Everything we know about the Golden Globes so far -- the nominations, the reactions, the predictions - Los Angeles Times
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Everything we know about the Golden Globes so far -- the nominations, the reactions, the predictions

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The 74th Golden Globe Awards take place Sunday, Jan. 8 with Jimmy Fallon taking on hosting duties. “La La Land,” with seven nominations, “Moonlight,” with six and “Manchester by the Sea,” with five nominations are film frontrunners. In TV, the heart-warming “This is Us” series scored more nominations than bloody, crowd favorite “Game of Thrones.” New TV was certainly the trend, “Atlanta,” “Insecure,” and “Westworld” all racked up nominations showcasing lots of talent and fresh creators.

The biggest surprise? Multiple nods for comic book underdog movie “Deadpool.”

Scroll down for all the reactions and predictions for the big night.

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Tracee Ellis Ross on her Golden Globes nomination for her work on â€black-ish’: â€I couldn’t be prouder’

Tracee Ellis Ross of the ABC comedy 'Black-ish'
(Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)

Nominated Monday morning for performance by an actress in a television series by the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn., star of ABC’s “black-ish” Tracee Ellis Ross released a statement in response to her first Golden Globes nod.

“I’m very grateful to the HFPA for recognizing â€black-ish’ and also mine and Anthony’s work on the show, in a year of such incredible work,” she wrote. “So many of the projects that I love in film and television were acknowledged, and I’m honored to be a part of this great class of nominees. I’m thrilled to be included in a category of talented women of all different ages and races, each telling such different stories.

“As an actress, I’ve dreamt of being at the Golden Globes since I can remember – it seems like the best party of the year. I’m 44 years old, third series in. This is a thrilling moment, and I couldn’t be prouder that it’s because of â€black-ish.’”

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â€Westworld’ creators celebrate their nominations by hinting at one big character’s return

"Westworld" show runners Lisa Joy and Jonathan Nolan.
( Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

Just a little over a week after the much-discussed season finale of “Westworld,” creators Jonathan Nolan, who also goes by Jonah, and Lisa Joy were excited to learn the HBO series had been nominated for three Golden Globe awards: TV series, drama; supporting performance by an actress in a drama for Thandie Newton; and performance by an actress in a drama for Evan Rachel Wood. We caught up with the couple to discuss that news and ask a couple of burning questions.

It must have been nice to see not only the show nominated but also Evan and Thandie.

Nolan: We’re just thrilled. It’s been a long journey to the screen with this show and we’re so excited to share their performances with the audiences. To see their talent and their fearlessness and their brilliance recognized, it’s fantastic.

Joy: Both of them have such amazing range and heart and strength and, honestly, not just in their performance but in real life too. You could not ask for better collaborators in every way. I feel that way about our entire cast.

Whenever a new show this twisty launches there must be jitters about whether the audience will engage. Viewers definitely engaged with “Westworld”; it was the show that launched a thousand think pieces and fan theories.

Nolan: Yeah, it’s definitely gratifying to see the level of conversation that the show drove. In a peak TV moment, when you’ve got 400-plus scripted shows, to have any kind of conversation around your show is exciting, but the level of engagement the fans brought to it, it’s very, very gratifying.

Were you surprised or disappointed that some viewers guessed some of the twists?

Nolan: No, not surprised. They’re not really guessing so much as doing some elegant detective work based on the little pieces that we very carefully laid into the narrative.

You’ve had “theories” shows where the theories seldom add up to much or they’re not really covered in the scope of the season.

What we really wanted to do here was tell a complete story in one season. It’s a story told in chapters, more in the way a film franchise works where each piece can stand by itself. I think that meant people felt free to theorize, which is great. There’s always a community that’s in there micro-analyzing what you’re doing. The only somewhat disappointing thing here was that, some of those theories wound up as headlines in articles put out by some sources that sort of spoiled it for the audience that was trying not to participate in that theorizing. And at some point, what’s the difference between a theory and a spoiler? Hopefully, in the second season, that means people will watch and write about the show a little bit differently.

Were there any crazy theories you heard or read that didn’t apply to the first season but had you thinking, “Hmm, maybe for next year?”

Nolan: [Laughs.] You have to be very careful not to read too much because when the fans are writing better stuff than you it’s always galling. You have to be careful not to let the conversation drive the show. Lisa and I laid out a plan for the show — and obviously it’s a plan that’s subject to some adjustment — and we’re sticking to it.

So after what I’m imagining is a vacation, do you all have any idea on the timeline for production on season two yet?

Joy: I would love a vacation. When is that going to happen?

Nolan: That’s not going to happen. [They both laugh.]

Joy: The great thing about it is, it’s a really ambitious show. We’ve got these incredible actors and the network has been so supportive. And the one thing we’ve got to do is just write, feed the beast of pages. And that means, unfortunately for us, that we don’t get a lot of time off.

Nolan: It’s a good problem to have. The short version is: not before 2018.

I think we were shooting the second episode of the first season when we started the conversation with the network where we said, “You guys know we can’t do this every year, right?” Not because we needed time off, but because the complexity of the narrative and the complexity of the production and the complexity of pulling it all together in postproduction is such that we can’t really multitask the way that I did in broadcast TV [with “Person of Interest”]. It’s a little different with this show.

And just a couple of burning questions. From the clues in the finale — about a potential “Samurai World” and the note that Maeve holds that partially reads “Park 1” on it — can we presume that the second season will open up to different worlds or parks, that “Park 1” might be just beginning?

Joy: Yeah, I think that there’s a little hint there that “Park 1” might just be the beginning and we’ll continue to do this journey as we have, which is we’ll discover the mysteries of Westworld through the perspective of our characters, so when they found out, we’ll find out.

Ed Harris’ character was shot, but just in the arm. That doesn’t mean he’s dead, right?

Joy: Yeah, I mean, how could an arm wound slow that guy down? [Laughs.] He’s stronger than that; he can withstand.

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Globes voters recognize a wide range of nominees and stories -- will academy members do the same?

With really good marketing and sheer force of will, the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. has, over the last decade, turned the Golden Globes from a scandal-riven booze fest into a highly rated, influential awards ceremony, a metamorphosis that has never been clearer than this year.

The diverse slate of film acting nominees it announced on Monday sent a clear, early message to Oscar voters dogged by the #OscarsSoWhite label: There can be no excuses this year.

Last year, when faced with criticism for yet another all-white slate of acting nominees, some members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences argued that there simply had been too few nonwhite choices.

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Racism, homophobia and sexism are on the minds of Golden Globe nominees

When they received news of their Golden Globe nominations, actors, writers and filmmakers expressed surprise, delight and gratefulness. But in this politically charged year, in which issues such as racism and sexism were front and center during the presidential election, many nominees talked about the social relevance of their work.

Jessica Chastain, who received a nod for best actress in a drama for her role in “Miss Sloane,” a film about women in Washington, talked about the opportunity to bring gender equality to the forefront.

“I’ve really been looking at the role women have in our society and we, for some reason, attack women for being prepared and ambitious,” Chastain said Monday, referring to criticisms of Hillary Clinton during the presidential campaign. “You hear that being said about actresses or musicians or people who really work hard at their profession that are women, but you don’t say that about men. We need to change the perception of women, of what a woman is supposed to be.”

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John Carney was buying firewood and whiskey when he heard about his Golden Globe nomination

Director John Carney
(Peter Foley / EPA)

We found John Carney, director of “Sing Street,” at his home in Dublin, Ireland, soon after the news came out that his film had been nominated for a Golden Globe in the comedy/musical motion picture category. The song “Falling Slowly” from his earlier musical romance “Once” won the 2007 Academy Award for best original song. Here’s how he reacted to the news of his most recent nomination.

Where physically are you? Where were you when the nominations were announced this morning?

I was in my car, driving to get some firewood for our house. It’s coming up to Christmas and it is cold in Ireland, unlike how it is in Los Angeles, apparently. So I was actually getting firewood and I was getting things for Marcella, my partner, to make a Christmas pudding. So stuff like whiskey and Guinness, stuff that supposedly goes into a pudding but now it’s going to go somewhere else.

So what city are you in?

I’m in Dublin, at home in Ireland.

Were you surprised by the nomination this morning?

Yeah, I sure was. I sort of thought maybe a song or something, but I’m just absolutely blown away by it. It’s such great news. For such a small little Irish film, and all those kids who are in it, it’s really like we made a film among people we really liked and that it’s been recognized by the Hollywood foreign press, it’s amazing. You know, the movie didn’t make a lot of money and in a sense it’s a best-kept secret, so it’s really nice that they noticed it and honored it with a nomination.

It was a surprise to me to learn that “Once” and “Begin Again” had not been nominated at the Globes. Does that make this even more of a surprise this morning?

I kind of always, as an Irish film director, everybody was telling me, “Oh you’re definitely going to get a Globe nomination for â€Once,’” and when it didn’t happen I thought, “Oh, OK, that’s fine.” I make slightly different films that don’t resonate there. But you’re right that this is doubly sweet in a way.

Well it seems that if you’re going to have a category for comedy or musical or comedy, a movie like “Sing Street” fits the bill.

It is a bit of both, isn’t it? I mean it’s a stealth musical, which is why I’m really happy it got nominated in the category as well. Let’s be honest, I haven’t seen “La la Land” yet, but it just looks so fantastic from the trailer and in a sense they couldn’t be two more different films. One is a breaking-into-song musical, which I love, and “Sing Street” is sort of like “Once.” The singing is part of the drama of the characters who are trying to talk and can’t really talk very well. They speak musically, in a sense, and it’s all justified by the instruments at hand and then the fact that they’re in a band or forming a band or buskers or whatever. It’s really lovely and I think it’s a great category. The films in it, the competition is just staggering. It’s so great to be included.

Since the film wasn’t seen by a lot of people when it was released, are you excited this might get the film seen by more people now?

That’s the absolute big thing about this nomination. That’s all it is in fact. I couldn’t care less about winning, at all, actually. And that’s being sincere. I really just think it’s great for the film. All the guys in the film, all the kids in the film, will now be even more annoyingly recognized in the street and in school than they were before. Which I think is funny.

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Viggo Mortensen on â€the little movie that could’ and â€irritating’ Trump

Viggo Mortensen, photographed at the Cinema Bar in Culver City on Nov. 16.
(Rick Loomis / Los Angeles Times )

Viggo Mortensen was in Spain, one of the places he keeps a home, when word came Monday that he’d been nominated for a Golden Globe in the actor in a drama category. His portrayal as an unconventional dad raising six children off the grid in “Captain Fantastic” helped the film — directed and written by Matt Ross (“Silicon Valley’s” Gavin Belson) — earn scores of positive reviews and the Un Certain Regard prize at Cannes.

Here’s what he told us over the phone about his reaction to the nomination news:

On where he was this morning, and was he surprised?

“I was having lunch and that’s when I found out about it. I got an email. I was surprised, yeah. But pleasantly surprised. I think people are aware [of the film] — though maybe less so in the U.S. — because not only did the movie come out in July, [it came out] first at Sundance. Since then, we’ve won a whole bunch of awards. It was one of the most well-received movies at Sundance. And around the world, it’s been very passionately received. So it wasn’t a total surprise.… It’s not a singular acknowledgement, but one of and for the movie. It keeps the movie alive in people’s minds, and I hope more people will take a look or a second look at it now. There’s a lot in it.”

On why people are connecting with the film:

“You know, we’ve had communication problems as a society. Especially since the recent election, people are polarized, they’re divided -- based on race, religion, sexuality, politics. People are not speaking to each other and not listening to each other. And because this movie does address that issue – the issue of listening to people who are different from you — people may have responded to that. It speaks to that concern. The movie, it really makes you think, laugh and cry, it’s a great story. But it does deal with that issue of communication problems.”

In his brief history as a politician, he has been about dividing people ... irritating people. That’s not gonna stop with the presidency.

— Viggo Mortensen, on Donald Trump

Viggo Mortenson stars in “Captain Fantastic.”

On the “little movie that could”:

“[â€Captain Fantastic’ is] not the kind of movie that has unlimited amounts of money to be in the news as far as promotion. It’s really been bolstered by word of mouth and good audience reaction. At a stage when all the big companies are putting all their money into promoting their big movies, it’s harder for a smaller movie like us to get noticed. So all the audience word of mouth has been great. People are connecting with it. It’s the little movie that could.”

