Monday, January 30, 2012

City Ballet: All Wheeldon


I’m calling it now. The All Wheeldon night at New York City Ballet is one of my favorite things, if not my number one favorite thing, of 2012. I am absolutely in love with Christopher Wheeldon’s choreography. His work is special enough, and to get to see three pieces in one night, for one of them to be his breakthrough work; for one to be a City Ballet premiere; for one of them to be a world premiere – it was a very special night.

We begin with the world premiere of Les Carillons. Wheeldon’s latest work is set to Georges Bizet’s Suites No. 1 and 2 of L’Arlesienne. (The music was composed for an unsuccessful play. After the play closed, Bizet “took steps to ensure [the score’s] survival,” and turned it into an orchestral piece, according to repertory notes.) The conceptual artist choreographer teams with costume designer Mark Zappone (I want the women’s dresses!), scenic designer Jean-Marc Puissant and lighting designer Mary Louise Geiger to great effect. (More as we go through.)

Les Carillons is amazing. It is absolutely breathtaking and beautiful. Once it was finished and we entered intermission, it took me a solid three minutes to calm down and stop shaking from excitement. Leading up to the premiere, Les Carillons had been described as a plotless ballet. It may be plotless but there is most definitely a story and oodles of emotion. Les Carillons is really a meditation on love – in all its forms and in all its stages. The stories were there; the human emotion was there. There wasn’t a through-storyline (or plot), but this was more than just dancing.

Wheeldon had been talking about the wonderful women this ballet features, and it’s easy to see why (though I’ll give credit to the incredible men, too!). Taking the stage were Sara Mearns, partnered with Amar Ramasar; Wendy Whelan, partnered with Robert Fairchild (guess who was ridiculously excited about that pairing!); Maria Kowroski, partnered with Tyler Angle; Ana Sophia Scheller, partnered with Daniel Ulbricht; and Tiler Peck, partnered with Gonzalo Garcia.

(Note: There was so much I loved about Les Carillons (and the entire night, actually), and I was so full of excitement that I know there are things I’ll miss or get out of order in this review. Please excuse the scattered nature, and chalk it up to me being too thrilled to think straight!)

This piece begins in an almost aggressive fashion, but the dancing was still very classical in form. Then Sara Mearns and Amar Ramasar come out for a sultry pas de deux. Corps members are “watching” them (dancing a little here and there). The couple fills the stage with a dance slightly reminiscent of the third movement in Interplay.

Next Tiler Peck comes out with a fiery passion. With each new emotion, each new kind of love, Geiger’s light changes. She back lights the scrim, which Puissant has painted to mirror the women’s costumes, and both mirror the movement. The multi-hued gray scrim has straight, vertical lines, and some of the choreography was crisp and precise. The scrim also has rounded edges, suggesting a fluidity that infuses much of the choreography.

Then Wendy Whelan and Robbie Fairchild take the stage, and it’s exquisite. They’re lovers exploring one another and the bounds of their love. The two extraordinary dancers are developing a good chemistry on stage and it’s simply marvelous.

After their pas de deux, Fairchild leaves the stage and a corps of girls comes on, but I have no idea what they were doing because I was busy watching Whelan get over her love. She is frozen at the wings, with her hand stretched out to the now absent Fairchild. She slowly weaves through the dancers and comes center stage, a look of longing, vulnerability and passion on her face. I thought, “If this was a musical, she’d break out into song with her 11 o’clock number.” Sure enough, she proceeded to dance the ballet equivalent – dancing an incomparable solo. It’s clear the unparalleled Wheeldon is showing off just how amazing his frequent collaborator is.

Later, the five men are bounding around the stage when all of the sudden they stop. They’ve come under the spell of Sara Mearns. She’s got them (and us!) bewitched and she knows it as she goes into a seductive dance. She absolutely commands the stage. (This is turning out be a great, breakthrough year for Mearns, who premiered not only in Les Carillons, but originated the lead role in Peter Martins’s and Paul McCartney’s Ocean’s Kingdom this past fall.)

