Who will win Golden Globes 2017 Live Stream Awards
“The show is in its 6th season, and we’ve generally done everything by the book,” Murphy told THR not long ago. “We needed to [create a] distinctive experience for the fans this year.”
With regards to that mandate, no different points of interest have been discharged about season seven, aside from that it will debut at some point in 2017.
‘American Horror Story: Roanoke’: All the Details After Episode Three
Should the Oscars break that unfortunate trend, 2017 may prove be a particularly historic one for the Academy. Viola Davis is mounting a major campaign to take home her first-ever Oscar for “Fences,” an adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-winning play by August Wilson. Davis won her second Tony for the role in the Broadway revival. Her onstage leading man, Denzel Washington, will pull double duty — directing and co-starring in the film.
Win Golden Globes 2017 Live Stream Awards
Should Negga and Davis earn Best Actress nominations, Golden Globes Awards 2017 Live it would be an overdue event for the Academy. It’s extremely rare that two non-white actresses are nominated in the same category during the same year. To date, it’s only happened four times: in 1967 (Beah Richards and Carol Channing), 1972 (1972 Cicely Tyson and Diana Ross), 1985 (Margaret Avery and Oprah Winfrey) and 2008 (Viola Davis and Taraji P. Henson).
If the Oscars want to make 2017 the year of black actresses, one film to watch out for is “Hidden Figures.” The little-known true story about three NASA engineers who help launch John Glenn into space has a dream cast, featuring Oscar-winner Octavia Spencer (“The Help”), Oscar-nominee Taraji P. Henson (TV’s “Empire) and R&B singer Janelle Monae. Directed by Theodore Melfi (“St. Vincent”), Fox is reportedly high on the film, so much so that it’s screening raw footage from the film at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival.
Monae will also appear in “Moonlight,” a coming-of-age drama in the vein of “Pariah” and “Boyhood.” Based on the play “In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue,” the Barry Jenkins-directed film follows Chiron, a black gay man coming to terms with his sexuality against the backdrop of the War on Drugs in Reagan-era Miami. Chiron is played by three different actors (Andre Holland, Jharrel Jerome and Jaden Piner) over the course of his life. British actress Naomie Harris (“Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom”) is receiving the lion’s share of pre-release buzz for the film, as Chiron’s supportive mother, Paula.
“Moonlight” was a major smash at the Telluride Film Festival, where “Brokeback Mountain began its awards season run 11 years ago. Currently, Jenkins’ film stands at a perfect 100 on Metacritic, a strong sign of its Best Picture (and potentially Best Director) chances going forward. No LGBT-themed film has won the highest honors at the Oscars since Bob Fosse’s “Cabaret” in 1973, and an armful of trophies for Jenkins and his team help address the Academy Awards’ repeated exclusion of queer-themed films. In addition to the “Brokeback” controversy — when “Crash” upset the gay cowboy romance in 2006 — the critically-beloved lesbian drama “Carol” was left off last year’s Best Picture list.
Aside from Denzel Washington — who is a two-time winner — the most probable black Best Actor nominee is David Oyelowo, who will be competing against himself this Oscar season. The Brit stars in both “Queen of Katwe,” a Disney crowdpleaser about a Ugandan girl who dreams of being a chess champion, and “A United Kingdom,” an interracial period romance. Oyelowo plays the first president of Botswana, Seretse Khama, who created an international stir in 1947 when he married a British clerk, played in the film by Rosamund Pike (“Gone Girl”).
NEW YORK – September 21, 2016 – Bravo Media Golden Globes Awards 2017 Live Stream and Universal Cable Productions (UCP) announce Golden Globe winning actress Uma Thurman will guest star in the new original scripted series, “My So Called Wife,” (wt) with a story arc spanning several episodes. Uma will play Lenny Cohen, the ultimate fixer. When the reclusive ring-leader of a group of con artists needs to keep his employees in line, eliminate an enemy, or whip up a world class omelette, there is only one person for the job – the lethal, articulate and mysterious Lenny Cohen.
“Uma and I have been friends for a very long time – I’m thrilled that after many tries we’ll finally get to work together,” said Executive Producer Adam Brooks. “Paul Adelstein and I wrote the role of Lenny Cohen specifically for her, and we are so excited to see how Uma’s iconic and very special talents will bring to life this unique and provocative character.”
“My So Called Wife” (wt) follows Maddie (Inbar Lavi, “Gang Related”), a persona shifting con-artist who is as beautiful as she is dangerous, which makes her unsuspecting victims even more tormented when they realize they have been used and robbed of everything… including their hearts. But things get complicated when her latest victims, Ezra (Rob Heaps, “Frankenstein and the Vampyre: A Dark and Stormy Night”) and Richard (Parker Young, “Suburgatory”) try to track her down just as she eyes her next mark, Patrick (Stephen Bishop, “Being Mary Jane”).
Jimmy Fallon will host the ceremony, which will air Jan. 8 on NBC.
The nominees for the 74th annual Golden Globe Awards were announced Monday morning by actors Don Cheadle, Laura Dern, and Anna Kendrick. Films nominated for the leading prize of Best Motion Picture—Drama were Hacksaw Ridge, Hell or High Water, Lion, Manchester by the Sea, and Moonlight. On the Musical or Comedy side of the same prize, 20th Century Women, Deadpool, Florence Foster Jenkins, La La Land, and Sing Street were picked. For Best TV Series—Comedy, the nominees are Atlanta, Blackish, Mozart in the Jungle, Veep, and Transparent, which has won the prize the last two years in a row. On the drama side of TV, the picks were The Crown, Stranger Things, This Is Us, Westworld, and the thrice-nominated-but-never-won Game of Thrones. HBO’s popular new series Westworld also snagged nominations for best lead and supporting actresses.
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