On whether “Captain Fantastic” is a comedy or drama:

“It has both. Sometimes it is very funny, but it’s a true situational comedy. It’s the cultural shock and the contrast between different family models and different ways of looking at life that are accentuated when the family I’m the father of leaves the forest and goes out into the world.”

On Donald Trump:

“What can I say? It’s not surprising. Nothing he’s done has been really surprising. [His Cabinet so far] is controversial, and it’s not gonna please everybody. No politician is gonna please everyone, but especially him. In his brief history as a politician, he has been about dividing people, pitting people against each other, irritating people, and that’s not gonna stop with the presidency.”

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â€Sing’s’ â€Faith’ gives Stevie Wonder another Golden Globe nomination ... 32 years later

Following his successful House of Toys benefit concert (which raised more than $500,000) this weekend, Stevie Wonder woke up to another accolade in a career spanning decades -- a Golden Globe nomination. His song “Faith” is featured in the animated film “Sing” from Illumination Entertainment.

A duet with singer Ariana Grande, “Faith” is up for original song in a film that seems filled with pop hits. This is not Wonder’s first time seeing a song of his compete for a movie award, though. “I Just Called to Say I Love You,” from the film “The Woman in Red,” won the original song Golden Globe and Academy Award in 1985.

Here are Wonder’s comments acknowledging the Golden Globes nomination:

I thank you, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, for this amazing honor.  It’s been over 30 years since I was nominated for a Golden Globe award. I am so thrilled to be sharing this nomination with my co-writers Ryan Tedder & Francis Farewell Starlite for â€Faith,’ which is a song and belief dear to my heart.

— Stevie Wonder

Chris Meledandri, founder and CEO of Illumination Entertainment, added: “From Santa Monica to Paris, the entire Illumination team is overjoyed. On behalf of my producing partner Janet Healy and our exceptionally talented writer director Garth Jennings as well as everyone at Illumination Mac Guff and our partners at Universal, I want to thank the HFPA for recognizing the work of all of the artists who created SING as well as the legend Stevie Wonder for giving us â€Faith.’ ”

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And the winning studio in Golden Globes nominations is ... Lionsgate

Lionsgate led its rival studios in Golden Globe Awards nominations Monday, thanks to the acclaimed movies “La La Land,” “Hacksaw Ridge” and “Hell or High Water.”

The Santa Monica mini-major studio secured 13 nominationsin film categories from the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn., including three out of the 10 best picture contenders. The robust total is a big improvement over last year, when when the studio’s major awards contender, “Sicario,” failed to get any love from the association.

“La La Land,” a throwback musical set in present-day Los Angeles, received seven honors, the most of any film, including best picture, actress (Emma Stone), actor (Ryan Gosling) and director (Damien Chazelle). The World War II-set “Hacksaw Ridge,” a career comeback for director Mel Gibson, and the modern-day western “Hell or High Water,” released with CBS Films, each nabbed three.

The studio hopes “La La Land” will become a commercial success as well as a critical favorite. “La La Land” opened in five theaters this weekend in Los Angeles and New York, and grossed an impressive $855,000 in ticket sales from its first three days — a good sign that it could become a commercial hit when it expands later this month.

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Denzel Washington recognizes the â€honor’ of speaking August Wilson’s words in â€Fences’

Denzel Washington was appreciative of his Golden Globe nomination as lead actor in the film “Fences,” but he gave all credit to August Wilson, whose play led to another major award nomination for Washington.

Washington previously won the Tony Award for lead actor in a play in 2010 for his role as main character Troy Maxson in the stage play of “Fences.” And now he returns to that part in the movie adaptation.

What an honor to speak the poetry of August Wilson’s words and then be recognized by the HFPA this morning. Thank you!

— Denzel Washington

Washington has been nominated eight times for Golden Globe Awards, including winning lead actor for 2010’s “Hurricane” and supporting actor for 1990’s “Glory.” He was also awarded the Cecil B. DeMille Award last year for his overall accomplishments.

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Director Pablo LarraĂ­n on the â€Jackie’/’Neruda’ connection and what the films say about how history is written

Pablo LarraĂ­n, director of "Neruda" and "Jackie."
(Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)

It’s fun and it’s poetic and it’s political. It’s an interesting cocktail for cinema. ... and it creates, I think, a beautiful mirror of our societies. 

— Pablo LarraĂ­n on â€Neruda’

We reached Pablo Larraín at his home in Santiago, Chile, where it was late morning, five hours ahead of time in Los Angeles, when the Golden Globe nominations were announced. The foreign language film nomination for his drama “Neruda” is the director’s second nod in a row from the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. Last year, the group nominated his film “The Club.”

Over the phone, he said he was excited not only for his own recognition, but for Natalie Portman’s nod in the drama category, acknowledging her performance in “Jackie,” which he directed.

“It’s interesting,” he said of having both films singled out, “because it’s the perspective of the foreign press there, and it’s not necessarily what everybody else sees. It’s the group point of view and it’s fantastic because â€Jackie’ is out now and â€Neruda’ will be released on Friday, so this will probably deliver more attention to the film and more people will get to see it. That’s always amazing. It’s just exciting ... so many years of work and other people involved. It’s great news and it gives a very beautiful attention to the film, which is always a blessing.

What has it been like juggling both films, both when you were making them and now that you’re promoting them?

I’m certainly not used to it. I have to say it’s been a whole new experience. But at the same time it’s been a good synergy and rhythm between both movies. I think they are very different, but they are somehow connected. And it’s interesting how they travel. Of course, I’ve been also going to Europe and other countries, Latin America, with both movies and I must say it’s very exhausting. But it’s a gift at the same time. I don’t know that I want to do it again, but I’ve learned a lot and met a lot of people. I think the movies work very well and create a lot of enthusiasm, more desire to keep on making movies. And that’s what we do. It’s not necessarily associated to the awards, but it’s associated to what you feel and how it makes you feel when the movie goes out. The reaction so far has been very beautiful and cool.

What would you hope people learn about “Neruda” and take from his story as you tell it in the film?

It’s hard to put it down into words because that’s why we made the movie. I guess “Neruda” is a take on Neruda’s cosmos. It’s fun and it’s poetic and it’s political. It’s an interesting cocktail for cinema. And it’s a movie in our language about a poet in our language and it creates, I think, a beautiful mirror of our societies. I think people could connect with the way we have been built. We have rich traditions and writers and journalists all through our history, but in reality I think the people who really define [us] are our poets.

So if this movie can somehow spread just a little bit of our imagination, and our history and our words and our souls, then I think we have achieved something. That’s what we wanted -- to deliver a sort of emotion, a taste, an illusion of society that is very fast but is very, very present.

Those are our words and our desires, and it’s beautiful to have a chance to portray them on film and the life of someone who seems so far [away] -- a communist poet from the ’40s. But then [Neruda’s story] is connected and it’s possible to understand that it’s not so unrelated. It’s also fascinating because it’s a movie about movies and that’s what we love, as filmmakers as well.

Neither of these films are birth-to-death biopics in the conventional sense. How do you see their relationship to the biopic?

I actually don’t think it’s possible to go out into the world and say, “Look, this is who this person was and who they were.” You just can’t put people’s lives into a box, into a film. What you can do is share some kind of emotion. And just a little bit. I think these movies are like a crack in the ceiling -- they let in a little bit of light.

There’s a lot of beautiful information there, but I wouldn’t call these movies biopics. It’s just like a reflection on people’s lives. And that’s enough, I think, to go out and make a movie. Of course, we would never make these movies if these people never existed, so we need them. We need those bloodstreams and those bodies -- who we think they were from the flight of fiction. And it’s always so arbitrary. I think it always arbitrary and that’s so essential to what we do.

Both movies grapple with how history gets written.

I’ve been fascinated over the years by the fact that media tries to manipulate or create their own public image. And it’s so beautiful and interesting when you see and observe how someone tries to do it.

There’s a big gap between the intention and the result. That gap is sort of our door, our entrance to the subject. It’s like going to the kitchen and observing how people are trying to shape a myth, a legend -- to take public opinion and shape and manipulate that. It’s always interesting. I think it defines our era.

Everything is out there in the media and there’s always a difference between the private world and the public one. And if you put them next to each other, you will have a very good fiction. It plays very well with what Jackie says: “Sometimes I feel like the person we read about in the papers is more real than the one who stands beside us.”

That’s a quote from the film, and I feel that there is something there that is extremely beautiful and extremely dangerous. At some point, you don’t know who you are. That illusion is fragile, and that fragility is what we need to work with.

What’s most gratifying about the recognition for Natalie Portman’s performance?

I think what Natalie did and what she does in the film, it’s one of the most beautiful experiences I’ve ever had. When she succeeds, we all do. She’s an angel. I’m grateful, and it’s wonderful when people react and praise her.

She’s the soul of the film. And she’s very generous and very connected with the entire team of the cast and the producers. It’s beautiful to see her being recognized. It’s amazing because she’s the heart of the film. What can I tell you? She’s Jackie. She’s our Jackie. She’s our queen.

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Ooh â€La La Land’

"La La Land" stars Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone at the 41st Toronto International Film Festival in September.
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

“La La Land” led all film nominees at the Golden Globes nominations Monday morning, garnering seven nods, including picture, actress, actor, director, screenplay, score and song.

Director and screenwriter Damien Chazelle, actress Emma Stone, actor Ryan Gosling, composer Justin Hurwitz, lyricists Benj Pasek and Justin Paul and producers Fred Berger, Jordan Horowitz and Marc Platt all released statements about being recognized as Golden Globe contenders by the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. Naturally.

Sadly it wasn’t in song, but they were all very “La La Land,” lovely:

“As I’m in LA, it was a very early start to the day but the best possible news to wake up to,” wrote Chazelle regarding the film’s success Monday morning. “I am so honored and thrilled by the nominations. Thank you so much to the Hollywood Foreign Press for celebrating â€La La Land’ and for recognizing the incredible work of all the cast and crew and especially Emma, Ryan and Justin.”

Stone was grateful for her own notices, but even more excited that the film saw such widespread acclaim.

“Wow! What a great way to start a Monday,” Stone wrote. “I am so honored to be a part of this incredible film. Thank you to the Hollywood Foreign Press Association and congratulations to Damien, Ryan, Justin and the rest of my â€La La Land’ family.”

Gosling was similarly excited for the nominations of his collaborators, writing, “I’m very appreciative to the Hollywood Foreign Press Association for recognizing not only my role in this film but also the wonderful work of Damien Chazelle, Emma Stone and Justin Hurwitz. Congratulations to them and all of the other nominees.”

For producers Berger, Horowitz and Platt, the film’s nominations were an endorsement of Chazelle’s vision, if nothing else.

“We would like to thank the Hollywood Foreign Press Association for this nomination,” the film’s producers wrote. “Making â€La La Land’ was a dream come true and we’re thrilled that Damien Chazelle’s vision has been recognized.”

The widespread acclaim for the throwback to old Hollywood movie musicals comes as a grace note for those individuals tasked with creating the music and lyrics.

“Damien and I started working on LA LA LAND over six years ago,” wrote composer Hurwitz. “I still can’t believe Lionsgate let us make this movie. To have the film received this way feels really great. Thank you to the HFPA for recognizing both the score and â€City of Stars,’ a song that wouldn’t exist without the lyrics by our amazing collaborators Benj Pasek and Justin Paul.”

“We are so thankful to the Hollywood Foreign Press for nominating â€City of Stars,’” Pasek and Paul echoed. “It was an honor to work on â€La La Land’ alongside Damien Chazelle, Justin Hurwitz and the rest of the remarkable team. Congratulations to all, including our extraordinary fellow nominees!”

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Donald Glover has big plans for the Golden Globes: â€I want to get drunk with Tom Hanks.’

Donald Glover, the creator, star and driving force of FX’s hip-hop flavored comedy “Atlanta,” was still recovering from his win for comedy actor at Sunday’s Critics Choice Awards when he received the word early Monday that the series was among the Golden Globe nominees, including best TV series, musical or comedy.

“I’m feeling overwhelmed,” Glover said in a telephone interview. “I really wasn’t expecting it last night, and then I’m getting texts and messages from family and friends this morning.”

Glover said the nominations will bring more visibility to the series, which has already been renewed for a second season: “This will help a lot.”

