The National - News

Golden Globes awards put solidarity on the red carpet

▶ Will Hollywood stars’ call for equality and an end to abuse be enough to effect real change?

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After a series of sexual assault allegation­s toppled such industry giants as Harvey Weinstein and Kevin Spacey, the eyes of the world descended on Hollywood for the 75th annual Golden Globes. The atmosphere was sombre, the outfits funereal. A number of stars brought race and gender equality activists, including Tarana Burke, the founder of the #MeToo movement condemning sexual harassment. Others promoted the Time’s Up initiative, which calls for equality and justice across all levels of society. Oprah Winfrey made a speech so rousing it spurred calls for a presidenti­al run. Throughout, hope and introspect­ion abounded. Yet concrete change is more elusive where discrimina­tion is concerned. Accepting a lifetime achievemen­t award, Winfrey recalled Sidney Poitier’s Oscar win in 1964, the first awarded to a black actor. “I’d never seen a black man being celebrated like that,” she said. More than five decades later, Winfrey, winner of an honorary Oscar in 2011, had just become the first black woman to win the Cecil B DeMille award at the Golden Globes.

The sentiments encapsulat­ed by the #MeToo and Time’s Up campaigns transcend Hollywood and the US. Influentia­l heads have rolled and the movements have had unexpected and far-reaching consequenc­es. This week BBC China editor Carrie Gracie published an open letter of resignatio­n, citing a “secretive and illegal pay culture” that favours men. She will no doubt galvanise others. Wage inequality remains a persistent and damaging fact of the contempora­ry workplace.

Political stances are not new to Hollywood. In 1973, Marlon Brando declined an Oscar, sending activist Sacheen Littlefeat­her in his place to highlight the industry’s mistreatme­nt of native Americans. In 2017, best documentar­y winner Ezra Edelman dedicated his Oscar to victims of police violence. The year before that, Leonardo DiCaprio demanded action on climate change in his victory speech. Ultimately, these statements yielded very little. But with more participan­ts, shifting public opinion, social media vigour and clear relevance for women worldwide, the prevalent mood at the Golden Globes has more potential to take hold. And given the sway of Hollywood’s luminaries in the US and abroad, onlookers would be advised to curb their scepticism. Times may well be changing.

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