Golden Globes 2014: 5 memorable moments - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 07:17 PM | Calgary | -7.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Entertainment

Golden Globes 2014: 5 memorable moments

From trademark lines to lubricated stars onstage, here are a few memorable moments from the 71st annual Golden Globe Awards.

Co-hosts Tina Fey and Amy Poehler hosted the Golden Globes for the second year

For the 71st annual Golden Globes, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association shared the love by spreading out trophies to a wide swath of winners, making for what appeared to viewers anyway a convivial evening of Hollywood celebration. Here are 5 memorable tidbits from Sunday nights broadcast.


Killer emcees

Host Tina Fey ended the telecast by dubbing the night the beautiful mess [she and co-host Amy Poehler] hoped it would be. But was anyone really surprised? The duo's irreverence, easy playfulness and self-deprecation helped kick the broadcast off to a great start with careful, yet still funny skewering of Hollywoods biggest names as well as the Globe organizers themselves.

"This is Hollywood," the returning Fey explained off the top,"if something kind of works, they'll just keep doing it until everyone hates it."

The opening joke that seemed to get the biggest laughs from the industry crowd? Feys description of nominated film Gravity as the movie where "George Clooney would rather float away in space and die than spend one more minute with a woman his own age."

Add just the right number of Matt Damon and Julia Louis-Dreyfus jokes over three hours, Poehler posing as Fey's "celebrity" son and also making out with Bono, and the ladies can chalk Sunday up as another successful night as Golden Globe emcees. And they still have one more year to go.


"Lubricated" presenter

Famous for its free-flowing bar referenced by several stars onstage (see below) as well as hosts Fey and Poehler, who occasionally popped up with wine goblets in hand the Globes might consider awarding Emma Thompson a prize for being one of Sunday nights quirkiest presenters.

The British actress and writer arrived onstage to present the screenwriting category barefoot, clutching her Christian Louboutin heels in one hand and swirling a full martini glass in the other.

"I just want you to know, this red," she quipped, noting the shoes' trademark soles, "it's my blood."

The Saving Mr. Banks actress then gamely dived into her martini before tossing her heels to accept the envelope listing the winning screenwriter.


Catchphrase call-out

Dallas Buyers Club star Matthew McConaughey delighted the Golden Globes audience by starting his best dramatic film actor acceptance speech harkening back to his trademark line from Dazed and Confused: "All right, all right, all right." (Paul Drinkwater/NBC Universal/Getty Images)
While most of the nights acceptance speeches were the usual list of predictable thankyous, a couple of actors lit up the crowd by delivering their respective catchphrases.

Best dramatic film actor winner Matthew McConaughey was honoured for Dallas Buyers Club, among his recent spate of critically acclaimed performances. Hedelighted one and all with his familiar All right, all right, all right! harkening back to his early stoner role in Dazed and Confused as he took the stage to accept his trophy.

Earlier, Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan thanked fans in his best TV drama win speech, but turned the mic over to series co-star Aaron Paul for some final words. Paul responded with his character Jesse Pinkmans trademark declaration "Yeah, bitch!"to supportive hoots from the crowd. (Incidentally, it wasnt the only impromptu "swear" that made it on-air: Jacqueline Bisset and Elisabeth Moss also responded to their respective acting wins with minor cursing.)


"Lubricated" winner

Best gently soused, mildly controversial acceptance speech of the night? Likely Cate Blanchetts admittedly vodka-fuelled, rambling thankyou upon winning one of the nights final honours: best actress in a dramatic film for Blue Jasmine. The celebrated Aussie went from referencing Judy Garland being plied with barbiturates to wondering if audiences at home could hear the music that was ushering her offstage.


Factoid faux-pas

One of the nights major faux-pas took place outside of the gala itself, when the E! Entertainment network bizarrely listed Michael J. Foxs Parkinsons diagnosis in 1991 as a "fun fact" a move that exploded into a Twitter uproar.

The information was shown as part of a graphic during the E! live stream of its red-carpet coverage, but was not actually televised. The network subsequently apologized to the Canadian-American actor (a TV comedy acting nominee Sunday night), saying in a statement that it regretted the insensitive graphic.