Dolly Parton won’t be on the Governors Awards stage to accept her Oscar in person, but her team says it’s not because of a health crisis. After speculation online and in some coverage, a representative clarified that Parton’s absence was planned months in advance and comes down to scheduling.

What Parton’s representative said
According to statements shared with multiple outlets, Parton’s camp says the Academy had been informed as early as June that she wouldn’t be able to attend the ceremony in Los Angeles. The representative emphasized that the decision was not driven by a new health emergency and that the plan was for Parton to deliver her acceptance remarks remotely from Nashville.
Why did this turn into a health rumor in the first place
The timing made the speculation predictable. In the same general period, Parton had postponed a set of Las Vegas performances due to upcoming medical procedures, which led some people to assume the Oscars-related absence was connected.
A key point, though: “postponed shows for procedures” is not the same thing as “too unwell to appear anywhere,” and Parton’s representative explicitly separated the Governors Awards decision from a health-driven cancellation narrative.
Which “Oscar” is this, and why is it a big deal
This isn’t a competitive Oscars race-night win. Parton was selected to receive the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, one of the Academy’s special honors that comes with an Oscar statuette and recognizes humanitarian and philanthropic impact.
The Academy announced the 2025 Governors Awards honorees (including Parton, plus Honorary Awards for Debbie Allen, Tom Cruise, and Wynn Thomas) months ahead of the ceremony.
What the Academy highlighted about Parton’s impact
Coverage around the honor points to Parton’s long-running charitable work, especially efforts tied to children’s literacy through the Dollywood Foundation and Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library, which has distributed hundreds of millions of books.
What happened at the ceremony
The Governors Awards took place on Nov. 16, 2025, at the Ray Dolby Ballroom in Hollywood. Parton accepted via a video message from Nashville, aligning with what her team said in advance.
That remote acceptance matters because it undercuts the louder rumor: she didn’t vanish; she participated in the way her schedule allowed.