Next Tyler Angle and Maria Kowroski come out. They were much better together on Saturday night than when I saw them the previous week in In G Major. Their long, lithe bodies fill the stage in beautiful, striking poses. Soon Tiler Peck returns to the stage. The lights are a jovial yellow and Peck, who shows incredible core strength in the way she effortlessly holds her arms, goes into her dance. Like spring come to life, she is intoxicating and playful, and she continues when she is joined by Daniel Ulbricht and Gonzalo Garcia.

(I was actually impressed with Ulbricht here. He’s a shorter man so I often find that his stature inhibits his gracefulness. Not so in Wheeldon’s ballet.)

The final movement pulses and charges; it builds to this great climax – leaving you with such a rush. I found it amazing that so much of the choreography was classical and full of grace, and yet at the same time it was modern and progressive. These two brands of ballet are seamlessly woven together for a fantastically fresh feel in a traditional art form. Les Carillons is a superlative ballet (I have to see it again!), and confirms that Christopher Wheeldon is the future of ballet.

The second piece of the evening was Polyphonia, Wheeldon’s breakthrough work. (I saw this for the first time back in May and provided a fuller review then.) On Saturday night, Wendy Whelan once again danced in the role she created; she was joined by Jared Angle; Jennie Somogyi and Gonzalo Garcia (though Somogyi left the stage due to an injury; Tiler Peck danced in her place to conclude the ballet); Sterling Hyltin and Adrian Danchig-Waring; and Sara Mearns and Craig Hall.

What I found most notable about this performance was Sterling Hyltin. You know that I love her dancing, but what I love most about it is that she’s playful – she dances with flair. This is the most rigid and precise ballet I’ve seen her in and she nailed it. It’s a testament to her range as a dancer that she can do something totally whimsical like The Concert and something very technical like this, and thrill in both.

(It was also at this second viewing that I noticed the music for the fifth movement sounded like “Another Hundred People” from Company.)

Perhaps the most enjoyable part about seeing this piece again, aside from Sara Mearns giving an impressive performance and Wendy Whelan being amazing, was the reaction from the woman sitting next to me. She was largely unfamiliar with Wheeldon’s body of work and had never seen Polyphonia before. Hearing her “ooh” and “ahh” at the different poses helped me rediscover the piece, as we watched in amazement as the dancers hit their unusual poses.

Finishing the evening was the City Ballet premiere of DGV: Danse a Grande Vitesse. (The piece premiered on November 16, 2006, at the Royal Ballet in Covent Garden.) Wheeldon has spoken about how the score, Michael Nyman’s MGV: Musique a Grande Vistesse, was composed “to commemorate the 1993 inauguration of the north European line of the French ‘train a grande vitesse,’ more commonly known as the TGV.” And so Wheeldon’s starting off point for this ballet was one of travel. I don’t want to argue with a genius, but I think DGV is more about exploration.

Jean-Marc Puissant’s scenic design (he also designed this ballet’s costumes) looked like creation. These structures seemed to burst forth from the stage, and they got progressively bigger as you looked from left to right. As Jesse Belsky’s lighting design changed throughout, so did the appearance of the structure. At times it looked solid, other times translucent. It all added to this ever-changing, enigmatic landscape to be explored by the dancers.

As the exploratory journey began, I was reminded of American Idiot, the way the show starts by basically shooting the actors out of a canon. So, too, in DGV, the ballet begins and that freight train has left the station. It starts and then keeps going and going and going – absolutely non-stop.

Teresa Reichlen and Craig Hall are guiding us now, both displaying a keen command of Wheeldon’s frenetic choreography while still expressing an adventurer’s spirit. Next Ashley Bouder and Joaquin de Luz come out, continuing the non-stop action. The momentum is building. The corps dancers are literally running around the stage. Bouder and de Luz are leaping through the air.

