The Academy Awards managed to include the recently departed Kobe Bryant and the multiple Oscar nominee Kirk Douglas in its annual In Memoriam tribute Sunday night, but people on social media were quick to notice that the video tribute, broadcast on global television, failed to feature Luke Perry, who died last February of a stroke at age 52.

The veteran “Beverly Hills, 90210” actor had appeared in Quentin Tarantino’s best-picture-nominated “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.”

“To not feature Luke Perry, given his last role was in ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ is appalling,” tweeted one person.

“The man was more talented than most current actors’ left pinky,” tweeted another. “Can’t throw his photo up for .4 seconds at the Oscars? That’s some (executive).”

“Cmon you mentioned Kobe Bryant and he wasnt even a movie star ??? Shame Shame Shame,” tweeted yet another.

“Excluding Luke Perry from the Oscars in Memoriam was disrespectful,” added still another.

The video segment, which was accompanied by Billie Eilish beautifully singing The Beatles’ “Yesterday,” also didn’t include horror legend Sig Haig and actor Cameron Boyce, who died in Italy in July at the age of 20, the Hollywood Reporter said.

Bryant’s image led the In Memoriam tribute and Douglas’s concluded it. The “Spartacus” screen legend died this past week at age 103, following more than 70 years starring in films and producing them.

Meanwhile, Bryant had only recently begun working in film and media, unlike Perry, whose career in TV and films goes back to the 1980s.

Still, Bryant is an Oscar winner, for his 2017 animated short film “Dear Basketball.” His Jan. 26 death in a helicopter crash also shocked and saddened the world, especially the Los Angeles community where the 41-year-old was a towering figure in sports and entertainment, playing for the Lakers for 20 years.

Meanwhile, Haig had worked in Hollywood for nearly 60 years, appearing in more than 50 films, most notably playing Captain Spaulding in the Rob Zombie films, “House of 1000 Corpses,” “The Devil’s Rejects” and “3 from Hell.” Haig died in September at age 80.

As for Boyce, he had appeared in several films, including Adam Sandler’s “Grown Ups” in 2016. But he was best known for playing Luke Ross on Disney Channel’s comedy series “Jessie” from 2011 to 2015. He died of an epileptic seizure in July.

The Hollywood Reporter said that Perry, Haig and Boyce featured in a more lengthy version of the In Memoriam tribute, which is posted on the Academy’s website. But that may be a small consolation to their fans, especially Perry’s, who filled Twitter with expressions of sadness and disappointment, but also tributes of their own.