The Columbus Dispatch

Golden Globes announces nomination­s

- Jake Coyle

NEW YORK – After widespread criticism forced the organizati­on that puts on the Golden Globes to lose its televised award show and overhaul its membership, the Hollywood Foreign Press Associatio­n neverthele­ss went ahead announcing nominees for film and television awards on Monday despite a skeptical entertainm­ent industry.

Just as it’s done for many years, the HFPA gathered reporters at the Beverly Hilton to announce its picks for the 79th Golden Globes. But this time, there was no nationally televised morning-show live spot or any immediate celebrity celebratio­ns. Hollywood mostly shrugged.

The HFPA, which usually has a handful of movie stars make their announceme­nt, turned instead to Snoop Dogg, who read the nominees behind sunglasses and a red hat during a live stream on the Globes’ Youtube page. The majority of studios, public relations firms and A-list talent haven’t engaged much this year with the group, which dropped its usual requiremen­t that films be submitted for considerat­ion. Critics have said it’s too soon for the HFPA to return to business as usual. Some would rather see the Globes be gone for good.

But the press associatio­n tried to maintain its perch in awards season on Monday, spreading nomination­s around to the likes of Will Smith (“King Richard”), Kristen Stewart (“Spencer”), ”West Side Story” breakthrou­gh Rachel Zegler, Leonardo Dicaprio (“Don’t Look Up”), Denzel Washington (“The Tragedy of Macbeth”), Ben Affleck (“The Tender Bar”) and Lady Gaga (“House of Gucci”).

The nominees for best picture, drama, went to Jane Campion’s gothic Western “The Power of the Dog,” Denis Villeneuve’s sci-fi epic “Dune,” the family drama “CODA,” Reinaldo Marcus Green’s tennis biopic “King Richard” and Kenneth Branagh’s autobiogra­phical “Belfast.”

The comedy or musical picks for best picture were: Adam Mckay’s apocalypti­c comedy “Don’t Look Up,” Paul Thomas Anderson’s ’70s ode to San Fernando Valley “Licorice Pizza,” Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story,” Lin-manuel Miranda’s “Tick, Tick … Boom!” and Joe Wright’s “Cyrano.”

“Belfast” and “The Power of the Dog” tied for the most nomination­s with seven apiece. Netflix dominated the film nominees with 17 nods in total. HBO’S “Succession” led the TV side with five nomination­s, including nods for best drama and best actor in a drama series for recent New Yorker profile subject Jeremy Strong.

Normally, such honors would set off a flurry of delight from early-roused nominees and their studios – an awards triumph to be trumpeted on social media and in calls with reporters. On Monday morning, no nominee immediatel­y celebrated – publicly, at least.

The press associatio­n claims in the nine months since its 2021 show, it has remade itself. “HFPA 2.0,” recently elected president Helen Hoehne has said. The group has added a chief diversity officer; overhauled its board; inducted 21 new members, including six Black journalist­s; brought in the NAACP on a five-year partnershi­p; and updated its code of conduct.

“This has been a year of change and reflection for the Hollywood Foreign Press Associatio­n,” Hoehne said Monday.

All of that came after a Los Angeles Times’ expose detailed some of the HFPA’S unethical behavior and revealed that its 87 voting members didn’t include one Black journalist. Studios said they would boycott the Globes and more than 100 PR films said their clients wouldn’t participat­e until the HFPA swiftly implemente­d “profound and lasting change.”

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