âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ and âBig Little Liesâ were the top winners at the 2018 Golden Globe Awards. Both the darkly comic film and the HBO limited series ended the night with four wins a piece in their respective motion picture and television categories. The 75th awards kicked off with Seth Meyers tackling Hollywoodâs sexual misconduct and gender inequality head on in an opening monologue that also included the host joking about a presidential run for Cecil B. DeMille Award honoree Oprah Winfrey. She answered the call with an acceptance speech that inspired others to seriously consider the possibility.
- Complete list of nominees and winners
- Watch Seth Meyersâ entire opening monologue
- The full transcript of Oprah Winfreyâs speech | President Oprah?
- ANALYSIS: A very different Golden Globes | Ali: How the Globes became the womenâs room | Gold Standard: The women winners
- PHOTOS: Red carpet looks | Show highlights | Winnersâ room
âDarkest Hourâ and other Golden Globe winners find box office success in a sea of franchises
In a film industry dominated by superheroes and Jedi warriors, a character drama about Winston Churchill doesnât scream box-office potential. Neither does a romance about a mute woman and an amphibious creature, or a quiet mother-and-daughter coming-of-age tale.
But despite the odds, dramas like âDarkest Hour,â âThe Shape of Waterâ and âLady Bird,â which all won awards at Sundayâs Golden Globe Awards, are drawing impressive audiences at the multiplex. Last weekend, indie movies made up nine of the top 20 films at the box-office, up from the roughly five that have cracked the charts during comparable weekends in the previous few years, according to Box Office Mojo.
âLady Bird,â which took the best picture prize for comedy or musical, has topped $34 million at the box office so far. âThe Shape of Water,â which won best director for Guillermo del Toro, has crossed the $20 million mark. Focus Featuresâ âDarkest Hour,â starring best actor winner Gary Oldman as Churchill, has taken in more than $28 million and ranked No. 8 in the U.S. and Canada last weekend. And âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,â the dark comedy that walked away with the top drama film prize, has grossed about $25 million.
Marchesa MIA: Harvey Weinstein fallout led to the 2018 Golden Globes trend you didnât see
The 75th Golden Globes was a big night for symbolic, statement-making style on the red carpet, thanks to a parade of powerfully dressed women in an inky sea of black dresses, accessorized with Timeâs Up lapel pins and accompanied by female activists.
And given the highly publicized effort to highlight the issues of gender inequality, sexual assault and harassment, it was nice to see a range of A-listers decked out in labels helmed by female designers, including âThe Crownâsâ Claire Foy in a black, double-breasted Stella McCartney suit, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâsâ Samira Wiley in a black A-line Romona KeveĹža Collection gown, Elisabeth Moss and Natalie Portman in Dior (which tapped Maria Grazia Chiuri as its first female artistic director in 2016) and Sam Rockwell, Diane Kruger and Gary Oldman in Prada.
But there was one female-led label that was conspicuously absent at the first awards show of the year. Marchesa, the brand started by Keren Craig and Georgina Chapman in 2004, has been making trips down awards-show red carpets since its founding. Sienna Miller at the 2007 Golden Globes, Jennifer Lopez for the 2007 Globes and 2007 Oscars, Sandra Bullock at the 2010 Oscars and Octavia Spencer at last yearâs Academy Awards are just a few examples.
Lena Waitheâs hopes âThe Chiâ will help humanize black people and their experiences
I hope they realize that black folks are human beings, and we deserve to be treated as such. That was really my mission. I really wanted to show us being normal. I wanted to show us being human. That was the goal.
— Lena Waithe, creator of âThe Chiâ
âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ showrunner Bruce Miller would love to hire more female directors
Our show is always looking to have a roster of all female directors. The most heartening thing thatâs happened in the last year, from my point of view as a showrunner, is everybodyâs too busy. The female directors, we would love to hire more, and theyâre working too much. Which is just the way it should be. ...  Shows work better â especially TV shows â by having different voices, writers, directors. So that it doesnât feel like the same show every week. I know that our actors love working with different directors and different voices. A huge, huge part of this is getting more women behind the camera, in every level. Including mine.
— Bruce Miller, showrunner of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
Ann Dowd of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ is thrilled that Hollywood predators cannot hide anymore
I think [there is] tremendous relief at the enormity of the exposure of predators. Not just one or two. ⌠And now thereâs no hiding. The fact that these predators cannot pay their lawyers to get them somehow off ⌠Itâs thrilling and so important.
— Ann Dowd, actress on âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
Female designers make a major fashion statement at the 2018 Golden Globes. Now what?
A majority of stars who stepped onto the 75th Golden Globesâ red carpet embraced an all-black dress code supporting the Timeâs Up movement, Hollywoodâs newly launched effort in stamping out workplace discrimination and sexual harassment.
While red-carpet attendees were quick to show their solidarity with their spin on the eveningâs color theme (or lack thereof), some managed to take that message of unity one step further by donning female designers for the evening.
âI had half my clients in women [designers], and half were not,â said Tara Swennen, who styled several stars, including best supporting actress winner Allison Janney (âI, Tonyaâ), who wore a gown by Italian designer Mario Dice. âIt was definitely something that we were trying to attain, but sometimes it just wasnât possible.â
Golden Globes after-party scene: chocolate truffles, a kerfuffle and one very busy engraving station
The Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. and Dick Clark Productions teamed up for their official viewing and after-party to celebrate the 75th Golden Globes. Unlike most of the other Sunday soirees in various venues throughout the Beverly Hilton, the action at this one started long before the telecast ended.
As the final stop on the âwinnerâs walk,â Golden Globe recipients could go for their backstage interview and then stop into this party to have their names engraved on their trophies. So, not surprising, stars came streaming in during the telecast.
Having attended this party and then later the Warner Bros. and InStyle shindig, we offer highlights from both Sunday night affairs.
Beyond wearing black, Hollywood stars discuss how they can improve their industry
Celebs took to the 2018 Golden Globes red carpet dressed in black to express solidarity with those who have spoken out against the sexual harassment and gender inequality plaguing their industry. But wearing all black to an event is just the beginning.
When actors and filmmakers on the red carpet Sunday night were asked what they can and are doing to promote change, they had a wide range of answers, from hiring more female directors to raising your own consciousness.
âLead by example first and foremost,â said âThis Is Usâ actor Milo Ventimiglia. âLetâs just be good men on our sets, in our crews, in life.â
âThe Handmaid Taleâsâ Bruce Miller added that it was just as important to destigmatize conversations about sexual harassment and to provide a safe environment for those to speak out.
âThese things last a lot longer and donât ever come to light because everybody is too embarrassed, ashamed, uncomfortable to talk about them,â Miller said.
See what else they had to say in the video above.
Barbra Streisand extends her Globes criticism to Twitter to decry dearth of wins for female directors
Barbra Streisandâs criticism of the Golden Globes didnât stop after she left the podium Sunday night. In fact, the actress, director and singer continued scolding Hollywood on Twitter for not championing films directed by women.
While introducing the nominees for best picture â drama at the close of the show, Streisand expressed disbelief that she remained the only woman to win in the directing category in the showâs 75-year history. (She took home the award in 1984 for directing âYentlâ and was nominated for âThe Prince of Tidesâ in 1991.)
âYou know⌠that was 34 years ago. Folks, timeâs up,â Streisand said, echoing the womenâs movement that prevailed as the theme of Sundayâs show.
Streisandâs revelation came after actress-director Natalie Portmanâs dig that no women were nominated in the directing category this year, referring to the snub of âLady Birdâ director and writer Greta Gerwig.
Streisandâs time wasnât up on Twitter, though. Just before midnight, she fired off a series of tweets after the show, also touting directors Dee Rees and Patty Jenkins for their films âMudboundâ and âWonder Woman,â respectively.
Streisand also pointed out that âthe three highest-grossing films last year were all carried by women.â
The trio of films that dominated the domestic box office in 2017 were âStar Wars: The Last Jedi,â âBeauty and the Beastâ and âWonder Woman,â which all featured strong female lead characters. However, only the latter film was directed by a woman.
ALSO
Why Barbra Streisandâs hope for female directors at Sundayâs Golden Globes sounded like 1984
Barbra Streisand canât believe sheâs the only woman to have won a Golden Globe for director
First stop post-Golden Globes? The HBO after-party
Because the entrance to the HBO bash is immediately outside the Beverly Hilton ballroom where the Golden Globes are held, it tends to be the first party stop for many revelers.
At least that was the move for Emilia Clarke, who took the opportunity to catch up with her âGame of Thronesâ co-stars, chatting with Gwendoline Christie and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau.
Also at their table? The Lonely Island guys, including Andy Samberg. When the trio of dudes got up to leave, Clarke shook her head defiantly and insisted they stay longer. Samberg picked up the placard on the table reading âGame of Thrones.â âSee!â he said. âWe donât belong here.â
Shailene Woodley, meanwhile, spent the evening alongside the activist she had brought as her guest to the Globes, Calina Lawrence. Plenty of onlookers surrounded her table, but she was focused intently on her plate of food, as no one who attends the Globes actually gets to eat dinner.
Also spotted? Lena Dunham, chatting with her âGirlsâ showrunner Jenni Konner, and Nicole Kidman, who could barely get to a table due to an onslaught of selfie-seekers toting their iPhones.
Watch Kerry Washington, Meryl Streep and Lena Waithe explain why they wore black to the Golden Globes
For solidarity and to signify change. That was the overwhelming message stars such as Kerry Washington, Meryl Streep and Lena Waithe shared when asked why they chose to wear black to the 2018 Golden Globes on Sunday.
âIâm proud to be wearing black to stand in solidarity with the women who have been doing the work for social justice for decades,â said Washington, a member of Timeâs Up, on the red carpet.
The newly formed, all-female coalition was behind the eventâs all-black plan.
âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ actress Ann Dowd shared that if the move was merely symbolic, she would have passed.
âItâs the fact that this organization is raising the funds to support those who donât have the freedom to speak up for fear of losing their livelihood and the support of their family,â said Dowd. âThat to me is what is the huge difference.â
But why black? âMaster of Noneâsâ Waithe considered the symbolism.
âWe ainât mourning the past, but weâre saying goodbye to it,â Waithe said. âWeâre saying goodbye to a time where we allowed for homophobia, for transphobia, for sexual harassment, for any sort of racism. Weâre putting a stop to that.â
At the Warner Bros. after-party, stars kick off their heels (literally) to dance
The first stop for many at the Warner Bros. and InStyle party was the LâOrĂŠal flats machine. Thatâs right, there was a machine on hand doling out free rollable flat shoes for any lady whose tootsies were wiped out after wearing heels all day.
That did not include Mariah Carey, who was posted up in the first banquette inside the party surrounded by a slew of Hollywood power players: Ashley Judd, Salma Hayek and Rowan Blanchard. Blanchard, 16, wasnât the only teen in attendance â Ava Witherspoon, 18, attended the bash with her mom, Reese.
Busy Phillips, who is typically Michelle Williamsâ plus-one â this year, Williams brought #MeToo founder Tarana Burke instead â caught up with her BFF at the party. They were hanging out near the âI, Tonyaâ crew, including Tonya Harding herself.
Despite the fact that Margot Robbie plays Harding in the film, the figure skater seemed to have found a new buddy in Allison Janney. The two kept hugging and laughing as Janney, who plays Hardingâs mother in the film, let Harding hold her newly acquired Golden Globe. Harding pretended to drop the prize, indicating how heavy it was, and then began rocking it like a baby.
Over on the dance floor, Maggie Gyllenhaal was busy dancing to Camila Cabelloâs âHavana.â More guests were actually dancing at this bash than any other, perhaps on a sugar high after hitting the fully stocked gelato and donuts bar.
Unclear, however? Whether astronaut Buzz Aldrin, who wandered into the bash around 11 p.m., broke out into the moonwalk.
By 11:53 p.m. Elisabeth Moss was celebrating her big night in style.
After taking home the trophy for actress in a television drama series, as well as the best drama series win for âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ earlier in the evening, Moss was ready to dance.
Shoes off, she displayed her finest moves to an array of songs including âShiningâ by DJ Khaled, featuring BeyoncĂŠ and Jay-Z, Cardi Bâs âBodak Yellowâ and Lauryn Hillâs âDoo-Wop (That Thing).â
UPDATES:
12 p.m.: This article was updated with more details about the party.
This article was originally published at 10:16 a.m.
As the night wound down, Amazonâs party was heating up
As some Golden Globe after-parties cleared out (ahem, the domed tent of the Focus party), others got packed â and some of the hottest soirĂŠes Sunday night turned out to be thrown by the newer kids on the block.
Like Netflixâs, Amazonâs penthouse party at the Beverly Hilton Hotel was a hot ticket. Around 11:30 p.m., Viola Davis made her way down the hallways just as Mariah Carey was gliding out; guests arriving in the witching hour were greeted by the booming sounds of rising rapper Cardi B.
Her breakout hit, âBodak Yellow,â gave way to a supremely danceable DJ set as attendees filled a small dance floor, gazing out at the Los Angeles skyline from penthouse heights.
The partyâs catchy soundtrack was no accident, as Amazon brought in the heavy hitters to score the evening.
Sibling DJs Samantha Ronson and Mark Ronson were both on hand to successfully keep the dance floor full late into the evening.
UPDATES:
11:45 a.m.: This article was updated with more details about the party.
This article was originally published at 10:08 a.m.
NBC apologizes, removes tweet endorsing Oprah Winfrey for president
NBC apologized on Monday for a tweet endorsing Oprah Winfrey as âOUR future president.â
The tweet was posted in response to a quip from Seth Meyersâ Golden Globes opening monologue, but fell flat with some on social media, including President Trumpâs eldest son, Donald Trump Jr.
