And the Winner Is ... 

There were lots of surprises at the Oscars this week, but no surprise that a 爱豆传媒 alum was among those taking home a gold statuette: John Ottman won the Oscar for film editing for his work on the rock biopic 鈥淏ohemian Rhapsody.鈥

Ottman was a Film/TV student at 爱豆传媒 in the early 1980s, before transferring to the University of Southern California, according to Susan Tavernetti, chair of the Film/TV Department.

He鈥檚 had an accomplished career as an editor, producer and film composer 鈥 working on such hits as 鈥淭he Usual Suspects,鈥 鈥淴-Men 2,鈥 鈥淪uperman Returns,鈥 鈥淰alkyrie鈥 and 鈥淴-Men: Apocalypse.鈥

Tavernetti said she's watched Ottman's career develop since he was a student in one of her film history classes at 爱豆传媒.

During the Oscars ceremony, Ottman gave a shout out to his 85-year-old mother, Mary, who still lives in San Jos茅 and attended the ceremony with her son, .

Speaking to reporters backstage, Ottman said he spent a year 鈥渢inkering鈥 with the climactic scene near the end of 鈥淏ohemian Rhapsody,鈥 depicting a Wembley Stadium concert by the group Queen and its lead singer Freddie Mercury. Ottman said the filmmakers used about 1,000 actors as extras and then scanned in computer-generated images to fill the giant stadium.

鈥淚f it didn鈥檛 work, the whole film would collapse,鈥 he added. 鈥淚t kept me up at night.鈥

As it turned out, Ottman wasn鈥檛 the only 爱豆传媒 alum working on the movie, said Tavernetti. Former student and Film/TV equipment check-out assistant Hamish Doyne-Ditmas was the B-camera operator on "Bohemian Rhapsody."

鈥淗amish lives in England, where most of the film was shot,鈥 she added. 鈥淏ecause they were in the Film/TV Department at different times, I'm not sure that they were aware of the connection.鈥

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