Screen siren Lauren Bacall gets lifetime Oscar

Bacall, 85, starred in more than 30 films but never won an  Oscar from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences,  coming closest with a nomination for “The Mirror Has Two  Faces”.

The screen siren earned movie immortality with her husky  voice, sultry gaze and curt retorts in films like “Dark  Passage,” and her 1944 debut opposite Humphrey Bogart in “To  Have and Have Not” launched one of the most electric on- and  off-screen pairings in cinema history.

She shouted out a whoop on stage when receiving the  lifetime achievement Oscar and thrust it above her head.

“I can’t believe it — a man at last,” Bacall, who was  married to Bogart from 1945 until his death from cancer in  1957, joked to the audience. “The thought that when I get home  I’m going to have a two-legged man in my room is so exciting.”

Bacall clearly relished the chance to charm an audience  that included Jack Nicholson, Peter Fonda and Warren Beatty  with the same drawling, teasing voice she used with Bogart.

“He gave me a life and he changed my life,” she said of the  Hollywood legend.

Saturday’s ceremony marked the first time the academy has  given its Governors Awards at a ceremony separate from the gala  Oscars, which will take place in March 2010.

Some industry insiders questioned the academy’s decision to  hold the awards banquet on Saturday, but the actors on hand  said it was a relief to be able to speak freely and shed the  limitations of catering to a television audience that numbers  tens of millions worldwide.

Anjelica Huston, whose director father John Huston worked  with Bacall and Bogart, presented her Oscar. George Lucas,  Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks also took part, along with Kirk  Douglas, who revealed how he settled for a 60-year friendship  with Bacall after an early attempt to seduce her fell flat. He said Bacall’s tough image was all show. “She’s a  pussycat and she has a heart of gold,” he said.

The Academy also bestowed honorary awards on producer and  director Roger Corman, who gave a start to a string of  directors like Frances Ford Coppola and mesmerized a generation  with his quirky, gory thrillers.

Corman was King of low-budget “B movies” such as “The Cry  Baby Killer”, “It Conquered the World”, “The Little Shop of  Horrors” and “The Raven”, where he mixed a comedy element into  Edgar Allan Poe’s macabre poem.

“He’s been a maverick for a lot longer than I have,” risque  director Quentin Tarantino told Reuters after describing to the  audience how he would sit glued as a boy to Corman’s movies  like “The Man With the X-ray Eyes” on late-night TV.

Gordon Willis, who worked on the “Godfather” trilogy, “All  The President’s Men” and Woody Allen films such as “Manhattan”  and “Annie Hall” also received an honorary Oscar.

The Irving G. Thalberg Award, named after a pioneering  1920s and 30s producer, went to John Calley, whose works range  from “A Clockwork Orange” to the more mainstream “Remains of  the Day” and “The Da Vinci Code”.