Oscars 2017 winners list - plus all the talking points from the Academy Awards

La La Land was announced as the best film winner at the 2017 Oscars on Sunday night - but then had to hand the award over to Moonlight after a mistake was noticed in what was the most dramatic moment in the history of the Academy Awards.

In extraordinary scenes, the La La Land team were halfway through their victory speeches, when it was noticed that the wrong film name had been read out by Warren Beatty and that Moonlight was actually the winner.

"There's a mistake. Moonlight, you won best picture," Jordan Horowitz, the La La Land producer announced to the gasps of a shocked crowd. He held up the card clearly showing the winner was Moonlight.

The stars and crew of La La Land shuffled off the stage and handed their gold statuettes to a jubilant Moonlight team.

Beatty said he had been given the wrong envelope to open. "I opened the envelope and it said Emma Stone, La La Land," he said, adding he had not done it "to try to be funny".

Emma Stone said backstage: "I was holding my best actress card the whole time so whatever story you heard, I don't know what happened, but I wanted to tell you that."

"When it happened I was just on such a buzzy stage, I was already on another planet. "I think it's a good outcome but a very strange happening for Oscar history."

"Is that the craziest Oscar moment of all time? Cool. We made history tonight. Craziest moment."

Jimmy Kimmel, the host, said: "I knew I would screw this up. I promise to never come back."

Casey Affleck won best actor for Manchester By The Sea while Stone won best actress and Damien Chazelle best director both for La La Land.

Viola Davis and Mahershala Ali won supporting Oscars for Fences and Moonlight respectively.

The awards were handed out in between jokes and attacks on President Donald Trump.

"This broadcast is being watched live by millions of Americans, and around the world in more than 225 countries that now hate us, and I think that is amazing," Kimmel said at the opening of the awards show.

In one of the most poignant moments of the ceremony, The Salesman won the foreign language  film Oscar, allowing director  Asghar Farhadi, who had boycotted the ceremony, to attack Mr Trump's "inhuman" travel ban in his victory message.

Winners list in full

Best film

Moonlight

Best actress

Emma Stone (La La Land)

Best actor

Casey Affleck (Manchester By The Sea)

Best director

Damien Chazelle (La La Land)

Best supporting actress

Viola Davis (Fences)

Best supporting actor

Mahershala Ali (Moonlight)

Best original screenplay

Kenneth Lonergan (Manchester By The Sea)

Best adapted screenplay

Barry Jenkins and Tarell Alvin McCraney (Moonlight)

Best cinematography

Linus Sandgren (La La Land)

Best original score

Justin Hurwitz (La La Land)

Best original song

Justin Hurwitz, Benj Pasek and Justin Paul (La La Land)

Best sound editing

Sylvain Bellemare (Arrival)

Best foreign language film

Asghar Farhadi (The Salesman)

Best film editing

John Gilbert (Hacksaw Ridge)

Best visual effects

Robert Legato, Adam Valdez, Andrew R. Jones and Dan Lemmon (The Jungle Book)

Best production design

David Wasco and Sandy Reynolds Wasco (La La Land)

Best sound mixing

Kevin O'Connell, Andy Wright, Robert Mackenzie and Peter Grace (Hacksaw Ridge)

Best documentary Feature

Ezra Edelman and Caroline Waterlow (O.J.: Made in America)

Best animated film

Byron Howard, Rich Moore and Clark Spencer (Zootopia)

Best animated short film

Alan Barillaro and Marc Sondheimer (Piper)

Best documentary short subject

Orlando von Einsiedel and Joanna Natasegara (The White Helmets)

Best live action short film

Kristof Deak and Anna Udvardy (Sing)

Best make-up

Alessandro Bertolazzi, Giorgio Gregorini and Christopher Nelson (Suicide Squad)

Best costume design

Colleen Atwood (Fantastic Beast and Where To Find Them)

 

 

Talking points from the night

1. Mahershala Ali becomes first Muslim actor to win an Oscar for role in Moonlight

Mahershala Ali won the Academy Award for best supporting actor for his portrayal of a drug dealer in Moonlight on Sunday, becoming the first Muslim to be awarded a golden statuette for acting.

Ali, a first time nominee, played a Miami drug dealer who mentors a young boy who is being teased and bullied in the heartbreaking coming of age tale.

It has been a breakout year for Ali, who starred in the Netflix series Luke Cage and also had a role in another Oscar-nominated film, Hidden Figures.

2. Jimmy Kimmel Trump protest

Jimmy Kimmel thanked President Donald Trump for making the Oscars appear less racist as he opened the 89th Academy Awards.

The talk show host said he knew the country was divided and he had been encouraged to say something that would unite people.

Opening the show, he said the ceremony was being watched around the world by "countries that now hate us".

