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Actor awards 2026: Michael B Jordan, Jessie Buckley and Catherine O’Hara among big winners

Michael B Jordan, Jessie Buckley and the late Catherine O’Hara were among the big winners at this year’s newly titled Actor awards.

Previously known as the Screen Actors Guild awards, the Actors are voted on by a membership of more than 160,000 actors. The name change was to provide “clearer recognition in terms of what the show is about”.

Jordan beat out the hotly predicted favourite Timothée Chalamet for the best lead male actor award, for his dual role in acclaimed vampire thriller Sinners. Jordan paid tribute to director and longtime collaborator Ryan Coogler, and the “love and support” from the many actors in the room who watched him grow up in the spotlight. This weekend also saw Jordan pick up the NAACP image award for entertainer and actor of the year.

The big screen ensemble award went to the cast of Sinners, also including Delroy Lindo and Wunmi Mosaku. “This project is anointed and from that standpoint, we’re all anointed to be part of this incredible journey,” Lindo said on behalf of the cast.

Buckley followed her wins at the Baftas and Golden Globes with another best lead female actor award for her performance in Chloé Zhao’s semi-fictionalised period drama Hamnet, beating Emma Stone and Rose Byrne. “I have been categorically changed by so many people in this room and beyond,” she said on stage.

Sean Penn was named best supporting male actor for his performance in One Battle After Another after also winning the Bafta last weekend. The actor was not at the ceremony to accept his award.

Weapons villain Amy Madigan enjoyed a surprise victory, beating favourite Teyana Taylor to take home the award for supporting female actor. “It’s such an honour to be here, I’ve been doing this for a long ass time,” she said, adding: “As you can tell, I’m nervous and overwhelmed and just so happy.”

After major wins at the Emmys and Golden Globes, Apple’s freshman industry series The Studio also dominated tonight’s comedy trophies. It picked up three awards, including a win for comedy ensemble against competition from previous winners The Bear and Only Murders in the Building.

The Studio’s co-creator Seth Rogen was also named best male actor for his role in the show, beating co-star Ike Barinholtz, while the late Catherine O’Hara, who died in January this year, was given a rare posthumous award for her performance.

Rogen collected on her behalf to a standing ovation from the audience, calling it a “very sad honour”.

“I know she would have been honoured to receive this award from her fellow performers,” he said, praising her “ability to be generous and kind and gracious while never ever minimising her own talents and her own ability to contribute to the work she was doing”.

The drama ensemble award was given to the cast of breakout medical drama The Pitt, beating The White Lotus and Severence. “I’ve never been more proud of a group of people in my life,” star Noah Wyle said. “We’re so grateful for this, I can’t even tell you.”

Wyle, who had previously won with the ensemble of ER four times in the 1990s, was also named best male actor in a drama series and used his speech to praise the work of labour unions.

Netflix’s smash hit drama Adolescence continued its impressive awards run, with a win for Owen Cooper as best male actor in a limited series. At 16, he’s become the youngest ever winner in this category, after Emmy and Golden Globe wins. The actor, who recently appeared in Wuthering Heights, wasn’t in attendance to accept.

Michelle Williams beat Cooper’s co-star Erin Doherty to win best female actor in a limited series for her role in acclaimed comedy drama Dying for Sex, her second Actor award after winning for Fosse/Verdon in 2020. Doherty had already won an Emmy and a Golden Globe for her performance.

The Diplomat’s Keri Russell was a surprise first-time winner of the female actor in a drama series award, beating Pluribus’s Rhea Seehorn and The White Lotus actors Parker Posey and Aimee Lou Wood.

Harrison Ford was the recipient of this year’s life achievement award, presented to him by Woody Harrelson who called him “a true renaissance man” in his introduction.

“I feel incredibly grateful for this kind attention but to be clear, I’m also quite humbled,” Ford said onstage, joking that it was a prize for “being alive”. He later added, in an emotive speech, that he sees himself as “a lucky guy – lucky to have found my people, lucky to have work that challenges me, lucky to still be doing it and I don’t take that for granted.”

The year’s stunt ensemble awards were won by Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning and The Last of Us.

