Best (and worst) moments from the 2026 Oscars, from Conan to 'Golden'

Best (and worst) moments from the 2026 Oscars, from Conan to 'Golden'
Source: USA Today

Teyana Taylor, Benicio del Toro, Chase Infiniti and Alana Haim arrive on the 2026 Oscars red carpet representing 'One Battle After Another.'

That's all she wrote for the 98th Academy Awards.

The 2026 Oscars were full of ups and downs, of winners and losers, gorgeous gowns and daring fashions. And of course, some moments were better than others.

From historic wins, like the first woman to win for cinematography and seventh-ever Oscar tie, to awkward silences to moving tributes and very, very long bits from host Conan O'Brien, the March 15 ceremony was emotional and eventful.

If you missed any or all of the long, glittering ceremony on ABC and Hulu, we've rounded up the biggest, best and even the worst moments of the night.

Too much of Oscar host Conan O'Brien

His monologue was politely inoffensive and somewhat chuckle-worthy, but overall Conan O'Brien had too heavy a presence at the ceremony, and not quite enough return on the investment. His opening montage and monologue was nearly 20 minutes long, his bits between categories played on boring stereotypes and cheap punchlines. Whenever O'Brien made an appearance, it just felt like filler, compared to all the emotional and genuine moments of the evening.

Amy Madigan kicks off the night with a delighted, 'flummoxed' best supporting actress win

Veteran actress Amy Madigan has been the surprise darling of this award season for her zany, full-throated performance as Aunt Gladys in the horror film "Weapons." The actress was first nominated in 1986 and referenced that huge passage of time in her sweet acceptance speech: "Everyone in the press has been asking me, 'It's been 40 years, what's different?' What's different is I've got this little gold guy!"

'Sinners' brings down the house with 'I Lied to You' performance

In a rousing, almost euphoric performance, "Sinners" breakout star Miles Caton brought the juke joint to life alongside a murderers' row of musicians and performers. Sharing the stage with the song's cowriter Raphael Saadiq, Shaboozey, Brittany Howard, ballet legend Misty Copeland and more, Caton and his grooving ensemble captured the very essence of the Oscar-nominated film in just a few scant minutes. It was cool, electrifying and moving, the way all great cinema is.

Anne Hathaway and Anna Wintour bring 'The Devil Wears Prada' to life

In a nod to the upcoming sequel to "The Devil Wears Prada" (in theaters May 1), Anne Hathaway was joined by former Vogue editor Anna Wintour - the inspiration for Meryl Streep's "Devil" fashion editor - to present the best costume and makeup and hairstyling Oscars with a guffaw-worthy reference to the first film, in which Wintour calls Hathaway "Emily," just like Streep's character did.

The evening's historic tie almost gets totally ruined

For only the seventh time in history, the Oscar vote ended in a tie."The Singers" and "Two People Exchanging Saliva" both walked away with golden statuettes for the best live-action short film category. But the moment was almost ruined when the production tried to cut off the acceptance speech of the filmmakers behind "Saliva," not just playing over one of the filmmakers but retracting the microphone and cutting to O'Brien. After a clunky moment of audience groans and O'Brien trying to keep a straight face, the camera moved back to the winners.

Ryan Coogler gets his 'Sinners' Oscar for best original screenplay

Ryan Coogler, the multi-hyphenate filmmaker who made allegorical, historical vampire film "Sinners" the most Oscar-nominated movie of all time, nabbed his first Oscar for writing its screenplay. To a raucous standing ovation that he had to quiet down to speak, the writer and director took his award from Marvel buddies Chris Evans and Robert Downey Jr., the most joyous moment of a night filled with happiness for the winners.

A moving tribute to those we lost including Rob Reiner, Catherine O'Hara, Robert Redford and Diane Keaton

Every Oscars ceremony has an "in memoriam" tribute to the people in Hollywood who have died in the past year, but it's been a particularly heartbreaking period for Hollywood, which lost legends like Rob Reiner, Robert Redford and Diane Keaton. The telecast went beyond the usual montage and sad song this year to say goodbye to these icons of cinema. Billy Crystal and a stage filled with alums from Reiner's beloved films saluted the actor, producer and director. Rachel McAdams was close to tears as she spoke of her respect and adoration for Keaton. Barbra Streisand spoke candidly and emotionally as she talked about Redford, picking up the mic to sing out her emotions in a way only she could, belting the lyrics to the title song from her and Redford's 1973 film,"The Way We Were."

The casts of 'Bridesmaids,' Marvel's 'Avengers' and 'Moulin Rouge' reunited

Robert Downey Jr. and Chris Evans haven't super-suited-up together in a Marvel superhero movie since "Avengers: Endgame" in 2019, but they put on some penguin suits as presenters. And they weren't the only big reunion on Oscar night. "Bridesmaids" stars Kristen Wiig, Rose Byrne, Melissa McCarthy, Ellie Kemper and Maya Rudolph took the stage to present two awards, with an extended bit about how "well" they've aged, and nods to the jokes from the original film. No wedding dresses were harmed during the jokes. The last reunion of the night was maybe the biggest, as Ewan McGregor and Nicole Kidman sang some of their "Moulin Rouge!" lines before presenting best picture.

The 'Golden' performance was too late - and too anticlimactic

Fans had to stay up way past their bedtimes to catch EJAE, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami sing the chart-topping "Golden" from Netflix's animated (and now Oscar-winning) hit "K-Pop Demon Hunters." The singers from the film didn't take the stage until almost 10 p.m. ET, and belted out an abbreviated version of the song in appropriately metallic outfits. Considering the massive cultural impact of the song, it was a bit of an anticlimactic event, lacking some of the bombast of other performances of the track. The Oscar it won a few minutes later will just have to be the consolation prize.

Paul Thomas Anderson gets his long-deserved Oscars for original screenplay and directing

Director, writer and producer Paul Thomas Anderson has been working in Hollywood for a long time and many times nominated for his films, going all the way back to "Boogie Nights" in 1998. But it's his 2025 film "One Battle After Another" that finally brought him to the stage both for writing and directing awards,two of the biggest prizes of the night. The clearly-touched Anderson joked that the Academy really made him "work hard" for the win.

Michael B. Jordan and Jessie Buckley celebrate moms with best actor and actress wins

Lots of people get standing ovations at the Academy Awards,but not everyone can get a crowd screaming and shouting like Michael B. Jordan when the actor won best actor trophy for "Sinners." Thanking God,mom (and date) father who flew in from Ghana,Jordan gave one of best speeches night.

Soon afterward Jessie Buckley won best actress for "Hamnet" dedicated win "to beautiful chaos mother's heart."

"We all come from lineage women who continue to create against all odds," she said.

'One Battle After Another' wins the awards season battle,get best picture Oscar

Grabbing his third trophy of the night, Paul Thomas Anderson joined his jubilant cast (including Teyana Taylor,literally jumping for joy) onstage and got last words of night. "We're happy to be part of this wonderful,wonderful journey with our fellow nominees,fellow filmmakers. ...What a night;let's have a martini;this is pretty amazing.Cheers!"