Adrien Brody Tells the Academy to Cut the Music So He Can Finish Speech: ‘I’ve Done This Before’

Adrien Brody has won his second Oscar for best actor, for his role in Brady Corbet’s “The Brutalist.”
He beat out Timothée Chalamet (“A Complete Unknown”), Colman Domingo (“Sing Sing”), Ralph Fiennes (“Conclave”) and Sebastian Stan (“The Apprentice”) for the statuette.
Walking on stage to accept the trophy, Brody spit his chewing gum into his hand and threw it to his partner, Georgina Chapman. Toward the end of his lengthy and passionate speech, the Academy began to play Brody off with music.
“I’m wrapping up, please turn the music off,” Brody said. “I’ve done this before. Thank you. It’s not my first rodeo, but I will will be brief.”
Brody’s two Oscars are both for playing characters who survived the Holocaust. “I’m here once again to represent the lingering traumas and the repercussions of war and systematic oppression, and of antisemitism and racism and othering,” Brody said. “I pray for a healthier and a happier and a more inclusive world, and I believe if the past can teach us anything, it’s a reminder to not let hate go unchecked.”
In 2003, Brody became the youngest person to win the Oscar for best actor at age 29, for his lead role in “The Pianist.” Had Chalamet won this year, he would have beaten Brody’s record by eight months.
Brody joins a short list of actors who have won the Academy Award for best actor twice: Spencer Tracy, Jack Nicholson, Marlon Brando, Dustin Hoffman, Gary Cooper, Tom Hanks, Fredric March, Sean Penn and Anthony Hopkins. (Daniel Day-Lewis is the only person to win best actor three times.)