Golden Globes 2020: Live Updates – The New York Times

Here’s what you need to know:

  • Ricky Gervais is hosting the night’s festivities.
  • Netflix has a chance to dominate.
  • Renée Zellweger and Joaquin Phoenix are likely to win.
  • Ellen DeGeneres and Tom Hanks receive accolades.
  • ‘Parasite’ wins best foreign film.
  • HBO’s ‘Succession’ wins best TV drama.

Ricky Gervais is hosting the night’s festivities.

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Credit…Paul Drinkwater/NBC, via Getty Images

Tom Hanks seemed to sum up the response in the audience. When the camera showed him, he had both cheeks filled with air and a get-me-out-of-here look on his face.

The night’s first award amounted to a showdown between old and new Hollywood, with HBO’s Bill Hader (“Barry”) going up against Hulu’s Ramy Youssef, the Egyptian-American star of the little-seen “Ramy,” for best actor in a TV musical or comedy. Youssef won. “Look, I know you guys haven’t seen my show,” he said from the stage, to polite laughter in the star-studded ballroom.

Phoebe Waller-Bridge (“Fleabag”) collected the Globe for best actress in a television musical or comedy. “Thank you for picking up this little scrap of a show,” she said to Amazon, which runs the series on its streaming service. The show also won best musical or comedy.

Jared Harris was expected to collect the Globe for best actor in a limited series for his “Chernobyl” scientist, but the award went to Russell Crowe (Showtime’s “The Loudest Voice”), who skipped the ceremony amid wildfires in his native Australia. Jennifer Aniston, presenting the award with Reese Witherspoon, shared a statement from Crowe, which read in part, “Make no mistake, the tragedy unfolding in Australia is climate-change based.”

The Golden Globes are nothing if not maddeningly mixed in their messaging. For the first time, a Netflix movie viewed mostly on TV sets and mobile devices, “The Irishman,” is expected to win the best drama prize. But the givers of the Globes, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, also hand out a trophy for best comedy or musical. An old-fashioned studio movie, Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” (Sony), is likely to win that contest. Tarantino collected the Globe for best screenplay, beating Noah Baumbach’s “Marriage Story” (Netflix).

Streaming video services collected 50 nominations, a 100 percent increase from last year. Netflix went into the night with 34 nods, including six for Noah Baumbach’s searing “Marriage Story,” the most of any movie, and five for “The Irishman,” Martin Scorsese’s leisurely gangster yarn. Another Netflix drama, the well-reviewed two-hander “The Two Popes,” was recognized in four categories.

Laura Dern won best supporting actress for her portrayal of a hard-charging divorce lawyer in “Marriage Story.”

But the hard-campaigning streaming giant has spoilers from traditional studios in its midst. Competing against the three Netflix films for best drama are “Joker” (Warner Bros.), which portrays the DC Comics villain as sharing the psychological traits of real-life mass shooters, and “1917” (Universal), Sam Mendes’s visually stunning World War I epic.

Be prepared for audible gasps in the room if it doesn’t go Scorsese’s way.

Netflix also has a shot in the comedy category with the Eddie Murphy vehicle “Dolemite Is My Name.” But legacy studios are represented by Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” (Sony), the Nazi satire “Jojo Rabbit” (Fox Searchlight), the whodunit “Knives Out” (Lionsgate) and the musical fantasia “Rocketman” (Paramount).

Renée Zellweger and Joaquin Phoenix are likely to win.

Nothing is certain when it comes to the Globes, but Renée Zellweger is as close to a sure thing as it gets. She is nominated for best actress in a drama for her heartbreaking portrayal of a middle-aged Judy Garland in “Judy.” Other nominees in the category are Cynthia Erivo (“Harriet”), Charlize Theron (“Bombshell”), Scarlett Johansson (“Marriage Story”) and Saoirse Ronan (“Little Women”).

On the men’s side, Joaquin Phoenix should be prepping his sure-to-be-awkward acceptance speech for his demented transformation in “Joker.” He’s up against Christian Bale (“Ford v Ferrari”), Antonio Banderas (“Pain and Glory”), Adam Driver (“Marriage Story”) and Jonathan Pryce (“The Two Popes”) for best actor in a drama.

Murphy is the favorite to win best comedic actor for playing a struggling comedian who comes up with a blaxploitation hit in “Dolemite.” But some awards handicappers were expecting an upset, with either Taron Egerton (“Rocketman”) or Leonardo DiCaprio (“Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood”) called to the stage. Other candidates in the category are Daniel Craig (“Knives Out”) and the young Roman Griffin Davis (“Jojo Rabbit”).

In recent years, stars like Oprah Winfrey and Meryl Streep have appeared on the Globes stage to accept lifetime achievement awards and have unleashed cris de coeur about politics and sexual harassment. This time around, the foreign press association seemed to make a statement about a need for niceness. The lifetime achievement honorees were Tom Hanks and Ellen DeGeneres, both of whom are known more for uniting than for dividing.

In presenting the Globe to DeGeneres, the “Saturday Night Live” star Kate McKinnon spoke about what it meant to her, as a young lesbian, to see DeGeneres come out of the closet. “The only thing that made it less scary was seeing Ellen on TV,” McKinnon said. “Attitudes change, but only because brave people like Ellen DeGeneres jump into the fire to make them change.”

DeGeneres fought back tears, thanked McKinnon and joked the same was true for her watching Carol Burnett: “Every time she pulled her ear, I knew she was saying, ‘It’s O.K. I’m gay, too.”

Hanks, who was battling a cold, choked up once while talking about his family and a second time while reflecting on the process of moviemaking. He said some of the best advice he had ever received came while he was a fledgling actor. “Your job is to show up on time, know the text and have a head full of ideas,” Hanks recounted.

‘Parasite’ wins best foreign film.

The foreign press association was beaten to a pulp on social media for putting forward an all-male slate of director honorees and overlooking women like Greta Gerwig (“Little Women”) and Lulu Wang (“The Farewell”), among others. The lack of awards recognition for female filmmakers is a problem that extends beyond the 88-member foreign press association; women could also be excluded by Oscar voters this year.

But with giants like Scorsese and Tarantino in the mix, there has been little oxygen left for any other filmmakers on the awards trail.

Globe voters could have thrown a curve ball and awarded the best director trophy to Bong Joon Ho for “Parasite.” Bong, the 50-year-old Korean filmmaker, created a genre-defying gem that dazzled critics. But the directing prize went to Mendes for “1917,” which will not see a wide release in theaters until Friday.

“Parasite” did win best foreign film. “Once you overcome the one-inch tall barrier of subtitles you will be introduced to so many more amazing films.” Bong said, speaking in Korean with the assistance of an onstage translator.

HBO’s ‘Succession’ wins best TV drama.

It was a good night for HBO. “Chernobyl” won best limited series and “Succession,” the network’s deliriously well-reviewed drama about a feuding media dynasty, won the best TV drama prize. One thank-you stood out: Jesse Armstrong, the “Succession” showrunner, name-checked Richard Plepler, the former HBO chief who recently announced he would be working exclusively for Apple TV Plus.

Apple, which is hoping to become a player on the awards scene, had two chances in the best actress in a drama category. Jennifer Aniston and her “Morning Show” castmate Reese Witherspoon were both nominated. But Olivia Colman won for her stiff-upper-lip portrayal of Queen Elizabeth on Netflix’s “The Crown.”

“I already got a little bit boozy because I didn’t think this was going to happen,” Colman said.

John Koblin contributed reporting from New York.

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