Spike Lee's Kobe Bryant-themed suit leads tributes for Lakers great at Oscars
The loss of Kobe Bryant wasn’t just felt in the basketball world.
The Los Angeles Lakers legend was also an Oscar-winning filmmaker after his NBA retirement, so it was only natural that the biggest event in show business honored him as well.
Leading the tributes to Bryant at the 92nd Academy Awards on Sunday — two weeks after his death in a helicopter crash that killed eight others — was director Spike Lee, well known for his NBA fandom and a friend of Bryant.
Respect. #Oscars pic.twitter.com/CxlWD2tmFW
— The Academy (@TheAcademy) February 9, 2020
"Tribute, honor, homage ... we all miss him,” Lee said on the red carpet before the show.
Bryant entered the world of filmmaking with a short film based upon his poem “Dear Basketball,” which won the 2017 award for Best Animated Short Film. The award made Bryant the first former professional athlete to win an Oscar, and helped cement Bryant as a cultural icon.
Incredibly enough, the winner of this year’s Best Animated Short Film was also a former professional athlete, ex-NFL wide receiver Matthew Cherry. The director of “Hair Love” dedicated the award to Bryant.
“This award is dedicated to Kobe Bryant.” @MatthewACherry accepts his #Oscar for Best Animated Short for #HairLove. #Oscars pic.twitter.com/O6VIP1BJMX
— COMMON (@common) February 10, 2020
The honors continued with the show’s annual “In Memoriam” segment, in which Bryant was the first name shown.
Kobe Bryant is the first to be shown during the "In Memoriam."
He won an Oscar for Best Animated Short with "Dear Basketball" in 2018.#Oscars pic.twitter.com/A4U98PdLAp— Braddington is Live Tweeting #TheOscars (@bradwhipple) February 10, 2020
In the two weeks since Bryant’s death, he has been honored in just about every basketball arena, soccer arenas, the Grammys, the Super Bowl, the U.S. Senate and now the Oscars. His death has been felt everywhere, just another reminder of his transcendent talent.
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