'Oppenheimer' triumphs at Golden Globes as Hollywood parties again
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[January 08, 2024]
By Lisa Richwine and Danielle Broadway
BEVERLY HILLS, California (Reuters) -Historical drama "Oppenheimer"
dominated the Golden Globe awards on Sunday, and gothic comedy "Poor
Things" upset summer blockbuster "Barbie," as Hollywood threw its
biggest party since labor disputes shut down much of show business last
year.
"Oppenheimer," about the making of the atomic bomb, landed five honors,
including the coveted best movie drama prize and acting awards for stars
Cillian Murphy and Robert Downey Jr.
Christopher Nolan won his first Golden Globe award for best director for
the film, which was distributed by Comcast's Universal Pictures.
"I am so pleased that Chris has been acknowledged because I just think
that what he does is unlike anything anyone else is doing,"
"Oppenheimer" producer Emma Thomas said on stage.
She said Nolan, who is her husband, "brings the best out in people by
being the very best himself."
"Poor Things," starring Emma Stone as a deceased woman revived by
scientists, won best movie musical or comedy.
Awards watchers had widely expected that honor to go to "Barbie," the
female empowerment story inspired by the iconic doll that topped 2023
box office charts and went into the night with a leading nine
nominations. Stone also was named best actress in a movie comedy or
musical.
"Barbie" went home with just two awards, for Billie Eilish's song "What
Was I Made For" and for a new category called cinematic and box office
achievement, created for widely seen films.
The winners were chosen by roughly 300 entertainment journalists who
voted on the honors as a part of a new organization created after an
ethics and diversity scandal among Globe voters.
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Lily Gladstone, best actress winner for her role in "Killers of the
Flower Moon" began her acceptance speech by introducing herself in the
Native American language she learned in school.
"This is an historic win," Gladstone continued in English. "It doesn't
belong to just me. I am holding it right now with all my beautiful
sisters."
She thanked director Martin Scorsese as well as Leonardo DiCaprio and
Robert De Niro, her co-stars in the story about the murders of members
of the Osage Nation in the 1920s.
"You are all changing things," Gladstone said.
Other acting winners included Paul Giamatti and Da'Vine Joy Randolph for
"The Holdovers," a comedy set at a boys boarding school.
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Christopher Nolan and Emma Thomas pose with the awards for Best
Director and Best Motion Picture - Drama at the 81st Annual Golden
Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., January 7, 2024.
REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
 In television categories,
"Succession" was named best drama and led all series with four wins,
including a lead acting honor for Kieran Culkin. "Suck it, Pedro!"
Culkin joked to competitor Pedro Pascal from "The Last of Us."
"The Bear," about the struggles of owning a restaurant, won best TV
comedy and acting trophies for stars Jeremy Allen White and Ayo
Edebiri.
Road-rage story "Beef" landed the Globe for limited series.
The glitzy ceremony at the Beverly Hilton kicked off Hollywood's
annual awards season, which culminates with the Oscars on March 10,
and brought top stars together for the first time after six months
of strikes by actors and writers in 2023.
The event gave performers the chance to mingle and to publicize
their movies and TV shows after months when red carpets and other
promotion was prohibited.
Jo Koy, a comedian hosting his first major awards show, opened the
ceremony, broadcast live on CBS, with jabs at some of the A-list
stars and their projects.
"Oppenheimer," a historical drama running three hours long, "needed
another hour," Koy joked. "I felt like it needed some more backstory."
Known as a boozy celebration more relaxed than the Academy Awards,
the Globes nearly disappeared. A 2021 Los Angeles Times report
revealed ethical lapses and a lack of diversity among the roughly 80
members of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the group that
previously voted on the Globes. The 2022 ceremony was scrapped while
the organization made reforms.
Sunday's turnout showed Hollywood had re-embraced the Globes as a
key stop on the awards campaign trail. In the crowd were several
Hollywood legends from Meryl Streep to Robert De Niro and Jodie
Foster, all Globe nominees vying for Oscars this year.
Pop superstar Taylor Swift joined the crowd as a nominee for her
recent concert film. Oprah Winfrey presented the night's top prize
to "Oppenheimer."
Several winners commented that the talent in the room made the crowd
"intimidating."
"I can't believe I'm in this room with all these people I have loved
so much, admired so much, for so long," "The Bear" star White said
as he accepted his award. "It's unreal."
(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; Editing by Mary Milliken and Jonathan
Oatis)
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