Suddenly Maria Kowroski and Tyler Angle come out and everything stops. The chaos subsides. The singular, visible back light turns blue, infusing the stage with a soft, relaxing, calming glow. Kowroski and Angle slow down the exploration – really taking in everything around them. They dance a beautiful, subtle, passionate pas de deux before the train takes off again.

Tiler Peck and Andrew Veyette come out, reigniting the furious choreography of before. They kick off this percussive throb that drives us to the end of the piece. (Three drummers are out on the thrust of the stage leading the charge.) The beat races on as the dancers rush around the stage, morphing in and out of breathtaking formations. And just when the flourish reaches its peak, the music softens. The corps dancers quietly leave the stage and the featured dancers remain for a moment of peace at the end of the journey.

This was such an amazing night of ballet. It was interesting to see three Wheeldon pieces in a row, to get to see some of the similar movements in each ballet. You get a sense of the things about ballet that really interest the prolific choreographer. Clearly, Christopher Wheeldon is a man who wishes to explore certain facets of dance, namely infusing modernity into such a classic form. He does it so well, and I can’t wait to see all three pieces again!

New York City Ballet’s winter season continues through February. Visit nycballet.com for more information and to purchase tickets.

SAG Award Wrap Up

Another award show down! The Screen Actors Guild Awards were presented last night, and, I’m a little disappointed to say, it was a rather uneventful night. There were some surprises, which I’ll get to later, but overall it was a rather tame night. As always, though, let’s begin with the fashion.

The color of the night was greige. About 80% of the ladies walking the carpet were in some shade of gray/beige/nude. For example, Julianna Margulies (above left) added some sparkle to her greige and looked fabulous in Calvin Klein. Tilda Swinton (above right) – who usually chooses something interesting and fashion forward – looked so regular in Lanvin I almost didn’t recognize her. Winner Viola Davis (right) looked like a goddess in her Marchesa dress. This white, flowy gown didn’t quite fit into the greige trend but that’s fine – it just made her stand out more. Also getting in on the trend were Kristen Wiig (below left) and Lea Michele (below right). Neither got it quite right. Wiig looked light and ethereal in Balenciaga but then she choked herself with a dog collar, ruining the look. And Michele looked almost perfect in her dress. I loved the structure of the bodice and the messy hair. But that slit! Way too high! Usually, to see that much leg you have to tune into Cinemax after hours.

There were some exceptions to the greige trend, of course. Some ladies, like Kyra Sedgwick in Pucci (above left), looked knock-out gorgeous in impossibly fitted dresses. Sedgwick’s dress was in power red and, like some others on the carpet, including Modern Family’s Julie Bowen, dangerously showed off her well-toned back. In a slightly less revealing dress but still in a bright, jewel toned color was Jessica Chastain (above right). Her cobalt blue column gown was simple and elegant. She looked fresh and fun, but I would have liked to have seen some great accessories, like a jeweled drop necklace.

Opting for something completely different was the lovely Emma Stone (right) in Alexander McQueen. Her tea length frock was just right, from the sophisticated lace bodice to the flouncy and fun skirt and very high heels. She looks both age- and occasion-appropriate and, because of the risk, is my pick for best dressed.

And now, the winners: (Need a refresher? Here are the nominees.)

Supporting Actor: Christopher Plummer, Beginners

Supporting Actress: Octavia Spencer, The Help

Actor, Comedy Series: Alec Baldwin, 30 Rock
I was a little surprised at this; I thought Steve Carrell might win for his final season on The Office, but Baldwin is absolutely hilarious on 30 Rock, and I liked that he rightfully thanked the writers. It’s not what Jack Donaghy would do, but it was the right thing to do.

Actress, Comedy Series: Betty White, Hot in Cleveland
This was a sentimental choice. I won’t begrudge a funny lady from receiving her props, but let’s be real: how many SAG members actually watch Hot in Cleveland?

Ensemble in a Comedy Series: Modern Family
Excellent choice, and excellent speech! Those kids are hysterical and it was a nice change of pace from the endless list of names.