The network, which aired Sundayâs show, then removed the tweet, explaining that it had been posted by a third-party agency used by NBC Entertainment and âwas not meant to be a political statement.â
Hereâs how it all went down:
âIn 2011, I told some jokes about our current president, [Donald Trump], at the White House Correspondents Dinner. Jokes about how he was unqualified to be president,â Meyers quipped. âSome have said that night convinced him to run. So if thatâs true, I just want to say: Oprah, you will never be president! You do not have what it takes!â
The joke was promptly followed by the tweet in question, which bore a GIF of Winfrey, Sundayâs Cecil B. DeMille Award recipient. It said âNothing but respect for OUR future president,â referencing a viral anti-Trump meme.
However, Trump supporters didnât find the barb so amusing and a backlash ensued. Trumpâs Twitter-enthusiast son Don Jr. then took the network to task, saying that the tweet showed the broadcasterâs bias loud and clear.
âIn case anyone had any doubts about where the media stands this should take care of it,â he wrote, sharing NBCâs Winfrey tweet. âThe bias against @realDonaldTrump is now so obvious they have simply given up hiding it. Can you trust anything they say at this point? Americans see the truth in job #s & in their wallets!â
The network then took the tweet down and issued its apology, which Don Jr. later called âstrange.â
More fun from the Fox Golden Globes after-party
The Fox Golden Globes bash â which included 20th Century Fox, Fox Searchlight, FX, National Geographic and Hulu â was an early must-stop for Globes-goers who noshed on charcuterie and cheeses.
âShape of Waterâ mastermind Guillermo del Toro and Martin McDonagh, director of âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ (which won for motion picture â drama), arrived showing off their Golden Globes.
The eveningâs winningest studio had a lot to celebrate at the sprawling after-party held on the roof terrace of the Beverly Hilton, where glinting chandeliers hung high above post-show revelers.
Stars of âThe Postâ gathered in one nook; gawkers flocked toward best actress winner Frances McDormand and her husband, Joel Coen; on the dance floor âThe Greatest Showmanâ actress and singer Keala Settle posed for pictures, celebrating a best-song win for âThis Is Me.â
In the âShape of Waterâ corner sat âStar Trek: Discoveryâ star Doug Jones, the versatile physical performer who plays the creature in Del Toroâs sci-fi romantic adventure.
âIâve known Guillermo for 20 years and seven projects,â Jones said, speaking fondly of Del Toro, with whom he first worked on 1997âs âMimic.â âIâm so happy for him.â
Outside, along a cozy terrace, television screens replayed scenes from the Globes telecast. Hungry guests lined up to soak up Champagne suds with gourmet pizza and enjoy an espresso bar.
But the sushi (prepared by on-site chefs) proved alarmingly mediocre â not that it stopped anyone from partaking â as the DJ spun tunes from Madonna to Chubby Checker for the early-night crowd.
Women take center stage at the Golden Globes
The 75th Golden Globes were the first major awards show of Hollywoodâs #MeToo movement, and the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. didnât miss its cue.
The procession of black dresses that began at the Beverly Hiltonâs red carpet moved to the winnerâs podium as films and television shows driven by women â âLady Bird,â âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,â âThe Handmaidâs Tale,â âBig Little Liesâ and âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ â prevailed at a ceremony marked mostly by serious speeches focusing on months of allegations and admissions of sexual harassment within Hollywood.
âThereâs a new era underway,â host Seth Meyers said moments into his opening monologue, âand I can tell, because itâs been years since a white man was this nervous in Hollywood.â
âBy the way,â he continued, âa special hello to hosts of other upcoming awards shows that are watching me tonight â like the first dog they shot into outer space.â
If this yearâs Globes marked a new age for awards shows, it wasnât remarkably different from previous editions, save for the monochromatic evening wear, the on-point #MeToo messaging and, for the most part, the jettisoning of snark, though the show did have a few priceless, snide moments. (Natalie Portman, presenting the director category: âAnd here are the all-male nominees.â)
The evening, long marketed as the looser, less inhibited answer to the stodgy Oscars, actually felt a lot like the Academy Awards with plenty of effusive and heartfelt acceptance speeches, with particular note being paid to the front-row presence of Oprah Winfrey, the recipient of the HFPAâs Cecil B. DeMille honor. (Meyers did one bit pegged to Winfrey running for president in 2020.)
All that attention proved prescient as Winfrey delivered the eveningâs big powerhouse moment with nearly everyone in the Beverly Hiltonâs ballroom hanging on every word.
Oprah for president? Sure, but Donald Trump always thought sheâd be a great running mate: âI think weâd win easilyâ
Oprah Winfreyâs political prospects have been subject to speculation for decades. And even President Trump has fed into it.
The former talk-show host, who accepted the Cecil B. DeMille Award at the Golden Globes with a rapturous speech on Sunday, was touted by Trump as a possible running mate long before he was sworn in as president.
When the president was still a mere grandiose builder in the late 1980s, he did the rounds criticizing U.S. foreign policy after taking out a full-page ad on the topic and sparking debate about his own presidential aspirations.
Winfrey suspected that he might run some day, but Trump wasnât so sure back then.
âI just probably wouldnât do it, Oprah,â he told her in 1988. âI probably wouldnât, but I do get tired of seeing whatâs happening with this country, and if it got so bad, I would never want to rule it out totally, because I really am tired of seeing whatâs happening with this country, how weâre really making other people live like kings, and weâre not.â
Trump told Larry King in 1987, âI have no intention of running for president.â The following year, Trump recited a similar yarn as a guest on Winfreyâs top-rated talk show, one of many dual appearances he had with her.
By the late â90s, however, Trump was still being asked about his political aspirations and even a possible running mate.
âI love Oprah,â Trump told King in 1999. âOprah would always be my first choice. If sheâd do it, sheâd be fantastic. Sheâs popular, sheâs brilliant, sheâs a wonderful woman.â
Then in June 2015, Trump circled back to that prospect, telling ABCâs George Stephanopoulos that Winfrey would be the perfect running mate who would help him clinch the election.
âIâd love to have Oprah,â Trump said. âI think weâd win easily, actually.â
But in June 2016, when Trump was the presumptive Republican nominee, late-night host Jimmy Kimmel told Winfrey that she âwould beat both Donald Trump and Hillary Clintonâ if she ran.
However, Winfrey doubled down, much like Trump once did, saying she âwould never run for officeâ and declared her support for Clinton.
Winfrey did tease some hope of a presidential run, though:
âFor many years, I used to think â until this election year, I thought â âWow, I have noâŚâ Why do people say that? I have no qualifications to run,â she said. âIâm feeling pretty qualified. After this year, Iâm feeling really qualified.â
Oprah Winfrey declares a ânew day on the horizonâ in a speech that stirs hope (in some) of a presidential run
We all have lived too many years in a culture broken by brutally powerful men. For too long, women have not been heard or believed if they dare speak the truth to the power of those men. But their time is up.
— Oprah Winfrey
Oprah Winfrey may not be running for president â yet â but on Sunday, it felt like she was kicking off her campaign.
Accepting the Cecil B. DeMille Award at the 75th Golden Globes on a night focused on sexual harassment within the entertainment business, the talk show guru brought the crowd of black-clad celebrities to their feet with a rousing speech about the power of speaking out against abuse and injustice.
Even before she took the stage, Winfrey was the center of attention. In his opening monologue, host Seth Meyers joked about his hope that sheâd run for president (with Tom Hanks as her running mate). Award winners Sterling K. Brown of âThis Is Usâ and Rachel Brosnahan of âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ both gave Winfrey shout-outs in their acceptance speeches.
Women in black take over the Golden Globes in a show of solidarity against sexual harassment and gender inequality
Last January, women marched in cities across the U.S. in a show of solidarity against the patriarchy. A year later, the protest came to the red carpet. Sunday night at the 75th Golden Globe Awards, hundreds of women, and men, chose to speak about gender parity and sexual harassment instead of their designers. And instead of pink, they wore black.
Days before the ceremony, 300 powerful women in Hollywood announced the Timeâs Up campaign, an initiative to draw attention to sexual harassment in the industry and beyond, and asked Globe attendees to wear black. Virtually all of them did, creating what Meryl Streep called âa thick black lineâ that wound its way up the red carpet and into the Beverly Hilton, where winner after winner thanked the power of women rather than the usual laundry list of power brokers.
The evening hit a crescendo when, accepting the Cecil B. DeMille award, Oprah Winfrey brought the house down with a speech calling for the day when no woman would have to say âMe tooâ; Barbra Streisand expressed shock that she was the only woman to receive a Globe for best director, and even Thelma and Louise (Geena Davis and Susan Sarandon) were resurrected to announce one of the eveningâs top awards, perhaps to show how far the industry has, and has not, come since they drove off that cliff 27 years ago rather than return to their limited lives.
Tommy Wiseau reveals what he would have said on stage at the Golden Globes
On a night that will be remembered mostly for its somber attire, sober attitude and that rousing speech from Oprah Winfrey, there was at least one glimmer of the classic, madcap unpredictability of the Golden Globes. That was provided, appropriately enough, by James Franco, Tommy Wiseau and the inside-out making-of tale âThe Disaster Artist.â
When Franco won lead actor in a motion picture, comedy or musical for his portrayal of Wiseau, Franco grabbed his younger brother and costar Dave Franco and dragged him onstage. And then from somewhere far, far in the back of the room came Wiseau, barreling onstage at the elder Francoâs exhortation. As Wiseau reached the stage, he headed straight for the microphone but James Franco physically blocked him from it.
Franco instead read a speech from his phone, saying of Wiseau, âNineteen years ago he was stuck in traffic, from the Golden Globes, he said to his best friend Greg,â â and here Franco briefly launched into Wiseauâs distinctive, unplaceable accent â ââGolden Globes, so what, Iâm not invited. I know they donât want me, guy with accent, long hair, so I show them. I donât wait for Hollywood, I make my own movie.ââ
Resuming in his own voice, Franco continued, âI am very happy to share this moment with him today.â
The men in (all) black at the Golden Globes
Many men who turned out to the Golden Globes ceremony on Sunday showed their sartorial solidarity with the Timeâs Up movement by wearing all-black tuxedo ensembles.
Check out our photo gallery of some of the memorable monochrome menfolk.
âThree Billboardsâ and âBig Little Liesâ are the top winners of a very different kind of Golden Globes awards
The Golden Globes are, by reputation, the loosest, booziest and most decidedly unserious ceremony on Hollywoodâs awards season calendar, with the awards themselves quite often the butt of the joke. Hosting the awards in 2016, Ricky Gervais repeatedly savaged them as âmeaningless.â
But, in a year that has seen the entertainment industry upended by a wave of sexual harassment scandals, the 75th Golden Globes flipped the script. At Sunday eveningâs ceremony, everything â from the black dresses women wore on the red carpet in solidarity to the jokes and speeches to the winners themselves â seemed freighted with meaning.
âItâs 2018 â marijuana is finally allowed and sexual harassment finally isnât,â show host Seth Meyers said, summing up the sense of change in the air.
In what has been one of the most wide-open awards seasons in years, the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. offered little clarity, spreading its love among a handful of top contenders. âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,â âLady Birdâ and âThe Shape of Waterâ all took home major prizes, while other critical favorites such as âDunkirk,â âGet Out,â âCall Me by Your Nameâ and âThe Postâ left empty-handed.
Women wear the pants at the 75th Golden Globes
âTonight is about women wearing the pants,â said Alison Brie at the 75th Golden Globes on Sunday, âso I chose to literally wear the pants.â
The âGLOWâ actress channeled a modern Audrey Hepburn in a strapless sweetheart ensemble by Vassilis Zoulias that comprised a full skirt nipping into a pant leg.
Her dress-pants combo look was a popular one on the red carpet, which was lined with stars in creative versions of all black in support of the Timeâs Up movement.
Style standouts from the 75th Golden Globes
In keeping with the more serious mood on this yearâs Golden Globes red carpet, we have decided to break with our tradition of presenting our best- and worst-dressed photo gallery. Instead, we present to you our style standouts.
Also, hereâs why we think this yearâs Golden Globes black-dress blackout is good for fashion.
This is why Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. President Meher Tatna didnât wear black
With an all-black dress code prevailing on the red carpet at the 75th Golden Globes on Sunday, Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. President Meher Tatna went against the tide in an embellished red ensemble â and for good reason.
âItâs a cultural thing,â the Indian journalist told âEntertainment Tonightâ on the red carpet, explaining her conscious decision to wear brightly colored traditional garb on an otherwise somber red carpet. âWhen you have a celebration, you donât wear black.â
Whatâs more, Tatna, who assumed the presidency of the entertainment journalist organization last June, told âETâ that she had also picked out the dress with her mother, who would be watching the show in Mumbai. âSo she would be appalled if I were to [have] worn black. And so this is for my mom.â
Red-carpet rewind: A video fashion recap of the 75th Golden Globes red carpet
A black-dress blackout, a surfeit of sequins, a bumper crop of bare shoulders and a whole lot of monochrome menfolk â those were some of the memorable moments from the red-carpet arrivals at the 75th Golden Globes on Sunday night.
With the first major awards show of 2018 in the rearview mirror, I sat down with The Timesâ Jesse Goddard to recap the evening through the fashion lens and discuss what clues, if any, the eveningâs takeaway trends might hold in the seasonal sartorial slog toward the Academy Awards in March.
