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Take Two: ‘Moonlight' Wins Best Picture at Academy Awards After ‘La La Land' Announcement Mishap

Officials said that presenters Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway were given the envelope for the wrong category

Barry Jenkins' "Moonlight" — not, as it turned out, "La La Land" — won best picture at the Academy Awards in a historic Oscar upset and an unprecedented fiasco that saw one winner swapped for another while the "La La Land" producers were in mid-speech.

Presenters Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway apparently took the wrong envelope — the one for best actress winner Emma Stone — onto the stage. When they realized the mistake, representatives for ballot tabulators PwC raced onstage to stop the acceptance speech.

All the stars came out Sunday night for the 89th Academy Awards. Watch a round up of all the top Oscar winners.

Host Jimmy Kimmel had come forward to inform the cast that "Moonlight" had indeed won, showing the inside of the envelope as proof. "I knew I would screw this up," said Kimmel, a first-time host. "I promise to never come back."

"La La Land" producer Jordan Horwitz also confirmed the mistake and graciously passed his statue to the "Moonlight" producers.

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But backstage, Stone said she was holding her envelope at the time of the announcement. "I think everyone's in a state of confusion still," said Stone. Later the actress, who pledged her deep love of "Moonlight," added, "Is that the craziest Oscar moment of all time? Cool!"

Early Monday, PwC released a statement on Twitter to apologize for the gaff. 

"The presenters had mistakenly been given the wrong category envelope and when discovered, was immediately corrected," PwC wrote. "We are currently investigating how this could have happened."

The group added: "We appreciate the grace with which the nominees, the Academy, ABC and Jimmy Kimmel handled the situation."

Brian Cullinan and Martha Ruiz are the two accountants from PwC who controlled the envelopes at the 89th Academy Awards. Before the big event, they talked about their job, which Ruiz called a "big responsibility." She added that they even memorize the winners so they can make sure the right names are called onstage.

"It's one of the strangest things that's ever happened to me," Beatty said backstage. "Thank God there were two of us up there," Dunaway responded.

The actress then asked Beatty, "Who else should I tell?"

"Everybody," he said.

At that point, a security guard tried to take the real envelope and Beatty said, "Security is not getting this. I'm giving it to (Moonlight director) Barry Jenkins at a later time." Beatty also refused to show it to anyone else.

ABC News, tweeting about the ceremony broadcast on its network, said the envelope held by Beatty read, "Actress in a leading role." A close-up photo of Beatty onstage verified that.

It was, nevertheless, a shocking upset considering that "La La Land" came in with 14 nominations, a record that tied it with "Titanic" and "All About Eve."

Barry Jenkins' tender, bathed-in-blue coming-of-age drama, made for just $1.5 million, is an unusually small Oscar winner. Having made just over $22 million as of Sunday at the box office, it's one of the lowest-grossing best-picture winners ever.

"Even in my dreams this cannot be true," said an astonished Jenkins, once he reached the stage.

Backstage, Jenkins spoke again about the shocking mistake. "It made a very special feeling even more special, but not in the way I expected," he said.

"The folks at 'La La Land' were so gracious," Jenkins added. "I can't imagine being in their position and having to do that."

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The ceremony's chaotic scene immediately raced to the top of all-time Oscar moments, far more stunning than the nude man who raced across the stage in 1974 as part of the "streaking" fad.

And it immediately evoked Steve Harvey's recent gaffe of naming the wrong Miss Universe winner.

The Miss Universe Twitter account quickly let the Oscars know they felt their pain.

"Have your people call our people, we know what to do," the tweet read.

An Oscars presenter announced the wrong winner before, according to the Los Angeles Times. In 1964, Sammy Davis Jr, presenting the award for scoring of music, adaptation or treatment mistakenly announced the winner for original music score, a different category. "They gave me the wrong envelope?" Davis asked as a PwC representative provided the correct envelope.

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