San Diego Union-Tribune

ZHAO BECOMES 2ND WOMAN TO WIN GLOBE FOR DIRECTING

‘Nomadland’ also earns honors as best movie drama

- BY SARAH BAHR Bahr writes for The Associated Press. The Los Angeles Times contribute­d to this report.

Chloe Zhao became the second woman to win best director at the Golden Globes in a year in which three women were nominated for the first time in the category.

Zhao was honored for her work on “Nomadland,” about people who take to the road and move from place to place seeking work for usually low wages. It stars twotime Oscar winner Frances McDormand and includes nonprofess­ional actors.

It also won as best motion picture drama.

“I especially want to thank the nomads who shared their stories with us,” Zhao said, accepting the directing honor virtually on Sunday night.

She singled out real-life nomad Bob Wells, who appears in the movie, for help with her remarks.

“This is what he said about compassion,” Zhao said. “Compassion is the breakdown of all the barriers between us. A heart to heart pounding. Your pain is my pain. It’s mingled and shared between us.”

The 38-year-old director who lives in Los Angeles is a leading Oscar contender for “Nomadland,” which is in select theaters and streaming on Hulu.

“Now this is why I fell in love with making movies and telling stories because it gives us a chance to laugh and cry together and it gives us a chance to learn from each other and to have more compassion for each other,” Zhao said in her acceptance remarks. “So thank you everyone who made it possible to do what I love.”

She joins Barbra Streisand, who won in 1984 for “Yentl,” as the only women to win directing honors at the Globes. Until this year, just five women had been nominated in the category.

Three years ago Globes presenter Natalie Portman wryly congratula­ted the “allmale nominees” in the running for that year’s director award during the televised awards show, calling attention to the stark gender imbalance that marks the Globes’ legacy and that of the entertainm­ent industry at large.

Regina King (“One Night in Miami”) and Emerald Fennell (“Promising Young Woman”) joined Zhao among this year’s nominees.

Zhao was nominated for best motion picture screenplay and lost to Aaron Sorkin. McDormand received a nod for actress in a motion picture drama, but lost.

Zhao’s nomination marked another first: The Chinese-born filmmaker is the first woman of Asian descent to compete in the category. “Nomadland” is her third feature following the indie dramas “The Rider” and “Songs My Brothers Taught Me.”

She has directed Marvel’s “The Eternals,” which is scheduled to open this fall following COVID-19 delays.

 ?? PETER KRAMER NBC ?? “Nomadland” director Chloe Zhao accepts her Golden Globe via video link on Sunday night as Bryce Dallas Howard watches onstage in New York.
PETER KRAMER NBC “Nomadland” director Chloe Zhao accepts her Golden Globe via video link on Sunday night as Bryce Dallas Howard watches onstage in New York.

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