Sacheen Littlefeather: John Wayne ‘Came Forth’ to ‘Assault’ Me at the 1973 Oscars but Was ‘Restrained by Six Security Men’

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Sacheen Littlefeather: John Wayne ‘Came Forth’ to ‘Assault’ Me at the 1973 Oscars but Was ‘Restrained by Six Security Men’

















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Sacheen Littlefeather dominated headlines this week after the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences issued a formal apology to her for the mistreatment she faced at the 1973 Oscars. Littlefeather, who was 26 years old at the ceremony, took to the stage on behalf of Marlon Brando, who was named best actor for “The Godfather,” and declined the award for him. Brando cited Hollywood’s problematic portrayal of “Native American Indian people in film and television” as his reason for rejecting the Oscar.
To mark the news of the Academy’s apology, plus an upcoming special program to be held in her honor at the Academy Museum in September, Littlefeather gave an in-depth interview to the Academy in which she recalled in detail what happened the night she declined Brando’s Oscar.


Littlefeather walked up to the Oscars stage and said, “I’m Sacheen Littlefeather. I’m Marlon Brando’s official representative here this evening. Unfortunately, he cannot receive this Academy Award because of the image of Native American Indian people in film and television today.”




“That’s when people started booing, and the other half started cheering,” Littlefeather remembered. “And that’s when all the people started getting into commotion in the audience. And I focused in on the mouths and the jaws that were dropping open in the audience, and there were quite a few. But it was like looking into a sea of Clorox, you know, there were very few people of color in the audience. And I just took a deep breath, put my head down for a second, and then, when they quieted down, I continued.”
Littlefeather said that when she left the stage she spotted John Wayne, who was furious about her speech and approached her in such a way that she thought he would assault her.
“[John Wayne] did not like what I was saying up at the podium,” Littlefeather said. “So, he came forth in a rage to physically assault and take me off the stage. And he had to be restrained by six security men in order for that not to happen.”
“It was interesting because some people were giving me the tomahawk chop. I thought, ‘This is very racist. Very racist indeed.’ And I just gracefully walked and ignored them,” Littlefeather continued. “They put two armed guards around me, and said they were going to take me to these different press rooms. One was for television press, radio press and international press. And I would have about 10 minutes in each press room, and that was it. And then, I was escorted out the door.”
Littlefeather became the first Native woman to stand on the stage at any Academy Awards ceremony back in 1973. She will join the Academy on Sept. 17 for a special program and conversation titled “An Evening With Sacheen Littlefeather.”
“We are delighted and humbled that Sacheen has so generously chosen to engage with the museum and Academy to reflect upon her trying experience at the 1973 Academy Awards,” said Jacqueline Stewart, director and president of the Academy Museum.

 
Sacheen Littlefeather recalls being shot at after Oscars speech: 'I nearly paid the price with my life'
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Sacheen Littlefeather recalls being shot at after Oscars speech: 'I nearly paid the price with my life'
Keith Langston
Thu, August 18, 2022 at 8:49 PM


Boos from the crowd, racist gestures, threats, blacklisting, and even attempts on her life — these are some of the reactions that Sacheen Littlefeather faced after taking the stage at the 1973 Academy Awards.
In an in-depth interview published by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences this week, the activist and onetime aspiring actress reflected on her experiences in the wake of calling out Hollywood's treatment of Native American people.
Littlefeather, who delivered her famous speech while declining Marlon Brando's Best Actor award on his behalf, recalled being shot at by an unknown assailant while returning to Brando's home after the ceremony. Her speech, she said, "was met with such hostility and anger, and I nearly paid the price with my life as a result. When I went back to Marlon's house, there was an incident with people shooting at me. And there were two bullet holes that came through the doorway of where I was standing, and I was on the other side of it."
She added, "It's situations like this that make you really think, you know, what if, what if, what if? And yet, I was never allowed to tell my story. Never. Never. And now, 50 years or so later, and here we are for the first time."
Sacheen Littlefeather at the 1973 Oscars

Sacheen Littlefeather at the 1973 Oscars
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images Sacheen Littlefeather at the 1973 Oscars
Littlefeather's interview coincided with the Academy disclosing that it issued a formal apology to her in June over the way she was treated after her speech. The organization also announced that it is presenting "An Evening with Sacheen Littlefeather" next month, where she will reflect on that historic evening in 1973 and discuss the future of Indigenous communities in the film industry.
As seen in the video below, Littlefeather took the Oscars stage after Brando won for his role in The Godfather. She began by saying, "I'm Sacheen Littlefeather. I'm Marlon Brando's official representative here this evening. Unfortunately, he cannot receive this Academy Award because of the image of Native American Indian people in film and television today."
While on stage, Littlefeather recalled, she noticed John Wayne rushing toward her. She said in the Academy interview that Wayne "did not like what I was saying up at the podium. So, he came forth in a rage to physically assault and take me off the stage. And he had to be restrained by six security men in order for that not to happen."
Littlefeather also recalled how some members of the audience began making tomahawk chop motions with their hands, and others booed (as can be heard in video of the ceremony).



