Some victors over the years have become legendary for their bizarre Oscar acceptance speeches ever.

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13 Awkward Oscar Speeches

13 Awkward Oscar Speeches

By Joe Frank

Gwyneth Paltrow sobbed during her best actress acceptance speech for 1999's "Shakespeare in Love," which opened with a reference to disgraced film producer Harvey Weinstein.

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At the 2014 Oscars, Matthew McConaughey surprised audience members by revealing his "hero" was himself.

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Sally Field received her second Oscar in 1985 for her performance in "Places in the Heart," but it wasn't until then that she began to feel accepted by her colleagues.

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Daniel Kaluuya's winning speech, which was captured by his mother's expression, praised God and his parents for having sex.

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Leo's unorthodox acceptance speech for the Oscar featured an awkward flirtation with Kirk Douglas and an unintentional F-bomb.

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When Angelina Jolie said she was "so in love" with her brother before kissing him on the lips, it made viewers uneasy.

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To celebrate receiving his 11th prize for "Titanic," James Cameron yelled "I'm the king of the world!" after his best director speech.

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Sam Smith claimed that no openly gay guy had ever won an Oscar, yet by 2016, nine openly gay men had done so, including Elton John and Stephen Sondheim.

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Elinor Burkett interrupted Roger Ross Williams' acceptance speech for the best documentary short by starting her own, which completely sidetracked Ross.

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The most crucial idea is that "La La Land," the year's finest film, was accidentally chosen when presenters Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty received the wrong envelope.

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Depending on your perspective, the sing-along speech by Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez was either cute or embarrassing.

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When Jack Palance won his third best supporting actor award at the age of 72, he decided to demonstrate rather than explain.

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Ben Folds a Piano man has done collaboration with NYC classical sextet yMusic, So There, for his first album after 2015.

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