Picture by Kevin Winter / Getty Images
Story – AP / AMIP News
Sunday March 2, 2014
Los Angeles, California 
After a whirlwind of awards seasons, attention for Lupita Nyong’o 
ended with a best supporting actress award at Sunday’s Oscars. The “12 
Years a Slave” star honored the character that put her on stage. For the
 same role she also won the Screen Actors Guild and Critics’ Choice 
Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role in addition to receiving 
nominations for the Golden Globe and the BAFTA Award for Best Supporting
 Actress.
“Thank you to the academy for this incredible recognition. It doesn’t
 escape me for one moment that so much joy in my life is due to so much 
pain in someone else’s,” she said, referring to Patsey, the tortured 
slave she played in director Steve McQueen’s wrenching 19th-century 
drama. She credited McQueen for bringing attention to a dark chapter in 
American history and the victims of slavery. “I’m certain the dead are 
standing about you and watching,” she said, a sentiment she expanded on 
backstage. “I think he’s really honored a people that really have been 
unsung for a really long time in doing this film,” she said. Nyong’o, 
who has talked about learning as a child to accept her dark-skinned 
beauty, said she hoped her success would inspire other youngsters.
“When I look down at this golden statue, may it remind me and every 
child, no matter where you’re from, your dreams are valid,” she said.
Lupita Amondi Nyong’o is a Mexican born, Kenyan actress and music video director who studied at Yale School of Drama. 
Nyong’o had been considered a front-runner in a category that 
included Sally Hawkins, “Blue Jasmine”; Jennifer Lawrence, “American 
Hustle”; Julia Roberts, “August: Osage County”; and June Squibb, 
“Nebraska.” Among other awards, Nyong’o claimed a Spirit Award on 
Saturday, the day she turned 31.
But she appeared shocked when her name was called Sunday. She bent 
over in her seat, then rose, still looking stunned, as the audience 
erupted with cheers and a standing ovation. “No, no, no,” she said 
backstage, when asked if she could have imagined receiving the honor. 
“I’m a little dazed. I can’t believe this is in my hands. I can’t 
believe this is real life.” Unlike supporting actor winner Jared Leto, 
who passed his Oscar for “Dallas Buyers Club” around to a roomful of 
reporters, Nyong’o cradled her trophy close to her elegant, ice-blue 
Prada gown. She referred to it as her “young man” at one point.
Nyong’o, who was born in Mexico and is of Kenyan descent, was honored
 for her film debut. Her parents are prominent in their own right: Her 
father, Peter Anyang’ Nyong’o, was an advocate for democratic reform in 
20th-century Kenya and is now a senator, while her mother, Dorothy 
Nyong’o, is the director of the Africa Cancer Foundation. She has said 
her parents are taking her fame in stride, but acknowledged a special 
moment with her father Sunday. “I saw him after I got this young man, 
and he hugged me and he said, ‘Thank you,’” she said.
The 86th Academy Awards aired on ABC from the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, hosted by Ellen DeGeneres.
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