Actress, TV Movie or Mini Series: Kate Winslet, Mildred Pierce

Actor, TV Movie or Mini Series: Paul Giamatti, Too Big to Fail
I have to say that this was a little surprising. I was expecting Guy Pearce to win for his performance in Mildred Pierce. It’s not shocking, but I was surprised nonetheless.

Mary Tyler Moore received the Lifetime Achievement Award. My favorite part was when Dick Van Dyke, upon coming out to present the award, told the crowd to settle down, “I’m just the presenter!”

Actress, Drama Series: Jessica Lange, American Horror Story

Actor, Drama Series: Steve Buscemi, Boardwalk Empire
Yay! I was happy about this one. I thought, except for Patrick J. Adams’s nomination, this was the most competitive category, or at least the category that was most difficult to predict. I know actors love Bryan Cranston and Breaking Bad so I thought he’d receive the honor. But I’m glad that Buscemi won, and I loved his line to Michael Pitt fans: “Please stop yelling at me on the street!”

Ensemble in a Drama Series: Boardwalk Empire
Yay!!! Another tight category. I like that Boardwalk Empire won because that show really is an ensemble. Sure, Buscemi is always nominated in the Leading Actor category, but that show is about everyone – it’s about the whole town so I like that the entire ensemble was recognized.

Leading Actor: Jean Dujardin, The Artist
Wow! I was 100% surprised by this. I thought this was a slam dunk for George Clooney. Now, usually I would tell you that the SAG awards are our best predictor for the Oscars. And while they still are a really good predictor, I think Clooney will take home a trophy on Oscar night. The reason SAG awards are a good predictor is because actors make up the largest Academy voting bloc. But they aren’t the only voting bloc. Writers and directors and producers and designers and technicians vote for Oscar winners (not nominations, but winners) and I think Clooney is well-liked and well-respected enough, and that his performance was so well-received by these non-actors that he can most certainly still win Oscar gold next month.

Leading Actress: Viola Davis, The Help
Davis and Meryl Streep keep alternating who wins. And that makes the Oscars so much more interesting. Davis was great in The Help, but everyone loves Ms. Streep. Who do you think will win on Oscar night?

Ensemble in a Movie: The Help
Though I didn’t love the movie, I think this was a good choice. (I think all of the nominees (The Artist, Bridesmaids, The Descendants and Midnight in Paris) were deserving, though.) The Help is a good example of how a cast can elevate a film when they work together. I don’t think this will give The Help the momentum it needs to win Best Picture at the Oscars (especially because the film didn’t receive nominations for writing or directing) but this particular honor is well deserved.

And that’s that. The 18th annual SAG Awards. We’re just a month away from the big night. Take a look at the nominees for the 84th Academy Awards and then tune into ABC on February 26 to find out who wins.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Media Morsels 1.27.12

  • New York City Ballet
    City Ballet is back in full swing! I had a great time last Friday night, enjoying an All Robbins program, and I cannot wait for the All Wheeldon night this weekend that will feature Christopher Wheeldon's breakthrough Polyphonia, a NYC Ballet premiere of DGV: Danse a Grande Vitesse and the world premiere of Les Carillons, Wheeldon's latest work. Time Out New York interviewed the uber-talented choreographer about the special evening.

    As previously noted, the unparalleled Wendy Whelan has a storied and successful relationship with Wheeldon (she wrote about it on PlaybillArts.com), and this weekend Whelan was featured in the New York Times. The profile focuses on her place in the company - she's one of the last few active dancers to have studied under Jerome Robbins - as well as her collaboration with Wheeldon. The NYC Ballet winter season goes through February so visit nycballet.com for more information and to purchase tickets.

