'Three Billboards' wins big as Golden
Globes power through sex scandal
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[January 08, 2018]
By Jill Serjeant
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Dark drama "Three
Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri" was the big winner with four Golden
Globes awards on Sunday on a night marked by scathing jokes about sexual
harassment and passionate odes to those breaking their silence.
Mother-daughter comedy "Lady Bird" was named best comedy film and the
indie A24 movie's star Saoirse Ronan won for comedy actress.
Gary Oldman was named best drama movie actor for his role as British
wartime leader Winston Churchill in Focus Features' "Darkest Hour" and
Frances McDormand took home the award for drama actress for her role as
an angry mother seeking vengeance in Fox Searchlight's "Three
Billboards."
James Franco won the comedy actor award for his cult movie homage "The
Disaster Artist," also from A24. Mexican director Guillermo del Toro won
best director for magical fantasy "The Shape of Water."
However, the night was dominated not by who took home prizes but by
jokes and speeches about the sexual misconduct scandal that has rocked
Hollywood.
"Happy New Year Hollywood! It's 2018. Marijuana is finally allowed and
sexual harassment finally isn't," quipped Globes host Seth Meyers in his
opening remarks, bringing wild applause from the A-list audience in
Beverly Hills.
Multiple allegations against actors, filmmakers and Hollywood agents
since October 2017 have led to many of the accused being fired, forced
to step down, or dropped from creative projects.
Referring to the male nominees gathered in Beverly Hills for the top
television and movie awards, Meyers said: "This is the first time in
three months it won't be terrifying to hear your name read out loud."
The evening began with the normally colorful red carpet transformed into
a sea of black gowns as every actress showed solidarity with victims of
sexual harassment inside and outside the entertainment industry. Many
have given their own harrowing accounts. [L1N1P300D]
Women kept up the theme inside the Beverly Hilton ballroom.
"This year, we became the story," Oprah Winfrey said in a rousing speech
while accepting the annual lifetime achievement award.
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The cast and producers of "The Handmaid's Tale" pose with the awards
they won for Best Television Series - Drama. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
McDormand said she was proud to be a woman in the industry. "It's
great to be here and be part of the tectonic shift in our industry's
power structure," she said.
Laura Dern, a supporting actress winner for "Big Little Lies," said:
"May we teach our children that speaking out without retribution is
our culture's new north star."
The HBO TV series was one of several female-driven winners on
Sunday.
The Golden Globes ceremony, the first of the major awards shows in
the run-up to the Oscars in March, marked the first big test for how
Hollywood would handle the scandal.
Meyers joked that, as the first of the hosts, he felt like "the
first dog they shot into outer space."
He appeared to have found the right balance, getting cheers in the
room and warm early reviews. Industry website Deadline.com said
Meyers "deftly executed a seemingly impossible task," while E! News
said he "made lemonade out of lemons."
Dystopian tale "The Handmaid's Tale" won best TV drama series and
"The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel," Amazon's new series about a 1950s
housewife who become a stand-up comedian, took best TV comedy or
musical series. [L1N1P3046]
Fox Searchlight and parent company Twentieth Century Fox were the
big winners in terms of studios, with their films winning seven
awards. Indie movie studio A24 had three.
(Additional reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy and Nichola Groom; Editing
by Sandra Maler and Paul Tait)
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