Perhaps "Moonlight" supporting actor Mahershala Ali was just taking a cue from Jane Fonda.
In 1972, the actress had a golden opportunity to lash out against the Vietnam War — and she passed.
"There's a great deal to say, and I'm not going to say it tonight," she said upon reaching the podium to accept the best-actress Oscar for "Klute."
This year's winners weren't expected to be as restrained. Many expected Sunday's ceremony to be jam-packed with political speeches slamming President Trump's policies, particularly his push to restrict citizens of select Muslim nations from reaching American shores, and pleas for religious tolerance.
That was certainly the case when Ali won a Screen Actors Guild Award earlier this month. But this time around, the first Muslim to ever win an acting Oscar decided to keep politics at bay. Maybe Ali got the politicking out of his system during the rest of the awards circuit. Maybe he figured the victory spoke for itself.
Whatever the case, one of the night's most highly anticipated moments turned into a tribute to Ali's teachers, and to the wife who gave birth to their child four days ago.
Viola Davis, whose supporting-actress win was also expected, has made race a major theme in past acceptance speeches. This time around, her powerful words stretched beyond the color of skin and made room to pay tribute to the late playwright who wrote her part in "Fences" while living in St. Paul.
"I became an artist and thank God I did," she said, choking back tears. "It's the only profession that celebrates what it means to live a life. So here's to August Wilson, who exhumed and exalted the ordinary people."