For all she endured, Littlefeather doesn't regret the fateful night.
"I knew that I paid the price of admission so that others could follow," she said. "That I had done something, that I was the first to make a statement, a political statement. The first Native American Indian woman, the first woman of color to ever make a statement at the Academy Awards, telling the truth about the way that it really is. Not the second, not the third, not the fourth, but the first one — and that will always historically be true."
 

Sacheen Littlefeather formally accepted the Academy's apology for the hostile reception she received during the 45th Oscars in 1973 when she appeared on behalf of winner Marlon Brando.

On Saturday, the actress and activist was honored during an event called "An Evening with Sacheen Littlefeather" held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles. There, Littlefeather, 75, also participated in a conversation with producer Bird Runningwater, co-chair of the Academy's Indigenous Alliance.

In response to the apology letter issued by then-Academy president David Rubin in June, she said, "I am here accepting this apology. Not only for me alone, but as acknowledgment, knowing that it was not only for me but for all of our nations that also need to hear and deserve this apology tonight."



RELATED: Everything to Know About the Academy's Mistreatment of Sacheen Littlefeather at the 1973 Oscars

She continued, "Now, I would like all the Indian people in this audience to stand. Look at our people, look at each other and be proud that we stand as survivors, all of us."

"Please, when I'm gone, always be reminded that whenever you stand for your truth, you will be keeping my voice and the voices of our nations and our people alive," she concluded. "I remain Sacheen Littlefeather. Thank you."

In 1973, Littlefeather stood on the Oscars stage on behalf of Marlon Brando to turn down his best actor award for his performance in The Godfather, using the speech to call out the film industry's mistreatment of Native Americans.

The protest garnered mixed reactions from the audience, the boos audible to the TV audience. She later said that John Wayne was restrained backstage for trying to storm the stage at the time of her speech.

At the 1973 Academy Awards, Sacheen Littlefeather refuses the Academy Award for Best Actor on behalf of Marlon Brando who won for his role in The Godfather. She carries a letter from Brando in which he explains he refused the award in protest of American treatment of the Native Americans.

At the 1973 Academy Awards, Sacheen Littlefeather refuses the Academy Award for Best Actor on behalf of Marlon Brando who won for his role in The Godfather. She carries a letter from Brando in which he explains he refused the award in protest of American treatment of the Native Americans.
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"I remember the faces in the crowd," Littlefeather recalled three decades after the event took place. "John Wayne, backstage, had to be restrained by six men from coming to get me and pull me off the stage."

In an interview with Variety published Tuesday, Littlefeather recalled, "I heard a disturbance from behind me as I was speaking up at the podium. I found out that [Wayne] had been restrained by six security men from assaulting me while I was on that stage."

Littlefeather said she was informed about what was going on backstage by a security guard, noting, "But it was never publicized" and Wayne was "never admonished by the Academy."


Following her Oscars appearance, she told Variety that she was "boycotted by the FBI," adding: "They went around Hollywood and told people not to hire me. If they did, they would shut their film production down."

"In addition, other people were let on talk shows like Johnny Carson, Merv Griffin, and other popular talk shows. They could go on there and talk about me, but I was never allowed to go on them and represent myself," she said.

In one of his first interviews after the Oscars stunt, Brando told Dick Cavett he was sad, but not shocked by the response from those in the audience. "You're ruining our fantasy with an intrusion of a little reality," he said of how he interrupted the room's outcry.

Littlefeather was in disbelief upon receiving an apology from the Academy in June, telling The Hollywood Reporter that she was "stunned."

"I never thought I'd live to see the day I would be hearing this, experiencing this. When I was at the podium in 1973, I stood there alone," she added.

In the letter, Rubin wrote in part: "The abuse you endured because of this statement was unwarranted and unjustified. The emotional burden you have lived through and the cost to your own career in our industry are irreparable. For too long the courage you showed has been unacknowledged. For this, we offer both our deepest apologies and our sincere admiration."
 

Sacheen Littlefeather formally accepted the Academy's apology for the hostile reception she received during the 45th Oscars in 1973 when she appeared on behalf of winner Marlon Brando.

On Saturday, the actress and activist was honored during an event called "An Evening with Sacheen Littlefeather" held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles. There, Littlefeather, 75, also participated in a conversation with producer Bird Runningwater, co-chair of the Academy's Indigenous Alliance.

