News & Blogs Award Shows Facts & Dates Galleries Forums    
SEARCH:
Search Entire Site Search Awards Database
AWARDS DATABASE
All of the winners, all of the nominees, all of the awards shows.
Up Next
Oct. 13-16
• ShowEast

Oct. 17-29
• Viennale 2008 - Vienna International Film Festival


"Charlie Wilson's War"
"Charlie Wilson's War": WGA member Aaron Sorkin, nominated for writing "Charlie Wilson's War," said he wouldn't cross picket lines.
(Universal)

A-list stars may forgo Globes

If the Writers Guild of America strike against the TV networks and movie studios isn't resolved, the WGA could picket the Jan. 13 show.
By John Horn, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
December 14, 2007

And the winner is . . . not here?

The Golden Globe Awards are a highly rated NBC event, an often irreverent ceremony brimming with A-list stars. If the Writers Guild of America strike against the TV networks and movie studios isn't resolved, the WGA could picket the Jan. 13 show, potentially resulting in a ceremony with all the celebrity clout of a charity bowling tournament.

While not considered remotely as prestigious as the Academy Awards, the Golden Globes can predict which films possess Oscar momentum. (Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. voters narrowly made "Atonement" a favorite Thursday, with seven nominations.) This year the Globes could also be a harbinger of how the labor dispute will affect prime-time specials -- with ABC's Oscars next in the cross hairs.

Several Globe nominees expressed reservations about crossing picket lines to attend the show, with a handful saying they wouldn't consider being disloyal to the WGA.

"If actors can't have solidarity with writers -- the people who put the words in their mouths -- then who can they have solidarity with?" said Tom Wilkinson, nominated for supporting actor for "Michael Clayton."

WGA member Aaron Sorkin, nominated for writing "Charlie Wilson's War," said he wouldn't cross, and Marc Forster, the director of foreign-language film nominee "The Kite Runner," said he wouldn't either.

"It's important to respect the writers," Forster said.

James McAvoy, nominated for dramatic actor for "Atonement," agreed: "I wouldn't want to go against people standing up for what they believe in."

Others said they were inclined to attend, even if pickets surrounded the Beverly Hilton Hotel. "I think the foreign press is very respectful of the negotiation process," said John Travolta, a best comedy or musical actor for "Hairspray."

As Katie Jacobs, executive producer of "House," nominated for dramatic TV series, put it: "If ever there was a time for celebration, this is it. . . . I just hope there isn't going to be a problem. If anybody gets in the way of me buying a beautiful new dress, I don't know what I'll do."

Organizers are hoping the WGA will grant the foreign press association a waiver for the Globes show, which would permit WGA writing. Earlier this month, the guild granted one-night waivers to Elizabeth Taylor and James Earl Jones for an AIDS fundraiser and for the Kennedy Center Honors, which CBS will broadcast Dec. 26. This week, the WGA granted a waiver to its sister union, the Screen Actors Guild, for its award show.

Without a waiver, the Globes would be treated as any other "struck company," and any members working on it would be considered to be crossing the line, a WGA spokesman said.

"It really hadn't occurred to me that that would be an issue until this morning," said Ryan Gosling, nominated for comedy actor for "Lars and the Real Girl." "It weighs heavily on me, and it's something I don't take lightly and will not take lightly."

Songwriter Carole Bayer Sager, nominated for collaborating with Clint Eastwood on the song "Grace Is Gone" from the movie of the same name, is in an unusual position. She is married to former Warner Bros. Chairman Bob Daly, once a powerful voice within the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, the bargaining entity for the TV networks and movie studios.

Sager said she would cross a Golden Globe picket line.




Local Ads