Academy will decide THIS WEEK how Will Smith will be disciplined for slapping Chris Rock - even though he resigned: Oscar winner could be banned from future events and even have his Best Actor award revoked
- Academy President David Rubin moved up a meeting first scheduled for April 18
- He said the board no longer needs to give Smith time to respond after the actor voluntarily resigned last week
- Smith infamously slapped Rock on air after the comic joked about his wife's hair
- 'It is in the best interest of all involved for this to be handled in a timely fashion,' Rubin told the board in a letter on Wednesday
- The board could make him ineligible for future awards or ban him for ceremonies
- The Academy has only rescinded an Oscar once, over a technicality, in 1969
The Oscars board will meet this Friday to discuss how to discipline Will Smith for slapping Chris Rock at this year's ceremony, days after the actor resigned from the Academy and said he would 'accept any further consequences.'
David Rubin, the president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, told the board Wednesday that he's moving a meeting originally scheduled for April 18 to this Friday at 9am PST.
'Following Mr. Smith's resignation of his Academy membership on Friday, April 1, suspension or expulsion are no longer a possibility, and the legally prescribed timetable no longer applies.
'It is in the best interest of all involved for this to be handled in a timely fashion,' he wrote in a letter.
The board has a few punishments it could hand out. They could make Smith ineligible for future awards or bar him from attending future ceremonies temporarily or permanently.
They could also strip Smith, 53, of the Academy Award for best actor that he won less than an hour after the onstage assault - though the last time the board rescinded an award was more than 50 years ago.
Rubin, the Academy's president, said the meeting was only originally scheduled for April 18 to give Smith enough notice, which is no longer necessary, according to Variety, which first published Rubin's letter.
The virtual meeting will take place over Zoom.
The Academy has only rescinded one Oscar. In 1969, it found that the documentary Young Americans, which won best documentary that year, had actually been released in 1967.
Smith resigned from the Academy on Friday, calling his actions during the ceremony 'shocking, painful and inexcusable' and adding that he'd accept any punishment doled out to him by the board.
'The list of those I have hurt is long and includes Chris, his family, many of my dear friends and loved ones, all those in attendance, and global audiences at home,' Smith said.
'I betrayed the trust of the Academy. I deprived other nominees and winners of their opportunity to celebrate and be celebrated for their extraordinary work. I am heartbroken.'
Though the board could technically take back his statuette - given for his portrayal of tennis coach Richard Williams in King Richard - there's little precedent for such a drastic move.
Speaking on The View the day after the March 27 ceremony, actress Whoopi Goldberg, who is a serving Governor for the Academy's Actors branch, defended Will's actions, reasoning that 'sometimes you behave badly.'
Smith slapped Rock, 57, in front of the world on live television after the comedian made a joke about Smith's wife, Jada Pinkett-Smith's hair loss, caused by alopecia.
Whoopi said on Monday's show: 'I think it was a lot of stuff probably built up.
'I think he overreacted… I think he had one of those moments where it was like [God damn] it, just stop. I get it, not everybody acts the way we would like them to act under pressure. And he snapped...
'Sometimes you get to a point when you behave badly. I myself have behaved badly on occasion.'
Whoopi's co-host Sunny Hostin said that she was 'surprised [Will] wasn't escorted out', and questioned if there was the possibility of Smith's Oscar being taken away.
Whoopi replied: 'We're not going to take that Oscar from him.
'There will be consequences I'm sure, but I don't think that's what they're going to do, particularly because Chris said, "Listen, I'm not pressing any charges.'"
Speaking to Us Weekly, an unnamed insider said Pinkett-Smith wishes her husband never slapped Rock.
'It was in the heat of the moment and it was him overreacting,' the source said. 'He knows that, she knows that. They're in agreement that he overreacted.'
They also alleged that Pinkett Smith is 'not a wallflower', nor 'one of these women that needs protecting'.
'He didn't need to do what he did,' they added.
Rock, on the other hand, has barely addressed the assault at his stand-up gigs.
Appearing at a surprise set at New York's Comedy Cellar on Tuesday night, Rock said: 'Lower your expectations, I'm not going to address that s***,' a source told Page Six.
Earlier that day, he was spotted walking around the city by himself. The 57-year-old comedian walked with his hands in his bomber jacket Tuesday morning.
Meanwhile his 42-year-old younger brother Kenny told the Los Angeles Times that he has trouble repeatedly watching the now infamous moment involving his brother from last week's Oscars ceremony. He said Smith should be stripped of the Best Actor trophy.
He said: 'It eats at me watching it over and over again because you've seen a loved one being attacked and there's nothing you can do about it.
'Every time I'm watching the videos, it's like a rendition that just keeps going over and over in my head.'
Kenny continued to express his distaste for the A-list actor's actions.
He said: 'My brother was no threat to him and you just had no respect for him at that moment.
'You just belittled him in front of millions of people that watch the show.'
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