Power is the new black on the red carpet at the Golden Globes Âť
Meet the designer behind Connie Brittonâs âPoverty Is Sexistâ sweater
Connie Brittonâs 75th Golden Globes ensemble killed two birds, you might say, with one sweater: She supported the Timeâs Up movement by wearing all black and brought awareness to Bonoâs female-focused One Campaign with her feminist-minded statement sweater. The black cashmere crewneck was emblazoned with an embroidered declaration that âPoverty Is Sexist.â
The maker of the hand-sewn sweater â and one reading simply âEqualityâ worn by Kristen Bell, who stayed home sick from the show â is New York-based label Lingua Franca, which launched its tops embroidered with hip-hop lyrics on Net-a-Porter in 2016 and has since found fans including Leonardo DiCaprio and Christy Turlington. The name Lingua Franca means âthe common language.â
Lingua Franca founder Rachelle Hruska MacPherson, who also founded the site Guest of a Guest, said in an email Sunday, âI never intended to put political statements on these sweaters. [But] after the election, the mood among our embroiderers was dismal to say the least. We have over 45 women sewing [the sweatersâ slogans by hand], all from diverse backgrounds, and many are immigrants to the U.S. I felt helpless; I think we all did. It became clear to me that we all have a voice and that we all can use that voice to make a statement.â
Drake, Aziz Ansari, Pharrell and more scenes from Netflixâs Golden Globes after-party
Held at the newly built Waldorf Astoria in Beverly Hills, Netflixâs Golden Globes after-party was an event fit for a monarch.
Guests were greeted by a blood-red carpet that wound its way to the hotelâs entrance. Presented with an entrance ticket of a black wristband with a Netflix brand upon checking in, attendees were greeted by waiters with glasses of white wine. Around the corner a bellboy, specially hired for the event, managed elevators that took guests upstairs to the party. (The red carpet on the elevator was also branded with the streaming serviceâs name.)
As the elevatorâs doors opened, another sign led guests to a shoe valet, where they were able to trade their heels and dress shoes for a pair of slippers â it was clearly time to Netflix and chill.
Just before 9:30 p.m., Pharrell Williams joined the party in jeans, sneakers and a cream-colored jacket as Mary J Bligeâs âReal Loveâ blared from the speakers. Blige, who was nominated earlier in the night for her role in Netflixâs âMudboundâ and for her original song âMighty River,â was seated at the party in the filmâs reserved section joined by actress Alfre Woodard. On a table not far away, someone had discarded their invites to HBOâs after-party.
Wearing a Timeâs Up pin, Golden Globe winner Aziz Ansari goes mostly unnoticed against the bar by the dance floor. Steps away, guests are clamoring to get photos with the âStranger Thingsâ kids.
A short time later, rapper Drake entered in a black tux with a white shirt and a security detail all around. He made his way across the dance floor, first embracing âStranger Thingsââ Millie Bobby Brown before migrating to âMudboundâsâ section and then the bar. At the bar, he and Ansari hugged and exchanged pleasantries.
Oprah at the Golden Globes: Is she running for president? She should!
Oprah Winfrey for president was something of a running theme throughout the Golden Globes on Sunday, beginning with Seth Meyersâ opening monologue. He jokingly forbade Winfrey from considering the presidency.
But the trend picked up steam as the night unfolded, particularly after Winfreyâs impassioned acceptance speech for the Cecil B. DeMille Award.
GOLDEN GLOBES 2018: Full coverage | Winners | Red carpet photos
Not one man mentioned the #MeToo movement in his acceptance speech
And that wasnât lost on Twitter users.
In a banner year for awareness of sexual harassment and assault, many people tuning into the Golden Globes Sunday night took issue with male winnersâ failure to acknowledge the #MeToo movement.
Oprah Winfrey on considering a run for president: âOkaay!â
The question isnât will Oprah Winfrey run for president, but when.
Electrified by her speech onstage at an unusually politicized Golden Globes, celebrities in the audience and fans watching from home were so ready to vote Oprah into the White House that a hashtag quickly gained momentum: #Oprah2020.
Holding court in the VIP row of tables up front, Winfrey sat with Gayle King and âWrinkle in Timeâ director Ava DuVernay, their seats turned toward the stage, where word of the internet campaign reached her.
âI tried to tell her!â DuVernay said, smiling.
TRANSCRIPT: Oprah Winfreyâs Cecil B. DeMille Award speech
âThe internet is saying Oprah for president in 2020,â The Times told Winfrey. What does Oprah say?
âI say, Iâm just glad I got through the speech!â she said, smiling as she referred to her Cecil B. DeMille lifetime achievement award acceptance speech. Winfrey was the first black woman to win the honor. âI thought a lot about it. I wanted this to be a meaningful moment.â
Winfreyâs speech, crafted in the spirit of the evening and delivered with a stirring and unimpeachable passion, rallied others to continue speaking up and out against injustice and referenced Sidney Poitier, Rosa Parks, Recy Taylor and the #TimesUp movement.
And it was almost cut short.
Earlier in the evening, Winfrey had been asked to trim her speech by three minutes. âI thought, âI donât know how I can.â â
But about that 2020 ticket ...
Will Oprah consider a run for POTUS? She paused, cracking a sly smile. âOkaay!â
Golden Globe winner James Franco on why he wore a Timeâs Up pin
I was asked this question a lot, too, when I did the film âMilk.â Whenever any group is treated differently or given less rights or less equality than any other . . . itâs everyoneâs responsibility to stand up and make change.
— James Franco, who won a Golden Globe for his performance in âThe Disaster Artistâ
Why Barbra Streisandâs hope for female directors at Sundayâs Golden Globes sounded like 1984
One of the most eye-opening moments at Sundayâs Golden Globe Awards came when Barbra Streisand, presenting the nightâs final award for best picture, drama, said, âBackstage I heard they said I was the only woman to get the best director award. And you know, that was 1984: That was 34 years ago!
âFolks, timeâs up! We need more women directors and more women to be nominated for best director,â she insisted. âThere are so many films out there that are so good directed by women.â
After an awards night with so many hopeful moments, when women seemed to be taking back the narrative on the red carpet, in their acceptance speeches and in the number of awards going to women-centered projects, it was a stinging dose of reality.
No women were nominated for a directing Golden Globe this year. While the Greta Gerwig-directed âLady Birdâ won the Globe for best musical or comedy picture, Gerwig was snubbed in the directors category, as was âMudboundâsâ Dee Rees.
Streisandâs words made us take a look back to our coverage of the 1984 Golden Globe Awards, the year that Streisand won the directing Golden Globe for âYentl,â
âStreisand, who appeared genuinely surprised by the best director award,â wrote L.A. Times writer Michael London in the story published on Jan. 30, 1984, âsaid that she hoped it represented ânew opportunities for so many talented women who tried to make their dreams become realities as I did.ââ
Thirty-four years later, sheâs still hoping.
ALSO: Barbra Streisand canât believe sheâs the only woman to have won a Golden Globe for director
Backstage, Golden Globe-winning âThree Billboardsâ writer-director Martin McDonagh hopes for a âsea changeâ in Hollywood
The only thing I have control over is telling a story like this. And doing everything one can to make sure oneâs set is the safest place to workâŚ.  One of the things that has come out about the Weinstein thing is that people knew for years. Hopefully from now on, when they hear, theyâll speak up more quickly. What Iâm hoping is a sea change from the last few months.
— Martin McDonagh, on what men in Hollywood can do to combat sexual harassment
Backstage after a big âLady Birdâ night at the Globes, Greta Gerwig on âan incredible year for womenâ
When âLady Birdâ writer-director Greta Gerwig and star Saoirse Ronan took the stage in the Golden Globes press room, they sparked a rowdy round of congratulatory hooting and hollering â to which they responded by hooting and hollering right back, clutching their award statuettes.
When the noise quieted down, the two melted into smiles.
Given how her solo directorial debut dovetails with the rise of the #MeToo and #TimesUp movements, Gerwig addressed gender equality in entertainment.
âItâs been such an incredible year for women â as actors and writers and directors and producers, people coming to the forefront to tell stories from their world as they see it,â she said. âThe support theyâve gotten and the way audiences [have received them] â it all makes it so much easier for the next crop of filmmakers who want to tell stories about women.â
Ronan said she felt âvery lucky that from an early age Iâve gotten to do what I want to do.â
âThere was definitely a time,â she continued, âwhen youâre trying to figure out what your role [in life] is ⌠and the role of Lady Bird was not around back then â and that was not that long ago! And itâs an incredibly special thing to have a character like that.â
How much of âLady Birdâ is autobiographical? Gerwig shook her head, as if to say, ânot at all.â
âShe was sort of the opposite of how I was growing up. I was a rule follower, and I didnât dye my hair bright red,â Gerwig said. âIt was an exploration of the kind of person I wanted to be back then. That being said, Iâm from Sacramento and went to Catholic girls school, but who Lady Bird is was born from my imagination.â
Gerwig was especially excited about one of the movieâs fans:
âI saw Justin Timberlake, and he saw the movie, and he gives his thumbs up,â she said. âThat began my night and I thought: âMan, thatâs amazing, thatâs all you need!ââ
Gary Oldman backstage at the Globes: the lessons of Churchill applied to the era of Weinstein
âHello everyone, what about that?â Gary Oldman exclaimed as he stepped onto the press room stage Sunday at the Golden Globes.
Oldman had a lucky charm tucked in his pocket: a little book of a speech by Winston Churchill, whom he portrayed in âDarkest Hour.â The actorâs outfit â black, with a Timeâs Up pin â was meant to be its own statement, one that Oldman felt passionately about, he said, because of his feelings about Harvey Weinstein.
âIâve always said when the curtain came down on Harvey, I was flabbergasted and shocked,â he said. âFortunately, he was never in my orbit. We met him in â92 and he gave me the creeps. And I said, âLetâs not work with that guy.â And we never did. When the curtain came down, I looked at it as evolution. Weâre still coming out of the [mist]. What we do, what we say, how we do it and who we say and do it to, is very, very important. And if thatâs exposed, then itâs a good thing.â
He added that âDarkest Hourâ illustrates what can come from standing up and saying, âNo more. Weâre not gonna take it anymore.â
Asked what it meant to embody Churchill, Oldman was just as passionate.
âThere are certain figures that are indispensable. And really, looking at Churchill more specifically and closely than just being a figure in British history ⌠really diving into it, our world order weâve sort of enjoyed over the past 70 years is arguably down to one man,â he said.
âAs I said out there, Iâm proud of the movie because it shows and illustrates the power of words and actions â that words and actions can literally change the world. And the courage [Churchill] had ... he took on this racist thug, this dictator, it showed extraordinary courage. I look at people like Washington and Lincoln, thatâs who I believe you could compare him to.â
Oldman was cheeky on the topic of what projects might be coming up, especially when one reporter suggested he might be playing Sigmund Freud.
âI heard it first from you!â he said, laughing. âThatâs interesting. Iâll think about that though.â
For now, making his rounds on the awards circuit is a full-time job.
âWeâre on this ride, and if it goes all the way to March 4 [the Oscars], Iâll be at work after that. This is my job at the moment.â
Who was Recy Taylor? Oprah Winfrey tells why she mentioned her at the Globes
On Recy Taylorâs way home from church one night in Abbeville, Ala., a group of white men accosted her on the street. They forced the 24-year-old wife and mother into their truck and six of them took turns raping her.
This was in 1944 and â despite admissions of guilt, a trial, help from NAACP investigator Rosa Parks and fruitless consideration of the case by a grand jury â the assailants were never brought to justice.
In 2011, with the assailants all dead, the state of Alabama issued an apology to Taylor for not prosecuting her attackers. She was 91 years old. On Dec. 28 of last year, Taylor died in the same Alabama town where she had been raped.
Onstage Sunday night at the Golden Globes, Oprah Winfrey said Taylorâs name and educated the audience on her story. Backstage, with her Cecil B. DeMille Award in hand, she explained why she decided to do so.
â[To show] itâs been happening for a very long time, when people didnât feel like they could speak up,â she said.
Draped in black, in solidarity with the Timeâs Up movement, Winfrey noted that shortly after the allegations against Harvey Weinstein, which led to an important discussion of sexual harassment and abuse in Hollywood, she thought, âHere is an opportunity for powerful growth.
âHow do we use this moment to elevate what is happening instead of continually victimizing ourselves?â she said. âNow that weâve all joined as one voice, it feels like empowerment to women who never had it.â
Taylorâs story was just one high point in Winfreyâs bold speech, which rallied her admirers.
Golden Globe winner Frances McDormand on whether a change in Hollywood is here to stay
Thereâs no going back. No, we just go forward. In the best possible way.
— Frances McDormand
Watch Seth Meyersâ Golden Globes opening monologue
Kicking off the first show of awards season is no easy feat, but Seth Meyers handled the task with aplomb.
Meyers pulled no punches during his Golden Globes opening monologue, tackling Hollywoodâs sexual misconduct crisis and inequality with a deft hand.
From Kevin Spacey to Harvey Weinstein, no one was spared from Meyersâ barbs. See Meyersâ monologue in its entirety above.
Golden Globe winner Guillermo del Toro on 25 years of films that stayed true to himself (with one exception)
Guillermo del Toro may be a Golden Globe winner, but heâs not letting the attention get to his head.
The âShape of Waterâ director, who only nabbed his first (and second) Globe nomination this year, made a commitment to remaining true to himself.
âIâve been very stubborn for many, many years,â he said, which earned a few laughs from the assembled press backstage. âI only do the stories I want to tell. I only tell them the way I want to tell them. Iâve been doing this for 25 years and with the exception of 1995 with âMimic,â the movies Iâve made are the movies I feel I need to make.â
He admitted that all of his films, in a way, are about his own life. It just so happens, he says, that âThe Shape of Waterâ is relevant for the current time period.
âI think that you have to do movies about things that are close to you, that you understand,â he said.
Barbra Streisand canât believe sheâs the only woman to have won a Golden Globe for director
In introducing the nominees for best picture â drama, Barbra Streisand seemed astonished that she remains the only woman to have won a Golden Globe for best director. Ever. Thatâs in 75 years.
Streisand took home the best director award for âYentlâ in 1984. This year, there was not a single female director nominated in that category.
âYou know⌠that was 34 years ago?â Streisand said at Sundayâs ceremony. âFolks, timeâs up.â
In fact, women have been nominated in the director category only seven times since 1943. Those nominees are Streisand (who, besides her â84 win, was also nominated in 1991 for âThe Prince of Tidesâ), Jane Campion (1993 for âThe Pianoâ), Sofia Coppola (2003 for âLost in Translationâ), Kathryn Bigelow (who, along with Streisand, was nominated twice, once in 2009 for âThe Hurt Lockerâ and again in 2012 for âZero Dark Thirtyâ) and Ava DuVernay (nominated in 2014 for âSelmaâ).
