Oscars… The Complete Winners List: 

Best Picture:  "Argo"
Best Animated Feature Film:  "Brave"
Best Director:  Ang Lee,  "Life of Pi"
Best Actor:  Daniel Day-Lewis,  "Lincoln"
Best Actress:  Jennifer Lawrence,  "Silver Linings Playbook"
Best Supporting Actor:  Christoph Waltz,  "Django Unchained"
Best Supporting Actress:  Anne Hathaway,  "Les Misérables"
Best Documentary Feature:  "Searching for Sugar Man"
Best Documentary (Short Subject):  "Inocente"
Best Adapted Screenplay:  "Argo"
Best Original Screenplay:  "Django Unchained"
Best Foreign Film:  "Amour"  (Austria)
Best Film Editing:  "Argo"
Best Costume Design:  "Anna Karenina"

Anne Hathaway took home the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for "Les Misérables" . . . and she also took home the unofficial Best Supported Chest on an Actress award.  Seriously, Anne's dress was a little pointy….and it became a social media sensation.  Has it’s own twitter account now.

Kristen Stewart showed up to the Oscars with crutches.  Her makeup person says she, quote, "cut the ball of her foot, quite severely, on glass two days ago."

A producer of the Best animated short winner “Paperman” got kicked out of the building for throwing paper airplanes.

The Jaws theme was used to alert Oscar winners that their acceptance speeches were
running long.  How did Richard Dreyfus fell about it?  Here’s what he tweeted.  “I always dreamed that the score of one of my films would be used to play people off at the Oscars.  We did it Steven.”

It’s the fanciest night in Hollywood, and before the Academy Awards got started, one of the ladies clogged a toilet inside the Dolby Theater. The backed-up pipe finally burst. There was about an inch of standing water in the theater lobby.  Throughout much of the Oscars, the ladies were limited to just one bathroom. The lines became ridiculous.   A witness says the mother of an Oscar nominee used the toilet. But instead of the water going down the drain, when she flushed, the water spurt up like a geyser (quote) “The poor woman came out looking drenched.” Thanks to the hardworking maintenance team -- dressed in formal tuxes -- at the Dolby Theater, the flood was squeegeed and then vacuumed. Guests walking out at the end of the Oscars had no idea about the emergency.