For months, Bradley Cooper had been pegged as a frontrunner for the Best Actor prize for his performance in A Star is Born. And why not?
Any of us who closely follow film awards — particularly those related to acting — know that they aren’t won simply on the basis of merit. For better or for worse, the annual rat race for these little gold statuettes can be equated to a cocktail with various ingredients, which include:
- The amount of active campaigning one does throughout what is essentially a six month circuit,
- Whether or not the film and/or performance is any good, and
- One's personal narrative: an overarching, supplementary account that may compel voters to think, "this person deserves it"