Penticton Herald

Everything Everywhere All at Once appears ready to sweep the Oscars

- By JAKE COYLE

The unlikely awards-season juggernaut "Everything Everywhere All at Once" marched on at the Screen Actors Guild Awards on Sunday, and even gathered stream with wins not just for best ensemble, Michelle Yeoh and Ke Huy Quan but also for Jamie Lee Curtis.

The SAG Awards, often an Oscar preview, threw some curve balls into the Oscars race in a ceremony streamed lived on Netflix's YouTube page from Fairmont Century Plaza in Los Angeles.

But the clearest result of the SAG Awards was the overwhelmi­ng success of Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert's madcap multiverse tale, which has now used its hotdog fingers to snag top honors from the acting, directing and producing guilds. Only one film ("Apollo 13") had won all three and not gone on to win best picture at the Oscars.

After so much of the cast of "Everything Everywhere All at Once" had already been on the stage to accept awards, the night's final moment belong to 94-year-old James Hong, a supporting player in the film and a trailblaze­r for Asian-American representa­tion in Hollywood. He brought up the ignoble yellowface history of the 1937 film "The Good Earth."

"The leading role was played with these guys with their eyes taped up like this and they talked like this because the producers said the Asians were not good enough and they were not box office," said Hong. "But look at us now!"

Hong added that the cast of "Everything Everywhere All at Once" wasn't all Chinese, though he granted Jamie Lee Curtis had a good Chinese name. Curtis' win was one of the most surprising of the night, coming over the longtime favorite, Angela Bassett ("Black Panther: Wakanda Forever"), who had seemed to be on a clear path to becoming the first actor to win an Oscar for a performanc­e in a Marvel movie.

A visibly moved Curtis said she was wearing the wedding ring her father, Tony Curtis, gave her mother, Janet Leigh.

"I know you look at me and think 'Nepo baby,"' said Curtis, who won in her first SAG nomination. "But the truth of the matter is that I'm 64 years old and this is just amazing."

The actors guild, though, lent some clarity to the lead categories. Though some have seen best actress as a toss up between Yeoh and BAFTA winner Cate Blanchett ("Tar"), Yeoh again took home the award for best female lead performanc­e.

"This is not just for me," said Yeoh, the first Asian actress to win the SAG Award for female lead. "It's for every little girl that looks like me."

Quan, the former child star, also won for best supporting male actor. He had left acting for years after auditions dried up. He's also the first Asian to win best male supporting actor at the SAG Awards.

"When I stepped away from acting, it was because there were so few opportunit­ies," said Quan. "Now, tonight we are celebratin­g James Hong, Michelle Yeoh, Stephanie Hsu, Hong Chau, Harry Shum Jr. The landscape looks so different now."

Best actor has been one of the hardest races to call. Austin Butler ("Elvis"), Brendan Fraser ("The Whale") and Colin Farrell ( "The Banshees of Inisherin" ) have all been seen as possible winners. But it was Fraser who went home with the SAG Award for his comeback performanc­e as an obese shut-in in "The Whale."

"Believe me, if you just stay in there and put one foot in front of the other, you'll get where you need to go," said Fraser, who anxiously eyed the actor-shaped trophy and left the stage saying he was going to go look for some pants for him.

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