He felt that the show’s “honesty” was connecting with viewers. “This is a show where points of view converge. It’s easy to have a show that has a timeline that gives you the point of view you want. But this show has differing points of view. That’s the purpose. “

But the nominations, along with the critical and popular success of the show, isn’t making him more relaxed going forward. Looking to music for an analogy, he said, “Just like OutKast, we’re only as funky as our last cut. I still feel like a freshman.”

But for now, Glover is looking forward to the awards. “I want to get drunk with Tom Hanks. That will be cool,” he said.

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The Chilean way to pronounce Pablo LarraĂ­n and more essential info about the â€Neruda’ and â€Jackie’ director

(Stephanie Cornfield / For The Times)

Chilean director Pablo Larraín’s film “Neruda” scored a Golden Globe nomination in the foreign language category, which means we’re going to be hearing his name a lot this awards season. But will you be hearing his name pronounced correctly?

“Neruda,” Larraín’s picture about the Nobel Prize-winning Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, is a wild romp that follows a police detective (Gael García Bernal) in the midst of an existential crisis as he chases down the famed poet (portrayed by Chilean actor Luis Gnecco), who is on the run from the authorities for political reasons.

Larraín is better known in the U.S. for his first English-language picture, “Jackie,” also released this year. It stars Natalie Portman, who received a Golden Globe nomination on Monday for playing former First Lady Jackie Kennedy.

But Larraín has a long trajectory as a key Latin American filmmaker. Last year, he received a Golden Globe nomination for his film “The Club.” And his film “No,” starring García Bernal, was nominated for a 2012 foreign language Oscar.

So when you hear Larraín’s name over the next several weeks, here are three things to keep in mind:

1. Despite all the butchered mentions of his name you may have heard so far this year, Larraín is pronounced Larra-EEN, not “Lorraine.”

2. Larraín first came to international attention for his 2008 film, “Tony Manero,” a bleak drama about a serial killer who obsesses over John Travolta’s character in “Saturday Night Fever.”

Larraín says the film bears a connection to “Jackie.”

“They are characters that are very far from each other,” he stated in a conversation with The Times in early December. “But at some point, it’s two stories about lonely people trying to survive. They’re victims of their political environment, and they somehow shape their own destiny without knowing it.”

3. He has references to the late Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet’s blue eyes in three of his films (“Tony Manero,” “No” and “Neruda”), a gag that makes a pointed statement about Chilean obsessions with class, race and politics.

“It was used by the propaganda when they were trying to make him more charming,” says LarraĂ­n. “They would say, â€Look, his blue eyes.’ There is nothing more stupid and dangerous to say that. â€We have a dictator who is mean and terrible, but he has blue eyes!’”

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Expect a reunion of â€The Help’ cast next month — all four stars have been nominated for Golden Globes

In 2011, the civil rights era drama “The Help” garnered four Golden Globe nominations and earned Octavia Spencer a Globe for her supporting role in the film. Four years later, the film’s stars stand to win big again with their work in four very different films up for awards.

Spencer (“Hidden Figures”) and Viola Davis (“Fences”) were nominated for supporting actress awards. Jessica Chastain (“Miss Sloane”) and Emma Stone (“La La Land”) are up for dramatic and musical/comedic actress awards, respectively.

This morning, Chastain tweeted a throwback photo of herself along with Davis, Spencer and Stone to congratulate her former costars on their nominations.

Expect an updated version of this photo when the Golden Globes airs on Jan. 8.

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After the â€body shock’ of Trump’s election, â€Transparent’ stars and creator see a changed mission ahead

Speaking via the wonders of conference call with Jeffrey Tambor en route to a shoot for a Disney film and Jill Soloway in Texas working on “I Love Dick,” the star and creator of “Transparent,” respectively, talk about their series, which earned two more nominations from the Golden Globes.

Is there still even a question anymore about whether “Transparent” will be nominated?

Jill: I’m always thrilled when we’re remembered, considered, recognized.

Jeffrey: I’m like a little kid this morning. We were just talking about it. To be in this company, this diversity, the newness, and invention that are in these categories is amazing.

Yes, there’s a lot of newcomers on the TV front. Any advice to your fellow nominees?

Jeffrey: Adore every moment of it. And be proud. You’re moving the whole conversation forward. It’s hard not to notice how political this all is and how diverse the lineup is. If you look down the list, it’s just an incredible statement of how our business has changed—and thank God.

Jill: I basically say to anybody who I see these days, I yell: intersectional power movement now! I used to say it pre-[Donald] Trump and it had this kind of slightly whimsical, slightly self-effacing, kind of goofy quality to walk around saying that. Now, it’s like, holy crap. We’ve all been shocked into recognizing the political methods of making change aren’t as simple as we thought.

I think the biggest shock to me after I sort of started to understand the election results were that it wasn’t as simple as Trump won over Hillary [Clinton]. I realized we’ve been living in a world in the past eight years, that as things were becoming more liberal, we were progressing forward and politics had an idea of the new, the tolerant, the modern. That modernity and tolerance and liberalism were all woven in our mind with moving forward. And I think we all thought, eight years of [President] Obama, eight years of Hillary. We’re moving forward. Tolerance is modern. And for the forward motion of our nation, to have that regressive feel of actually protecting whiteness and protecting male-ness is a shock to the system. That’s the body shock. Modernity, progress is about protecting the rights of white men.

It’s really hard for me to stay excited about my own [achievements]. Half the day, I don’t even believe it. I generally only believe it in the mornings, and as the afternoon comes, I’m like, holy crap, this world is so sad. Nothing I do can make it better.

But luckily you’ve caught me in the morning. I look at the Golden Globe nominations. I look at Issa Rae. I look at Donald Glover. I look at â€Moonlight.’ And I go: I want to, as a queer person and as a queer content creator, I want to link arms with all people who are otherized. I really look at the coming together of women, people of color, queer people, and all otherized people into, as Van Jones calls it, a Love Army. We can all be powerful and bombastic about civil rights and social justice.

I look at something like the Golden Globes that has an international audience and is being broadcast around the world--we’re the outsiders and we need to take pride in our ability to shape the cultural conversation. And to keep doing it. To be recognized by the HFPA [Hollywood Foreign Press Assn.] at this moment, feels more important than ever.

Jeffrey: The thing I’m getting from people is people are really asking and demanding and really desiring anything that is true right now. They want true statements and that seems to be what’s going on. If you look at the nominees, it’s an incredible statement to what people are responding to. I can’t think of a time when it’s more needed in our culture.

Did you feel a call to action following the election in terms of what you wanted to explore in the series for Season 4 or what you felt your responsibility was as a storyteller?

Jill: Oh my God, of course. When people are talking about what went wrong in certain states and recounts, I’m like, guys, it’s a problem around the whole planet. Not just our country. It’s happened in England, it’s happening in Germany. There is a global response for white people wanting to draw a line around their whiteness.

Honestly, this binary thinking gives birth to a war mentality in otherizing. I want to take the same kinds of questions and put them into Season 4. I want to take on a more global approach to how people otherize.

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Gina Rodriguez is celebrating her Golden Globes nomination with tacos in Thailand

Gina Rodriguez, from the CW's "Jane the Virgin," is photographed at the Fairmont Miramar Hotel and Bungalows in Santa Monica on March 30, 2015.
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

Nominated for her performance in the CW comedy “Jane the Virgin,” actress Gina Rodriguez responded to being honored by the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. with this statement:

“Thank you to the HFPA for always recognizing new and unbelievable talent regardless of color or culture. The HFPA changed my life three years ago and they continue to do so for so many talented artists and projects out there. How wonderful it is to see an awards show so full of diversity, and not just for diversity sake, but because of the phenomenal performances.”

“I feel beyond blessed and humbled to have been one of their discoveries. It’s 10 p.m. in Thailand and I think we are going out for a celebratory beer and tacos. Yup. I said tacos in Thailand, wish me luck!”

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Creator of â€This Is Us’ (the show that started off as a movie) didn’t see this twist coming

“This Is Us” creator Dan Fogelman
(Suzanne Kreiter/ The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

With three Golden Globe nominations, “This Is Us” received more honors from the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. on Monday morning than HBO’s highly decorated epic series “Game of Thrones.”

Below, creator Dan Fogelman talks with the Los Angeles Times about his NBC series that became the network’s first series to earn a nomination in the drama category in 10 years.

You cannot tell me you didn’t see THIS twist coming?

I didn’t!

I hear there’s a group text going—

Yes, there’s one going with some of the producers and the cast. The cast is the coolest, they are so supportive of each other. And they’re so excited for Mandy [Moore] and Chrissy [Metz]. And they are excited the show is nominated. I mean, you feel it when you watch them on-screen. It’s a genuinely nice group of people. It radiates off of them. That makes it really fun.

This was a show that started out as a spec film script that you eventually made into a TV series. Its trailer notched an insane amount of views—but you were unsure of whether that would mean anything. Now you’ve got yourself a hit.

More than anything, our casting directors cast the eight right people. It kind of all went from there. The cast is beautiful and NBC got it out there the right way. They positioned it to win. They’re marketing was great.

Honestly, I’ve never had this kind of creative experience in my life, they completely let me make the show I wanted to make. All the other stuff is this slippery thing that you can’t even figure out how or why something happens this way. It just does. Whatever that magic is caught here. I hope it’s staying because we’re enjoying it.

You guys are the only broadcast contender in the drama category. What statement do you think that makes in an era of peak TV?

I watch everything. I’m not a student of television in that way. I know the general perception that cable is cooler and edgier than network TV. I’ve always believed there’s a form of populist and accessible entertainment that I think, especially recently, hasn’t been sold as much to the masses—or at least rewarded this way, getting nominations for things.

Wait. What am I saying? What on Earth am I talking about? I woke up at 5:30 a.m. this morning. I think there’s a place for this type of entertainment and I think we’re the lucky show that came around at the right time to be the one to break through.

In the spirit of the show, how often do you think about who your parents were before they had you and how their lives changed?

A lot of this came from that. My mom passed away eight years ago. She was pretty young. I’ve experienced all these milestones in my life, subsequently. I got married for the first time. All this stuff has happened in my work. My sister just had a baby. My mother and I were very close. Introspectively, that’s a big part of my formation right now.

As you get through your 30s, you think about that a lot as you move forward in creating your own family, you think about the family that came before you. It’s a part of the show that I think people are attaching to — the basic concept of that, seeing parallels in their own lives. The cast and I are all struck by the ways in which people are responding to the show. It’s different than anything I have ever worked on in terms of not just the amount of people that are watching it, or the number of people who want to take selfies with Mandy. That always happens. It’s the interpersonal connections to the show beyond just “I love that show,” but telling a story from an episode as it relates to their family or their childhood. It has caught us all by surprise.

I want to see lots of selfies the night of. I need to see the kids dressed up as they take in the night.

Honestly, last night I went to [the Critics’ Choice Awards]. I don’t think I’ve ever been to an award show. I’ve been involved in films that got a modicum of awards recognition here or there--even TV shows. But never enough to be invited to one. I literally had to go and buy a tux.

I was watching it the whole night last night and was like, so, this is what happens—every commercial break, all the most famous people in the world race up from their tables to go drunkenly talk to their actor peers at other tables. It’s really stressful. You’re watching everyone go around the room.

I wound up at a dinner party with Ryan Murphy last Friday night and he had been telling me that [“This Is Us”] was going to get nominations and he needed to take me shopping. I’m terrified of it. I saw him last night and he was like, we’re going shopping if you get those nominations tomorrow.

My wife thinks it’s really funny and I’m terrified he’s going to make me spend a gazillion dollars on a tuxedo. This is literally all I’m thinking about. Everyone keeps asking me if I’m excited about the show’s nomination and I’m like: I’m worried Ryan Murphy is going to make me spend $40,000 on clothes.

Can I be a fly on the wall for this shopping trip?

I think there’s a reality show in there somewhere.

Are you constantly being hounded for more information about the show?

I have friends who’ve had falling outs with friends, and those friends are getting in contact so they can ask me if Toby is alive. People who haven’t spoken in decades are putting aside grudges to find out answers. I have maybe 200 emails a day from people I haven’t heard from in ages asking what happens to Toby.

Has there been an episode that’s made you teary-eyed?

Every episode has a moment that moves me. When I saw the cut of last week’s episode, it was little Kevin walking side by side with his sister, little Kate, as she’s being wheeled in for surgery. Something was welling up inside me. I was like, oh ... The little moments catch me offguard.

