Golden Globes: 10 things you didn't know you didn't know | Inquirer Entertainment

Golden Globes: 10 things you didn’t know you didn’t know

/ 03:52 PM January 07, 2018

Meryl Streep, golden globes

Meryl Streep poses with the award 15 January 2007;
Meryl Streep has had 31 Golden Globe nominations and eight wins. Image: GABRIEL BOUYS / AFP

Hollywood’s annual awards season revs up on Sunday as industry A-listers turn out for the 75th Golden Globes.

Here are 10 fun-filled facts (plus a few bonus tidbits) you probably didn’t know about Tinseltown’s biggest pre-Oscars prize-giving, organized by the 90-member Hollywood Foreign Press Association.

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Beginnings

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Founded in 1944, the awards were given out for the first 14 years by journalists who were members of the Hollywood Foreign Correspondents Association, a precursor to the HFPA.

Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr took over the stage as impromptu masters of ceremony in 1958 and stole the show—and were invited back as official hosts the following year.

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From 1958 to 1963, the Globes were only broadcast only in Los Angeles, finally going national in 1964.

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The prizes

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Unlike the Oscar-awarding Academy of Motion Picture, Arts and Sciences, the HPFA doesn’t give out technical prizes, sticking to recognizing actors, directors, producers and writers.

A total number of 25 awards are up for grabs on Sunday—14 in film and 11 in television.

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Winners

Meryl Streep has the most nominations, her 31st coming this year for Pentagon Papers thriller “The Post.” She has won eight times, one less than record-holder Barbra Streisand, including non-competitive trophies.

Jamie Foxx and Helen Mirren jointly hold the record for the most nominations in one year with three.

The youngest winner remains Ricky Schroder, who was nine, for his role in “The Champ,” while the oldest was Jessica Tandy, who was 80 when she picked up best actress for “Driving Miss Daisy.”

And a couple of losers… almost

Renee Zellweger was in the bathroom when her best actress award for “Nurse Betty” was announced in 2001, leaving a bemused Hugh Grant to ask her table for her whereabouts.

The red-faced starlet turned up in the nick of time to receive her award, joking that she had been cleaning lipstick off her teeth.

She wasn’t even the first to make the error—Christine Lahti got caught short three years earlier, and was otherwise engaged when Michael J. Fox announced she had won best actress for “Chicago Hope.”

The ‘big five’

“One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” was the first movie to win all of the “big five” categories — best picture, actor, actress, director and screenplay—as part of a six-win haul in 1975.

It remained the only “big fiver” until “La La Land” scooped the major categories as part of a record-breaking seven-trophy clean sweep last year.

“Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” (1967) and “The Godfather, Part III” (1991) each received seven nominations but lost in every category, going home empty-handed.

Lifetime achievement

The Cecil B. DeMille Award for lifetime achievement was first handed out in 1952 to… Cecil B. DeMille.

Subsequent winners have included Walt Disney, Judy Garland, Sidney Poitier and Jodie Foster.

Objectors, contentious and otherwise

Marlon Brando refused to accept his Globe for “The Godfather” in 1973 in protest against the Vietnam war. Two months later, he rejected an Oscar over the poor treatment of Native Americans in the film industry.

The producers of “Z” refused the Globe for best foreign language film in 1970 because they were angry it was left out of the prestigious best motion picture category.

The coveted trophy

The 24-karat gold-plated Golden Globe statuette costs around $800 to make and is 10.75 inches (27.3 centimeters) tall and 3.5 inches wide, weighing in at a hefty 5.5 pounds (2.5 kilograms).

After 2008, it was given a facelift and a marble custom presentation box.

The hosts

This year’s show will be hosted for the first time by NBC late-night host Seth Meyers, who is promising the usual political humor throughout the night and has vowed not to pull punches on Hollywood’s sexual misconduct scandals.

Previous hosts have included Ricky Gervais (2010-12, 2016), Tina Fey and Amy Poehler (2013-15) and Jimmy Fallon (2017).

The menu

Before dinner, guests will be treated to champagne cocktails—Moet Imperial, tequila, blood orange juice and a smattering of honey, according to Variety magazine.

They will sit down to a burrata cheese, frisee lettuce and heirloom tomato salad before tucking into a main course of sea bass.

Dessert is a crunchy base of Italian hazelnuts beneath a coffee biscuit and Frangelico mascarpone—all drenched in chocolate and topped with a chocolate globe filled with sea salted caramel. NVG

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Veteran Golden Globes producer reflects on favorite moments

TAGS: “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”, Cecil B. DeMille, Golden Globes, La La Land, Marlon Brando, Meryl Streep

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