Oscar glory at last: Tom Cruise and Dolly Parton are finally getting Academy Awards
He's one of the most bankable stars in Hollywood history, considered one of the last great Movie Stars and has defied death for more than three decades in the Mission: Impossible franchise... And yet, Tom Cruise has yet to win an Oscar – despite four nominations.
Now, that Golden Baldie dearth is about to be rectified as the 62-year-old actor will finally receive an Academy Award this year.
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced that Cruise will get an Honorary Oscar in November to celebrate his entire career, praising Cruise for his dedication to his craft, including performing all his own stunts, and helping the film industry recover following the COVID-19 period.
Indeed, Cruise – who can currently be seen in Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning - famously played a large part in kick-starting the box office during the pandemic when Top Gun: Maverick opened in late spring 2022. The sequel to the 1986 adventure went on to gross $1.5bn worldwide.
Cruise previously earned lead actor Oscar nominations for Born On The Fourth Of July and Jerry Maguire, a supporting actor nod for Magnolia, and a best picture nomination as a producer on Top Gun: Maverick.
The leading man is one of four honourees, alongside choreographer and actress Debbie Allen (Fame, Ragtime, Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling), pioneering Black production designer Wynn Thomas (Do The Right Thing, Malcolm X, A Beautiful Mind), and country singer - and complete legend - Dolly Parton.
'This year's Governors Awards will celebrate four legendary individuals whose extraordinary careers and commitment to our filmmaking community continue to leave a lasting impact,' said Janet Yang, Academy President.
'The Academy's Board of Governors is honored to recognize these brilliant artists. Debbie Allen is a trailblazing choreographer and actor, whose work has captivated generations and crossed genres. Tom Cruise's incredible commitment to our filmmaking community, to the theatrical experience, and to the stunts community has inspired us all. Beloved performer Dolly Parton exemplifies the spirit of the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award through her unwavering dedication to charitable efforts. And production designer Wynn Thomas has brought some of the most enduring films to life through a visionary eye and mastery of his craft.'
The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award is also an Oscar statuette and is presented to Hollywood figures renowned for 'promoting human welfare and contributing to rectifying inequities'.
Parton's charitable and philanthropic work include the Dollywood Foundation, founded in 1988. The institution champions the education of children in her home state of Tennessee. As for her literacy initiative, Dolly Parton's Imagination Library, it has distributed more than 285 million books globally since 1995.
Besides her music career, Parton has starred in films like 9 to 5 and Steel Magnolias, and earned two original song Oscar nominations for '9 to 5', and 'Travelin' Thru from Transamerica' from the film Transamerica.
The four honorees will be presented with their Honorary Oscars at the Governors Awards ceremony on 16 November.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


American Military News
39 minutes ago
- American Military News
It's about time Tom Cruise got an Oscar, the academy decides — Dolly Parton, too
It's finally Oscar time for Tom Cruise, the Motion Picture Academy of Arts & Sciences has decided. Cruise, Dolly Parton, actor-producer-director-dancer Debbie Allen and production designer Wynn Thomas will receive Academy Honorary Awards for their ample (and as-yet unrecognized) contributions to big-screen culture. They are, according to a statement Tuesday from academy President Janet Yang, 'four legendary individuals whose extraordinary careers and commitment to our filmmaking community continue to leave a lasting impact.' Cruise (who famously does his own stunts) has 'inspired us all,' according to Yang, with his 'incredible commitment to our filmmaking community, to the theatrical experience, and to the stunts community.' Sometimes called Hollywood's last real movie star, Cruise has fueled box office revenue like few others, drawing crowds to the wildly successful 'Top Gun' and 'Mission Impossible' films, not to mention 'Rain Man,' 'War of the Worlds,' 'Risky Business' and 'Jerry Maguire.' He has been nominated for four Oscars in the past — twice for lead actor, once for supporting actor and once for best picture, for 'Top Gun: Maverick' — but hasn't taken one home. Allen is being honored for her nearly five-decade career, during which she has acted, sung, danced, directed, produced and executive-produced. In that time she has choreographed the globally televised Academy Awards ceremony seven times and performed as well. 'Debbie Allen is a trailblazing choreographer and actor, whose work has captivated generations and crossed genres,' Yang said. While much of the six-time Emmy winner's work has been in TV, film credits tagged to her many job descriptions include 'Ragtime,' 'Fame,' 'Amistad,' 'Forget Paris' and more. And without Thomas' work, Spike Lee wouldn't be who he is today. Thomas started his career as a production designer on the director's 1986 effort 'She's Gotta Have It,' then continued their collaboration on 'Do the Right Thing,' 'Jungle Fever,' 'School Daze,' 'Malcolm X' and 'Da 5 Bloods.' He also worked on 'Eddie Murphy: Raw,' Robert Townsend's 'The Five Heartbeats' and 'King Richard,' which delivered a lead actor Academy Award for Will Smith. Other films on Thomas' resume? 'Hidden Figures,' which was nominated for three Oscars, and 'A Beautiful Mind,' which won four. 'Thomas has brought some of the most enduring films to life through a visionary eye and mastery of his craft,' Yang said. Meanwhile, Parton will take home the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award and its attendant Oscar statuette, an honor given 'to an individual in the motion picture arts and sciences whose humanitarian efforts have brought credit to the industry by promoting human welfare and contributing to rectifying inequities.' The singer and '9 to 5' star, whose husband, Carl Dean, died in March, has long put her fame to good use. Yang said Parton 'exemplifies the spirit' of the Hersholt award 'through her unwavering dedication to charitable efforts.' The woman behind Dollywood has been nominated for original song Oscars twice. The honors will be given out Nov. 16 at the academy's 16th Governors Awards in Hollywood. ___ © 2025 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