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Golden Globe nominee Nick Nolte talks â€Graves’ and art imitating our political life

Scripted television inevitably imitates real life. But occasionally, real life imitates TV – or TV-in-the-making.

When Epix’s “Graves” – a satire about a former president addressing mistakes he’s made 25 years after leaving office – started shooting, this year’s election campaign was just heating up. The show, starring Nick Nolte as former POTUS Richard Graves, was working on an over-the-top, seemingly unrealistic idea about an ex-president who takes to social media to express his opinions.

“It was this whole idea of social communication and if the ex-president got on that, how out of line that would be,” Nolte said, speaking by phone from Malibu shortly after being nominated for a Golden Globe for best actor in a TV comedy. “We were trying to satirize things; but then we can’t use that material now. Here comes Trump and he has no [political] experience, he uses Twitter and is holding these rallies.

“I was worried about the fact that would be more of a show than what we could put on the air. How silly real life is.”

On his nomination, Nolte – whose gravelly voice sounded even more so than usual having just woken up – said he was shocked.

“My publicist called at 5 a.m. and I thought he’d been arrested or something,” Nolte joked. “It was a total surprise. Total. Because, you know, we know what we did, and it’s quite entertaining, and we were picked up for a second season; but I just wasn’t expecting this.”

Nolte was equally surprised at the results of the presidential election.

“We’d been breaking ground -- the first black president,” he said. “And I thought it would be a woman president.”

Nolte was less taken aback, however, by how close former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani came to joining Donald Trump’s incoming administration. Giuliani and Nolte filmed a scene together for the first episode of “Graves.”

“We were in the car together and I said, â€What do you think about the presidential election?’ and he said, â€I’m a good friend of Trump’s, that’s my leaning.’ And I said,’OK.’ ”

Personally, Nolte added, he’s less of a Trump fan.

“One [thing] I’ve been worried about is he’s used to making business deals and not thinking about the whole human race,” he said. “What will happen?”

The second season of “Graves” will be very different from the first, Nolte said. Mainly because he’s 75 years old now, and “too old” to be working 12-14 hour days.

“I said to Sela Ward [who plays Nolte’s wife], â€Next year I’m not going to work every day and you should step forward and I’ll step back. We’ll have you run for Senate,’” Nolte said. “All the situations were based on me, but it was always conceived as a family show. You can’t have a comedy based on one person, you have to have three or four. I just wanted to get things started.”

As for how to out-Trump Trump in terms of humorous scenarios for future shows? Nolte says not to worry.

“It’s still going to be very funny, regardless of what Trump does,” he said. “You can’t follow him.”

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Billy Bob Thornton on â€Goliath’ Golden Globe nod: â€Remember when TV movies were really horrible? Those days are over.’

Last seen on TV screens as the icily sinister Lorne Malvo on the first season of FX’s “Fargo,” Billy Bob Thornton has again captured the attention of awards voters with his performance as a down-on-his-luck attorney in the Amazon original series “Goliath.”

In 2015, Thornton won the Golden Globe for best actor in a mini-series for his role in “Fargo,” the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. has again recognized his work in a drama series for “Goliath,” which was created by veteran TV writer David E. Kelley. “Goliath” has yet to be confirmed for a second season, but in the meantime Thornton will keep busy in the new year with a planned tour with his band the Boxmasters, which will release a new album, “Tea Surfing.”

We spoke with Thornton about the importance of managing one’s expectations with awards shows and how much actors have in common with lawyers in 2016.

Congratulations on the nomination -- that’s a pretty nice way to wake up.

It’s real nice. You always try to put those things out of your mind and not think about it too much. It’s always better that way. It seems like any time I’ve ever been nominated for anything over the years -- this goes back 25 years’ worth of stuff or more -- when I get nominated it’s when I wasn’t thinking about it. And if I get all nerved-up the night before and stay up late or can’t sleep or whatever then, you know, nothing happens.

So you were relaxed this morning and doing something else, I take it?

Yeah, I was asleep. I just checked my text messages when I woke up.

Billy McBride is a little bit of a departure from where we last saw you on TV in “Fargo.” What drew you to this role?

You know, it seems like a departure and at the same time it’s like a lot of roles I’ve played. A guy who on the surface appears to be one thing and yet he’s really another. Obviously in “Fargo” you knew exactly who he was, but in movies I’ve always played down-and-out guys, guys who either are down on their luck or have never had any to begin with.

It’s the kind of role I’d always wanted to play. It’s like Paul Newman in “The Verdict,” those kind of things. I’ve wanted to play a lawyer too, I had in “The Judge” with Robert Downey Jr. and [Robert] Duvall, but that was sort of like a big cameo. When I was playing that role [I thought] I’d like to play a lawyer for a longer period of time because lawyers and actors have a lot in common. A lawyer’s trying to convince a jury and an actor’s trying to convince an audience.

And there’s a performance element to both.

Absolutely. And a lot of people hate lawyers, and these days a lot of people hate actors. (Laughs)

This also brought you over to the streaming side in working with Amazon and outside of the usual network and studio structure. Was that something that appealed to you as well?

Oh there’s no question. And FX, who did “Fargo,” they’re as close as you can get to that. It’s such a great network and so friendly to the artist -- they want their stuff to be the artist’s vision. I’d already had a great experience with them and I can’t tell you how good Amazon has been. They have a chance to do something really incredible. I think they’ve only scratched the surface, but at the same time they’re just getting started.

Remember when TV movies were really horrible? Those days are over, but at the same time, the streaming services and premium cable channels they don’t make so many one-off movies because I guess financially it doesn’t make as much sense to them. I wish there was a way they could figure that out financially because then I might be able to direct again and write again. Because the independent film world is kind of gone, you know?

This is as close as you can get to making an independent film now, doing eight parts like we did or 10 parts like we did on “Fargo,” what is essentially an independent film. It’s just in a longer format.

How was it working with David E. Kelley on this show? He’s got a rich history of working in TV.

Yeah, he’s been around a long time, and certainly had great success. This is a new thing for him also. I think we were doing an interview along the way and he talked about that, how it’s nice to have the freedom that you have in places like this.

You don’t have to write for commercials. I guess on network shows you write six-minute sections because pretty soon you’ve got to have the hemorrhoid cream thing coming up. I’m sure he’s happy about that part of it.

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The Golden Globes nominations are diverse, but #OscarsSoWhite is not over

Ever since the rise of the hashtag #OscarsSoWhite, following the second year of an all-white slate of acting nominees for the Academy Awards, at the 2016 ceremony, many have been awaiting the moment calls for diversity and inclusion fade away -- not because it’s a passing fad, but because representation will truly be equal.

Given Monday morning’s Golden Globes nominations -- featuring the likes of Viola Davis (“Fences”), Dev Patel (“Lion”), Gael Garcia Bernal (“Mozart in the Jungle”) and Donald Glover (“Atlanta”) -- some might be predicting the end of the online campaign that had very real mpact. But not so fast, tweeted April Reign, creator of the hashtag.

Reign has been outspoken about the fact that #OscarsSoWhite is about more than just African American representation in the industry. In fact, it’s about all marginalized and under-represented groups.

“They do need to do more,” she said in January about the film academy’s diversity efforts. “But we also need to focus on the heads of the studios who make the decisions with respect to greenlighting films so that we see more people of color and more LGBTQ people and more people who are differently-abled up on the screen telling their stories as well.”

When the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences invited its largest and most diverse class to date in July, Reign heralded the move as progress, but noted “a lot of work still must be done.”

And the same sentiment persists despite some, such as the African American Film Critics Assn., calling 2016 the best year ever for black people in film. Still, don’t be so quick to cancel #OscarsSoWhite.

“It’s undeniable that the studios have responded admirably to the tremendous outcry from the African American community through its delivery of the films that we’ve seen this year,” Gil Robertson, president of the critics organization, said last month. “But what about next year and the year after that? Unfortunately, the question that we must ask with every watershed year is â€how long will it last?’ Were the past 12 months an anomaly or does it signal the beginning of Hollywood being more committed to supporting a diverse lineup of black films? And what about films about the Asian, Hispanic, Native American and LGBT communities? â€Moonlight’ has been a bright spot in representing both the black and LGBT communities, but we need more.”

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Images from the top Golden Globes television nominees

â€The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story’

NOMINATED: TV limited series or motion picture made for TV; actress in a limited series or motion picture made for TV — Sarah Paulson; actor in a limited series or motion picture made for TV — Courtney B. Vance (second from left); actor in a supporting role in a series, limited series or motion picture made for TV — Sterling K. Brown, John Travolta (center).

“The Night Manager”

NOMINATED: TV limited series or motion picture made for TV; actor in a limited series or motion picture made for TV — Tom Hiddleston; actor in a supporting role in a series, limited series or motion picture made for TV — Hugh Laurie; actress in a supporting role in a series, limited series or motion picture made for TV — Olivia Colman.

“The Crown”

NOMINATED: TV series, drama; actress in a TV series, drama — Claire Foy (at left); actor in a supporting role — John Lithgow.

See more of the top nominated television shows here.

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Felicity Huffman is thankful that ABC has â€ovaries of steel’

Felicity Huffman has been one of the busiest and most popular actresses on ABC's prime-time "American Crime."
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

So thrilled! Thank you HFPA for recognizing â€American Crime’! Thank you ABC for having ovaries of steel. You put your energy and capitol behind a risky show that is stretching the boundaries of network TV. I am so grateful to be part of it.

— Felicity Huffman, on her Golden Globe nomination

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The book lovers’ guide to the Golden Globes

The nominees for the 2017 Golden Globe Awards were announced Monday morning, and although the focus is on achievements in television and film, there’s no reason for book lovers to feel left out.

Many of this year’s nominated movies and shows were based on books. So if you’re more at home in a library or a bookstore than a movie theater, you’re likely to find some reading material to curl up with while the rest of your family is gathered around the television set.

“Arrival” (actress in a motion picture, drama): Amy Adams plays a linguist, mourning the death of her young daughter, who helps the U.S. Army translate symbols used by aliens who have suddenly come to Earth. The movie is an adaptation of “Story of Your Life,” the Nebula Award-winning novella by author Ted Chiang.

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Peter Morgan and Claire Foy are dually â€delighted’ by â€The Crown’ nominations

Creator and show runner Peter Morgan and actress Claire Foy, nominated for their work on Netflix’s “The Crown,” released statements about being recognized as Golden Globe contenders by the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn.

“I am thrilled with the nominations for The Crown,” Morgan wrote in response to the show’s recognition for drama television series. “Delighted of course for Claire and John [Lithgow], but this was a massive team effort, and the Best Drama-Television nomination really reflects that. I am proud of everyone involved. Thank you so much to the HFPA.”

Foy could hardly contain her excitement over her nomination for actress in drama television series, as well as nods for co-star John Lithgow and the series itself.

“I am so delighted by the nominations â€The Crown’ has received today! The whole experience has been wonderful,” Foy wrote. “I feel very lucky to have had the opportunity to bring Peter Morgan’s Princess Elizabeth to life; she is a gift of a role and a challenge I am so grateful for — a young woman trying to navigate a path through an extraordinary situation.

“I must thank the HFPA for this nomination, it’s such an honor. More than anything I am so happy that people have enjoyed the show the way they have and recognized the hard work of the truly brilliant ensemble cast and crew.

“I would also like to congratulate John and everyone on â€The Crown’ for their nominations today.”

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Scenes from the top Golden Globe film nominees

NOMINATED: Motion picture comedy; actress in a motion picture, musical or comedy - Emma Stone; actor in a motion picture, musical or comedy - Ryan Gosling; director - Damien Chazelle; screenplay; original song, motion picture - “City of Stars”

NOMINATED: Motion picture drama; supporting actress in any motion picture - Naomie Harris; supporting actor in any motion picture - Mahershala Ali; director - Barry Jenkins; screenplay; original score

NOMINATED: Motion picture drama; actor in a motion picture drama - Casey Affleck; supporting actress in any motion picture - Michelle Williams; director - Kenneth Lonergan; screenplay

See more of the top nominated films here.

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Casey Affleck and Kenneth Lonergan on the â€champions’ of â€Manchester by the Sea’

Director and writer Kenneth Lonergan and actor Casey Affleck, nominated for their work on “Manchester by the Sea,” released statements about being recognized as a Golden Globes contender by the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn.