What fashion had to say at the Golden Globes
The red carpet arrivals at the 75th Golden Globes did more than kick off the start of the awards-show season, it ushered in a new era of Hollywood power-dressing â especially for women â that emphasized the shoulder (to lead with or stand on, take your pick) and drew attention to the belted midriff in a way that evoked the notion of a superheroâs costume with a cape-wearing Diane Kruger and âWonder Womanâsâ Gal Gadot in a Tom Ford tuxedo-inspired dress further heightening the effect. All this was rooted in a color palette of black â a showing of sartorial solidarity organized to highlight the issues of sexual assault, harassment and gender inequality.
Leading the bare-shoulder brigade were Meryl Streep, Kerry Washington and Michelle Williams in strapless dresses, with Emma Stone and Reese Witherspoon in one-shoulder dresses. Kelly Clarkson and Saoirse Ronan added a dash of metallic flair to the one-shouldered look, the former in gold (along with an armor-like gold arm sleeve) and the latter in a black, one-sleeved custom Atelier Versace gown with angular Swarovski silver crystal mesh accents at the shoulder that gave the look a retro-futuristic feel.
Alison Brie wore a Vassilis Zoulias ensemble that paired bare shoulders up top with a pants and gown combination below.
âTonight is about women wearing the pants,â Brie said on the red carpet, âso I chose to literally wear the pants.â
Reese Witherspoon on the timing of Golden Globe-winning âBig Little Liesâ and a âdifficult yearâ in Hollywood
On a night when women were demanding to be heard, the cast of âBig Little Liesâ said it was extra gratified that the female-centric HBO show garnered the Golden Globe for limited TV series.
âFor this show to be resonating at this time is extraordinary,â Nicole Kidman, a winner for best actress in a limited series, told reporters backstage. âIt allows us to speak and be heard.â
The series, based on the bestselling novel from Liane Moriarty, revolves around a group of women living in Monterey and will return for a second season.
Star and co-producer Reese Witherspoon is one of the key players in the anti-sexual harassment coalition Timeâs Up that encouraged the fashion blackout at the ceremony. She spoke of the decision to unite in solidarity following a âdifficult yearâ in Hollywood.
âA lot has come out of the darkness and into the light,â she said. âI think there was a collective feeling that it wouldnât be business as usual. âŚWeâre very privileged to be here. There are a lot of people in other industries who donât get the opportunity to be heard.
âHopefully this is a small gesture that will continue to resonate.â
Read the full transcript of Oprah Winfreyâs speech that fired up the Golden Globes
Oprah Winfrey won the Cecil B. DeMille Award at Sundayâs Golden Globes, making history as the first black female recipient. Her fiery acceptance speech will no doubt go down in history too, igniting speculation that maybe she has political aspirations.
Winfrey declares a ânew day on the horizon,â stirs hope (in some) of a presidential run>>
Hereâs the full transcript:
Thank you, Reese [Witherspoon, who presented the award].
In 1964, I was a little girl sitting on the linoleum floor of my motherâs house in Milwaukee, watching Anne Bancroft present the Oscar for best actor at the 36th Academy Awards. She opened the envelope and said five words that literally made history: âThe winner is Sidney Poitier.â Up to the stage came the most elegant man I had ever seen. I remember his tie was white and, of course, his skin was black. And Iâd never seen a black man being celebrated like that.
And I have tried many, many, many times to explain what a moment like that means to a little girl, a kid watching from the cheap seats, as my mom came through the door bone-tired from cleaning other peopleâs houses. But all I could do is quote and say that the explanation in Sidneyâs performance in âLilies of the Fieldâ: Amen, amen. Amen, amen.
In 1982, Sidney received the Cecil B. DeMille Award right here at the Golden Globes, and it is not lost on me that at this moment there are some little girls watching as I become the first black woman to be given the same award. It is an honor and it is a privilege to share the evening with all of them and also with the incredible men and women whoâve inspired me, whoâve challenged me, whoâve sustained me and made my journey to this stage possible: Dennis Swanson, who took a chance on me for âA.M. Chicago,â Quincy Jones, who saw me on that show and said to Steven Spielberg, âYes, she is Sofia in âThe Color Purple,ââ Gayle [King], who has been the definition of what a friend is, and Stedman [Graham], who has been my rock, just a few to name.
Iâd like to thank the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn., because we all know that the press is under siege these days. But we also know that it is the insatiable dedication and the absolute truth that keeps us from turning a blind eye to corruption and injustice, to tyrants and victims and secrets and lies. I want to say that I value the press more than ever before as we try to navigate these complicated times, which brings me to this: What I know for sure is that speaking your truth is the most powerful tool we all have. And Iâm especially proud and inspired by all the women who have felt strong enough and empowered enough to speak up and share their personal stories.
Each of us in this room are celebrated because of the stories that we tell. And this year we became the story. But itâs not just a story affecting the entertainment industry. Itâs one that transcends any culture, geography, race, religion, politics or workplace. So I want tonight to express gratitude to all the women who have endured years of abuse and assault because they, like my mother, had children to feed, bills to pay and dreams to pursue.
Theyâre the women whose names weâll never know. They are domestic workers. And farm workers. They are working in factories and they work in restaurants and theyâre in academia, and engineering, and medicine, and science. Theyâre part of the world of tech and politics and business. Theyâre our athletes in the Olympics and theyâre our soldiers in the military. And thereâs someone else: Recy Taylor. A name I know and I think you should know too.
In 1944, Recy Taylor was a young wife and a mother. She was just walking home from a church service sheâd attended in Abbeville, Ala., when she was abducted by six armed white men, raped and left blindfolded by the side of the road coming home from church. They threatened to kill her if she ever told anyone, but her story was reported to the NAACP where a young worker by the name of Rosa Parks became the lead investigator on her case. And together, they sought justice.
But justice wasnât an option in the era of Jim Crow. The men who tried to destroy her were never [prosecuted]. Recy Taylor died 10 days ago, just shy of her 98th birthday. She lived as we all have lived, too many years in a culture broken by brutally powerful men. For too long, women have not been heard or believed if they dared to speak their truth to the power of those men. But their time is up.
But their time is up. Their time is up! Their time is up. And I just hope â I just hope that Recy Taylor died knowing that her truth, like the truth of so many other women who were tormented in those years, and even now tormented, goes marching on.
It was somewhere in Rosa Parksâ heart almost 11 years later when she made the decision to stay seated on that bus in Montgomery, and itâs here with every woman who chooses to say, âMe too.â And every man who chooses to listen.
In my career, what Iâve always tried my best to do, whether in television or through film, is to say something about how men and women really behave. To say how we experience shame, how we love and how we rage, how we fail, how we retreat, persevere and how we overcome.
Iâve interviewed and portrayed people whoâve withstood some of the ugliest things life can throw at you, but the one quality all of them seem to share is an ability to maintain hope for a brighter morning, even during our darkest nights. So I want all the girls watching here now to know that a new day is on the horizon!
And when that new day finally dawns, it will be because of a lot of magnificent women, many of whom are right here in this room tonight. And some pretty phenomenal men, fighting hard to make sure that they become the leaders who take us to the time when nobody ever has to say âMe tooâ again. Thank you.
âMrs. Maiselâ creator Amy Sherman-Palladino on celebrating a âconfident female taking charge of her lifeâ
After their win for best TV series comedy, the cast and creatives of âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ filed into the Golden Globes press room, where show creator Amy Sherman-Palladino talked about how âMrs. Maiselâ dovetails with the #MeToo movement and the quest for gender equality.
âAs things got weirder and creepier in the sexual predator realm, the whole idea of a truly confident female taking charge of her life, when the male in her life walked out and left, took on a little more meaning,â Sherman-Palladino said of her show, a dramedy set in the 1950s about one womanâs journey from an Upper West Side housewife to raunchy stand-up comedian in New York.
Tony Shalhoub, who plays Abe Weissman, added that while the show is timely, its comic tone also offers some needed levity.
âItâs a really fertile time, the timing couldnât be better,â he said. âWhatâs going on in our country right now, in our industry right now, [this story] is a respite from that and breathes a sigh of relief.â
When the group was asked about âthe Jewish-American aspect of the show,â Sherman-Palladino stepped forward again:
âMy father was a comic,â she said. âHeâd work the Borscht belt, the Catskills, the clubs downtown. I was sort of raised with [it].
âAnd when you grow up with it,â she continued, âyou feel like Jews invented comedy. Back in the 1950s, that voice â not just a Jewish voice, but a New York voice â it just felt like the most fun thing we could possibly do. Plus: matzo ball soup!â
âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ wins best picture â drama
âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for best picture â drama.
The other nominees were:
âCall Me by Your Nameâ
âDunkirkâ
âThe Postâ
âThe Shape of Waterâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Frances McDormand wins lead actress in a motion picture â drama
Frances McDormand wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for lead actress in a motion picture â drama.
The other nominees were:
Jessica Chastain, âMollyâs Gameâ
Sally Hawkins, âThe Shape of Waterâ
Meryl Streep, âThe Postâ
Michelle Williams, âAll the Money in the Worldâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Gary Oldman wins actor in a motion picture â drama
Gary Oldman wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for actor in a motion picture â drama.
The other nominees were:
TimothĂŠe Chalamet, âCall Me by Your Nameâ
Daniel Day-Lewis, âPhantom Threadâ
Tom Hanks, âThe Postâ
Denzel Washington, âRoman J. Israel, Esq.â
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Oprah Winfrey makes history as first black female recipient of the Cecil B. DeMille Award
Oprah Winfrey made history tonight as the first black woman to be honored with the Cecil B. DeMille Award since its inception in 1952.
In her speech, she recognized Sidney Poitier for paving the way for black actors.
âIn 1964, I was a little girl sitting on the linoleum floor of my motherâs house in Milwaukee watching Anne Bancroft present the Oscar for best actor at the 36th Academy Awards,â she recalled.
âShe opened the envelope and said five words that literally made history. âThe winner is Sidney Poitier,ââ she continued. âUp to the stage came the most elegant man I had ever seen. I remember his tie was white and of course, his skin was black. And Iâd never seen a black man being celebrated like that.â
âThere are some little girls watching as I become the first black woman to be given the same award. It is an honor and it is a privilege to share the evening with all of them...â
The honor, which recognizes âoutstanding contributions to the world of entertainment,â has been awarded to only four black actors and just 15 women in its 66-year history.
Winfrey joined the ranks of icons such as Joan Crawford, Poitier, Bette Davis, Elizabeth Taylor, Morgan Freeman, Audrey Hepburn, Denzel Washington, Barbra Streisand and, most recently, Meryl Streep.
Winfrey, 63, has had a long career in the entertainment industry. She hosted âThe Oprah Winfrey Showâ for more than two decades, founded âO, The Oprah Magazineâ and launched a successful cable network, âOWN: Oprah Winfrey Network.â
Sheâs also had a successful film career, receiving a Golden Globe nomination in 1985 for âThe Color Purpleâ and an Emmy nod for her role in HBO Filmsâ âThe Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks.â
In recent years Winfrey has appeared in âLee Danielsâ The Butler,â Ava DuVernayâs Oscar-winning âSelmaâ and she will appear next in DuVernayâs âA Wrinkle in Time.â
âLady Birdâ wins best picture â musical or comedy
âLady Birdâwins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for best picture â musical or comedy.
The other nominees were:
âThe Disaster Artistâ
âThe Greatest Showmanâ
âGet Outâ
âI, Tonyaâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Emma Watson, Meryl Streep and Michelle Williams bring black dresses and female activists to the Golden Globes
In addition to the black palette on the 75th Golden Globes red carpet, several A-list actresses brought female activists as their dates.
On the red carpet, Michelle Williams commented that she wasnât at the awards show because of her film (âThe Greatest Showmanâ) but because of Tarana Burke, her companion for the night. Burke founded the Me Too movement in 2006 to raise awareness about the pervasiveness of sexual abuse and assault in society, which the recent hashtag #MeToo amplified.
âFor me, itâs about unity. Itâs about solidarity, and what can be born of women speaking to each other, empowering ourselves,â said Emma Watson, who attended with friend Marai Larasi, executive director of Imkaan, which the actress described as âan amazing black feminist organization that fights violence against women and girls.â
Golden Globe winner Allison Janney connects the dots between âI, Tonyaâ and Timeâs Up
In âI, Tonya,â Allison Janney plays a tough-as-nails woman whose love for her daughter (Margot Robbieâs Tonya Harding) canât be tied up in a tidy bow. In fact, many might say the character is outright nasty and unsupportive to the point of abuse.
Itâs a different type of abuse than the primary focus of the Timeâs Up movement, but Janney, who took home the supporting actress Golden Globe for her performance, finds it all related.
â[Tonya] was not embraced for her individuality,â Janney said in the press room, her award in hand. âThatâs a shame that she wasnât appreciated⌠that she struggled to fit in.â
Janney took a pause, noting that she got lost in the light and was wondering what was happening in the ballroom. âPeople need to be seen for who they are and appreciated for who they are,â she said succinctly.
She noted that while abuse and harassment will never end, âPeople will be held accountable for it. The fund [Times Up is] creating will help people who canât afford legal counsel get counsel.â
This is Janneyâs first Golden Globe after five previous nominations for TV work that included âThe West Wingâ (four times) and âMom.â She underscored how happy she was for her film performance to be recognized this time around.
âIt feels great,â she said. âIâve been a here a number of times and never won. It feels extraordinary.â
And the winner (still) isnât ... âWill & Graceâ
Twenty-nine nominations and one reboot later, âWill & Graceâ and its cast still havenât been graced by a Golden Globe Award.
