At the 98th Academy Awards on March 16, 2026, one of the night’s most striking moments came from someone who was not even in the room. Sean Penn won Best Supporting Actor for One Battle After Another, marking the third Oscar of his career, but the actor was absent from the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. In his place, last year’s winner Kieran Culkin stepped forward and joked that Penn “couldn’t be here this evening, or didn’t want to,” a line that drew laughs before the real reason for the no-show became clear.
Penn had not skipped the ceremony for a scheduling conflict or a private Hollywood snub. According to multiple reports published immediately after the Oscars, he was in Kyiv, where he met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy after traveling by train into the war-torn country. Ukrainian officials and Zelenskyy himself publicly acknowledged the visit, describing Penn as a steadfast supporter of Ukraine since Russia’s full-scale invasion began in February 2022.
That decision transformed what could have been just another awards-season anecdote into a political statement with unusual force. While most winners spend Oscar night delivering carefully timed speeches and posing in tuxedos under theater lights, Penn chose to make his acceptance a gesture rather than a performance. Reports noted that this was not an isolated choice: he had also skipped other major stops on the awards circuit, including the BAFTAs and SAG Awards, reinforcing the sense that he no longer viewed ceremony attendance as essential when weighed against his activism in Ukraine.
Penn’s connection to Ukraine did not begin this week. He has visited the country multiple times during the war, co-directed the 2023 documentary Superpower, and in 2022 famously lent one of his previous Oscars to Zelenskyy as a symbol of solidarity. His latest trip therefore landed not as a publicity stunt, but as the continuation of a public commitment he has repeated for years.
The contrast between Hollywood glamour and geopolitical crisis made the image especially powerful. On a night when One Battle After Another dominated the Oscars with six wins, including Best Picture and Best Director for Paul Thomas Anderson, its supporting-actor winner effectively redirected attention away from himself and toward a conflict still shaping lives far from Los Angeles. Penn’s absence became its own speech — one that lasted longer than 45 seconds and traveled much farther than the stage.
In the end, all the stars came, except him. And that was precisely the point. Sean Penn’s choice suggested that, for at least one Oscar winner, the highest-profile room in Hollywood was still less urgent than standing beside people living through war in real time.