“Thank you, Hollywood Foreign Press Association,” wrote Lonergan in response to nominations for director and screenplay. “I’m immensely proud of Casey [Affleck], Michelle [Williams], Lucas [Hedges], Kyle [Chandler], and all of our cast and crew. I’m in awe of their talents.

“All artists need champions, and I’m very grateful to have had several, all of whom also gave me broad creative freedom: Matt Damon, Kimberly Steward and this dedicated producing team, all of whom share in our nominations and have my eternal thanks.”

Affleck, who was nominated for actor in a motion picture, drama, wrote, “Huge thanks to the Hollywood Foreign Press Association for this prestigious honor. It will actually be my first time attending the Golden Globes and I’ve been working for more than 20 years, so this moment isn’t lost on me.

“I’m so happy for the recognition this morning given to our incredible writer and director Kenneth Lonergan and to Michelle Williams, and for our entire cast and crew. It’s really meaningful for our film. Thank you.”

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Andrew Garfield dedicates his â€Hacksaw Ridge’ nomination to Desmond Doss, the real-life veteran behind his character

Actor Andrew Garfield has two films out this season - "Hacksaw Ridge" and "Silence" - both of which are getting critical praise.
(Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)

Nominated for his performance in the drama “Hacksaw Ridge,” actor Andrew Garfield responded to being honored by the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. with this statement:

“I am so incredibly moved by the HFPA and their recognition of this film and my work, especially considering the remarkably strong caliber of performances this year. It’s an honor to stand with actors like Denzel Washington who have inspired me since I was old enough to watch movies.

“I’m very proud of â€Hacksaw Ridge’ and I share this with Bill Mechanic, David Permut and Mel who led the charge on this project with great vision, humility, integrity and love. I dedicate this nomination and my work to the incomparable Desmond Doss and all those who sacrifice themselves in the service of the protection and freedom of others. He is a profound symbol of healing and compassion for the times we are in.”

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Take a look through Golden Globes nominees’ portraits by The Times

Ryan Gosling, 'La La Land'
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Ruth Negga, 'Loving'
(Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)
Rami Malek, 'Mr. Robot'
(Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)
Thandie Newton, 'Westworld'
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

Check out more portraits and interviews here.

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Golden Globe-nominated Amy Adams on her character in â€Arrival’

(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

“She’s not heroic in the traditional sense. I love that she gets to rely on her intellect and instinct as opposed to brawn and bravery.”

— Amy Adams, Golden Globe nominee for “Arrival”

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Which studio topped the Golden Globe nominations?

"La La Land" stars Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone.
“La La Land” stars Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone.
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

Lionsgate had the most Golden Globe nominations of any movie studio this year, thanks to “La La Land,” “Hacksaw Ridge” and “Hell or High Water” (released with CBS Films). Indie distributor A24 rode high with “Moonlight.”

Here’s how the distributors stack up in the motion picture categories:

  • Lionsgate: 13
  • A24: 9
  • Paramount Pictures: 8
  • Amazon Studios: 6
  • Focus Features: 6
  • 20th Century Fox: 6
  • The Weinstein Co.: 5
  • Roadside Attractions: 5
  • CBS Films: 3
  • Sony Pictures Classics: 3
  • Disney: 3
  • Universal Pictures: 2
  • Bleecker Street: 1
  • Cohen Media Group: 1
  • EuropaCorp: 1
  • Fox Searchlight: 1
  • GKIDS: 1
  • Netflix: 1
  • The Orchard: 1
  • STX Entertainment: 1
  • TWC-Dimension: 1
  • Warner Bros.: 1

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Golden Globe nominee John Turturro is just grateful to be â€invited to the party’

John Turturro, Golden Globe nominee for best actor in a limited series made for television, released a statement this morning in response to being recognized for his work in the HBO miniseries “The Night Of.”

“It’s nice to be invited to the party, thank you [Hollywood Foreign Press Assn.],” Turturro said. “I am especially pleased to share it with my acting partner Riz Ahmed. And of course, our indomitable leader Steve Zaillian and Richard Price.”

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Thandie Newton has â€all the feels’ over her â€Westworld’ nomination

Actors continue to register their gratitude on social media, upon waking Monday to find they’d been nominated for a Golden Globe, including Thandie Newton (“Westworld”), Sterling K. Brown (“The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story”) and Christian Slater (“Mr. Robot”).

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Simon Helberg learned of his Golden Globes nod for â€Florence Foster Jenkins’ while on a Japanese bidet

Simon Helberg costars opposite Hugh Grant and Meryl Streep in "Florence Foster Jenkins."
(Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)

Monday morning started off with a bang for actor Simon Helberg, who plays Howard Wolowitz on the long-running series “The Big Bang Theory.” But it wasn’t his sitcom role that was generating all the ruckus. Or Helberg’s just-announced Golden Globe nomination.

It was the toilet.

“I was on the toilet when I got the news,” Helberg said of when he heard about his nomination in the supporting actor category, in which he was recognized for playing a piano accompanist to Meryl Streep’s opera-hopeful in Stephen Frears’ “Florence Foster Jenkins.”

Helberg had woken up a few minutes earlier, excited by the nominations and maybe a little nervous too.

“I didn’t have any expectations,” he says. “But I woke up at 5:12 a.m. and I saw they were going to announce at 5:15 a.m., and my stomach just dropped. Then I hit this bidet button — I got the new news on a text and it was like, â€boing!’ The water shot up. It was all very high tech. This toilet is made for the future of mankind. It’s like a toilet that has wi-fi.

“Anyway, it was all in tune — the universe, the nomination, my bodily functions — it all culminated in a terrible, clumsy moment sitting on a Japanese bidet.”

On a more serious note, Helberg says he was honored by his Golden Globes nomination.

“I was very moved by it,” he says. “Because I care deeply about this movie and the performance is something I’m proud of, and it’s really lovely to have people connect to it. And awards, I guess it’s a way of showing that people were affected by it.”

Working with Streep was a highlight for Helberg, he says.

“I met one of the most incredible, giving, intelligent, insightful people that I’ve ever come across,” he says. “And I got to spend three months with that person. Then, of course, there’s the gob-smacking talent and legacy, and all my life, growing up, watching and learning from her. So to get the chance to create something together and find she’s as beautiful a human as an actor, it was inspiring.”

The rest of the afternoon will be fairly routine for Helberg, he says. He’ll go for a jog in the neighborhood, then off to work on “Big Bang,” where today’s schedule entails attempting stunts.

“At some point, I’ll be hanging from the ceiling.” But there’s not another visit to the bidet planned.

“No,” he laughs, “I think I’ve taken care of everything.”

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2 of the 5 movies nominated for the Golden Globes foreign language film category were made by women

Director Maren Ade is shown at the 41st Toronto International Film Festival in September.
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

In contrast to the Golden Globes’ best director category, in which all the nominees are men, two films made by women are nominated in the foreign language category. “Toni Erdmann,” written and directed by Maren Ade, earned a nomination. The film from Germany took five prizes at the European Film Awards over the weekend, including best film, director and screenplay. Also nominated for the Globes is “Divines,” a film from France directed and co-written by Houda Benyamina.

Unlike the Oscars, the Globes allow multiple films from the same country to be submitted for this category. The official Oscar submission from France is “Elle,” so “Divines” will not be competing there. All the other titles nominated here for the Globes are also in play for the Oscar as official submissions for their respective countries.

Houda Benyamina is shown at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.
(Jay L. Clendendin / Los Angeles Times)

The five nominees:

  • “Divines” (France)
  • “Elle” (France)
  • “Neruda” (Chile)
  • “The Salesman” (Iran)
  • “Toni Erdmann” (Germany)

Asghar Farhadi, filmmaker of “The Salesman,” has won this category once before. “Elle” filmmaker Paul Verhoeven, better known for Hollywood films such as “Basic Instinct” and “Showgirls,” was nominated once before in this category for his early Dutch film “Soldier of Orange.” Pablo Larrain, filmmaker of “Neruda,” was nominated last year for his film “The Club” and also made his English-language debut this year with “Jackie.”

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    Told ya so: Golden Globe TV nominees according to our critics

    The Golden Globes have a reputation for taking chances and honoring new television shows. This year’s class of nominees, announced Monday morning, was no exception. From “Stranger Things” to “This Is Us,” here is what The Times’ critics had to say about some of 2016’s new and noteworthy shows.

    “This is Us”:

    “The success of most every series rests on the appeal of its characters, and â€This Is Us’ appears to be full of appealing characters.” Full review here.

    “Westworld”:

    “It isn’t just great television, it’s vivid, thought-provoking television that entertains even as it examines the darker side of entertainment.” Full review here.

    “Stranger Things”:

    “â€Stranger Things’ doesn’t just star 1980s icon Winona Ryder; it stars 1980s icon Winona Ryder in a brown corduroy coat.” Full review here.

    “The Crown”:

    “[It] unfurls in intimate conversations, usually between two people, one of whom is trying to roll a ball forward while the other is trying to keep it back.” Full review here.

    “Atlanta”:

    ”...sets a tone that is a little melancholic but not pessimistic; it’s aspirational in a minor key. It is critical in an interested, even amazed, way about people, while managing not to judge them.” Full review here.

    “Divorce”:

    “It’s an intelligent, if sometimes taxing or manipulative show, well played, often funny, here and there lovely; it improves as it goes along, letting us get to like characters who can first seem a little hateful.” Full review here.

    “Goliath”:

    “At its best, â€Goliath’ suggests the creative possibilities that arise when writers steeped in the broadcast television tradition are liberated to tell heavily serialized, character-driven, morally complicated stories without the arbitrary limitations imposed by networks.” Full review here.

    “Insecure”:

    “Much of it takes place in neighborhoods television typically visits only in crime stories, with the difference that there are no crime stories here, just the getting on with life, love, work, acceptance and self-acceptance.” Full review here.

    “The Night Of”:

    “An anthem to television’s unique power to turn a series of understated performances into sustained magnificence.” Full review here.

    “Graves”:

    “It is cynical enough, vaguely, about politics to suggest that it takes an outsider to do things right, a notion that does fit the temper of the times.” Full review here.

    “The Night Manager”:

    “Unapologetically sleeker and more sentimental than any George Smiley tale, and streamlined to the point of simplicity..., it is tense but linear, clearly framed to take full advantage of its stars’ strengths and, it must be said, their cross-demographic fan base.” Full review here.

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    Directors of Golden Globe-nominated â€Zootopia’ know it’s the perfect time for a flick about bias and bunnies

    Nominated for best animated motion picture, “Zootopia” directors Byron Howard and Rich Moore took time out this morning to talk about their film’s nomination for a Golden Globe and about making an animated film that tackles bias and discrimination.

    “It is an unbelievable feeling to have put in so much work on a film and to have it received so well by critics and the audience, and then by an organization like the Hollywood Foreign Press with this nomination,” Moore said.

    According to Howard, the idea for “Zootopia” came after conceptualizing a film with talking animals and then going to Africa for research.

    “We were camping near a watering hole and we would see zebra drink right next to lion,” Howard said. “It was like a human city, even though they don’t see eye to eye, they have to find ways to make it work. It quickly became this opportunity to talk about bias in this 21st century fable.”

    'Zootopia' directors Rich Moore and Byron Howard, center, with producer Clark Spencer at left.
    (Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)

    After their trip, the two began meeting with Shakti Butler, founder of World Trust and an educator in racial equality, to tell “Zootopia’s” story of rabbit Judy Hopps, the first rabbit cop in the city and the discrimination she faces. More than just a comedy, the directors hoped to make a film with a message for children and adults alike.

    “[Butler] talked to us for many years about how destructive bias can be and how subtle it can be,” Howard said. “Looking at the past year in the United States, it’s good timing for a film like this to come out.”

    “As an artist and as a filmmaker [this nomination is] very validating. It makes me want to jump right back in the saddle again and to keep doing what we do,” Moore added.

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    Julia Louis-Dreyfus thanks the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. and Russian hackers for her nomination

    Social media reactions continue to roll in as Hollywood elite wake up to find out they’ve been nominated for a Golden Globe.

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    The best addition to Mahershala Ali’s morning coffee? A Golden Globe nomination

    Actor Mahershala Ali from the film "Moonlight."
    (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

    The name on the tip of all of Hollywood’s tongues is Mahershala Ali. His captivating turn in Barry Jenkins’ “Moonlight” has been all anyone can talk about, as evidenced by the countless honors he’s received from critics bodies. On Monday, he added another recognition to that slate with a supporting actor Golden Globe nomination, his first. The Times spoke with Ali via phone moments after he received the “amazing” news.