In December the series, which started up again in 2017 after its original 1998-2005 run, was Globes-nominated for a seventh time as best television series â musical or comedy, while Eric McCormack notched his sixth nod for performance by an actor in a television series â comedy or musical.
â[H]olding our breath, crossing our fingers, wearing our lucky underwear,â the showâs official Twitter account peeped an hour into the awards show.
Alas, no luck.
Oh, well, kids â those six Primetime Emmys will have to do for now. Thirtieth timeâs a charm?
Saoirse Ronan wins lead actress in a motion picture â musical or comedy
Saoirse Ronan wins lead actress in a motion picture â musical or comedy
Judi Dench, âVictoria & Abdulâ
Helen Mirren, âThe Leisure Seekerâ
Margot Robbie, âI, Tonyaâ
Emma Stone, âBattle of the Sexesâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
âBig Little Liesâ wins limited series or TV movie
âBig Little Liesâ won the 2018 Golden Globe Award for limited series or motion picture made for television.
The other nominees were:
âFargoâ
âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
âThe Sinnerâ
âTop of the Lake: China Girlâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Ewan McGregor returning as Obi-Wan? âIâd be happy to play him again,â he says after Golden Globes win
A recent image of Ewan McGregor had âStar Warsâ fans speculating that the actor is gearing up to return as Obi-Wan Kenobi for an upcoming film in the franchise. But McGregor downplayed the talk Sunday night after his Golden Globes win.
âItâs just that â thereâs a lot of talk,â McGregor told reporters backstage. âIâd be happy to play him again. I donât know about it any more than you do.â
The actor said he saw âStar Wars: The Last Jediâ over the holidays and âthought it was really, really beautiful. I loved it.â
McGregor was speaking backstage at the Beverly Hilton after winning the Golden Globe for actor in a limited series for the third installment of FXâs âFargo.â In it, he plays feuding brothers â Emmit Stussy, the good-looking real estate magnate, and his younger, flabby, balding parole officer brother, Ray Stussy.
McGregor isnât a rookie to playing dual roles. He starred in Michael Bayâs 2005 sci-fi thriller, âThe Island,â as a man and his clone. He played Jesus and the Devil in 2015âs âLast Days in the Desert.â Not that it made it any easier to inhabit two characters.
âThis was two completely radically different characters,â McGregor said. âMy challenge was to try to play them so the audience wasnât thinking about me playing both parts.â
Itâs a challenge when youâre learning lines for two characters with one brain.
âI never got the chance to stop learning lines,â he said. âI was learning them in the car, at breakfast, at dinner.â
Guillermo del Toro wins best director
Guillermo del Toro wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for best director.
The nominees were:
Guillermo del Toro, âThe Shape of Waterâ
Martin McDonagh, âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ
Christopher Nolan, âDunkirkâ
Ridley Scott, âAll the Money in the Worldâ
Steven Spielberg, âThe Postâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Yes, Tonya Harding is at the Golden Globes
Tommy Wiseau isnât the only subject of a Golden Globes-feted biopic who scored an invitation to the ceremony itself.
Two-time Olympian Tonya Harding attended the Sunday ceremony, even donning a black sequined dress and walking the red carpet.
Hardingâs presence was emphasized by Allison Janney during her acceptance speech for supporting actress in a motion picture. Janney won her first ever Golden Globe for her performance as LaVona Golden, Hardingâs mother, in âI, Tonya,â a look at the skaterâs life and career.
When approached by The Times inside the Globes ceremony, Harding declined to comment, saying she was âunder contractâ and couldnât talk to reporters.
In a separate conversation, âI, Tonyaâ director Craig Gillespie said of Harding, âI think she just doesnât want to talk right now.â
Backstage, Janney gave even more love to the filmâs real-life inspiration. âTonya is here tonight,â Janney said. âSheâs totally sitting out there at my table. She loves the movie. I donât think she loves all of itâŚ
âI think sheâs pretty proud of it⌠She comes out looking OK in this. I think people come out [of the movie] having a lot more compassion for her⌠I should have brought her back here with me.â
Aziz Ansari wins lead actor in a TV series â musical or comedy
Aziz Ansari wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for lead actor in a television series â musical or comedy.
The other nominees were:
Anthony Anderson, âblack-ishâ
Aziz Ansari, âMaster of Noneâ
Kevin Bacon, âI Love Dickâ
William H. Macy, âShamelessâ
Eric McCormack, âWill & Graceâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Rachel Brosnahan backstage: Globes win comes as viewers are still finding âMrs. Maiselâ
Youâd think Rachel Brosnahan would be somewhat used to standing onstage, considering she plays a 1950s housewife-turned-stand-up comic in the Amazon series âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.â But when she won best TV comedy actress Sunday night at the Golden Globes, well, speaking in front of an audience was a challenge.
âI donât remember any of it other than Oprah,â she told a reporter backstage. âAt which point, I forgot everything I thought I might say.â
She took her moment backstage to fill in the blanks: âI want to thank my friends and family, who are very, very important. Our cast and crew, also very important. And thereâs probably still more that Iâll think about when I go to sleep tonight.â
âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,â which hails from Amy Sherman-Palladino and Dan Palladino (âGilmore Girlsâ), was released the week before Thanksgiving and just a few weeks before nominations were announced. After Brosnahanâs win, the series went on to win best TV series musical or comedy.
âPeople are still discovering the show,â she said. âItâs been one of the most exciting and wonderful things about the show.â
If thereâs a lesson to be learned from her role as Miriam âMidgeâ Maisel, Brosnahan said itâs a sense of self-empowerment.
âFinding the confidence in my work to bring this woman to life was challenging and terrifying. Iâve never done comedy. This whole thing was like a nightmare and a dream. I hope to be able to carry that with me.â
âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ wins for television series â musical comedy
âMarvelous Mrs. Maiselâ won the 2018 Golden Globe Award for television series â musical or comedy.
The other nominees were:
âblack-ishâ
âMaster of Noneâ
âSMILFâ
âWill & Graceâ
Nobody loves movie musicals like the HFPA, awarding Golden Globe to âThis Is Meâ from âThe Greatest Showmanâ
Pop stars presented the award, but none of their kind walked away with the thing.
Accepting the trophy from Kelly Clarkson and Keith Urban (who sang a portion of their envelope-opening spiel), Benj Pasek and Justin Paul took the Golden Globe for best original song with âThis Is Me,â their tune from the P.T. Barnum movie musical âThe Greatest Showman.â
The duo â who won last year at the Globes (and at the Oscars) with âCity of Stars,â from âLa La Landâ â beat a host of better-known musicians, including Mary J. Blige, Nick Jonas and Mariah Carey, as well as the married couple behind the music from Disneyâs âCoco.â
Yet their victory didnât come as much of a surprise: In 2017, Pasek and Paulâs Globes competition included no less a pop icon than Stevie Wonder; Justin Timberlake was trounced, too, with his âCanât Stop the Feeling!,â which finished 2016 as that yearâs biggest-selling song.
In their speech, the two young songwriters thanked the âannoyingly handsome and charming Hugh Jackman,â who stars in âThe Greatest Showman,â along with moviegoers who still believe in the idea of musicals âon the big screen.â
One can safely assume that group overlaps with the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn.
Ewan McGregor wins lead actor in a limited series or TV movie
Ewan McGregor wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for lead actor in a limited series or a motion picture made for television.
The other nominees were:
Robert De Niro, âThe Wizard of Liesâ
Jude Law, âThe Young Popeâ
Kyle MacLachlan, âTwin Peaksâ
Geoffrey Rush, âGeniusâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Sterling K. Brown on his historic Golden Globe win: âI come from a place of truth, thatâs all I can doâ
Backstage after winning the Golden Globe award for actor in a TV series, Sterling K. Brown described NBCâs âThis Is Usâ as âsomething that made me laugh out loud, it made me cry into the page.â
But what affected Brown the most, he said, was âthis fish-out-of-water [character], even in his own family.â
âGrowing up, my mom always told me, âYouâll have to work twice as hard to get just as far.â ... That experience informs a lot of how I view [my character] Randall.â
When a reporter pointed out that Brown had made history as the first African American man to win in this category, the actor was nothing if not humble.
âIâve never been the first to do anything!â he said.
âIâve never considered myself to be a trailblazer,â he continued, joking again that he was the fourth black student council president at his high school. âI just try to stand in my truth all the time. If I come from a place of truth, thatâs all I can do.â
Then, he added: âI look forward to seeing someone else stand up here and hold this trophy â not 75 years from now.â
On what inspires him, Brown was quick to answer.
âMy children,â he said. âI got two beautiful baby boys. If I have a hard day at work, or a great day at work, they just want to be played with and loved⌠my boys are everything.â
âIn the Fadeâ wins best foreign language film
âIn the Fadeâ wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for best picture â foreign language.
The other nominees were:
âA Fantastic Womanâ
âFirst They Killed My Fatherâ
âIn the Fadeâ
âLovelessâ
âThe Squareâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Martin McDonagh wins for screenplay for âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ
Martin McDonagh won the 2018 Golden Globe Award for screenplay.
The other nominees were:
Guillermo del Toro and Vanessa Taylor, âThe Shape of Waterâ
Greta Gerwig, âLady Birdâ
Josh Singer and Liz Hannah, âThe Postâ
Aaron Sorkin, âMollyâs Gameâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
James Franco brings up Tommy Wiseau -- but he doesnât get to talk
Accepting his Golden Globe for actor in a motion picture, musical or comedy, for his performance in âThe Disaster Artist,â James Franco arrived onstage with his brother, Dave, and the man who inspired the film: Tommy Wiseau.
In his signature sunglasses, Wiseau immediately reached for the microphone before Franco playfully (?) swatted him away.
âNineteen years ago, he was stuck in traffic for the Golden Globes,â Franco said of Wiseau, before adopting his inscrutable accent. âHe said to his best friend Greg, âGolden Globes, so what? I know they donât want me, guy with accent, long hair, so I show them. I donât wait for Hollywood. I make my own movie.â
âIâm very happy to share this moment with him today,â Franco added. âThank you to the Hollywood Foreign Press for all your support over the years.â
He also thanked his brother, but not before the wrap-up music began to play.
âWhen I went to NYU, I always said I wanted my own Coen brother, someone to collaborate with,â Franco said in a rush. âI realized this year I have my own Franco brother. I love him more than anything. Thanks to my mother for giving him to me.â
Alas, it wasnât Wiseauâs moment to shine. With the music playing, he exited stage right along with the brothers Franco.
Meet âMarvelous Mrs. Maiselâ star Rachel Brosnahan, Golden Globe winner
Rachel Brosnahan edged out a category consisting almost entirely of newcomers and took home the Golden Globe for actress in a television series musical or comedy Sunday.
Brosnahanâs performance as Midge Maisel in âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ charmed members of the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn., with the first season of the series debuting on Amazon on Nov. 29.
The series, set in 1958, centers on a Jewish housewife and mother of two who tries her hand at stand-up comedy after her husband leaves her.
âHistory is told through the eyes of men about men,â Brosnahan said in a November interview with The Times. âItâs nice to be a part of something that in all these ways should no longer be radical, but is.â
Read more about Rachel Brosnahan and âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ here.
Allison Janney wins for supporting actress in a motion picture
Allison Janney won the 2018 Golden Globe Award for supporting actress in any motion picture.
The other nominees were:
Mary J. Blige, âMudbound
Hong Chau, âDownsizingâ
Laurie Metcalf, âLady Birdâ
Octavia Spencer, âThe Shape of Waterââ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Debra Messing calls out E! over Catt Sadler departure during E!âs own red carpet show
At the Golden Globes, Debra Messing wasnât afraid to talk about the gender pay gap â because she saw an opportunity for one outlet to make a difference.
The âWill & Graceâ actress put her mouth where the money wasnât on the red carpet Sunday, calling out E! during an E! interview about host Catt Sadlerâs recent departure from the entertainment network after failing to hammer out a contract.
âWe want diversity, we want intersectional gender parity, we want equal pay,â Messing told E! on the carpet. âI was so shocked to hear that E! doesnât believe in paying their female co-hosts the same as their male co-hosts. I mean, I miss Catt Sadler. We stand with her and thatâs something that can change tomorrow.â
Sadler blamed her departure from âE! Newsâ last month on a âmassive pay disparityâ between her and male âE! Newsâ anchor Jason Kennedy.
At contract-renewal time, Sadler said, âMy team and I asked for what I know I deserve and were denied repeatedly.â
Later, Messing said she wasnât nervous to talk about the issue, even though she didnât think her interviewers really responded to her.
âWhat they did [in the Sadler situation] was egregious,â she said. âI wanted to bring it up because this could be rectified tomorrow if they so chose.â
E! previously said in a statement that it âcompensates employees fairly and appropriately based on their roles, regardless of gender. We appreciate Catt Sadlerâs many contributions at E! News and wish her all the best following her decision to leave the network.â
Sadler wrote on her blog that she had wanted to stay at her job but said her decision was made for her.
Yvonne Villarreal contributed to this report.
UPDATE
6:27 p.m.: This post was updated with additional comments from Messing.
This article was originally published at 5:32 p.m.
Golden Globe winner Elisabeth Moss of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ: âWe want to tell stories that reflect our lives back at usâ
If one show is said to be representative of the countryâs politically divisive climate, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ is it.
âThere are a lot of times where we wish we arenât as relevant as we are,â said Warren Littlefield, the showâs executive producer, after it took home the Golden Globe for television drama on Sunday. In the Globes press room, he was joined by the showâs cast and its creator, Bruce Miller.
âIt was not a Trump world,â he continued, speaking about when the show first began production. âMidway through the first season, the reality changed. But each and every day, weâre reminded of what we carry forward⌠to be part of the resistance.â
The showâs female lead, Elisabeth Moss, also took home the Globe for lead actress drama. She gave a special nod to the creator of the book on which the series is based, Margaret Atwood.