  • The Normal Heart on Film
    We learned late last week that the film adaptation of Larry Kramer's The Normal Heart has been cast. Ryan Murphy, who created Glee and American Horror Story, will direct the film. Mark Ruffalo (The Kids Are All Right) will star as Ned Weeks (played by Joe Mantello on Broadway), with Matt Bomer (TV's White Collar) playing Ned's boyfriend, Felix, Julia Roberts as Dr. Emma Brookner and Alec Baldwin as Ned's brother. (John Benjamin Hickey and Ellen Barkin won Tony Awards last year for their respective performances as Felix and Dr. Brookner.) Jim Parsons will reprise his role as an activist.

    (In slightly related Matt Bomer news: Bomer will appear on Glee as Blane Anderson's (played by Darren Criss) brother.)

  • Award Season Update
    Oscar nominations are out. (I don't know about you, but I woke up and thought, "Oscar nominations," and proceeded to get right out of bed and see who'd been nominated!)
    • On Grantland.com, Mark Harris offers his take on the slate of nominees, including his shock (which I shared) at the lack of nominations for Michael Fassbender (Shame) and Albert Brooks (Drive), as well as some interesting facts and figures (ex.: Meryl Streep picked up a pan-gender record-setting 17th nomination).

    • Over at Slate.com, they explain the convoluted way Original Song nominations are made.

    • Of course, Rolling Stone's Peter Travers got in on the fun and presented his, "Damn You, Oscars!" speech.

    • Empire Online weighed in, joining the chorus of folks who found it reprehensible that Michael Fassbender wasn't nominated.

    • The AV Club rounded up Albert Brooks's (Drive) and Patton Oswalt's (Young Adult) reactions (via Twitter) to their lack of nominations.

    • And finally, CritcizeThis.ca features a Q&A on the subject of Wings, the first Best Picture Oscar winner.

    Reminder: The SAG Awards are on this Sunday night. Find the list of nominees here and then tune into TNT or TBS Sunday night at 8pm EST.

  • John Mulaney is Funny
    Reminder: John Mulaney, a talented comedy writer (he currently writes for SNL and helped create the beloved Stefon character who chats with Seth Meyers on "Weekend Update"), will see his first Comedy Central television special, New in Town, broadcast this Saturday night at 10pm. I was lucky enough to attend the live taping this summer and I assure you - you'll be laughing non-stop! (New York magazine caught up with Mulaney this week.)

  • Shakespeare in the Park
    It may be cold outside this winter, but the good folks at the Public Theatre have put a little spring in our step as they announced the summer lineup for the 50th Anniversary Shakespeare in the Park season. This summer will feature two unparalleled writers: Shakespeare and Sondheim. First up (in June) is Shakespeare's As You Like It, directed by Daniel Sullivan and starring Seminar's Lily Rabe. Next (in July) is Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine's Into the Woods. No casting has been announced for Into the Woods but I'll be sure to keep you updated!

  • Dig This

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Wit

Wit is one of those dense, literary-allusion filled plays that comes off well on stage, and, I imagine, even better on paper. Margaret Edson’s Pulitzer Prize winning play – the only play this Atlanta, Georgia, teacher ever wrote – is debuting on Broadway, courtesy of the Manhattan Theatre Club. Lynne Meadows directs a tight and moving production starring the fearless Cynthia Nixon.

Nixon plays Vivian Bearing, a professor of 17th century poetry (she’s particularly taken with the work of John Donne). It’s 1995 and Bearing has been diagnosed with advanced stage ovarian cancer. Her doctor recommends an aggressive and experimental course of chemotherapy. Throughout the ordeal, this rigid, private scholar has to learn to cede control, open up and, ultimately, find her humanity.

Throughout the play, no matter if Bearing is in present day or playing herself as a five year old (Bearing often breaks the fourth wall and speaks directly to the audience, sort of meta-ly aware that she is performing), she wears her hospital gown and a red baseball cap. At a post performance discussion, one audience member asked why she kept the cap on the whole time. Wouldn’t she take it off during a treatment, this patron asked. I turned to my friend and said, “No. The cap is her cloak. She’s hiding.”

