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Oscar wins for 'CODA' bring tears and elation to Deaf community

"CODA" is a tender, coming-of-age tale about the only hearing member in a deaf family that became a crowd-pleaser and earned widespread critical acclaim to become the first film with a largely deaf cast to win the best picture. It stars a trio of actors who are deaf, while offering an authentic depiction of Deaf life. For many in that community, the Oscar win provides an unprecedented feeling of affirmation, while offering a measure of Hollywood's recent progress.

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Oscar wins for CODA bring tears and elation to Deaf community

"I remember answering the phone from people who wanted him to do jobs and me talking with them and signing to my dad at the same time," Zatko said. "It was our lives. It's what we did. But to see someone make a movie of it ... I laughed. I cried."

The movie also showed the challenges that parents who are deaf face when visiting their kids at school, said Tony VonDolteren, who is Zatko's cousin, and grew up with deaf parents.

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Oscar wins for CODA bring tears and elation to Deaf community

VonDolteren, who lives in St. Augustine, Florida, remembers his dad cheering for him at a baseball game.

"It was louder than most and off tone," said VonDolteren, 46, now the national youth director for Perfect Game, a scouting service for youth travel baseball. "It would startle you. And people are like, 'Man, what's wrong with that guy,' until they find out my dad's deaf."

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Oscar wins for CODA bring tears and elation to Deaf community

John D'Onofrio, 80, who is deaf and lives in Boynton Beach, Florida, said he's in awe of the Oscar win for "CODA" and is grateful that more people are learning what life is like for people in the Deaf community. His stepdaughter is Barish, the personal assistant who lives in New York.

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Oscar wins for CODA bring tears and elation to Deaf community

D'Onofrio said he wanted to be an architect as well as a carpenter when he grew up but was told he couldn't do either. Instead, he worked for 35 years as a printer in a newspaper press room, a noisy place where many people who are deaf had earned a living.

"It's such a big win," he said of the film's Oscars. "For the Deaf community. For deaf people. For everyone."