In response to the apology letter issued by then-Academy president David Rubin in June, she said, "I am here accepting this apology. Not only for me alone, but as acknowledgment, knowing that it was not only for me but for all of our nations that also need to hear and deserve this apology tonight."



RELATED: Everything to Know About the Academy's Mistreatment of Sacheen Littlefeather at the 1973 Oscars

She continued, "Now, I would like all the Indian people in this audience to stand. Look at our people, look at each other and be proud that we stand as survivors, all of us."

"Please, when I'm gone, always be reminded that whenever you stand for your truth, you will be keeping my voice and the voices of our nations and our people alive," she concluded. "I remain Sacheen Littlefeather. Thank you."

In 1973, Littlefeather stood on the Oscars stage on behalf of Marlon Brando to turn down his best actor award for his performance in The Godfather, using the speech to call out the film industry's mistreatment of Native Americans.

The protest garnered mixed reactions from the audience, the boos audible to the TV audience. She later said that John Wayne was restrained backstage for trying to storm the stage at the time of her speech.

At the 1973 Academy Awards, Sacheen Littlefeather refuses the Academy Award for Best Actor on behalf of Marlon Brando who won for his role in The Godfather. She carries a letter from Brando in which he explains he refused the award in protest of American treatment of the Native Americans.

At the 1973 Academy Awards, Sacheen Littlefeather refuses the Academy Award for Best Actor on behalf of Marlon Brando who won for his role in The Godfather. She carries a letter from Brando in which he explains he refused the award in protest of American treatment of the Native Americans.
Bettmann Archive


Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up to date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

"I remember the faces in the crowd," Littlefeather recalled three decades after the event took place. "John Wayne, backstage, had to be restrained by six men from coming to get me and pull me off the stage."

In an interview with Variety published Tuesday, Littlefeather recalled, "I heard a disturbance from behind me as I was speaking up at the podium. I found out that [Wayne] had been restrained by six security men from assaulting me while I was on that stage."

Littlefeather said she was informed about what was going on backstage by a security guard, noting, "But it was never publicized" and Wayne was "never admonished by the Academy."


Following her Oscars appearance, she told Variety that she was "boycotted by the FBI," adding: "They went around Hollywood and told people not to hire me. If they did, they would shut their film production down."

"In addition, other people were let on talk shows like Johnny Carson, Merv Griffin, and other popular talk shows. They could go on there and talk about me, but I was never allowed to go on them and represent myself," she said.

In one of his first interviews after the Oscars stunt, Brando told Dick Cavett he was sad, but not shocked by the response from those in the audience. "You're ruining our fantasy with an intrusion of a little reality," he said of how he interrupted the room's outcry.

Littlefeather was in disbelief upon receiving an apology from the Academy in June, telling The Hollywood Reporter that she was "stunned."

"I never thought I'd live to see the day I would be hearing this, experiencing this. When I was at the podium in 1973, I stood there alone," she added.

In the letter, Rubin wrote in part: "The abuse you endured because of this statement was unwarranted and unjustified. The emotional burden you have lived through and the cost to your own career in our industry are irreparable. For too long the courage you showed has been unacknowledged. For this, we offer both our deepest apologies and our sincere admiration."
 
In an interview with Variety published Tuesday, Littlefeather recalled, "I heard a disturbance from behind me as I was speaking up at the podium. I found out that [Wayne] had been restrained by six security men from assaulting me while I was on that stage."
So thats what that little rumbling noise i was hearing in the background was...
 
Sacheen Little feather is to Real Authentic Indigenous People

as

Emenim is to Hip hop culture....

Real Kniggas are the only Indigenous Americans...

You can look at her and tell she is Mongolian


her people JUST got here in comparison to ours...

when you KNOW your history and the history of others,

No mindfuck could ever fuck you again!!!
'
 
John Wayne was a racist piece of shit and died a horrible death. Good. I hope the same happens to Clint Eastwood, James Woods, Jon Voight, Pat Sajak and all the other racist Hollywood garbage. The only person I'm hoping dies and right soon is that fuckin' Judas Clarence Thomas. I hate that coon with a passion greater than I've ever felt for anyone else living or dead. :angry:
 
John Wayne was a racist piece of shit and died a horrible death. Good. I hope the same happens to Clint Eastwood, James Woods, Jon Voight, Pat Sajak and all the other racist Hollywood garbage. The only person I'm hoping dies and right soon is that fuckin' Judas Clarence Thomas. I hate that coon with a passion greater than I've ever felt for anyone else living or dead. :angry:
God gives the evil so much more time on Earth than they deserve.
 
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