And so she is. Which makes Nixon’s performance all the more powerful. Even though Bearing is hiding, Nixon doesn’t hide anything from the audience. This piece – in performance, especially – lives or dies by the actor portraying Bearing. We’re lucky to have Nixon, who can transition seamlessly from moments of light hearted wit to notes of deeply felt truths. (According to Bearing’s mentor, wit isn’t wit at all; it’s truth.) Though Bearing can come off as brusque and prickly at first, Nixon manages to instantly engage us and elicit empathy. This isn’t just a woman struggling with cancer. This is a woman struggling with human connection.

Wit, and Bearing’s journey, is something almost all of us can relate to, and I was proud to join my fellow audience members and stand up to applaud this moving and intensely intimate drama.

Wit is currently playing a limited run through March 11. Visit witonbroadway.com for more information and to purchase tickets.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

City Ballet: In G Major; In Memory Of...; and The Concert

New York City Ballet is back for its winter season. Though the week kicked off with several Balanchine ballets, just in time for the founding choreographer’s birthday, on Friday evening I saw an all Robbins program. While I’ve seen a lot of Jerome Robbins, Friday night marked the first time I saw the three pieces on the program.

First up, In G Major, a whimsical ballet set to Maurice Ravel’s music. The first two things I noticed were the costumes, which looked like 20s bathing suits, and the painted scrim, which suggested water. (Both were designed by Erte.) Given this combination, I couldn’t help but think this delightful ballet would make a good companion piece to Anything Goes. (I know, I know – Anything Goes is set in 1934. Close enough.) And that’s not the only connection I made. Overall, In G Major has the playfulness of Interplay and moves reminiscent of NY Export: Opus Jazz, two of my favorite Robbins ballets.

In G Major featured principal dancers Maria Kowroski and Tyler Angle, backed up by a dozen soloist and corps members, who were sharp and appropriately buoyant.

When Kowroski first took the stage, she seemed to have to settle into her comfort zone. She appeared tense and ill at ease. By the end of the movement, however, she looked like she was having fun, “flirting” with the male corps.

Next Angle came out, and he is just amazing to watch. He’s very powerful and commanding on stage. I particularly liked the section in which he looks like he’s underwater, moving not quite in slow-motion but rather pushing against the water. Angle has a magnetic presence that holds your attention in even the quietest, stillest moments.

I was a little disappointed, however, in Kowroski and Angle’s chemistry. Their pas de deux was technically flawless, but they weren’t connected. (Kowroski used to partner with Charles Askegard, who left the company at the end of this past fall season. Perhaps she misses him?) I could see myself enjoying the pas de deux a lot more had it been danced by Tyler Angle and Tiler Peck or Robbie Fairchild and Sterling Hyltin (or Fairchild and Sara Mearns), but this duo just didn’t click for me.

Still, In G Major finishes with a good, playful ending, full of energetic and precise movements – and the Ravel score is lovely.

Next up was In Memory Of… This is a much more personal piece. As repertory notes indicate, composer Alban Berg was working on his opera Lulu when he learned that a close friend’s 18-year-old daughter had died. He immediately set aside Lulu and “began composing a violin concerto which, in his own words, was ‘dedicated to an angel.’ The music divided into programmatic sections: first, a portrait of the girl; next, her illness and death; lastly, her transfiguration.”

Of course I read the repertory notes before the ballet began so I knew the narrative. I’m not sure that I would have gotten the full story otherwise, but with the notes the story is easy to discern.

I most enjoyed the middle section, when the girl is fighting her illness. That’s not meant as a macabre or sadistic statement; rather, it’s a testament to Wendy Whelan’s phenomenal dancing. The prima ballerina has a great fight in her thin, willowy body, and sitting as close as I was I could see the exquisite look of anguish on her face when the girl dies.

The final section of In Memory Of… is the transfiguration, which is light and, while not exactly hopeful, a pleasant and reassuring resolution. This Robbins ballet isn’t entirely transfixing, but the movement – especially when danced by Whelan, is nice to look at nonetheless.

