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The most powerful moments for women at the 2026 Oscars

Ellie Austin
By
Ellie Austin
Ellie Austin
Editorial Director, Most Powerful Women
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Ellie Austin
By
Ellie Austin
Ellie Austin
Editorial Director, Most Powerful Women
Down Arrow Button Icon
March 16, 2026, 12:47 PM ET
Irish actress Jessie Buckley accepts the award for Best Actress in a Leading Role for "Hamnet" onstage during the Academy Awards on March 15.
Irish actress Jessie Buckley accepts the award for Best Actress in a Leading Role for "Hamnet" onstage during the Academy Awards on March 15.Patrick T. Fallon/AFP—Getty Images

Good morning! Fortune MPW editorial director Ellie Austin here. Federal cuts are driving Planned Parenthood to cosmetic treatments, Hulu has ditched its Buffy reboot, and history was made for women at the Oscars. Have a good Monday. 

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Last night’s Academy Awards were a tame but enjoyable affair, grappling with two big questions, both frequently referenced onstage: What is the role of Hollywood in a world beset by myriad crises? And what is the future of movie-going as AI and streaming reshape entertainment? (Host Conan O’Brien’s opening monologue included a sharp joke about the evening being Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos’ first time in a theater. “Why are they all together enjoying themselves?” said O’Brien, imagining Sarandos’ thoughts. “They should be home alone, where I can monetize it!”) 

The political thriller One Battle After Another dominated, winning six awards including best picture. Sinners, a supernatural portrayal of the Jim Crow South, came in second with four wins, one of which saw Michael B. Jordan beat Timothée Chalamet to the best actor statue. The movie also won the cinematography award, thanks to Autumn Durald Arkapaw, who made history as the first woman ever to win the category. Hellish global headlines make issues like equity in Hollywood seem less urgent, but we shouldn’t forget how poorly represented women and people of color continue to be at all levels of the entertainment business. The 2026 UCLA Hollywood Diversity Report, published just last week, showed that 2025’s biggest films were less diverse than previous years, with the number of women in lead roles down 10% year-on-year. In her acceptance speech, Durald Arkapaw asked all the women in the room to stand up and said that she wouldn’t have achieved all she has without them.  

Relatedly, Amy Madigan scooped her first Oscar at the age of 75, winning the best supporting actress category for her role as Aunt Gladys in the horror hit Weapons. It is a glorious example of bucking trends in an industry not known for celebrating older women, proving that there is no expiration date on success.  

Other memorable moments:  
– All the Empty Rooms, a devastating film about the bedrooms left behind by victims of school shootings, won the award for best documentary short. Gloria Cazares, the mother of Jackie Cazares, who was killed at the age of 9 in Uvalde, Texas, in 2022, joined the filmmakers onstage. “If the world could see their empty bedrooms, we’d be a different America,” Gloria said.  

– Memorable for all the wrong reasons was the moment after “Golden,” a huge hit from KPop Demon Hunters, won best original song. But the walkoff music was played far too soon, and the team didn’t get a proper speech—they stood there for a few seconds looking devastated and then left the stage. This is the first KPop track ever to win the award.  

– Jessie Buckley’s best actress win for Hamnet was as unsurprising as her acceptance speech was charming. She told her husband that she wants to have 20,000 more children with him and, as it was U.K. Mother’s Day (she is Irish), she dedicated her Oscar to “the beautiful chaos of a mother’s heart.”  

In short, the 98th Academy Awards ceremony did not provide answers to the big, existential questions about the future of Hollywood. It did, however, give us a few hours of glamorous escapism from everything else going on in the world which is, perhaps, exactly what we needed from it.  

Ellie Austin 
Editorial Director, Most Powerful Women
ellie.austin@fortune.com

The Most Powerful Women Daily newsletter is Fortune’s daily briefing for and about the women leading the business world. Subscribe here.

ALSO IN THE HEADLINES

In more Chloé Zhao news... Hulu kills her Buffy reboot. Zhao was due to direct and executive produce a revival of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. This weekend, the show’s star, Sarah Michelle Gellar, posted on Instagram that the project was no longer going ahead.  No details yet as to why the reboot stalled. Variety 

Iranian soccer captain withdraws bid for Australian asylum. Zahra Ghanbari, the captain of Iran’s women’s soccer team, is the latest player to drop her asylum application, according to Iran’s state media. Following the team’s refusal to sing their national anthem at the Asian Cup, seven players sought sanctuary over fears they would face repercussions if they returned to Iran. Five have since reversed their decision. BBC

Planned Parenthood turns to Botox to stay afloat. Deep federal funding cuts mean that the country’s best-known abortion rights organization is in financial turmoil. Last week, its Mar Monte affiliate, which operates 30 clinics in California and Nevada, introduced a new revenue stream: Botox injections. NYT

ON MY RADAR

OpenAI’s bid to allow X-rated talk is freaking out its own advisors WSJ 

Carolyn Bessette was living the dream. Then she met John NYT 

The Vogue reject who made £40 million from her SheerLuxe empire Times of London 

PARTING WORDS

“For those of you who look like me, I’m so sorry that it took us so long to see us in a movie like this. But it is here.”

— Maggie Kang, the director of KPop Demon Hunters, accepting the film’s best animated movie Oscar last night 

This is the web version of MPW Daily, a daily newsletter for and about the world’s most powerful women. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.
About the Author
Ellie Austin
By Ellie AustinEditorial Director, Most Powerful Women
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Ellie Austin is the editorial director of Most Powerful Women at Fortune.

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