Lethbridge Herald

Awards season clashes with Trump address

- Jake Coyle

While Sunday’s Golden Globes were notable for their lack of political speeches, Donald Trump couldn’t be avoided at Tuesday night’s National Board of Review Awards which, it turned out, were scheduled concurrent­ly with the president’s nationally televised address advocating for a border wall with Mexico.

The awkward timing made for a ceremony that seldom strayed far from politics. Most of the previously announced winners at the star-studded, untelevise­d gala at Cipriani’s in Manhattan — including Lady Gaga of “A Star Is Born” and director Peter Farrelly of “Green Book” — made some mention or allusion to Trump and his policies.

Barry Jenkins, accepting the award for best adapted screenplay for James Baldwin’s “If Beale Street Could Talk,” happened to take the stage as Trump was addressing the nation from the Oval Office.

“Literally right now the president is talking about walls and borders. I don’t know how this happened. So I can’t help but talk about the president and borders and all these walls,” said the “Moonlight” director. “There’s a film being celebrated called ‘Minding the Gap,’ by Bing Liu. Bing Liu and his family emigrated here. The president does not want them here.”

Jenkins also cited two of the year’s most acclaimed movies — Chloe Zhao’s “The Rider” and Alfonso Cuaron’s “Roma” — as other brilliant films made by immigrant filmmakers that Trump would dismiss. He concluded by quoting Baldwin — “One can only face in others what one can face in oneself” — and declaring “No walls. No borders,” along with an expletive directed at Trump.

The annual dinner was hosted by Willie Geist and put on by the National Board of Review, a 109-year-old organizati­on of film enthusiast­s, academics and profession­als. It’s one of the many traditiona­l stops in Hollywood’s awards season. While it has little bearing on the Oscars race, the NBRs can be a frothy pit-stop between other honours and a welcome chance to polish acceptance speeches that might have gone unused at the Globes.

Both Lady Gaga (best actress) and Bradley Cooper (best director) were presented with awards two days after their film went home with a disappoint­ing solitary Globe. Cooper was introduced by Steven Spielberg, who lauded Cooper’s directoria­l debut as a birth of a filmmaking talent. “Bradley’s a survivor and Bradley’s a sponge,” Spielberg said.

Introducin­g Gaga was Stephen Colbert, who happily noted that “being here meant I had to miss the president’s stupid speech.” In lengthy and poised remarks that lasted 13 minutes, Gaga said she was very different from her character.

“I knew that although she was a strong woman, she would feel the pressures to succumb to what other’s saw her future as, whereas in my career I have over and over tried to subvert the influence of powerful men in my life had on me and create something unexpected all on my own,” said Gaga. “If they told me to go left, I would take a sharp, sharp right.”

Her co-star Sam Elliott was also celebrated Tuesday as best supporting actor. The 74-year-old actor’s speech, spoken in Elliott’s trademark, modest drawl, earned the night’s most raucous standing ovation.

For Farrelly’s 1960s interracia­l road trip “Green Book,” which won best film (comedy or musical) at the Globes, it was another night of celebratio­n. The NBRs bestowed best picture and best actor (Viggo Mortensen) on the divisive film despite complaints over its racial sensitivit­y and its authentici­ty. “Green Book” got another boost earlier Tuesday, too, when Farrelly was selected among the five directors nominated by the Director’s Guild for its annual — and often quite predictive — honours.

Farrelly said he hoped his film, made as a feel-good throwback, could bring people together — as he hoped a future president could, too.

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