Finally we were treated to The Concert, or The Perils of Everyone. And what fun it was. This fantastical child’s play ballet actually reminded me of a Muppet Babies episode (stay with me): it’s the one in which one of them, probably Piggy, starts the story and then the egg timer goes off and another Muppet baby takes over the storytelling. There are all these funny, variations-on-a-theme yarns being spun, which is exactly what The Concert is. The ballet is everyone’s interpretation of the music, and it’s wonderfully whimsical.

In the repertory notes, Jerome Robbins is quoted: “One of the pleasures of attending a concert is the freedom to lose oneself in listening to the music. Quite often, unconsciously, mental pictures and images form, and the patterns and paths of these reveries are influenced by the music itself, or its program notes or by the personal dreams, problems and fantasies of the listener.” That’s just what we get in this concert, featuring a game and funny ensemble led by principals Sterling Hyltin and Joaquin de Luz and corps de ballet member Gwyneth Muller.

There’s a section in which the girls are “messing up” the dance, only they’re not messing up, it’s just that it’s everyone’s individual fantasy…being danced out simultaneously. Of course there are discrepancies! It’s hard to explain, but, if you can believe it, it was laugh out loud funny.

De Luz was great here because his character’s quirkiness and showiness fit de Luz’s style of dancing just right.

And that effervescent Sterling Hyltin. I can’t say enough good things about this young and lovely dancer. She’s so playful and at ease. The way she flitted about to the music it was like she was dancing along to the music in her room – having a ball the whole time. I love, love, love watching her dance!

So, that’s one week down. Check back in next week when I’ll have attended City Ballet’s first ever All Wheeldon night, which includes Polyphonia, the NYC Ballet premiere of DGV: Danse a Grande Vitesse and the world premiere (!!!) of Les Carillons.

Visit nycballet.com for information and to purchase tickets.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Oscar Nominees


The 84th Academy Award nominations were announced today! And there were actually some surprises. Nothing shocking, of course, but surprises nonetheless. Let's get right to it. (Below is a highlighted list of nominees. Visit oscar.go.com/nominees for the full list.)

Best Picture
This list wasn't so surprising, though we all know it's going to come down to The Artist and The Descendants, with the latter being my pick. I think the surprising thing about this list, particularly given nominations in other categories, is that there is not a tenth film. (With the other nominations it received, I thought Bridesmaids might have gotten a nod here.)

Actor in a Leading Role
I'm surprised and disappointed that Leonardo DiCaprio (J. Edgar) and Michael Fassbender (Shame) weren't nominated. Fassbender received a Golden Globe nomination and DiCaprio received both Golden Globe and SAG nominations. It appears that Bechir (a SAG nominee) and Oldman (supposedly terrific in a film I want to see) took "their slots." I also wish Joseph Gordon-Levitt was nominated for his fearless performance in 50/50. Doesn't make much of a difference since it's Clooney's to lose, but I would have liked for their respective work to be recognized.

Actress in a Leading Role
  • Glenn Close, Albert Nobbs
  • Viola Davis, The Help
  • Rooney Mara, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
  • Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady
  • Michelle Williams, My Week with Marilyn
Absolutely nothing surprising about this category. Of the nominated performances, I've only seen Viola Davis's, but based on buzz, I think we're going to see this come down to Doubt co-stars Davis and Streep, with Globe winner Streep having the edge.

Actor in a Supporting Role
  • Kenneth Branagh, My Week with Marilyn
  • Jonah Hill, Moneyball
  • Nick Nolte, Warrior
  • Christopher Plummer, Beginners
  • Max von Sydow, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
No nomination for Albert Brooks in Drive? That's upsetting. And no Armie Hammer for J. Edgar? That's a little disappointing. Plummer definitely deserves his nomination, though, and all the wins he's racked up thus far. Tune into the SAG awards this Sunday for our most faithful indicator of who will win.