    Tell me, where were you and what were you doing when you got the news this morning?

    I usually get up around this time so I was already up, making my coffee and whatnot. I got the call and it was pretty exciting to see my phone buzzing because I knew it had to be something positive.

    You’ve been getting a lot of recognition already for this role, nabbing the supporting actor Critics Choice Award last night. How does that feel?

    Really humbling, honestly. To have the opportunity to be a part of a project that people have sort of universally embraced is pretty incredible. To be mentioned and in the company of such wonderful actors is all humbling and sort of amazing to me. I appreciate it and am just trying to take it all in and ride the wave. It’s been a really beautiful experience.

    What do you think is the purpose of “Moonlight,” for this time period, that seems to be resonating with people?

    Well, it’s a deeply personal story, and the more personal something is, I think, the more universal it is. So, the examination of Chiron’s life and how much we go in-depth and on this journey with this character, I think people are really, as humans, responding to the challenges he’s presented with and are rooting for him. And therefore, in some way, they’re connected to that. He’s one of the “others.” He’s on the outside of the circle. He’s one that doesn’t really fit within the tribe of his neighborhood. I think we can all relate to being one of the “others,” one of the outsiders from some period in our life. The story is so honest and really highlights his unique truth, and I think people are responding to that because, in some way, in this time, there are so many people who feel that they’re outside of the center, that they’re not really connected in the same way – especially with what’s going on in our country politically. People just feel like they’re a little bit outside of the loop and want to be supported and loved and represented.

    Are you surprised about all of this attention the movie is getting?

    A little bit. None of us really anticipated any of this. We were just trying to do our best work, and were there for the right reasons. We kept it at that. I felt the script was special and what we were experiencing on the day felt unique and special. It was just such a wonderful shoot. Now, to have the film out and sharing it with the world, to see people responding to our little film is pretty remarkable.

    Diversity has been the name of the game with Hollywood this year. “Moonlight” for many is seen as the perfect antidote to #OscarsSoWhite.

    It’s a wonderful position to be in, but I think there is a lot of terrific work this year. What Dev Patel does in “Lion” and of course “Loving” and “Fences,” so there are other projects out there that feature people of color. So, the field is definitely more diverse this year around. I just hope that that’s something that is the norm moving forward, where there are people from all walks of life and different cultures and communities in some way shape or form being represented up there on screen, and their work being appreciated and recognized. That’s my hope, that this is the real start to something we see quite a bit.

    So are you doing any celebration of any sort today?

    I’m just going to try to get some rest. It’s been a busy couple of months so I’m going to get some rest and relax, have an opportunity to take some time to take it all in.

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    The phrase Natalie Portman repeated in each scene while filming â€Jackie,’ but is entirely absent from the final cut

    Natalie Portman stars as Jacqueline Kennedy in a new biopic about the famous first lady.
    Natalie Portman stars as Jacqueline Kennedy in a new biopic about the famous first lady.
    (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

    Pablo Larraín, the film’s Chilean director, felt Kennedy’s love of beauty was so integral to her character that he requested Natalie Portman utter “I love beauty” at some point during the shooting of every scene.

    “It never ended up in the film, but I feel like you really get a sense of the fact that Jackie was a true aesthete. She took so much sensual pleasure in fabric and things. To take pleasure in nature, in art, in music — that’s aesthetic, and that can make you feel connected to something. To see the world as a beautiful place full of wonder, even when you’re bombarded with a lot of negative events.”

    — Natalie Portman, “Jackie”

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    Hailee Steinfeld on getting recognized for â€The Edge of Seventeen’s’ â€anthem for self-acceptance’

    Hailee Steinfeld has gotten a Golden Globes nod for her work in "The Edge of Seventeen."
    (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

    Hailee Steinfeld, nominated for best actress in a comedy or musical for her performance in “The Edge of Seventeen,” released a statement about being recognized as a Golden Globes contender by the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn.

    “I am overcome with excitement and joy to be nominated for The Edge of Seventeen,” she wrote. “We set out to make a film that would resonate with men and women of all ages because the message of self-acceptance and embracing your truth is universal.

    Contrary to the reality that I face as a young actress on a daily basis, “Edge of Seventeen” isn’t a film about a teenage girl wrestling with her identity and self-worth because of the influence of social media defining her popularity. Instead, it’s an anthem for self-acceptance, and I’m so grateful to Jim Brooks and Kelly Fremon-Craig for granting me the opportunity to play such a complex and unlikely heroine.”

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    â€Moonlight’s’ Naomie Harris didn’t want to take the role. Now she has Golden Globes nomination for it

    Naomie Harris received a Golden Globe nomination this morning for best performance by an actress in a supporting role. We caught up with Harris this morning shortly after she got off a flight from L.A. to New York.

    This a really good morning for you.

    I’m really great. I’m very happy this morning.

    What was your initial reaction?

    Oh, I was just over the moon. I’m so delighted because ”Moonlight” is a tiny little movie that was made for a really small budget. Nobody expected it to really have this kind of impact, and every award show we go to, every nomination we have, makes a huge impact on this movie. We don’t really have a big publicity budget in the same way the other movies we are nominated with do. So, these awards are incredibly important for getting awareness of the film out there.

    You filmed your role in three days. Did you think three days of work would get you here?

    [laughs] I so did not. No, it’s crazy. It was just a passion project. I felt like this was a really beautiful script. I thought it was just such a beautiful story. I never ever in a million years thought it would lead to a Golden Globe nomination.

    And the film has six total nominations, with Mahershala Ali also getting recognized for role. This “small film” is taking the industry by storm.

    It feels really overwhelming and surprising. It makes me really emotional because this is a movie I feel very passionately about. I also think it’s one of these movies that’s incredibly healing. It’s a very timely movie; we really need this, movies that remind us of our shared humanity, now more than ever.

    It really just makes me happy that a movie like this is getting the recognition it deserves because I do think it’s one of these movies that has the ability to change the way people look at life and each other.

    You’ve been outspoken about taking on this role, of a drug addicted woman, that you didn’t want to play…

    That’s the other thing about it. A role I did in three days and a role I didn’t want to take on…[laughs] and now I have a nomination for it! This is crazy. Now I look back and I’m just so glad I did it.

    But I knew after speaking with Barry [Jenkins] that I didn’t need to be afraid. My concerns were that I didn’t want Paula to fall into being a cliché. But when I found out that [Jenkins’ mother] suffered from crack addiction — and in the movie I’m basically playing an amalgamation of his mother and Tarell Alvin McCraney the writer’s mother. I realized he had a vested interest in ensuring that she wasn’t reduced to a stereotype and that she got her full emotional complexity and full humanity that she deserves

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    Amid so much binge-worthy TV, Christian Slater is â€thrilled’ about his Golden Globe nomination

    Christian Slater, who received a nomination for his work on the USA series "Mr. Robot."
    (Gary Friedman / Los Angeles Times)

    USA Network’s “Mr. Robot” is nothing if not chock-full of surprises – for the first season, we weren’t quite sure if Christian Slater’s “anarchist hacktivist” was real or a figment of the lead actor Rami Malek’s imagination.

    Slater’s Golden Globe nomination for best supporting actor this morning, however, is very much a concrete thing.

    “I’m thrilled. But yeah, it was absolutely unexpected,” Slater said from his Los Angeles hotel room this morning. “I love the HFPA, they’re a fantastic group. And to be included in this kind of list -- it’s a phenomenal honor.”

    That the show itself wasn’t included among the Golden Globes nominees in the best TV drama category (an honor it won last year) – might be an outgrowth of how much “bingeable TV” is out there, Slater says.

    “I think it’s hard with all the new shows that come out, you know, it’s really is an embarrassment of riches,” he said. “The show was so beautifully acknowledged last year and it’s nice to give some room and acknowledgement to some of the other wonderful shows out there.”

    So what’s Slater watching these days?

    “The O.J. show [â€The People v. O.J. Simpson’] was incredible,” he said. “I thought [fellow Globe nominee] John Travolta was amazing, and Sarah Paulson, just breathtaking. â€Better Call Saul,’ too, and â€Mom.’ And especially â€Game of Thrones.’ I’m a huge fan, I’m totally into it. I’m definitely a member of the binge-watching generation.”

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    How early is too early for FaceTime? â€Insecure’ costar Yvonne Orji calls up Issa Rae for congrats at the crack of dawn

    Issa Rae, the star of HBO’s “Insecure,” got an early morning call from friend and costar Yvonne Orji, who was gracious enough to screencap their conversation and share Rae’s reaction (and their matching headscarf game) with the whole of the Internet.

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    Mandy Moore on finding hope in â€This is Us:’ â€It’s not escapist entertainment. It’s cathartic entertainment’

    Actress-singer Mandy Moore stars in the NBC's breakout freshman drama "This Is Us."
    Actress-singer Mandy Moore stars in the NBC’s breakout freshman drama “This Is Us.”
    (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

    NBC’s “This is Us” had a nice showing in the Golden Globe nominations with nods for best drama and supporting actress nominations for Chrissy Metz and Mandy Moore.

    Moore checked in by phone shortly after she got the good news.

    Please tell me there is a group text chain going on with the cast.

    There is! There is! You know there is. Everyone is so excited. We’re just so psyched about the show. I’m like: You guys, we get to get semi-tipsy with each other again at another award show. As long as we can keep doing this together, I’m in.

    How would you describe this ride? To go from pilot drought to being on a full-on hit?

    It’s pretty indescribable. I am just so grateful. I can’t even put into words. Every time I see [â€This is Us” creator] Dan Fogelman, I’m like: “Thank you for changing my life. Thank you for changing my life.” I’m thankful we get to do this show everyday. And to see the reaction. Yesterday, it hit all of us at the Critics’ Choice Awards because we’re out and about together, all gussied up, and we’re hanging out as a group and we just kept getting people coming up to us, and not saying in passing how much the show means to them, but they wanted to have full-on conversations about which characters they relate to and the discussions and dialogues that get started among family and friends because of the show. We all just were scratching our heads. None of us have been a part of something like this. It is the craziest ride. And it’s not lost on us how hard it is to breakout in this cluttered market. So the recognition is extra special.

    And to breakout with a show that is so inherently hopeful.

    That’s the best part of it all. It’s not escapist entertainment. It’s cathartic entertainment. It’s what everybody is looking for. Maybe you can escape into your own feelings and grief and joys and pain or whatever is happening in your world.

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    Meet Tarell Alvin McCraney, the writer of the play that inspired â€Moonlight’

    Tarell Alvin McCraney wrote the play "In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue," the basis for the new film "Moonlight."
    Tarell Alvin McCraney wrote the play “In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue,” the basis for the new film “Moonlight.”
    (Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)

    For Tarell Alvin McCraney, watching “Moonlight,” which nabbed six Golden Globe nominations Monday, isn’t the wonderfully transformative experience it is for the industry shouting its praises from the rafters. It’s emotional. It’s painful. It’s struggle, embodied. After all, the movie is his life playing out onscreen, with actors as the men and women he knew and loved some 20, 30 years ago: his drug-addicted mother, the local drug dealer turned father figure, the first guy with whom he was ever intimate.

    “It’s a palpable snapshot of memories and dreams that is difficult to sit through,” he said. “The first time I saw it, I went through a pretty bad depression. The second time, I burst into tears midway through. It’s hard. It’s rough.”

    But the difficulty McCraney has in watching the semi-autobiographical tale is what makes it authentic and, as L.A. Times critic Kenneth Turan said in his review, “a film that manages to be both achingly familiar and unlike anything we’ve seen before.”

    McCraney, however, knows it all too well.

    “Moonlight,” written and directed by Barry Jenkins, was adapted from McCraney’s play “In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue.” The film is considered a front-runner for Oscars recognition,

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    Sarah Paulson is nominated for a Golden Globe. She still hasn’t seen â€People v. O.J. Simpson’

    On the heels of a lead actress honor at the Emmy Awards in September for her role as Marcia Clark in “The People v. O.J. Simpson,” Sarah Paulson was nominated for a Golden Globe for her performance. Below, the actress spoke with the L.A. Times on the way to the airport this morning.

    So, you’ve long said that you would watch “The People v. O.J. Simpson” after the Emmys. Have you watched?