âOur biggest challenge as a group is probably trying to do this incredible book justice,â she said.
When asked about what âHandmaidâsâ success means in a broader Hollywood context, Moss added that the show proves what can happen when a woman is allowed to lead.
âWe want to tell stories that reflect our lives back at us,â she said. âMany, many women watch television and many, many women go to the movies⌠and we want to see ourselves. I think that Hollywood is learning that that makes money. That itâs popular.â
All of the showâs cast and crew donned black, in solidarity with the Times Up anti-sexual harassment movement, with a few even wearing pins. When asked if she was surprised that some of the elements in the show had been faced by women in the real world, Ann Dowd, who was nominated for her supporting role, said: âI think women know that it certainly does happen, so none of us are surprised for a minute.
âIâm not surprised, and I wonât be surprised when it turns around.â
âCocoâ wins best animated picture
âCocoâ wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for best picture â animated.
The other nominees were:
âThe Boss Babyâ
âThe Breadwinnerâ
âCocoâ
âFerdinandâ
âLoving Vincentâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Laura Dern wins supporting actress in a TV series, limited series or TV movie
Laura Dern won the 2018 Golden Globe Award for supporting actress in a series, limited series or motion picture made for television.
The other nominees were:
Ann Dowd, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
Chrissy Metz, âThis Is Usâ
Michelle Pfeiffer, âThe Wizard of Liesâ
Shailene Woodley, âBig Little Liesâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Backstage at the Golden Globes, Sam Rockwell talks about the âpowerfulâ display from women on gender equality issues
Sam Rockwellâs racist Officer Dixon may not be the most likable character in the film âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,â but after winning best supporting actor at the Golden Globes, he was an easygoing and charming presence backstage in the press room.
âHey, man,â he said, taking the stage and patting the press room announcer on his shoulder. âHey, everybody, howâs it going?â he said, turning to the audience. âWhatâs happening?â
When asked who he was most looking forward to seeing at tonightâs awards show, he stumbled over the embarrassment of riches in the room. âIâve already seen so many beautiful people,â he said. âIsabelle Huppert, Jude Law â I saw him in the bathroom â Ewan McGregor, itâs pretty stellar.
âOh, and I forgot to thank my fellow nominees on stage, so I just want to thank them. Iâm honored and humbled to be in their company,â he interjected.
On making a movie about someone who pursues justice relentlessly, Rockwell said âI think taking justice into your own hands â well, this is fictional, itâs like a western â and if we all behaved that way weâd be arrested. But itâs a fantasy, itâs a western fairy tale.â
âOh, and I wanna thank my agent,â he interjected again.
On women in Hollywood coming together around the issue of gender equality, he said: âI think itâs really powerful that women feel empowered to say something, I think the rest of us [should] listen.â
Someone in the press room asked if there was anything he felt men can do. âI donât really know the answer to that. The issue, really, is bullying. People have to stop bullying. It starts with compassion.â
You can get a cappuccino with your face on it at the Golden Globes
James Franco wins lead actor in a motion picture â musical or comedy
James Franco wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for lead actor in a motion picture â musical or comedy.
The other nominees were:
Steve Carell, âBattle of the Sexesâ
Ansel Elgort, âBaby Driverâ
Hugh Jackman, âThe Greatest Showmanâ
Daniel Kaluuya, âGet Outâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Connie Britton wore a âPoverty is Sexistâ sweater to the Golden Globes
On an already highly politicized night, actress Connie Britton made a doubly bold statement when she wore an all-black ensemble that included a sweater embroidered with the phrase âPoverty is Sexist.â
A slogan popularized by Bonoâs ONE Campaign, #PovertyIsSexist aims to spotlight poverty and its inequality across nations.
âNowhere on earth do women have as many opportunities as men. Nowhere,â reads a statement on the website. âBut for girls and women in the poorest countries, that inequality is amplified. We wonât end extreme poverty until we break down the barriers holding girls and women back.â
The sweater is available through Lingua Franca, a brand that has also made custom sweaters embroidered with phrases like âI Miss Barackâ and âThe Future is Female.â
âThis Is Meâ from âThe Greatest Showmanâ wins original song
âThis Is Meâ from âThe Greatest Showman,â with music by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul and lyrics by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for original song â motion picture.
The other nominees were:
âHome,â âFerdinandâ
Music: Justin Tranter, Nick Jonas and Nick Monson; Lyrics: Justin Tranter and Nick Jonas
âMighty River,â âMudboundâ
Music: Raphael Saadiq; Lyrics: Mary J. Blige, Raphael Saadiq and Taura Stinson
âRemember Me,â âCocoâ
Music: Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez; Lyrics: Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez
âThe Star,â âThe Starâ
Music: Marc Shaiman and Mariah Carey; Lyrics: Marc Shaiman and Mariah Carey
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Alexandre Desplat wins original score
Alexandre Desplat wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for original score â motion picture.
The other nominees were:
Hans Zimmer, âDunkirkâ
John Williams, âThe Postâ
Jonny Greenwood, âPhantom Threadâ
Carter Burwell, âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Everyone deserves a comeback ... even LâOrĂŠal after that terrible Golden Globes commercial
The ad started off innocuously enough: a woman, shown only in profile and in mysterious close-up shots, gets ready in an elegant dressing room.
Judging by the amount of time her hands linger in her hair, itâs safe to assume that this is a shampoo commercial.
She walks around the room, twiddling with the fixtures before being called to the stage. The big reveal? Itâs Winona Ryder! Followed by the text, âEveryone loves a comeback.â
And what else does?
âDamaged hair deserves one too.â
(Insert collective groan here.)
Directed by Roman Coppola, son of Francis Ford Coppola, the ad was for LâOrĂŠal Parisâ Elvive haircare line and debuted during the Golden Globes Sunday night.
Alexander SkarsgĂĽrd wins supporting actor in a TV series, limited series or TV movie
Alexander SkarsgĂĽrd wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for supporting actor in a TV series, limited series or motion picture made for television.
The other nominees were:
David Harbour, âStranger Thingsâ
Alfred Molina, âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
Christian Slater, âMr. Robotâ
David Thewlis, âFargoâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ wins for television series â  drama
âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ won the 2018 Golden Globe Award for television series â drama.
The other nominees were:
âThe Crownâ
âGame of Thronesâ
âStranger Thingsâ
âThis Is Usâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Meyers takes aim at Spacey, Weinstein and gender inequality in his Golden Globes monologue
Host Seth Meyers came out swinging at the Golden Globes on Sunday night, directly addressing in his monologue the issues of sexual harassment and gender inequality that have roiled the industry for months.
He lobbed hard-hitting jokes at Kevin Spacey, Harvey Weinstein, Woody Allen and, of course, President Trump.
Meyers also acknowledged the awkwardness of a straight white male hosting the show on this particular night. He ended the monologue on a sincere note, âPeople in this room worked really hard to get here, but itâs clearer now than ever before that the women had to work even harder. So thank you for all the amazing work that youâve all done and continue to do. I look forward to you leading us to whatever comes next.â
Here are a few of the best zingers.
- âI was happy to hear theyâre going to do another season of âHouse of Cards.â Is Christopher Plummer available to do that too? I hope he can do a Southern accent, because Kevin Spacey sure couldnât⌠Oh, is that too mean? To Kevin Spacey?â
- âWhen I first heard about a film where a woman falls in love with a hideous sea monster, [âThe Shape of Waterâ], I thought it was a Woody Allen movie.â
- âI think itâs time to address the elephant not in the room. Harvey Weinstein isnât here tonight because well, Iâve heard rumors heâs crazy and difficult to work with. Donât worry, heâll be back in 20 years when he becomes the first person ever booed in the In Memoriam.â
- âA special hello to other hosts of awards shows who are watching me tonight like the first dog they shot into outer space.â
- In a bit borrowed from his show, âJokes Seth Canât Tell,â Meyers asked some of his non-straight-white-male showbiz friends to deliver the punchlines to his setups. Like this one, with help from Jessica Chastain: âThe Golden Globes turned 75 years old this yearâŚbut the actress who plays its wife is still only 32.â
- In a veiled barb aimed at Trump, Meyers joked, âA lot of people thought it would be more appropriate for a woman to host these awards and they may be right. If itâs any consolation I am a man with absolutely no power in Hollywood. Iâm not even the most powerful Seth in the room tonight. [Camera cuts to Seth Rogen]. Remember when he was the guy making trouble with North Korea? Simpler times.â
Elisabeth Moss delivers early contender for Globes speech of the night
Elisabeth Moss, star of Huluâs âThe Handmaidâs Tale,â delivered an empowering message Sunday night during her acceptance speech for best actress in a TV series â drama.
Moss did nothing less than invoke words from Margaret Atwoodâs eponymous novel, giving notice to the world that women would no longer live in the blank white pages at the edge of print.
Mossâ full remarks:
âThank you. ⌠OK, I have to go fast. HFPA, thank you so much. Hulu and MGM, thank you to my incredible crew, especially Colin [Watkinson] and Julie [Berghoff]. To my incredible cast, I couldnât do it without you. Especially to Bruce [Miller] and Warren [Littlefield], you two are the kind of men we need more of in this business and I thank you.
âTo my team, you know who you are and I love you. My mom and my brother, you are the hero and heroine of my life.
âI brought this [gestures to her notes] because I canât be trusted. This is from Margaret Atwood. âWe were the people who were not in the papers. We lived in the blank white spaces at the edge of print. It gave us our freedom. We lived in the gaps between the stories.â
âMargaret Atwood, this is for you and all of the women who came before you and after you, who were brave enough to speak out against intolerance and injustice and to fight for equality and freedom in this world.
âWe no longer live in the blank white spaces at the edge of print. We no longer live in the gaps between the stories. We are the story in print, and we are writing the story ourselves.
âThank you.â
Sterling K. Brown wins actor in a TV series â drama
Sterling K. Brown wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for actor in a television series â drama.
The other nominees were:
Jason Bateman, âOzarkâ
Freddie Highmore, âThe Good Doctorâ
Bob Odenkirk, âBetter Call Saulâ
Liev Schreiber, âRay Donovanâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Elisabeth Moss wins actress in a TV series â drama
Elisabeth Moss wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for lead actress in a television series â drama.
Claire Foy, âThe Crownâ
Maggie Gyllenhaal, âThe Deuceâ
Katherine Langford, â13 Reasons Whyâ
Elisabeth Moss, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
Caitriona Balfe, âOutlanderâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Ava DuVernay fights for equality... and Oprah Winfrey
Director Ava DuVernay, whose next film, âA Wrinkle in Timeâ bows March 9, was feeling the positive, political vibes on the Golden Globes red carpet.
âNot one person asked me what I was wearing,â she told The Times.
Things werenât quite right inside the Beverly Hilton ballroom, however.
DuVernay is seated at a table front and center, alongside Viola Davis and Denzel Washington. But the seating arrangement leaves a bit to be desired, according to DuVernay.
Seated at the same table, with her back to the stage, is the woman of the evening, Oprah Winfrey, who will receive the 2018 Cecil B. DeMille Award during the ceremony.
âThis isnât right,â DuVernay said of Winfreyâs less-than-ideal seat. âIâm trying to tell her publicist so they can move it. Why do I have the best seat?â
Rachel Brosnahan wins actress in a television series â musical or comedy
Rachel Brosnahan won the 2018 Golden Globe Award for actress in a television series â musical or comedy.
The other nominees were:
Pamela Adlon, âBetter Thingsâ
Alison Brie, âGLOWâ
Issa Rae, âInsecureâ
Frankie Shaw, âSMILFâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Sam Rockwell wins supporting actor in a motion picture
Sam Rockwell wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for supporting actor in any motion picture.
The other nominees were:
Willem Dafoe, âThe Florida Projectâ
Armie Hammer, âCall Me By Your Nameâ
Richard Jenkins, âThe Shape of Waterâ
Christopher Plummer, âAll the Money in the Worldâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
Nicole Kidman wins lead actress in a limited series or a TV movie
Nicole Kidman wins the 2018 Golden Globe Award for lead actress in a limited series or a motion picture made for television.
The other nominees were:
Jessica Biel, âThe Sinnerâ
Jessica Lange, âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
Susan Sarandon, âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
Reese Witherspoon, âBig Little Liesâ
The complete list of 2018 Golden Globe winners and nominees Âť
âMudboundâ director Dee Rees on âWhy black?â
Black is the fullest of all colors. If you mix everything together, you get black.Â
On what this movement means:
I think itâs giving people a safe place in the workplace to speak out. Â
— Dee Rees
Emma Watson and Marai Larasi describe the mood on the red carpet
For me itâs about unity. Itâs about solidarity and what can be born of women speaking to each other, empowering ourselves.
— Emma Watson
Weâre actually saying enough is enough. Tonight wonât fix the problem, but itâs shining a light.
— Marai Larasi
Lena Waithe on the Globes blackout: âWeâre not mourning the past but weâre saying goodbye to itâ
Black represents being in mourning. Weâre not mourning the past but weâre saying goodbye to it. âŚÂ I felt honored to wear this color tonight. It adds so much more to the night to be able to say something.
— âThe Chiâ creator Lena Waithe on the Globes blackout
Flashback: Meryl Streep kicked off a year of resistance with an epic speech
The year was 2017 and the country was awaiting the inauguration of the 45th president of the United States, Donald J. Trump.
It was only a year ago at the 2017 Golden Globes that Meryl Streep delivered her acceptance speech for the Cecil B. DeMille Award and, in the process, lambasted the incoming president without ever uttering his name.
âDisrespect invites disrespect. Violence incites violence. When the powerful use their position to bully others, we all lose,â Streep said.
Her pointed remarks werenât lost on the audience, much less on the man himself. Trump assailed Streep on Twitter the next day, calling the 20-time Oscar nominee âone of the most overrated actresses in Hollywood.â
Streep went on to speak about the important role that journalism plays in holding the powerful accountable, a message that proved particularly meaningful in the months to follow.