Actress in a Supporting Role
  • Berenice Bejo, The Artist
  • Jessica Chastain, The Help
  • Melissa McCarthy, Bridesmaids
  • Janet McTeer, Albert Nobbs
  • Octavia Spencer, The Help
This list is exactly the same as the SAG one, so Sunday night we'll have a clue as to who will win. It's one nominee off from the Globe list, swapping in McCarthy for The Descendants' Shailene Woodley, which is disappointing because Woodley gave a bravura performance and Bridesmaids wasn't very funny.

Cinematography
  • Guillaume Schiffman, The Artist
  • Jeff Cronenweth, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
  • Robert Richardson, Hugo
  • Emmanuel Lubezki, The Tree of Life
  • Janusz Kaminski, War Horse
Okay, so I thought The Tree of Life was a ridiculously self-indulgent film, but it was gorgeous to look at and beautifully shot. Still, I loved Hugo, so I'm rooting for Richardson. (I'm also rooting for Hugo's Dante Ferretti and Francesca Lo Schaivo in the Art Direction category, and Rob Legato, Joss Williams, Ben Grossman and Alex Henning in the Visual Effects category.)

Music (Original Score)
  • John Williams, The Adventures of Tintin
  • Ludovic Bource, The Artist
  • Howard Shore, Hugo
  • Alberto Iglesias, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
  • John Williams, War Horse
Much as I liked Shore's score, this has to go to Bource for The Artist, right? It was a silent film so the score was a key storyteller. Do the right thing, Academy voters!

Music (Original Song)
  • "Man or Muppet," The Muppets, music and lyrics by Bret McKenzie
  • "Real in Rio," Rio, music by Sergio Mendes and Carlinhos Brown, lyrics by Siedah Garrett
This is always a controversial category, in my mind. There can be up to five nominees, and often times, they have less than that because of the convoluted weighting system determining the nominees. Of course I'm thrilled that "Man or Muppet" was nominated, but I also would have liked for "Life's a Happy Song" to get a nod, too. But, at least with "Man or Muppet" receiving a nomination, we can get optimistically excited about a Jason Segel and Muppet performance on the Oscars. Please, Thespis, make this happen!

Adapted Screenplay
  • Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash, The Descendants
  • John Logan, Hugo
  • George Clooney, Grant Heslov and Beau Willimon, The Ides of March
  • Steven Zallian, Aaron Sorkin and Stan Chervin, Moneyball
  • Bridget O'Connor and Peter Straughan, Tinker Tailor Solider Spy
No big surprises here. Of course I'm glad that playwright and former political operative Willimon is nominated. For me, it comes down to my dear Aaron Sorkin and company for Moneyball and team The Descendants. Much as I love Sorkin, I wouldn't be disappointed and would actually be glad if Payne, Faxon and Rash won for The Descendants. Let's see what happens when the WGA winners are announced.

Original Screenplay
  • Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist
  • Annie Mumolo and Kristen Wiig, Bridesmaids
  • JC Chandor, Margin Call
  • Woody Allen, Midnight in Paris
  • Asghar Farhadi, A Separation
This is the most surprising category. Again, I didn't like Bridesmaids. I know almost everyone else did, but I'm still surprised to see it receive this nomination. I prefer the Critics Choice nomination list, which included Will Reiser for 50/50 and Tom McCarthy and Joe Tiboni for Win-Win. Even if those writers were nominated, though, I'd still be rooting for Allen for one of his best films in recent years, and my new favorite romantic comedy.

Directing
This is a rich category. For me, it comes down to Payne, Scorsese and Allen. Let's leave out Allen and give him the Original Screenplay award instead. So we're left with Payne and Scorsese. On the one hand, Payne's direction set the tone for the film, striking a careful and powerful balance between farce and tender poignancy. On the other hand, Scorsese directed a beautiful and touching love letter to the medium he loves so much, and used 3D to its greatest effect. It's a close call. Who do you think should win?

And there they are: the nominees for the 84th Academy Awards. Tune into ABC on February 26th to find out who wins!