    I have not. I know, I know. Well, now it’s going to be after Golden Globes.

    I think it’s a combination of a lot of things. Chiefly, I’m kind of overwhelmed with the response to my work in it. And I’m super hypercritical of myself. I still want to enjoy the exciting celebration of it all and let that be the predominate feeling versus me hating myself for noticing that maybe I didn’t use my left hand like Marcia did. I also don’t want to watch her lose. Even though I know it happens and I played it, I don’t think I can stomach watching it.

    Do you still think about the role?

    I’m still thinking about it and thinking about her. I haven’t moved on simply because it was the greatest role of my life to date. And in coming to get to know Marcia, I have an enormous sense of reverence for her and knowing that this was a true story and how all of these lives were affected.

    There also seems to be a narrative shift for her. I don’t take credit for it. I take credit for helping to bring it to life. But the writers -- it was paramount to them to bring forward the communication of sexism. I think that was very powerful. To be a part of something like that was very rewarding.

    We saw you bring her to the Emmys. Do you think you might take Marcia as your date to the Globes come January?

    I don’t know. For the Emmys, it just never occurred to me to bring anyone else. But for Marcia, that whole red carpet madness is not a comfort spot for her. I had to really ask her to please come. She was going to come if she didn’t have to do the red carpet. And then it became public knowledge that I was bringing her, and then she couldn’t not do the red carpet.

    Ultimately, I think she was pleased with how it all turned out. It could have gone another way had I not won, with us sneaking out the back way.

    Sterling K. Brown was also nominated. But so was his new series, “This Is Us.” I’m so invested in knowing what table he’ll sit at--

    Chrissy Metz [from â€This Is Us’] is also nominated! I heard her name and I literally let out a yelp. I think she is an extraordinary actress—she was in “American Horror Story.”

    It’s always such a thrill when someone has a first time experience. I myself had that experience with “Studio 60.” That was the first time I was recognized. I just know what a meaningful thing it is, so I’m so happy for her.

    But you were asking about Sterling. Oh, that guy is old news -- he’s getting an award every other day!

    We need to get you an arc on â€This Is Us.”

    I want to be on it! Dennis O’Hare was recently on it. Can you make it happen? Can you put this out there?

    Finally, how would you describe the working relationship you have with Ryan Murphy?

    Every single great role I have—in terms of my TV work, has been because of him. This kind of collaboration is not commonplace. I feel incredibly lucky to be in his stable of women.

    The thing about Ryan is he’s incredibly loyal. He has a way of seeing what you’re capable of when you don’t think there’s a shot in hell that you can do something. You’re in a very lucky place when you work with him. He taps things in you that you didn’t know you had. It’s very empowering.

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    â€Loving’ star Ruth Negga shares her Golden Globe nomination with Joel Edgerton and director Jeff Nichols

    Actress Ruth Negga has been nominated for her role in "Loving."
    (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

    Nominated for her performance in the drama “Loving,” actress Ruth Negga responded to being honored by the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. with this statement:

    “I am profoundly grateful for this recognition,” wrote the Ethiopian-Irish actress. “I can’t thank the HFPA enough for their support, this is such an honor. I am humbled to be in the company of all of these extraordinary, talented, and powerful women.

    “It has been such a gift to share Mildred and Richard Loving’s important story with the world. I share this honor with my partner in the film, Joel Edgerton, our incredible director Jeff Nichols and everyone involved in bringing Loving to life.”

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    HBO leads the way with the most Golden Globe nominations

    As it often does at awards shows, HBO leads the pack of Golden Globes TV nominations with 14. The pay cable network won accolades across the board with shows both new and vintage (“Westworld,” “Game of Thrones”), comedy (“Insecure” and “Divorce”) and drama (“The Night Of”) as well at its original films (“All the Way,” “Confirmation.”)

    Thanks to “The People v. O.J. Simpson” and “The Americans,” FX is not far behind.

    Broadcast networks made a decent showing thanks to the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn.’s CW favorites “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” and “Jane the Virgin,” new NBC hit “This is Us” and ABC’s compelling “American Crime,” but CBS and Fox were unable to make a dent.

    Here’s the tally:

    HBO - 14

    FX - 9

    ABC - 5

    Amazon - 5

    AMC - 5

    Netflix - 5

    NBC - 3

    Starz - 3

    The CW - 2

    USA Network - 2

    BBC America - 1

    EPIX - 1

    Showtime - 1

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    Jessica Chastain on Washington’s boys club and how D.C.’s â€most notorious’ lobbyist helped her prepare for â€Miss Sloane’

    Jessica Chastain
    (Liz O. Baylen / Los Angeles Times)

    Jessica Chastain, nominated for a Golden Globe Monday morning for her role in “Miss Sloane,” told The Times’ Tre’vell Anderson that she considers the film an opportunity for Hollywood to shift attitudes about women.

    “I’ve really been looking at the role women have in our society and we, for some reason, attack women for being prepared and ambitious,” Chastain said, noting criticisms Hillary Clinton received during the presidential campaign. “You hear that being said about actresses or musicians or people who really work hard at their profession that are women, but you don’t say that about men. We need to change the perception of women, of what a woman is supposed to be.”

    This film’s very important for women to see, and for young girls to see, to know that they should take their space.

    — Jessica Chastain

    In “Miss Sloane,” Chastain plays a Washington lobbyist who is asked to represent a National Rifle Assn.-esque organization opposing a bill on gun control, but quits to support the backers of the law.

    Anderson asked Chastain about the research she did to tap into her character.

    “Less than 10% of lobbyists in D.C. are women,” she said. “Politics in D.C. can be very much a boys club. So, for me, it was important to meet with female lobbyists because I wanted to know what they go through day-to-day in that town, and in that political system, to get where they are. But first I read Jack Abramoffâ€s book [“Capitol Punishment: The Hard Truth About Washington Corruption From America’s Most Notorious Lobbyist”] — the lobbyist that ended up in jail — because I wanted to understand even what a lobbyist was. Then I Googled and found all these lists of the most successful female lobbyists and just started calling their offices. I got 11 women to agree to meet with me.”

    “Miss Sloane” also makes broader statements about the climate of Washington. How does Chastain describe the film’s message?

    “That the system is rotten, and it needs to be overhauled. Yes, we talk about the gun debate, but the whole movie ... could be about climate change, immigration, controversial subject, because it leads us to the system is broken. The priorities are in the wrong place.”

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    The biggest snubs and surprises from the Golden Globes nominations

    The Golden Globes nominations haven’t been as wildly surprising in recent years as they were in that one year, when “The Tourist” and “Burlesque” were named two of the best comedy/musicals of the season.

    Still, when nominations were announced from the Beverly Hilton on Monday morning, there were plenty of surprises.

    They included Jonah Hill in a movie not many people saw, Viggo Mortensen in a movie even fewer people saw and plenty of love for “Deadpool,” which at least was a movie a lot of people saw.

    Here are six of the bigger snubs and surprises from the film side of the Golden Globes ledger.

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    Complete list of 2017 Golden Globe nominations

    The Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. announced the 2017 Golden Globe nominees Monday morning.

    “La La Land” was the most recognized film of the morning, scoring seven nominations, and “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story” led all television series’ with five nominations.

    The 2017 Golden Globes Awards are scheduled for Jan. 8 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills. Jimmy Fallon has been tapped to host the ceremony that is to air live on NBC.

    Motion picture, drama

    Motion picture, musical or comedy

    • “20th Century Women”
    • “Deadpool” | Review
    • “Florence Foster Jenkins” | Review
    • “La La Land” | Review
    • “Sing Street” | Review

    Television series, drama

    • “The Crown“ | Review
    • “Game of Thrones”
    • “Stranger Things“ | Review
    • “This Is Us“ | Review
    • “Westworld” | Review

    Television series, musical or comedy

    • “Atlanta” | Review
    • “black-ish”
    • “Mozart in the Jungle”
    • “Transparent”
    • “Veep”

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    In defense of Jonah Hill’s Golden Globe nomination

    (Warner Bros. Pictures / Associated Press)

    I’m seeing a lot of head-scratching about Jonah Hill’s nomination for the comic drama “War Dogs.” OK. Not a perfect movie. Maybe not even a good one. But Hill is an absolute force of nature in the film, playing a repellent arms dealer defined by self-hatred and a wheezing cackle of a laugh. It’s one of the year’s best turns.

    Plus: Jonah Hill has a lot of fans. Tom Hanks recently told me: “Jonah Hill is probably the busiest actor on the planet. He was great in â€War Dogs.’ I can never take my eyes off him. I think he’s absolutely amazing. And he can go back and forth between serious movies and funny movies, and he’s always very, very real.”

    So there you go. HFPA voters aren’t the only members of the Jonah Hill Booster Club. Now if they had just nominated Hanks for “Sully” instead of Viggo Mortensen for “Captain Fantastic,” my morning would be even better.

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    Riz Ahmed of â€The Night Of’ thanks â€those who shared their stories of prison and prejudice’ for his Golden Globe nod

    Nominated for best performance by an actor in a limited series or television movie, Riz Ahmed of the HBO miniseries “The Night Of” released a statement Monday morning.

    “Thank you HFPA! I’m absolutely thrilled to be counted amongst this year’s nominees,” he wrote. “I’m deeply indebted to Steve Zaillian, Richard Price, HBO, to all the cast and crew of â€The Night Of’ for their dedication in bringing this timely story to life, and all those who shared their stories of prison and prejudice with me in researching this role.”

    “It was an honour to portray Nas, and through him the untold stories of so many.”

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    There will be emoji: Stars react to Golden Globes nominations

    There’s nothing like scoring a Golden Globe nomination to start a week off right. These stars all turned to Twitter to share their joy and gratitude upon learning that they’d been recognized by the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn.

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    Television’s top nominees include â€The People v. O.J. Simpson’ and â€The Night Manager’

    Clockwise from left, actors John Travolta, Courtney B. Vance, Sarah Paulson and Cuba Gooding Jr. star in "The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story."
    (Christina House / For The Times)

    As expected, the critically acclaimed FX ensemble drama “The People v. O.J. Simpson” cleaned up in the Golden Globes TV nominations, leading the pack with five.

    The Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. once again proved that it likes to champion newer shows with four nods for “The Night Manager,” and three apiece for “The Crown,” “The Night Of” and “This is Us.”

    The only top vote-getter that has been on for more than one season was ABC’s “black-ish,” which scored three.

    Here’s the top of the tally board:

    “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story” - 5

    “The Night Manager” - 4

    “black-ish” - 3

    “The Crown” - 3

    “The Night Of” - 3

    “This Is Us” - 3

    “Westworld” - 3

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    â€Westworld, â€Atlanta’ and Issa Rae among TV newcomers recognized by Golden Globes

    With the benefit of being the first awards show eligible to draw from the new fall season, the Golden Globes again looked to some newcomers for its nominees in the television category.

    As expected, “Atlanta” followed up an acclaimed first season by landing among the nominees for musical or comedy series, and the drama series field includes four new faces competing against HBO’s “Game of Thrones.” They are “The Crown,” “Westworld,” “This Is Us” and “Stranger Things,” which became a pop cultural phenomenon after its debut this summer.

    In the acting categories, the nominations grew even more broad. Billy Bob Thornton was recognized for his work in the Amazon series “Goliath,” and newcomers in the actress field for TV drama included Claire Foy of “The Crown,” Evan Rachel Wood for “Westworld” and Winona Ryder for “Stranger Things.”

    In the TV comedy field, two new series from HBO were recognized in the actress category: “Insecure” creator and star Issa Rae and Sarah Jessica Parker for “Divorce.” The actor field included a nomination for “Atlanta” star and creator Donald Glover alongside a surprise nod for Nick Nolte for the Epix series “Graves.”

    The supporting acting categories also looked to some of television’s new faces. Thandie Newton of “Westworld” was nominated for supporting actress along with two performers from the NBC drama “This Is Us,” Chrissy Metz and Mandy Moore. And John Lithgow joined the field for best supporting actor for his performance in the Netflix series “The Crown.”

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    Lily Collins’ mom snaps the actress seconds after her Golden Globe nomination is announced

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    Natalie Portman says her Golden Globe nomination feels like â€icing on the cake’

    Natalie Portman received a nomination Monday morning for her spell-binding turn as former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy in “Jackie.” In a statement, she expressed her gratitude.