The ceremony, which aired live on Netflix, was hosted by Nobody Wants This actor Kristen Bell, who kicked the night off by saying: “I think the world could use some levity right now so we’re gonna keep things fun tonight.”

The night was light on political speeches but on the red carpet, wearing an “ICE out” pin, Wunmi Mosaku called ICE “atrocious”. “I don’t believe in what this administration is inflicting on the people in this country,” she said.

Later in the evening, Sag-Aftra president and Lord of the Rings actor Sean Astin offered “a sincere prayer for peace” on behalf of the acting community.

Last year’s winners included Timothée Chalamet, Demi Moore, Kieran Culkin and Zoe Saldana for film and Anna Sawai, Jessica Gunning, Jean Smart and Colin Farrell for television. (Guardian)

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Golden Globes 2026: “One Battle After Another” and British series “Adolescence” win big

The stars of film and TV gathered in Los Angeles on Sunday for the 83rd Golden Globes ceremony, and Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another and Netflix miniseries Adolescence emerged as the big winners on the night, earning four Globes apiece.

One Battle After Another won Best Film (Comedy or Musical), Best Supporting Actress for Teyana Taylor, Best Director and Best Screenplay, both for Anderson, who has become only the second filmmaker after Oliver Stone to collect Best Director, Screenplay and Film (as a producer) at the Globes.

Loosely inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s postmodern countercultural novel “Vineland”, Anderson’s tenth feature centers around a dishevelled revolutionary (Leonardo DiCaprio) who is forced out of retirement when a former enemy (Sean Penn) threatens his daughter (Chase Infiniti) in a bid to revive an old grudge. Euronews Culture ranked it our Number 1 Movie of 2025 and it is the clear front-runner this awards season.

In one of the evening’s best speeches, singer and actress Teyana Taylor sent a message to “my brown sisters and little brown girls watching tonight”.

“Our light does not need permission to shine,” she told them. “We belong in every room we walk into. Our voices matter and our dreams deserve space.”

While many were betting on Ryan Coogler’s vampire thriller Sinners to take Best Film in the Drama section, Chloé Zhao’s Hamnet, a speculative drama about William and Agnes Shakespeare based on Maggie O’Farrell’s bestselling novel, pulled off an upset by winning the Best Film (Drama). Its star, Jessie Buckley, also won Best Actress in a Drama.

At the Oscars, Buckley will have to compete against Rose Byrne, who was rewarded for her lead performance in Mary Bronstein’s punishing parental drama If I Had Legs I’d Kick You.

Sinners – another one of our 2025 favourites – did end up winning Best Score and the Cinematic and Box-office Achievement award, beating the likes of Avatar: Fire and Ash, F1Weapons and Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning.

Other big winners of the evening include Timothée Chalamet, who nabbed his first Golden Globe for Marty Supreme, beating George Clooney and Leonardo DiCaprio. The 30-year-old is poised to win his first Oscar for his role in Josh Safdie’s first solo outing behind the camera. Loosely inspired by the life and career of US ping-pong player Marty Reisman, Marty Supreme is a coming-of-age film about scheming and whatever-it-takes determination in the face of adversity.

“My dad instilled in me a spirit of gratitude growing up: Always be grateful for what you have,” said Chalamet. “It’s allowed me to leave this ceremony in the past empty handed, my head held high, grateful just to be here. I’d be lying if I didn’t say those moments didn’t make this moment that much sweeter.”

Elsewhere, Brazilian actor Wagner Moura was the surprise winner in the Drama category for his role in the political thriller The Secret Agent, becoming the first Brazilian to win the award. His win follows Fernanda Torres’ success last year for I’m Still Here.

“This is a film about memory – or the lack of memory – and generational trauma,” Moura said. “I think that if trauma can be passed along generations, values can too. So this is to the ones that are sticking with their values in difficult moments.”

The Secret Agent also won Best Film (Non-English language), beating favourite Sentimental Value.

Swedish actor Stellan Skarsgård, 74, did win Best Supporting Actor for Sentimental Value. He joked that he hadn’t prepared a speech “because I thought that I was too old”, before making an impassioned plea for people to see films like his on the big screen.

“Cinema should be seen in cinemas,” he said to cheers from the audience. (EuroNews)