Amy Poehler and Saru Jayaraman tackle âWhy black?â
Sometimes it represents the ending of something, [but]Â weâre showing solidarity and leaning into the beginning of something.
— Amy Poehler
Black is the most powerful color. Black is power. Woman are powerful.
— Saru Jayaraman
Rita Moreno and Norman Lear roll up to the Golden Globes in style
How do a groundbreaking television producer and EGOT winner make an entrance on the red carpet?
Any way they want to.
Norman Lear, 95, and Rita Moreno, 86, caused quite a stir Sunday when they rolled up on the ruby rug on the back of a similarly crimson scooter.
Lear piloted the vessel with Moreno serving as a very supportive second in command. No one was injured during the stunt, outside of maybe a nearby hedge.
Moreno stars on Netflixâs reboot of Learâs classic sitcom âOne Day at a Time,â which releases its second season Jan. 26.
Ann Dowd sees âtremendous reliefâ in post-Weinstein Hollywood
Actress Ann Dowd sees the Golden Globes red carpetâs black dresses as the antithesis of the coded dresses and cloaks worn by women in âThe Handmaidâs Tale.â
âThis is a symbol of hope and fighting back. No one is forcing us to wear this. Itâs a choice,â said Dowd on Sunday on the red carpet. She is nominated for supporting actress in a series, limited series or motion picture made for TV for âThe Handmaidâs Tale.â
In Hollywood since the Harvey Weinstein scandal broke, she said, âThereâs tremendous relief at the enormity of exposure on the predators.
âNow thereâs no hiding.â
Meryl Streep on the Golden Globes blackout: âWeâre standing up togetherâ
Meryl Streep walked the Golden Globes red carpet with activist Ai-jen Poo, highlighting the Timeâs Up campaign to fight sexual harassment.Â
Meryl Streep walked the Golden Globes red carpet with activist Ai-jen Poo, highlighting the Timeâs Up campaign to fight sexual harassment. âWeâre showing solidarity across a lot of different lines,â Streep said. âWeâre standing up together.â
Darren Criss on âWhy black?â
I thought the night would have a somber overtone but it feels like a battle cry, it means something. When you are an industry at the forefront of consumption, itâs important to show weâre not going to stand for this.
— Darren Criss, on Golden Globes attendees wearing black as a form of protest
Bye-bye, Miss Golden Globe. Hello, Golden Globe ambassador
If youâre looking for Miss Golden Globe this year, you wonât find her. The Golden Globe ambassador has replaced her.
Simone Garcia Johnson, daughter of actor Dwayne Johnson, is the latest Hollywood scion to step up for Globes service, following in the footsteps of Sylvester Stalloneâs three daughters last year and dozens of celebritiesâ daughters and sons dating back to the 1960s. (There have been Mr. Golden Globes too.)
The difference: In prior years, the honor mostly involved getting statues and winners off the stage during the telecast. Moving forward, itâs been expanded to âembody the HFPAâs philanthropic efforts year round,â according to Meher Tatna, president of the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn.
The HFPA, which presents the Globes, plans to distribute $2.8 million this year in charitable grants to entertainment-industry organizations.
âOutlanderâ fans await Caitriona Balfe on road to the Golden Globes
During the slow roll up to the Golden Globes, a slew of black SUVs idle in the suburban streets of Beverly Hills waiting to be inspected by security guards. Sometimes, fans wait on the sidewalk, hoping a black car will roll down its windows to reveal a celebrity.
Thatâs what the women who comprise Outlander SoCal Edition were hoping for, though they had a very specific star in mind: Caitriona Balfe. Roughly two dozen fans traveled to 90210 â some from as far away as San Diego â to hold up signs for Balfe. Most were decked out in âOutlanderâ gear, and one even had a doll of the star.
âSheâs not just an actress, sheâs an activist,â a fan screamed.
âOutlanderâ fans await Caitriona Balfe on the road to the Golden Globes in Beverly Hills on Sunday, Jan. 7, 2018.Â
William H. Macy on why he wore black to the Golden Globes
Because itâs the right thing to do. Because I have a wife. Because I have two daughters ⌠the world would be a better place if women ran it.
— William H. Macy
What is the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn., anyway?
Even though the Golden Globes have been awarded since 1944, there are still plenty of people who donât know the first thing about the organization behind the scenes.
The Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. is a group of around 90 international journalists based in Southern California who distribute news about television and film to publications around the world.
According to its official website, the HFPA grew out of an earnest desire to report about the entertainment industry to the world at large.
In addition to hosting and organizing the Golden Globes, HFPA also has an extensive history of philanthropy, with an eye toward the advancement and preservation of film culture.
The group has distributed more than $29 million in grants and fellowships to film schools and nonprofit organizations during the last 31 years.
Thatâs the scoop on the HFPA. Now go and win your office Golden Globes betting pool.
Predictions! Get your predictions!
The Timesâ resident awards expert, Glenn Whipp, can honestly say he has no idea who will win the motion picture drama race.
âIt is indicative of the unpredictable state of this yearâs awards season. You could make a case for any one of the five nominees â âCall Me by Your Name,â âDunkirk,â âThe Post,â âThe Shape of Waterâ and âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ â and youâd probably convince me that youâre correct,â he wrote in his newsletter this week.
Ultimately, Whipp settled on Del Toroâs sci-fi romance, âThe Shape of Water,â as this yearâs winner. But he could be wrong and knows it.
On the TV side, the members of the HFPA tend to bestow new, lesser-known shows with big prizes, so donât be surprised if âMarvelous Mrs. Maisel,â âSMILF,â âThe Sinnerâ or âOzarkâ get a win.
Hereâs a breakdown of Whippâs other predictions, which you can use as a cheat sheet when you cast your vote on our nifty play-at-home ballot here.
Why is everyone wearing black dresses to the Golden Globes?
So you heard something about actresses wearing black to the Golden Globes this year, but â perhaps not obsessed with Hollywoodâs annual cycle of self-congratulation â youâre not exactly sure why.
In a nutshell: After the Harvey Weinstein scandal and everything that has followed, itâs a silent show of solidarity against sexual harassment and assault in the entertainment industry.
âI think that will be really powerful,â supporting actress nominee Allison Janney said Tuesday at the Palm Springs International Film Festival, where she was wearing green. âI will be in a black dress and be proud to be standing there with the other actresses.â
Stylist Ilaria Urbinati wrote on Instagram before Christmas that her male clients would be wearing black as well. âSafe to say this may not be the right time to choose to be the odd man out here⌠just sayinâŚâ
But even as more people decided to join the black-clad ranks, and an A-list protest march has been added, there has been a bit of pushback.
âSome feel women should celebrate their newfound power, strong voices and the future by wearing a wide variety of brighter shades. Instead of distracting from the real issue with a mandate to wear one particular color,â a source told People on Wednesday.
And in mid-December, when the silent protest was still mostly an idea, actress Rose McGowan lashed out at those who would support it, naming Meryl Streep specifically and calling out others by implication. âYOUR SILENCE is THE problem,â McGowan tweeted. âYouâll accept a fake award breathlessly & affect no real change. I despise your hypocrisy. Maybe you should all wear Marchesa.â
Harvey Weinsteinâs ties to Marchesa, his estranged wife Georgina Chapmanâs fashion line, are said to have given him access to models, many of them young, far from home and particularly vulnerable.
Streep said it was unfortunate that McGowan would see her as an adversary. The âCharmedâ actress later apologized for the Marchesa reference, saying it was beneath her.
Make your predictions on The Timesâ Golden Globes play-at-home ballot
Who will win big at the 2018 Golden Globes tonight?
Whether you think âLady Birdâ will sweep its four categories or that Christopher Plummerâs whirlwind âAll the Money in the Worldâ journey will include a Golden Globes win, mark your predictions and follow along on our handy ballot.
You can cast your votes, save your picks and share your choices with friends on Facebook and Twitter. Donât forget to check back later to see how many of your choices walked away with the prize. The ballot will be updated in real time as the winners are announced.
Check out the complete list of nominees in The Timesâ awards season database
Here is the complete list of 75th Golden Globe Awards nominations in The Timesâ awards season database where you can catch up on everything you need to know about your favorite nominees.
The list will be updated live with the winners.
Before the ceremony you can watch exclusive video interviews with the nominated actresses, actors and directors such as Guillermo del Toro. His romantic fantasy âThe Shape of Waterâ is up for awards in seven categories including best picture in the drama category as well as nods for stars Sally Hawkins, Octavia Spencer and Richard Jenkins.
âThe Post,â Steven Spielbergâs timely Pentagon Papers drama, and the darkly hued morality play âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ followed closely behind with six nominations apiece.
Ricky Gervaisâ Golden Globes advice for Seth Meyers: Treat Hollywood with the respect âit deservesâ
Four-time Golden Globes host Ricky Gervais tweeted a simple message of advice Sunday for this yearâs Globes host Seth Meyers: âHave an absolute blast tonight at The #GoldenGlobes and please treat the industry with the respect it deserves.â
To demonstrate for Meyers the kind of respect he means, Gervais added a clip from his own hosting turn in which he told the star-studded audience: âShut up! You disgusting pill-popping, sexual deviant scum.â
ALSO:
How Seth Meyers and his writers are preparing for the Golden Globes
Golden Globes roll out the red carpet, and Seth Meyers is ready to host in a year of change
Amy Schumer, Eva Longoria call on Globes attendees to take E! to task over Catt Sadlerâs departure
Top Hollywood actresses are calling on those who stop at E! News on the Golden Globes red carpet to ask the entertainment outlet about how it treated Catt Sadler.
Sadler, who provided multiple hosting duties on E!, left the network in December she said she learned that her colleague Jason Kennedy was paid âclose to double [her] salary for the past several years.â
On Sunday, Amy Schumer urged those âon the carpet tonightâ to ask E! âwhat happenedâ with Sadler. âWe thought you would be for pay equality and say #imwithcattsad,â Schumer posted on her Instagram account a few hours before the awards show kicked off.
Schumer told The Times that she and Eva Longoria had âjoined forcesâ to support Sadler; the two stars raised the issue during New York and Los Angeles meetings of Timeâs Up, a coalition of female industry leaders formed in the wake of the Harvey Weinstein harassment scandal. Brie Larson has also voiced support for Sadler via social media.
Sadler hosted daytime show âDaily Popâ in addition to regular appearances on âE! News,â the channelâs flagship news program. Kennedy anchors the latter show five nights a week in addition to other duties at E!.
âE! compensates employees fairly and appropriately based on their roles, regardless of gender,â read a statement provided by an E! spokesperson. âWe appreciate Catt Sadlerâs many contributions at E! News and wish her all the best following her decision to leave the network.â
While Sadler had not been one of the outletâs primary red carpet Globes hosts -- that fell to Ryan Seacrest and Giuliana Rancic -- in years past she covered fashion and parties at the awards show. In 2017, she co-hosted a Globes special that aired the day after the event with the âjuiciest momentsâ from the show and backstage interviews.
â[Ho]w can I operate with integrity and stay on at E if theyâre not willing to pay me the same as [Kennedy]? Or at least come close?â Sadler wrote in a blog post last month describing why she left E!
âHow can I accept an offer that shows they do not value my contributions and paralleled dedication all these years? How can I not echo the actions of my heroes and stand for what is right no matter what the cost? How can I remain silent when my rights under the law have been violated?â
Equal pay is one of the many things Timeâs Up -- which is comprised of hundreds of female celebrities, including Reese Witherspoon, Kerry Washington and Jennifer Lawrence -- is fighting for. As a sign of solidarity with those who have spoken out about sexual misconduct in recent months, Timeâs Up members decided to wear black to the Globes.
Other participants, like Michelle Williams and Emma Stone, will be bringing gender and justice activists to the glitzy gala as their plus ones.
Jessica Chastain holds red carpet comments for tonightâs Globes, but athletes at pre-awards lunch speak out
âHi everybody,â Jessica Chastain whispered, as she made her way inside the âGold Meets Goldenâ brunch, billed as a âHollywood send-offâ for those competing in the upcoming PyeongChang Winter Games. The Golden Globes nominee let her Ralph Lauren-designed skirt with the thigh-high slit do the talking for her as she skipped speaking with press on the red carpet.
Once inside, Chastain mingled with soccer star Alex Morgan. Elsewhere, Nicole Kidman found a friend in snowboarder Amy Purdy; James Franco hugged it out with gold medalist Laurie Hernandez; and Hugh Jackman tried Summer Sandersâ gold medal on for size.
Why this yearâs Golden Globes black-dress blackout is good for fashion
Even though the first footfalls on this yearâs Golden Globes red carpet wonât take place until later today, weâre just going to go ahead and get the whole trend-spotting thing out of the way: The vast majority of the women in attendance will be wearing black dresses. The men, most of whom would usually pair a white shirt with their black tuxedos, will favor dark ones to create a tone-on-tone formalwear look. The on-trend lapel accessory of the season will be a Timeâs Up pin.
Inevitably, a few â but only a few â fashion mavericks will be enthusiastically oppositional by dressing in bright, focus-pulling colors. Exposed skin â plunging necklines and daring leg slits â will be at a minimum and red-carpet talking points will be at a maximum. And no one will end up on the eveningâs âworst-dressed listâ because there simply wonât be one.
We know all these things, of course, because theyâve been explained in great detail in newspapers across the country (including this one) over the last week, as well as parsed, dissected, criticized and generally bandied about across social media. In short: The call to wear black dresses is an effort to highlight the issues of sexual assault, harassment and gender inequality.
As good as this may be for getting the message out (and we have no doubt that it will be very good at that), at first blush it seems as though a sea of black-dress sameness might make the red-carpet arrivals less enjoyable fashion-wise. In fact, itâs probably the best thing to happen to the fashion world since the invention of the raised runway. Here are a few reasons why.
And the presenters are...