    “I’m so honored to be recognized by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association,” she said. “I had such a beautiful experience making this film with the most wonderful cast and crew, and particularly with our great director, Pablo Larrain, that it feels like icing on the cake to be nominated.”

    Portman’s nomination is the only one the film received.

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    Adorable â€Stranger Things’ kids react adorably to their Golden Globe nomination

    The cast of “Stranger Things” reacts to their Golden Globe nomination.

    People can’t get enough of the cast of “Stranger Things,” whose youthful exuberance can melt even the steeliest hearts.

    Filming has already started on a second season of the Netflix hit, meaning that the show’s young stars were gathered together to watch their series score a Golden Globe nomination for television series - drama.

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    Awards season’s big three -- â€La La Land,’ â€Manchester’ and â€Moonlight’ -- continue to lead the way at Globes

    “La La Land,” “Manchester by the Sea” and “Moonlight” earned Golden Globes nominations for picture, director, writing and acting -- another sign that these three films are the movies to beat this awards season.

    “La La Land” picked up seven nominations, with “Moonlight” getting six and “Manchester” five.

    Surprising showings: Tom Ford’s dark drama “Nocturnal Animals” was a big hit with the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn., picking up two nods for Ford -- directing and screenplay -- as well as a nomination for supporting actor Aaron Taylor Johnson. (Not Michael Shannon? Really?)

    The HFPA also continued to show its loyalty to Mel Gibson, giving his war drama “Hacksaw Ridge” three nominations -- picture, director and lead actor Andrew Garfield. The movie continues to pick up steam leading up to next month’s Oscar nominations.

    Here’s the rundown:

    “La La Land” - 7

    “Moonlight” - 6

    “Manchester by the Sea” - 5

    “Lion” - 4

    “Hacksaw Ridge” - 3

    “Nocturnal Animals” - 3

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    Listen to the nominees for original song

    “How Far I’ll Go” (“Moana”):

    “Can’t Stop the Feeling!” (“Trolls”):

    “Faith” (“Sing”):

    “City of Stars” (“La La Land”):

    “Gold” (“Gold”):

    (Film’s trailer, no video/audio of song nominee available.)

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    Ryan Reynolds responds to â€Deadpool’s’ Golden Globe surprise with a tickle fight

    “Deadpool” was nominated for two Golden Globes on Monday morning, for motion picture - comedy or musical, as well as for Ryan Reynolds’ performance as the snarky superhero.

    The Internet was appropriately excited for the film’s surprise nominations.

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    Matt Damon congratulates â€Manchester by the Sea’ crew on Golden Globe nomination

    Actor Matt Damon onstage during 2015 Toronto International Film Festival.
    (Kevin Winter / Getty Images)

    The first round of congratulations is coming in for the Golden Globes nominees. First up, Matt Damon, producer and almost lead for “Manchester by the Sea” (he reportedly passed on the title part).

      Congratulations to our incredible crew and a deep thank you to Kenny Lonergan and the entire cast who poured their hearts and souls into this, and thank you as well to the HFPA for championing a little movie like ours.

    — Matt Damon, producer

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    How â€La La Land’ composer and Golden Globe nominee Justin Hurwitz found his â€City of Stars’ sound

    Justin Hurwitz composed the music for the musical "La La Land." His guiding question: "Am I going to remember this melody after I've left the movie theater?"
    Justin Hurwitz composed the music for the musical “La La Land.” His guiding question: “Am I going to remember this melody after I’ve left the movie theater?”
    (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)

    “â€La La Land’ was two and a half years of nonstop work, going to bed into the wee hours of the night —  1,900 piano demos. Orchestrating every note myself. An unbelievable amount of work and an unbelievable amount of passion. I had to be so passionate about it to keep up with it. I got sick because I wasn’t sleeping enough.”

    — Justin Hurwitz, composer

    Read the full interview >>

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    Motion picture - comedy or musical

    “20th Century Women”

    “Deadpool”

    “Florence Foster Jenkins”

    “La La Land”

    “Sing Street”

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    Performance by an actor in a limited series or a motion picture made for television

    Courtney B. Vance, “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story”

    Riz Ahmed, “The Night Of”

    John Turturro, “The Night Of”

    Bryan Cranston, “All the Way”

    Tom Hiddleston, “The Night Manager”

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    Motion picture - drama

    “Hacksaw Ridge”

    “Hell or High Water”

    “Lion”

    “Manchester by the Sea”

    “Moonlight”

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    Meryl Streep to receive 2017 Cecil B. DeMille Award

    (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

    Meryl Streep’s elegance, heart and wit have become veritable staples at Hollywood award shows. Over her 40-plus years in film, Streep has racked up a record 29 Golden Globe nominations – eight of which she won. Not to mention Oscars, Emmys and other honors.

    At this year’s Golden Globes, Streep will receive one of her most prestigious accolades to date, the 2017 Cecil B. DeMille Award for “outstanding contributions to the world of entertainment.”

    The Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. has bestowed the Cecil B. DeMille Award upon the industry’s most esteemed entertainers since 1952. At the last Golden Globes, Denzel Washington received it; the year prior, George Clooney. Judy Garland was the first woman to receive a DeMille, in 1962, followed by Joan Crawford in 1970. Only 13 women in all, before Streep, have been honored with the award.

    Streep, who’s often referred to as “the greatest living actress,” is known for playing strong female leads such as Joanna Kramer in “Kramer vs. Kramer,” Sophie Zawitowski in “Sophie’s Choice” and Miranda Priestly in “The Devil Wears Prada,” and the award comes at a time when issues of gender inequities, particularly in Hollywood, have very much been in the national conversation.

    In a statement announcing the award, HFPA President Lorenzo Soria said that Streep’s “enthralling body of work across a diverse set of genres has made her a role model over the past 40 years.”

    Soria also called 67-year-old Streep “a trailblazer” who has “paved the way for women in television, film and stage. For shattering gender and age barriers, all with finesse and grace, the HFPA is humbled to bestow this honor upon her.”

    One can expect that Jan. 8’s ceremony will be infused with a little extra lady power.

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    Director - motion picture

    Damien Chazelle, “La La Land”

    Tom Ford, “Nocturnal Animals”

    Mel Gibson, “Hacksaw Ridge”

    Barry Jenkins, “Moonlight”

    Kenneth Lonergan, “Manchester by the Sea”

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    Performance by an actor in a motion picture - drama

    Denzel Washington, “Fences”

    Casey Affleck, “Manchester by the Sea”

    Joel Edgerton, “Loving”

    Andrew Garfield, “Hacksaw Ridge”

    Viggo Mortensen, “Captain Fantastic”

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    Performance by an actress in a motion picture - musical or comedy

    Hailee Steinfeld, “Edge of Seventeen”

    Annette Bening, “20th Century Women”

    Lily Collins, “Rules Don’t Apply”

    Emma Stone, “La La Land”

    Meryl Streep, “Florence Foster Jenkins”

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    Performance by an actress in a motion picture - drama

    Isabelle Huppert, “Elle”

    Natalie Portman, “Jackie”

    Ruth Negga, “Loving”

    Amy Adams, “Arrival”

    Jessica Chastain, “Miss Sloane”

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    Television series - drama

    “The Crown” - Netflix

    “Stranger Things” - Netflix

    “Westworld” - HBO

    “Game of Thrones” - HBO

    “This Is Us” - NBC

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    Performance by an actor in a television series - drama

    Rami Malek, “Mr. Robot”

    Billy Bob Thornton, “Goliath”

    Bob Odenkirk, “Better Call Saul”

    Matthew Rhys, “The Americans”

    Liev Schreiber, “Ray Donovan”

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    Performance by an actor in a motion picture - musical or comedy

    Colin Farrell, “The Lobster”

    Ryan Gosling, “La La Land”

    Hugh Grant, “Florence Foster Jenkins”

    Jonah Hill, “War Dogs”

    Ryan Reynolds, “Deadpool”

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    Performance by an actress in a supporting role in any motion picture

    Viola Davis, “Fences”

    Naomie Harris, “Moonlight”

    Nicole Kidman, “Lion”

    Octavia Spencer, “Hidden Figures”

    Michelle Williams, “Manchester by the Sea”

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    Performance by an actress in a television series - drama

    Claire Foy, “The Crown”

    Evan Rachel Wood, “Westworld”

    Winona Ryder, “Stranger Things”

    Caitriona Balfe, “Outlander”

    Keri Russell, “The Americans”

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    Actress in a television comedy or musical

    Rachel Bloom, “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend”

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus, “Veep”

    Sarah Jessica Parker, “Divorce”

    Issa Rae, “Insecure”

    Tracee Ellis Ross, “black-ish

    Gina Rodriguez, “Jane the Virgin”

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    Performance by an actress in a limited series or a motion picture made for television

    Sarah Paulson, “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story”

    Kerry Washington, “Confirmation”

    Felicity Huffman, “American Crime”

    Riley Keough, “The Girlfriend Experience”

    Charlotte Rampling, “London Spy”

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    Original score - motion picture

    Justin Hurwitz, “La La Land”

    Jóhann Jóhannsson, “Arrival”

    Nicholas Britell, “Moonlight”

    Dustin O’Halloran, Hauschka, “Lion”

    Benjamin Wallfisch, Pharrell Williams, Hans Zimmer, “Hidden Figures”

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    Animated feature

    “Kubo and the Two Strings”

    “My Life as a Zucchini”

    “Moana”

    “Sing”

    “Zootopia”

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    Performance by an actor in a supporting role in any motion picture

    Mahershala Ali, “Moonlight”

    Jeff Bridges, “Hell or High Water”

    Simon Helberg, “Florence Foster Jenkins”

    Dev Patel, “Lion”

    Aaron Taylor Johnson, “Nocturnal Animals”

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    Television series - comedy or musical

    “Atlanta”

    “black-ish”

    “Mozart in the Jungle”

    “Transparent”

    “Veep”

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    Watch how the announcements for the Golden Globes nominations went down

    Laura Dern, Anna Kendrick and Don Cheadle announced the 2017 Golden Globes nominees before dawn in Los Angeles Monday morning. Did your favorite TV show or movie get a nod? Watch the livestream here:

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    Jimmy Fallon to host the 2017 Golden Globes

    Jimmy Fallon
    (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

    Slow jam this news: Jimmy Fallon is set as the host of the 2017 Golden Globe Awards.

    Whe he got the gig in August, Fallon joked: “I’m really looking forward to spending time with the Hollywood Foreign Press before Donald Trump has them all deported.”

    The “Tonight Show” host follows Ricky Gervais, who emceed the ceremony earlier this year. Fallon’s former “Saturday Night Live” castmates Tina Fey and Amy Poehler hosted in 2015.

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    The Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. will look for respectability in its Golden Globes nominations

    Gina Rodriguez in blue on the red carpet at the 73rd Golden Globe Awards.
    (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

    Remember when predicting the Golden Globes was a simple math equation along the lines of: star power + junket price tag = momination?

    That’s no longer the case as the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. has taken a stab at respectability in recent years, forsaking the likes of Johnny Depp, Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie in favor of critics groups’ favorites. The trend will likely hold this year, as you’ll see in this early look at the front-runners for this year’s nominations, to be announced this morning.

    MOTION PICTURE DRAMA

    “Fences”

    “Manchester by the Sea”

    “Silence”

    “Moonlight”

    “Lion”

    Bubbling under: “Jackie,” “Loving,” “Hacksaw Ridge,” “Nocturnal Animals”

    Analysis: Accepting on faith that Martin Scorsese’s long-gestating epic, “Silence,” will score with a group that has rewarded the director often over the years. Also hedging that Harvey Weinstein’s long-standing HFPA mind-meld puts “Lion” in the fold.

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    How to watch the 2017 Golden Globes announcements

    Lady Gaga with her Golden Globe for actress in a miniseries or a motion picture in 2016.
    Lady Gaga with her Golden Globe for actress in a miniseries or a motion picture in 2016.
    (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

    How can you catch the 2017 nominations? At 5:10 PST, the announcements will be broadcast on ABC, CBS and NBC.

    For those not near a television, the nominations will also be live-streamed in two different places: the Golden Globes official website and via Facebook live on the official Golden Globes Facebook page. Or you can watch it here with us on the Los Angeles Times Golden Globes nominations live blog.

    The 2017 Golden Globes ceremony is set for Jan. 10, to be broadcast by NBC.

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