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Entertainment

Oscars to leave Hollywood in 2029: Academy

Agence France-Presse
Oscars to leave Hollywood in 2029: Academy
Andy Jurgensen, Teyana Taylor, Regina Hall, Cassandra Kulukundis, Shayna McHale AKA Junglepussy, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Chase Infiniti accept the Best Picture award for "One Battle After Another" onstage during the 98th Oscars at Dolby Theatre on March 15, 2026 in Hollywood, California.
Getty Images via AFP / Kevin Winter

LOS ANGELES, United States — The Oscars will leave Hollywood after celebrating their centenary, organizers said Thursday, as they announced a long-term deal to hold the gala in central Los Angeles.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences said the ceremony, the most important night of the year for the global film industry, would leave the Dolby Theater on the Hollywood Walk of Fame after 2028.

The 2029 edition will instead be held at The Peacock Theater, part of the vast LA LIVE complex, next to the Crypto.com Arena, home to the Los Angeles Lakers.

"For the 101st Oscars and beyond, the Academy looks forward to closely collaborating with (owners) AEG to make LA LIVE the perfect backdrop for our global celebration of cinema, both for our live in-theater audience and for film fans around the world," Academy CEO Bill Kramer and President Lynette Howell Taylor said.

The 10-year deal with AEG comes as the ceremony leaves network television in the United States, to be broadcast instead worldwide by YouTube.

Related: Timothee Chalamet roast, 'Devil Wears Prada 2,' top moments from Oscars 2026

It also marks an end to a decades-long run for the ceremony at the Dolby, which is just a stone's throw from the Roosevelt Hotel, where the very first Oscars were handed out in 1929.

While Hollywood is synonymous with the Oscars, the ceremony has not always been held there.

Stars have previously descended on a number of venues in the Downtown area, and for much of the 1960s, the ceremony was hosted in the beachside city of Santa Monica.

At this year's awards, held on March 15, Paul Thomas Anderson's "One Battle After Another" — a wild tale of leftist revolutionaries, white supremacists, and immigrant detention centers — was crowned as best picture.

RELATED: Fil-Am Autumn Durald Arkapaw dedicates, honors women for historic Oscar win

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