At the 65th Academy Awards in 1993, Hollywood witnessed what should have been a joyful, career-defining moment. Instead, it became the seed of one of the most persistent conspiracy theories in Oscar history. When veteran actor Jack Palance opened the envelope for Best Supporting Actress and announced Marisa Tomei as the winner for My Cousin Vinny, the room briefly froze.
Applause followed—but so did disbelief.
By the next morning, a damaging rumor was already circulating: Palance, then 74, must have read the wrong name. The theory claimed he was confused, possibly intoxicated, or unable to read the teleprompter—and that Tomei’s name had simply appeared last on the list. According to the whisper campaign, she hadn’t won the Oscar. She’d “stolen” it.
The Anatomy of an Oscar Urban Legend
At the heart of the conspiracy was elitism. Tomei was 28, relatively new, and—perhaps most unforgivably in Hollywood’s eyes—won for a comedy. Her sharp, scene-stealing performance as Mona Lisa Vito went up against a formidable slate of dramatic heavyweights, including Vanessa Redgrave and Judy Davis. To many critics, the idea that a comedic role could triumph over prestigious period dramas was unthinkable.
The rumor metastasized into industry “fact,” repeated so often that it began to feel true—despite zero evidence.
The Academy Breaks Its Silence
As the conspiracy gained traction, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences took the rare step of officially debunking it. Their explanation was procedural and airtight: a representative from Price Waterhouse (now PwC) is always stationed backstage. If a presenter ever announces the wrong winner, that representative is required to immediately stop the show and correct the mistake.
No correction happened in 1993—because there was no mistake.
Ironically, the infamous Best Picture mix-up at the 89th Academy Awards, when La La Land was wrongly announced instead of Moonlight, later validated the Academy’s position. When an error occurs, it’s fixed instantly. The idea that the Oscars would quietly allow a wrong winner to keep a statue for 30 years simply doesn’t hold up.
Redemption Through Talent
Still, the shadow followed Tomei for years. Rather than publicly spar with critics, she let her work speak. She earned two more Oscar nominations for In the Bedroom and The Wrestler, conclusively silencing doubts about her talent.
Today, her performance in My Cousin Vinny is widely regarded as one of the greatest comedic turns ever honored by the Academy.
A Legacy Reclaimed
The “Tomei conspiracy” ultimately reveals more about Hollywood’s historical bias against comedy than about Jack Palance’s eyesight. Three decades later, Marisa Tomei’s Oscar stands not as a mistake—but as proof that sometimes, the Academy actually gets it right.