Oscars 2015: Patricia Arquette wins Best Supporting Actress for Boyhood

Arquette was up against Laura Dern, Keira Knightley, Emma Stone and Meryl Streep

Payton Guion
Monday 23 February 2015 03:54 GMT
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Patricia Arquette making her acceptance speech for winning Best Actress Award
Patricia Arquette making her acceptance speech for winning Best Actress Award (Getty Images)

Patricia Arquette won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress at the 2015 Academy Awards for her role in Boyhood, a victory that was 12 years in the making.

Arquette was filmed over a period of 12 years, from the ages of 33 to 45, for Boyhood, in which she plays the mother of Mason. The film follows Mason from the age of 5, documenting the trials of growing up. The film was directed by Richard Linklater.

The Oscar is the fourth major award Arquette has won for her performance in Boyhood, as she also claimed the Golden Globe, Screen Actors Guild award and the Bafta.

Speaking backstage after her acceptance speech, in which she made an impassioned plea for equal rights in the US, Arquette said: “We talk about equal rights for women in other countries... we don’t have equal rights for women in America because when they wrote the constitution, they didn’t write it for women.”

Arquette beat out Laura Dern (Wild), Keira Knightley (The Imitation Game), Emma Stone (Birdman) and Meryl Streep (Into the Woods) to claim the Oscar.

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