Mission accomplished. (Photo: X/@DeanSalamouras)
Tom Cruise accepted an honorary Oscar for “extraordinary distinction in lifetime achievement” on Sunday in a room filled with actors and directors, including Leonardo DiCaprio and Steven Spielberg. The 63-year-old actor, who until now had never lifted the statuette in a 44-year film career, chose a Rolex Day-Date with a mother-of-pearl dial for the occasion. Cruise is not a Testimonee for Rolex.
Until recently, Rolex refrained from signing Hollywood actors to represent the brand. On a roster that already includes 30 tennis players and 58 golfers, Rolex added its first actor this year when it announced Leonardo DiCaprio, followed by Zendaya last month. Cruise and Rolex CEO Jean-Frédéric Dufour met at Wimbledon last year, and the actor is seen wearing Rolex more frequently than any other brand.
Rolex has historically avoided celebrity partnerships built on fame alone, choosing instead to link its image to achievement through excellence. Cruise, a protégé of the late Paul Newman, is the only A-list actor who personally performs high-risk stunts, including HALO jumps, wing-walking, motorcycle cliff-dives, high-G aerial maneuvers and advanced helicopter flying. He is known for extreme preparation before each stunt and precision while executing it.
Yet on Sunday, he spent more time honoring others than himself during his 10-minute remarks, a class act by any measure. If Rolex wants to align itself even further with a legacy of excellence, precision and professionalism, it could do worse than signing Cruise.