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Sean Penn Skips Oscars to Visit Ukraine


Tue 17 Mar 2026 | 11:05 AM
Yara Sameh

The mystery of Sean Penn’s whereabouts on Sunday night during the 98th Academy Awards in Los Angeles, where he won the Oscar for best supporting ​actor for his role in the political thriller "One Battle After Another," has been solved.

Penn, 65, was in Ukraine, where he met with President Volodymyr Zelensky, who posted a photo of their meeting on Monday.

The iconic actor's absence from the ceremony wasn’t a major surprise to those paying attention, as speculation grew about his attendance in the week ahead of the ceremony.

It became a bigger question when his name was called from the Dolby Theatre stage by last year’s best supporting actor winner, Kieran Culkin, where Penn had failed to turn up.

“Sean Penn couldn’t be here this evening — or didn’t want to — so I’ll be accepting the award on his behalf,” Culkin told the A-list crowd.

On Sunday, The New York Times, citing two sources close to the actor, reported that Penn was in Ukraine on Oscar night.

Ukraine's state ​railway operator posted a short video clip of Penn getting out ​of the train in the morning, saying it had kept his trip a secret until the very last moment.

"Now we can say it officially: ​Sean Penn chose Ukraine over the Oscars!" it said on ​its Facebook page.

On Monday, President Zelensky posted an image of Penn and himself sitting in office chairs as they appear to be in conversation.

In the X post, he thanked the actor and praised his commitment to the country as it continues to defend itself against Russia’s invasion.

“Sean, thanks to you, we know what a true friend of Ukraine is,” Zelensky wrote. “You have stood with Ukraine since the first day of the full-scale war. This is still true today. And we know that you will continue to stand with our country and our people.”

Penn, a long-time advocate for Ukraine, has visited the country several times during the four-year war with Russia.

He also collaborated with Aaron Kaufman on the 2023 ​documentary “Superpower,” about Ukraine and Zelensky.

It uses Penn’s perspective to tell the actor-turned-wartime-president’s atypical story.

Penn also lent Zelensky one of his ​other Oscars in 2022.

In addition to his support of Ukraine as it has fended off Russia since its 2022 invasion, he has been known for his high-profile humanitarian work in Louisiana in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and the devastating 2010 Haiti earthquake.

Penn won the best actor Oscar for the 2003 thriller "Mystic River" and for the Harvey Milk biopic "Milk" in 2009. He was also nominated in that category for "Dead Man Walking," "Sweet and Lowdown," and "I Am Sam.”

With this third Oscar, he tied the record for most acting wins by a male performer, joining Jack Nicholson, Walter Brennan, and Daniel Day-Lewis.