Geek Tyrant
an hour ago
- Geek Tyrant
TOP GUN 3 Director Joseph Kosinski Teases "Ambitious" Idea With Help From the Navy and Lockheed — GeekTyrant
After Top Gun: Maverick rocketed past the billion-dollar mark and reignited the legacy of Pete "Maverick" Mitchell, the big question became: What's next? The answer is starting to come into focus, and it sounds like something that could push the franchise into uncharted airspace. In a recent interview with ScreenRant, Top Gun: Maverick director Joseph Kosinski confirmed that Top Gun 3 is in active development, and it won't be more of the same. He shared: 'Ehren Kruger is writing the script as we speak. It's a big idea that I spent almost a year developing — working with some friends at the Navy and Lockheed. And yeah, Ehren's into it now, so we'll see how it comes along.' I love that whatever he's cooking for this third film required months of collaboration with actual Navy personnel and Lockheed engineers. It's all because the idea was just too big to ignore. He added: 'It was about coming up with an idea that — again — felt like a new challenge. Something that opens up the story in a way you just can't let go. And I think the idea is so ambitious. That's what's exciting to me.' Kosinski isn't the only returning name in the cockpit. Christopher McQuarrie, who co-wrote Maverick and has been busy steering the Mission: Impossible franchise, is also onboard, and according to him, the story came together faster than expected. 'It wasn't hard. I thought it would be, and that's a good place to go from is you walk into the room going, 'Come on, what are we going to do?' and Ehren Kruger pitched something and I went, 'Mhm actually,' and we had one conversation about it and the framework is there.' That "framework" will build on the emotional and thematic core of Top Gun: Maverick , a film that found new depth in Maverick's role as a mentor, his unresolved history with Goose's son, and his brush with obsolescence in a rapidly modernizing military. While details on Top Gun 3 remain tightly under wraps, the involvement of Lockheed and the Navy suggests that whatever Kosinski and team have planned, it's going to lean heavily into the bleeding edge of aerial warfare, and probably ask some tough questions about the future of fighter pilots in an age of unmanned drones and AI systems. Until then, Top Gun fans can take comfort in knowing that the next mission is in the works and that it's being crafted with the same care, technical precision, and story-driven focus that made Maverick a modern action classic.


Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
Musician Offers Simple Fix for Will Smith's New Single on X: 'Way Better'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A musician has gone viral for his simple suggestion that left social media fascinated by Will Smith's new single. Smith became popular for his work as both an actor and a rapper, but in the past few years, his career has been mainly focused on acting. However, the 56-year-old artist released a full-length album in March 2025 and he dropped a new single called "Pretty Girls" on Friday. The song prompted popular X, formerly Twitter, account HaterReport_ to post "I have no idea what possessed Will Smith to try to make new music." File image: Actor Will Smith in Hollywood, California on February 24, 2015. File image: Actor Will Smith in Hollywood, California on February 24, 2015. Photo by Axelle/Bauer-Griffin / Getty Images Hip-hop artist Michael Christmas, however, wasn't so sure the song was a lost cause. "This is just a tempo issue," Christmas wrote on the platform. "Speed it up to 1.25 or slow it down to .75 and watch, much more fire song." Christmas' post went viral, drawing more than 11k reposts and 186k likes. This is just a tempo issue. Speed it up to 1.25 or slow it down to .75 and watch, much more fire song — Michael Christmas (@MickeyChristmas) June 15, 2025 "If anybody wants to pay me to listen to your music and give you what feels like very minute advice to maybe help, I am available," Christmas noted in a follow-up post. Christmas, who is based in Boston, has experienced success of his own—his song "Grab Her Hand," which features late hip-hop legend Mac Miller, has earned more than 6 million listens on Spotify, while his song "Not The Only One" has more than 5 million. Christmas averages more than 43,000 monthly listeners. "I have random posts go viral all the time, I never expect it, it's always dumb," Christmas told Newsweek. "At least this time it showed I am good at music." Users React Christmas' observation drew a big reaction from users shocked that such a simple correction could make such a difference. "You killed this for real," Oscar-winning filmmaker Matthew Cherry replied to Christmas. "0.75 is way better woah," user gothamhiphop added. "1.25x is FIRE," user ishverduzco wrote, adding, "Wow, great call." 'Stuck between genres' Christmas told Newsweek he expected the track to be bad because of the reaction online. However, "I make music so I don't believe in hating for the sake of, especially on a legend. I listened and immediately thought (and said out loud), 'You speed this up it's probably fire'," Christmas said. "I sped it up to 1.25 and said 'see!'" Christmas said he thought the song sounded like it was "stuck between genres," as if Smith was too attached to rapping instead of just making a party song. "The slower one to me reminded me of almost like some trippy goth-strobe-lighty party for models in a cave," he said. "But the fast one feels like a Jersey club type of night. In Boston we have these parties called 'Deep Cutt' and 'Red Eye.' I think they would mix that in so fire." He added that people should listen to his music and follow him on social media. "And call your mom," Christmas said, "I gotta call mine too."