.@JimmyKimmel on Meryl Streep's 20th Oscar nomination. #Oscarshttps://t.co/sYnkctdJyepic.twitter.com/0pNSSlu00Z

— ABC News (@ABC) February 27, 2017

"The country is divided right now, I've been been getting advice that I need to say something to unite us.

"Let me say something. I can't do that. There is only one Braveheart in this room and he's not going to do that either," he said in a dig at Mel Gibson.

He made the audience give Meryl Streep a standing ovation. He said the actress was "over-rated" echoing the president's appaisal of her following Streep's anti-Trump speech at the Golden Globes.

"I want to say thank you to President Trump. Remember last year when it seemed like the Oscars were racist? It's gone!" he quipped.

He then referenced the exclusion from a White House press briefing of certain news organisations on Friday. He asked anyone from CNN, New York Times or any publication with the word “times” in to leave the building.

3. Red carpet Trump protests

A number of Oscar-nominees threw their support behind the organisation who first challenged President Donald Trump's travel ban by wearing blue ribbons to the ceremony.

Irish-Ethiopian star Ruth Negga, who is up for best actress for her role in Loving, was first on the red carpet and sported the political accessory on her red Valentino dress.

The blue bow represents the American Civil Liberties Union and is part of their new initiative titled Stand With ACLU.

Negga was followed by the Hamilton creator Lin-Manuel Miranda and his mother who both wore the pin. Miranda is nominated for writing music and lyrics for How Far I'll Go from animated movie Moana.

Director of best film nominee Moonlight, Barry Jenkins, was also spotted with the blue bow pinned to his suit.

The ACLU was among the first to launch a legal challenge following President Trump's travel ban, which bars people from seven Muslim-majority countries entering America.

While the travel ban has been blocked by the courts, a revamped refugee and immigration executive order is expected to be released by the White House next week.

4. The Salesman Trump protest

The Salesman won the foreign language  film Oscar, allowing director  Asghar Farhadi to attack President Donald Trump's "inhuman" travel ban.

The filmmaker boycotted the ceremony because of Mr Trump's executive order that banned travel to the US from seven Muslim countries.

Iranian astronaut Anousheh Ansari accepted the award on behalf of director Asghar Farhadi. She read the following statement from Farhadi:

I'm sorry I'm not with you tonight. My absence is out of respect for the people of my country and those of other six nations who have been disrespected by the inhumane law that bans entry of immigrants to the U.S.

5. London Trump protest

Thousands of people braved London's winter drizzle earlier on Sunday for a screening of the Oscar-nominated movie that has become a rallying point for opponents of US President Donald Trump's immigration policy.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan made clear his political motivation in hosting the British premiere of the "The Salesman", whose Iranian director is boycotting the Hollywood ceremony.

Iranian director Farhadi was affected by Trump's muslimban. London Mayor Sadiq Khan organized a free screening of his Oscar-nominated movie. pic.twitter.com/q3PUQJztOO

— SeriouslyUS? (@USseriously) February 26, 2017

"President Trump cannot silence me," Khan said to cheers from the crowd gathered in Trafalgar Square. "We stand in solidarity with Asghar Farhadi, one of the world's greatest directors."

6. Meryl Streep hits back at 'lying' Karl Lagerfeld in Oscars dress row

Meryl Streep has slammed "lying" Karl Lagerfeld after the designer falsely accused her of being paid to wear a gown on the Oscars red carpet, Mark Molloy writes.

The dress row erupted when Lagerfeld wrongly claimed Streep changed her mind about wearing a Chanel gown to the awards because she wanted to get paid by wearing a creation from a different designer.

“A genius actress, but cheapness also, no?” he told Women’s Wear Daily (WWD) in an interview.

Lagerfeld later admitted he was wrong and had “misunderstood that Ms Streep may have chosen another designer due to remuneration”.

In a statement, the Oscar-winning silver screen icon accused the Chanel boss of "lying and defaming" her in his interview with WWD ahead of the 89th Academy Awards.

She also dismissed a statement from Lagerfeld in which he expressed his ‘regret’ over the controversy and accused him spoiling her night at the upcoming awards.

7. And finally: Jimmy Kimmel tries - but fails - to bury the hatchet with Matt Damon

Jimmy Kimmel and Matt Damon continued their "feud" as the 89th Academy Awards host took aim at the actor in his opening monologue.

The host claimed he would "bury the hatchet" with Damon, whose Manchester by the Sea was up for six Oscars, before ripping into the actor.

"WRAP IT UP!" - @Jimmykimmel playing Matt Damon off the stage while he reads nominations. #Oscarshttps://t.co/7oCByw2eCcpic.twitter.com/qaEEjeshL0

— Good Morning America (@GMA) February 27, 2017

"I would like to bury the hatchet with someone I've had issues with -- Matt Damon. ... I've known Matt for a long time now. I've known Matt so long, when I first met Matt, I was the fat one."

Best jewellery at the Oscars 2017