The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Pre-taped SAG Awards go for spirit of live ceremonies past

- By Lynn Elber

With the Screen Actors Guild Awards days away, producers gathered for final appraisal of a fast-paced montage honoring the nominees that include Olivia Colman, Sacha Baron Cohen and the late Chadwick Boseman.

“I can’t wait to see all of the pieces come together, I think this is going to be really lovely,” Elizabeth McLaughlin, an actor (“Hand of God”) and SAG awards committee member, said of Sunday’s ceremony airing at 9 p.m. EDT on TNT and TBS.

The meeting was virtual and the SAG event will be pre-taped, bowing to the pandemic that has upended the entertainm­ent industry’s awards season. For the SAG honors, the challenge became how to evoke the tradition of ceremonies past.

Key among them: the hallmark “I Am an Actor” declaratio­n that stars make to the camera on awards night, sometimes paired with a brief career anecdote. That staple inspired this year’s docuseries-style segments celebratin­g actors and their craft.

“Very early on, we were really struggling with what the show would look like and we went through,

I don’t know how many, different iterations and concepts,” said Jon Brockett, a longtime producer of the ceremony and the guild’s national director of programmin­g.

“It was the network that really pushed us to think out of the box this year,” Brockett said. “What we came up with, and the network ended up loving, was this reimaginin­g of the ‘I Am an Actor’ stories which typically opened our show.”

Jason George, who plays Dr. Ben Warren on “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Station 19” and is a SAG awards committee member, suggested some big stars may have joined in because of their lockdown-induced doldrums.

“In a normal year, I don’t know we would have gotten them. I think everybody was ready to let their hair down and put it out there,” George said, without dropping names. “There’s a lot of fun things that... (will) make you smile and think, ‘OK, I don’t care how famous you are, you’re in this with me.’”

For the mini-docs, the goal was to create an engaging narrative with actors’ recollecti­ons on specific themes or topics and adhere to a high production standard. That meant actors had to agree to work with inperson camera crews.

In short, Zoom was out.

“They trusted us, they just wanted to understand” why they couldn’t contribute online, said Maggie Barrett Caulfield, veteran talent booker for the ceremony. “Once we let them know that we were expanding on that incredible signature of ‘I Am an Actor’” and how it would be done, she said, many were game.

Tapings took place at actors’ homes or on sets, and precaution­s against COVID-19 included keeping crew to a minimum and coronaviru­s testing, Barrett Caulfield said.

Helen Mirren waited patiently in her backyard for a pesky helicopter to pass so taping could resume without the overhead buzz. Daveed Diggs, in production on the TNT series “Snowpierce­r,” made time for an interview, with the series’ virus-vetted crew enlisted to record it.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jon Brockett, a producer for the 27th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards, poses for a photo in Los Angeles on March 25, 2021. The Screen Actors Guild Awards airs Sunday at 9 p.m. EDT on TNT and TBS.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jon Brockett, a producer for the 27th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards, poses for a photo in Los Angeles on March 25, 2021. The Screen Actors Guild Awards airs Sunday at 9 p.m. EDT on TNT and TBS.

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