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Some Oscar Attendees Delayed by Protesters Calling for Cease-Fire in Gaza

Demonstrators near the Dolby Theater chanted “Long live Palestine” while marching down Sunset Boulevard.

Protesters wearing keffiyehs and holding Palestinian flags march down a street.
Protesters near the Dolby Theater in Los Angeles held signs saying “Stand With Palestine” on Sunday.Credit...Carlin Stiehl/Reuters

Douglas Morino and

Douglas Morino reported from Los Angeles, and Matt Stevens from New York.

Some Oscar attendees were delayed arriving at the Dolby Theater on Sunday when demonstrators calling for a cease-fire in Gaza filled lanes of traffic a few blocks south of the theater, according to the Los Angeles police.

There were at least three protests about the Israel-Hamas war, said Capt. Kelly Muniz, a head of the Los Angeles Police Department’s media relations division. She said there were between 500 and 700 protesters at the largest demonstration, near the Cinerama Dome, a closed movie theater about a mile away from the Dolby Theater.

At that protest, Laura Delhauer, an independent filmmaker who held a cardboard sign that read “Free Palestine,” said she hoped to put pressure on the U.S. government to end the conflict.

“I’m heartbroken to know that our hard-earned tax dollars are going to pay for the murder of innocent civilians,” she said.

Delhauer and other protesters marched down Sunset Boulevard as car horns honked, a helicopter hovered overhead and Los Angeles police officers in riot gear watched nearby.

Captain Muniz said the Police Department had arrested one person for battery of a police officer in relation to the protests, which may have been connected to one another.

By 4:30 p.m. local time, Captain Muniz said that the size of the protests had diminished but that some demonstrators were still seeking to “get into the gated areas” near the Oscars. After protesters tried to breach a chain-link fence near the entrance to the Dolby Theater, police officers secured it with zip ties.

The largest protest was organized by groups including Film Workers for Palestine and SAG-AFTRA Members for Ceasefire.

“With people from across the globe watching the Academy Awards, this is a Hail Mary opportunity,” said Anthony Bryson, one of the organizers. He added: “What’s happening in Gaza needs to have attention drawn to it. We wanted to bring as much resistance and visibility as possible.”

Shortly after the protest began, a man dressed in a dark blue suit stood across the street holding both a United States flag and an Israeli flag. After a brief verbal altercation, protesters grabbed the Israeli flag and threw it into the street. The man walked away, surrounded by volunteer safety officers who had been brought in by protest organizers.

Matt Stevens writes about arts and culture news for The Times. He has been a journalist for more than a decade. More about Matt Stevens

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