Orlando Sentinel

‘Three Billboards’ sweeps SAG Awards

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The Western-inspired revenge tale “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” swept the female-focused and female-led Screen Actors Guild Awards on Sunday with wins for best ensemble, best actress for Frances McDormand and best supporting actor for Sam Rockwell.

It was almost an exact repeat of the major Golden Globe Awards wins with Gary Oldman also winning best actor for his portrayal of Winston Churchill in “Darkest Hour” and Allison Janney taking supporting actress for playing Tonya Harding’s mother in “I, Tonya.”

As with many of the awards shows this season, it was the treatment of women in Hollywood that stayed at the forefront of the show, which featured nearly all female presenters and Kristen Bell as inaugural host.

“We are living in a watershed moment,” Bell said in her opening monologue, which stayed light and mostly clear of politics. “Let’s make sure that we’re leading the charge with empathy and diligence.”

With many prominent men in Hollywood facing sexual misconduct accusation­s, virtually every aspect of awards season has been affected by the scandal.

Both James Franco and Aziz Ansari two weeks ago won Golden Globe Awards while wearing Time’s Up pins before being accused of sexual misconduct and, in Ansari’s case, aggressive sexual behavior by an anonymous accuser. Both were nominated Sunday and lost, Franco to Oldman and Ansari to William H. Macy for “Shameless.”

 ?? VINCE BUCCI/INVISION ?? Frances McDormand accepts a SAG Award for her role in “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.”
VINCE BUCCI/INVISION Frances McDormand accepts a SAG Award for her role in “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.”

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