed by Pedro Almodovar, was nominated for best foreign-language film, along with France’s “East West,” Nepal’s “Caravan,” Sweden’s “Under the Sun” and the United Kingdom’s “Solomon and Gaenor.” The past year’s most popular non-fiction film, Wim Wenders’ “The Buena Vista Social Club,” was nominated for best documen tary, but Errol Morris’ “Mr. Death: The Rise and Fall of Fred A. Leuchter Jr.” and Chris Smith’s “American Movie” were shut out by “Genghis Blues,” “On the Ropes,” “One Day in September” and “Speaking in Strings.” The Matrix and btar wars: Episode 1— The Phantom Menace” will be competing for best visual ef fects, sound recording and sound ef fects editing. And the highly bleep able “Blame Canada,” horn “South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut,” was nominated for best song. Billy Crystal will host this year’s Academy Awards, which begin with a pre-show special at 8 p.m. ET March 26 in Los Angeles’ Shrine Auditorium. Reclaiming the ‘The Vagina Monologues,’ performed on Valentine’s Day, extolled the agma By Sandra Colton for the Emerald “Vaeina! Dara I feminine genitalia Fple, Cyn thia Gomez, Diane John son. Melissa say it? Vagina; I’ll say it again!” Those were the first words uttered by Carol Horne in “The Vagina Monologues,” a play pre sented Feb. 14 bv the EMU Lebofsky, T.K. McDonald, and Margot Treiger — were joined by nine special guests. An esti mated 200 people at tended the show in the Cultural Forum in collabora tion with Little Apple Produc tions. The event was held to raise awareness in the fight to stop vi olence against women. Some of the topics featured in the play were the importance that hair plays on and around the vagina, how one explores the vagina and all its potential, the reclaiming of the word “vagina,” as well as the smell and sexuali ty that surrounds the vagina. “It covered all of the emotions. I thought it was really good,” said University student Justus McCann, a journalism major. The author of “The Vagina Monologues” is Eve Ensler, and she and other performers such as Julie Kavner, Swoosie Kurtz and Rosie Perez regularly bring the show to New York City stages. Ensler is a an award-winning poet, playwright, screenwriter and activist; “The Vagina Mono logues” won a 1997 Obie Award and was also nominated for Dra ma Desk and Helen Hayes awards. The University cast — Horne, the artistic director of Little Ap oenijuger i_.uungtj. The V-Day 2000 College Ini tiative is a growing movement nationwide and worldwide to get colleges to “celebrate V-Day in their communities with a per formance of ‘The Vagina Mono logues’ on Valentine’s Day,” ac cording to the organization’s literature. The mission statement of V-Day outlines a “vision of a world where women live safely and freely.” The only way the perform ance can be put on at a university or college is if the event’s profits are directed to organizations that raise awareness about violence against women. The three organi zations involved with this presen tation were Sexual Assault Sup port Services (SASS), Womenspace and Mother Kali’s Bookstore. Horne said pointed out to the audience that acts of violence against women happen on a dai ly basis in our society. In the play, she said that 500,000 women are raped in the United States each year. A spokesperson from Womenspace stated that “70 percent of men who abuse their female partners also abuse their children.” In 1999, there were about 65 colleges involved in V-Day Initia tive and this year there were about 160 that participated, Horne said. “Next year [the na tional organization is] shooting for 300 and the big event, the millennium one in 2001, is going to be held at Madison Square Garden.” Even though the word “vagi na” does not usually come up in everyday conversation, through out this performance the buzz around the room was that very word. The program reached emotion al highs with laughter, hooting and hollering. “The Vagina Monologues” cast created the playful atmosphere by pulling the audience in with humor and keeping it there with stories of pain and wonder.. The show, which lasted an hour and 45 minutes, was fol lowed by a standing ovation from the audience. “This is the best Valentine’s Day I’ve ever had in all of my 53 years,” an audience participant Mary Drew said. When it was all finished, “The Vagina Monologues” turned out to be a play that wants to involve people and send the message that violence against women must be stopped. In addition, they asked the predominantly fe male audience to reclaim the words that had been silenced or taken away from them.