The stars are coming out on Sunday to present the awards. Among this yearâs presenters are past winners, nominees, and, naturally, several hail from this yearâs crop of contenders.
In alphabetical order, hereâs who youâll see at the podium this year:
- Jennifer Aniston
- Roseanne Barr
- Halle Berry
- Carol Burnett
- Mariah Carey
- Jessica Chastain
- Emilia Clarke
- Kelly Clarkson
- Common
- Darren Criss
- Geena Davis
- Viola Davis
- Zac Efron
- Gal Gadot
- Greta Gerwig
- John Goodman
- Hugh Grant
- Kit Harington
- Neil Patrick Harris
- Salma Hayek
- Garrett Hedlund
- Chris Hemsworth
- Christina Hendricks
- Ron Howard
- Kate Hudson
- Isabelle Huppert
- Allison Janney
- Dakota Johnson
- Dwayne Johnson
- Angelina Jolie
- Michael Keaton
- Shirley MacLaine
- Ricky Martin
- Helen Mirren
- Sarah Jessica Parker
- Robert Pattinson
- Sarah Paulson
- Amy Poehler
- Natalie Portman
- Edgar RamĂrez
- Seth Rogen
- Andy Samberg
- Susan Sarandon
- J.K. Simmons
- Octavia Spencer
- Sebastian Stan
- Emma Stone
- Sharon Stone
- Aaron Taylor-Johnson
- Keith Urban
- Alicia Vikander
- Kerry Washington
- Emma Watson
- Reese Witherspoon
Dwayne Johnson is also on hand because his daughter Simone Garcia Johnson was named the inaugural Golden Globe ambassador, a title previously referred to as Miss Golden Globe. Garcia Johnson will be onstage helping out presenters and handing out gilded statues.
Whoâs hosting the Golden Globes this year? That would be Seth Meyers
NBC often taps its marquee talent to host the boozy, often no-holds-barred event. So it came as no surprise that its âLate Nightâ star Seth Meyers has picked up the gauntlet this year.
âWe have a lot to talk a about,â Meyers said in a promo for the show, cheekily addressing the Harvey Weinstein sexual assault scandal that upended the industry last fall. There are also plenty of politics in and outside Tinseltown to unpack, and Meyers plans to do just that in his opening monologue, in which heâll address the rampant sexual harassment allegations.
âI can only tell you that weâre having a lot of conversations about it and getting the tone right, but also knowing that we need to address it and hopefully we can find that right way to do that,â he told The Times on Thursday.
Meyers has previously hosted the Emmy Awards when they aired on the peacock network, and he is the latest in a long line of fellow âSaturday Night Liveâ veterans to score the gig. âSNLâ alums Tina Fey, Amy Poehler and Jimmy Fallon have hosted in recent years, and so has comedian Ricky Gervais. Meyers even pitched in on jokes when Fey and Poehler hosted, so heâs had practice backstage at a few shows.
âWhat I like about this show, what makes me excited about doing it, is that itâs the loosest awards show, so itâs fun to keep an eye out for things you can reference through the evening,â he told The Times.
These eight actresses are bringing gender and racial justice activists as guests to the Golden Globes tonight
While a number of stars at Sunday nightâs Golden Globes are expected to walk the red carpet dressed in black in solidarity with victims of sexual harassment, eight actresses have decided to take their protest a step further.
Michelle Williams, Emma Watson, Susan Sarandon, Meryl Streep, Laura Dern, Shailene Woodley, Amy Poehler and Emma Stone will each be attending the awards with an advocate or activist for gender and racial justice, according to a press release.
âOur goal in attending the Golden Globes is to shift the focus back to survivors and on systemic, lasting solutions,â reads a joint statement from the advocates, who have pledged their support to Timeâs Up â a newly formed female coalition of actresses, agents, lawyers and others who came up with the all-black plan.
âThis moment in time calls for us to use the power of our collective voices to find solutions that leave no woman behind.â
Williams, who is nominated for her performance in âAll the Money in the World,â will attend the show with Tarana Burke, a gender and racial justice advocate and senior director at Girls for Gender Equity. Burke is also the founder of the â#MeToo.â movement and co-founder of youth organization Just Be Inc.
Watsonâs guest will be Marai Larasi, the executive director of Imkaan, a black feminist network organization based in the United Kingdom. Sarandon, nominated for âFeud: Bette and Joanâ will attend the show with Rosa Clemente, an organizer, political commentator and independent journalist.
Streep, nominated for her performance in âThe Post,â plans to attend the show with Ai-jen Poo, the director of the National Domestic Workers Alliance and co-director of the Caring Across Generations Campaign. Dern, nominated for âBig Little Liesâ will attend with MĂłnica RamĂrez, co-founder of Alianza Nacional de Campesinas.
Woodleyâs guest, Calina Lawrence, is an enrolled member of the Suquamish Tribe and an advocate for Native Treaty Rights, the âMni Wiconiâ (Water is Life) movement led by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and the #NoLNG253 movement led by the Puyallup Tribe.
Poehler will attend with Saru Jayaraman, the president of Restaurant Opportunities Centers (ROC) United and ROC Action and director of the Food Labor Research Center at UC Berkeley. And Stone, who is nominated for âBattle of the Sexesâ will attend with Billie Jean King, whom she portrayed in the film. King is the founder of the Billie Jean King Leadership Initiative and the co-founder of World TeamTennis, among other organizations.
âAs longtime organizers, activists and advocates for racial and gender justice, it gives us enormous pride to stand with the members of the Timeâs Up campaign who have stood up and spoken out in this groundbreaking historical moment,â the statement read.
âWe want to encourage all women -- from those who live in the shadows to those who live in the limelight, from all walks of life, and across generations -- to continue to step forward and know that they will be supported when they do.â
How this yearâs Golden Globes red carpet became a political statement
We decided we didnât want to boycott, because there were a lot of our peers who were being nominated. We thought it was stronger to participate, but make sure we had a public sign of support.
— Kerry Washington, Timeâs Up member
On Sunday, a majority of the Hollywood stars walking the red carpet at the Golden Globes will be dressed in black. Cloaked in the democratizing color, entertainment industry leaders are hoping to make one of the most dramatic political statements in awards season history â standing in solidarity with those who have spoken out about sexual harassment following the Harvey Weinstein scandal.
But the women behind Timeâs Up â a newly formed female coalition of actresses, agents, lawyers and others who came up with the all-black plan â briefly considered taking even more drastic action: boycotting the glitzy event altogether.
âIn the wake of Harvey, how do you show up at events about empowering women when weâve learned that so much has been swept under the rug â or out there in plain sight?â said actress Tessa Thompson, who has been an active participant in Timeâs Up since the organization began meeting in October. âDo we show up? If we show up, how do we show up? What are our demands and what is our narrative?â
5 things to watch for at the 2018 Golden Globe Awards
If the actual awards presented during this yearâs Golden Globes ceremony feel like something of an afterthought, donât blame the movies and TV shows in contention â it was just that kind of year.
The biggest sources of anticipation and anxiety leading up to Sunday nightâs ceremony have little to do with who will take the top prizes and everything to do with what the attendees will say (and wear) on the red carpet. Black dresses. Statements of solidarity. Thoughts on how to reckon with the festering rot exposed by the sexual misconduct scandals in Hollywood and beyond.
All that plus the curiosity over how first-time host Seth Meyers will handle cracking wise in the midst of such troubled times â how soon before he acknowledges the Weinstein-sized missing elephant in the room? â and how many jabs heâll take at a certain former NBC star now occupying the White House.
But leaving all of that aside for a moment, and getting back to whatâs supposed to be the reason for the evening, thereâs still plenty of drama in this yearâs awards races. Even in the Globesâ unique comedy categories.
With that in mind weâve broken down five key things to look for in 2018âs winners circle.
Here are our film and TV predictions for this yearâs Golden Globe Awards
This yearâs Oscar best picture free-for-all will put more attention on the movies the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. rewards at the Golden Globes on Jan. 7. âLady Birdâ stands as a heavy favorite on the comedy side, but the drama race is up for grabs.
Who will win? Hereâs a first stab at predictions.
MOTION PICTURE, DRAMA
The nominees: âCall Me by Your Name,â âDunkirk,â âThe Post,â âThe Shape of Water,â âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ
And the winner is: âThe Shape of Waterâ picked up a leading seven nominations; âThe Postâ and âThree Billboardsâ earned six each. You could make a case for any one of this trio winning, so Iâll simply go with âShapeâ since it has the numbers ever so slightly on its side. A safer bet: Iâll probably change my mind at least twice before the ceremony.
Unless: âThe Post,â the more obvious topical movie, prevails. Or âThree Billboardsâ for capturing cultural rage. Who knows? This is the group that nominated âAll the Money in the World.â
How Golden Globes host Seth Meyers stepped up his game after retreating behind his desk
I always felt like I was my showâs own warmup comedian until I sat down.
— Seth Meyers
Seth Meyers spent the holiday break visiting his in-laws in Albuquerque, playing with his 21-month-old son Ashe (âOne of the great things about him is he barely ever brings up the Trump administration,â Meyers says, âbecause, for him, itâs almost entirely trucksâ) and celebrating his 44th birthday in pretty much the same manner as he commemorated his 43rd.
âMy wife and I go away to a hotel, binge watch a television show, get a nice dinner and go to bed,â Meyers explains, adding that âAlias Graceâ was this yearâs series of choice. âAs a 44-year-old man, that seems perfectly fine.â
Meyers returned to work this week but not to hosting âLate Night with Seth Meyers.â He and his writing staff flew to Los Angeles, where Meyers will be hosting the Golden Globes on Sunday evening. Itâs not the first time Meyers has holed up at the Beverly Hilton in early January. He worked on the writing team the three years that Tina Fey and Amy Poehler hosted the ceremony this decade. But itâs his first go-around as host, a gig heâs happy to take.
âWhat I like about this show, what makes me excited about doing it, is that itâs the loosest awards show, so itâs fun to keep an eye out for things you can reference through the evening,â Meyers says.
That said, unlike Ricky Gervais, who hosted the Globes four times, bracketing Fey and Poehlerâs 2013-15 stint, the affable Meyers doesnât plan on having a drink in his hand throughout the evening. Or perhaps at any time during the evening.
James Franco, Gal Gadot and Mary J. Blige help W magazine kick off the 75th Golden Globes party circuit
Emilia Clarke and James Franco smiled for the phalanx of photographers surrounding them as they perched beside a sofa; Brooklynn Prince paused in the entry hall to spend a moment with Gal Gadot; and Mary J. Blige found a spot, just barely quieter, to relax with friends. There, in a penthouse suite at the Chateau Marmont in Hollywood, a mass of A-listers crowded into the various rooms, some spilling onto the terrace for fresh air, while others ducked into side rooms to sample the dinner or dessert buffets.
âItâs kind of a great momentâ said party host Stefano Tonchi, editor-in-chief of W magazine, taking time out to chat with the Los Angeles Times. âItâs the beginning of the awards season. The Oscars, somehow, are the grand finale, but now, before the Golden Globes, everybody has a chance.â
What time are the Golden Globe Awards?
The 75th Golden Globe Awards kick off the 2018 awards season on Sunday. And hereâs the lowdown on what you need to know before the stars hit the red carpet.
The anniversary celebration, with its bacchanal reputation and âParty of the Yearâ moniker, comes during a watershed moment as the entertainment industry crackles over sexual misconduct in Hollywood and beyond.
What time does the show start? And on what channel and streaming service?
The party-like ceremony will take place at its usual haunt, the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, and will air live on NBC from 5 to 8 p.m. Pacific.
NBC will also stream the show to paid subscribers on its website and through its app and through other providers that carry the local NBC market. (Century Link Stream, DirecTV Now, Fubo TV, Hulu Live TV, Sling TV, Sony PlayStation Vue and YouTube TV will also carry the official stream.)
The official red-carpet pre-show begins at 3 p.m. Pacific and can be live-streamed on the Golden Globesâ official Facebook page. Additionally, the â2018 Golden Globe Arrivals Special,â hosted by the âTodayâ showâs Natalie Morales, Al Roker and Carson Daly, will air live on NBC from 4 to 5 p.m. Pacific.
Golden Globes roll out the red carpet, and Seth Meyers is ready to host in a year of change
The traffic circle outside the Beverly Hilton hotel was overrun with plastic and unfurled carpets Thursday morning, while the fountain at the center continued to gush uninterrupted.
Inside, the hotelâs International Ballroom was transformed into a construction site, eight oversize gilded spheres adorning the far walls providing the only hint of whatâs to come on Sunday when the Golden Globes take place here.
Workers in T-shirts and hoodies put finishing touches on the stage, credentials dangling from their necks as they bent to install lights on the stairs. Three bright orange ladders cluttered the stage, bold and out-of-place among the elegant black and silver lights. Overall, the ballroom looked more like a Home Depot than a place where hundreds of Hollywoodâs biggest stars will soon gather.
First-time Globes host Seth Meyers was on hand to witness the initial set-up as a murmur of voices and the erratic din of a drill filled the air behind him.
Whatâs âSMILFâ and why is it nominated at the Golden Globes?
If youâre a fan of the Golden Globes, then you know that the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. loves to raise the profile of overlooked television shows.
In previous years, awards have gone to acclaimed â but underexposed â shows such as âThe Affairâ and âMozart in the Jungle,â as well as performances from âJane the Virginâ and âCrazy Ex-Girlfriend.â
Which brings us to one of this yearâs rising TV stars, âSMILF,â which is nominated for musical or comedy TV series.
The acronym for the Showtime series stands for âSingle Mother Iâd Like to [um, use your imagination]â and stars Frankie Shaw as the eponymous SMILF.
The series centers on Shawâs life as a working-class single mother, splitting her time between tutoring and acting in an attempt to pay the bills.
Shaw, who wrote, directed, executive produced and starred in the series, earned critical praise for the series and scored an additional Golden Globe nomination for her performance.