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Wednesday, September 7, 2011

It's official: Eddie Murphy to host Oscars

Confirming the news that set Oscar-watchers buzzing over the weekend, the Academy announced on Tuesday that Eddie Murphy will host the 84th Academy Awards.

The 50-year-old actor and comedian was reportedly the first choice of Oscar show co-producer Brett Ratner, who directed Murphy and Ben Stiller in the upcoming action comedy "Tower Heist."

Bing: More on Eddie Murphy


Murphy has appeared on the Oscar show several times in the past 25 years, most recently when he presentedJerry Lewis with the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award in 2009. He was nominated for Best Supporting Actor two years earlier for "Dreamgirls," but lost to Alan Arkin in "Little Miss Sunshine."

Murphy, who spent most of that awards season as the odds-on favorite to win, famously left the Kodak Theater soon after his category was announced.

More from TheWrap.com: New Oscar producer Brett Ratner: 'Comedy is the key'

A former standup comedian and "Saturday Night Live" cast member, Murphy has appeared in more than three dozen films including, early in his career, the hits "48 Hrs.," "Trading Places" and the "Beverly Hills Cop" series. His film career slumped for much of the 1990s, though in recent years he has done voice work in the popular "Shrek" series.

The selection of Murphy by Ratner and co-producer Don Mischer returns the Oscar hosting job back to the kind of performer who handed the gig for most of the past two decades. Beginning in 1990, when Billy Crystal hosted the show for the first time, Oscar producers turned for 19 straight years to performers who had made movies but who also had standup comic experience.

Tell us on Facebook: How do you think Eddie Murphy will be as an Oscar host?

Crystal, Whoopi Goldberg and Steve Martin all took multiple turns hosting, while Jon Stewart did the job twice and David Letterman, Chris Rock and Ellen DeGeneres hosted once each. (Even the TV-bred Letterman, Stewart and DeGeneres had made films before hosting the Oscars.)

In 2009, producers Bill Condon and Lawrence Mark turned away from the comic-actor route, which had begun to seem old hat, and booked the actor Hugh Jackman for a well-received turn at the helm. But the past two Oscar shows which were hosted by the curiously flat teaming of Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin in 2010, and the widely-panned duo of Anne Hathaway and James Franco earlier this year resulted in many within the Academy wondering if there wasn't a lot to be said for the old-style use of a host with standup experience.

Also: Here's what to expect from Brett Ratner producing 2012 Oscars

For his part, Ratner made it clear from the start that he wanted to produce a funny Oscar show: "Comedy is the key," he told TheWrap on the day he was announced as producer.

"I am enormously honored to join the great list of past Academy Award hosts from Hope and Carson to Crystal, Martin and Goldberg, among others," said Murphy in the release. "I'm looking forward to working with Brett and Don on creating a show that is enjoyable for both the fans at home and for the audience at the Kodak Theatre as we all come together to celebrate and recognize the great film contributions and collaborations from the past year."

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