
No one knows the ins and outs of hosting the Academy Awards better than Billy Crystal. For the eight-time host, who will take the stage this Sunday to emcee Hollywood’s biggest night for the first time in eight years, the Oscars have always been deeply personal. ”When I would first watch it—[at] 6 or 7 years old, watching on a black-and-white TV—I very rarely could stay up until the Best Picture award, so my mother would write down who won and when I came into the kitchen the next morning, the list of winners would be in my cereal bowl,” he tells EW in an exclusive, wide-ranging interview in this week’s issue. “It’s important that the show be good, and I take it really seriously.”
Still, when he makes his entrance for this year’s show, Crystal may not find that Oscar stage as cozy a place as he did 21 years ago, when he first took on the gig. Ratings for the telecast have steadily ebbed in recent years, complaining about the show has become a national pastime, and last year’s Oscars, hosted by Anne Hathaway and James Franco, were widely slammed as a clumsy attempt by the Academy to lure in younger viewers. Crystal says he knows how high the stakes are for this year’s show: “There’s a big responsibility to the job—I think more so this year because people were not happy last year,” he says. “I’ve got to deliver.”
For more of our interview with Crystal — including the never-before-reported backstory on how he came to host this year’s show, his Oscar-watching ritual at home, and his thoughts on which movies should have gotten more Oscar love this year — pick up the new issue of Entertainment Weekly, on stands this Friday.
Entertainment Weekly is now available on most tablets, including the iPad, Nook Color, Kindle Fire, and Samsung Galaxy. Think of it like the EW you already love, but on steroids: With our digital magazine, you can buy the recommended movies, albums, books, and DVDs while you’re reading about them. Plus you can watch music videos and film trailers, and find movie showtimes in your neighborhood. Current subscribers can access the digital version of EW for free by downloading EW app (also free) and logging in using your name and address or the information on your subscription label. Single copies of the magazine are also for sale through the app if you prefer to read EW that way. If you’re not a subscriber, but would like to become one, you can can do so by going to ew.com/allaccess.







