Paul Sorvinoâs family call late actorâs Oscars In Memoriam snub âshocking and baffling beyond beliefâ


During the ceremony on Sunday, musician Lenny Kravitz performed his song Calling All Angels as a screen behind him showed a montage of notable figures from the world of film who had died in the past year.
These included Olivia Newton John, Ray Liotta, Angela Lansbury, Jean-Luc Godard and Irene Cara.
Other stars to be featured in the segment were Burt Bacharach, Nichelle Nichols, Kirstie Alley and Racquel Welch.
There was no mention however for character actor and opera singer Sorvino, who was known for his menacing performances in movies such as The Gambler and Romeo + Juliet and died of natural causes in July 2022 at the age of 83.
Taking to social media after the ceremony, his actress daughter Mira Sorvino, wrote on Instagram: âI for one am remembering Dad on this Oscars nightâ¦â
Her post included a clip of her father visibly weeping at the Oscars in 1996, after she won the Best Supporting Actress prize for her role in Woody AllenâsMighty Aphrodite.
Ms Sorvino later amended her caption, explaining that she had posted the reel before learning âof Dadâs omission and that of several other incredible artists from the In Memoriam sectionâ.
âIncredibly hurt and shocked that my fatherâs lifelong, irreplaceable, enormous contribution to the world of cinema was overlooked by whomever made that list,â she stated.
âWe his adoring family, and you, his adoring public, know just how unique and incredible he was. We hope @theacademy does something to put this right.â

Adding: âThe Oscars forgot about Paul Sorvino, but the rest of us never will!!â
She later tweeted that it was âbaffling beyond belief that my beloved father and many other amazing brilliant departed actors were left outâ.
Mr Sorvinoâs widow, Dee Dee Sorvino, who he married in 2014, told People: âPaul Sorvino was one of the greatest actors in cinematic history in Hollywood. It is unconscionable that he would be left out of the In Memoriam segment of the Oscars.
âItâs a three-hour show, they canât give a couple more minutes to get it right?â
She called on the Academy to âissue an apology, admit the mistake and do betterâ.
Addressing the issue, an Academy spokesperson told The Hollywood Reporter that the segmentâs selection committee âfeatures a representative from each of the organisationâs 17 branches, and some names that are more familiar to audiences cannot be included because all branches are entitled to representation during the limited time allotted for the segmentâ.