Chadwick Boseman, Andra Day, Chloé Zhao Earn Milestone Golden Globe Wins
For three hours on Sunday night (February 28), the entertainment world took part in one of its time-honored awards-season traditions: enjoying the self-aware celeb fest that is the
Golden Globes. This year, though, by means of the a hybrid East Coast-West Coast broadcast that featured a live audience along with a fleet of Hollywood big-timers calling in by way of the Zoom, the show was far less about ego-puncturing jokes and alternatively more concerned with pointing out the systemic failures of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, which has had
no Black members in nearly 20 years.
This elephant in the gilded room was brought up numerous times, including by winner Sacha Baron Cohen and co-host Tina Fey
during her monologue with fellow show anchor Amy Poehler. It was even acknowledged by HFPA members themselves at a key moment throughout the show any time once they vowed to “create an environment where diversity is the norm, not the exception.”
And though things got off to a rocky begin as soon as Best Supporting Efficiency in a Motion Picture, Drama winner Daniel Kaluuya's mic was initially muted while in his acceptance speech — prompting the
Judas and the Black Messiah star to exclaim,
"You're doing me dirty!" any time finally given the floor — things resumed as much normalcy as they could've, given the dystopian breakout rooms actors, writers, and directors were placed in alongside their fellow nominees. That led to some rather meme-able moments: a hoodied Jason Sudeikis
rambling on (to Ramy Youssef's puzzlement),
pet cameos courtesy of Sarah Paulson and Emma Corrin,
normcore Jeff Daniels. It also lent itself to moments both touching and celebratory, as winners like
The United States vs. Billie Holiday's Andra Day,
Nomadland director Chloé Zhao, and the late
Chadwick Boseman reached key milestones in Globes history.
At the end of the night, Day picked up the award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture, Drama for her portrayal of jazz legend Holiday, beating out heavyweights like Viola Davis, Frances McDormand, and more. The moment was seismic, with her loved ones around her exploding into cheers and Day herself choking up through a litany of thank yous. "God bless y'all. Thank y'all so much," she mentioned, marking what was a milestone victory. For her take on Holiday, Day became
only the second Black woman to win in that category and the opening since Whoopi Goldberg for 1985's
The Color Purple.
Earlier in the night, another actor was honored for his commitment to telling the tale of a Black musician, albeit a fictional one, on the screen. Boseman, who
died in August 2020 of colon cancer, won for Best Actor in a Motion Picture, Drama, making him the opening Black actor to ever receive the honor posthumously. His partner, Simone Ledward Boseman, accepted on his behalf in an exceptionally moving moment that paid tribute to both her late husband's accomplishments and the work of his coworkers.
"He would mention something cute, something inspiring, something that would amplify that little voice indoors of all of you that tells you could, that tells you to keep going, that calls you back to what you are meant to be doing at this moment in history," she said.
One of the night's other key victories was for Zhao, whose
Nomadland is a moving and often desolate portrait of Residents of the
U.S. On the fringe. The film took the night's top honor of
Best Motion Picture, Drama, and Zhao herself became the opening Asian woman to win Best Director. In that category, she faced two other females — Emerald Fennell for
Promising Young Woman and Regina King for
One Night in Miami — for the initial time in the awards' history.
Zhao was also the opening woman to clinch the award since Barbra Streisand won for 1983's
Yentl. In her speech, she incorporated words from one of the film's real-life nomads, Bob Wells, and discussed about what they mean to her career. "This is why I fell in love with making movies and telling stories, 'cause they give us a chance to laugh and cry with each other Zhao mentioned, "and they give us a chance to learn from each other and to have more compassion for each other."
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