- The 78th Golden Globe Awards: Keep scrolling to see the best moments from the night.
- The winners: "Nomadland" took home the award for best drama. You can see the full list here.
Although they honor both movies and TV, the Globes are watched most closely as a bellwether for the Academy Awards. The traditional awards season, however, has been disrupted by coronavirus, from the release of movies via streaming services to sliding the calendar for these events further into 2021.
After one of the more criticized nomination decisions, "Minari" — an American production about a Korean family in Arkansas — was named best foreign language film, since that's the way the HFPA chose to classify it.
In television, Netflix's "The Crown" was named best drama by Globes voters for the second time (the last coming in 2017), amid a wave of wins by British talent, including Josh O'Connor and Emma Corrin for playing Prince Charles and Princess Diana. "Schitt's Creek" followed up its final-season sweep at the Emmys by snagging another trophy as best comedy.
More significantly, the broadcast followed reporting by the Los Angeles Times about questionable ethical behavior by members of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association — the group that presents the awards, and has long been the subject of such controversies — as well as its complete lack of Black members, which prompted criticism from a number of major Hollywood figures.
The night's first two awards, notably, both went to Black stars: Daniel Kaluuya, for the historical drama "Judas and the Black Messiah;" and John Boyega, for an installment in the Amazon anthology "Small Axe." The animated feature award also went to a film with a predominantly African-American cast, "Soul," which premiered on the streaming service Disney+. The movie was also honored for best original score.
Neither directly addressed the controversy, although Fey and Poehler did, calling on the HFPA to address the lack of inclusivity in its ranks, during an alternating monologue in which Fey referred to the group as "90 international, no-Black journalists" and "European weirdos."
Few of the award recipients or presenters referenced the HFPA's issues, although "This is Us" star Sterling K. Brown wryly began his introduction by saying, "It is great to be Black — back — at the Golden Globes."
The otherwise-empty ballrooms were populated by masked first responders, while nominees watched from home. The cutaways, however, featuring all of the nominees had an ungainly quality, and Kaluuya's feed experienced technical difficulties before he could deliver his acceptance.
Organizers of the awards stated in advance that they would address the latter concern within the broadcast, but three members spoke of doing better in only the broadest of terms. "We look forward to a more inclusive future," Turkish journalist Ali Sar said in conclusion.
NBC, which pays millions each year for rights to televise the ceremony, has had no comment regarding the HFPA and the latest concerns surrounding it.
Michael Douglas and his wife, Catherine Zeta-Jones, took the stage to present the award for Best Motion Picture Drama, which went to "Nomadland."
"For everyone who has gone through this difficult journey this is for you ... we don't say goodbye, we say see you down the road," said director Chloé Zhao.
Earlier in the evening Zhao won the Golden Globe for best director. She is the second woman to win in this category.
The film stars Frances McDormand, a woman named Fern who has lost her job and her husband has recently died. She decides to travel the United States in a van while making her way out West. The film also stars David Strathairn, Linda May, Bob Wells, Derek Endres and Peter Spears.
Andra Day won the Golden Globe Award for best actress for "The United States vs. Billie Holiday."
Day was visibly emotional during her speech, saying she was in "the presence of giants" of other actresses during the movie.
Day said the singer Billie Holiday "just transformed me with this role, and with her presence and with her spirit."
It's common for the winners of the Cecil B. DeMille Award to walk down memory lane discussing their numerous career highlights.
But actress Jane Fonda took a different tack when she accepted the prestigious lifetime achievement award at the Golden Globes Sunday night.
Fonda began by exalting storytelling as an art form and praising the work of the actors and directors behind many nominated works this year. She ended by calling for better leadership in Hollywood to make sure everyone's stories are told.
"Stories — they really can change people. But there's a story we've been afraid to see and hear about ourselves in this industry — a story about which voices we respect and elevate, and which we tune out," Fonda said.
As Borat would say, very nice!
Sacha Baron Cohen took home the award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for his hit movie "Borat Subsequent Movie Film." The film was a sequel to his popular 2006 film "Borat."
It was a category that didn't have a clear winner with many fans thinking Lin-Manuel Miranda might take home his first Golden Globe for "Hamilton."
The Golden Globe for best director went to Chloé Zhao for "Nomadland."
Zhao said the award belongs to the whole cast and crew of the film. She read a few sentences about compassion from Bob Wells, one of the "nomads" featured in the film. "Compassion is the breakdown of all the barriers between us," Wells wrote.
"This is why I fell in love with making movies and telling stories, because it gives us a chance to laugh and cry with one another," Zhao said. "And it gives us a chance to learn from each other and to have more compassion for each other."
For the first time, three female directors were nominated in the category. Zhao is the first woman of Asian descent to be nominated in the category.
Chadwick Boseman was awarded a posthumous Golden Globe for Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama for "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom." It was his final role before his death last year after a battle with colon cancer.
Boseman's wife, Taylor Simone Ledward, accepted the award on his behalf.
Through a flood of tears, she said in part, "He would thank his ancestors for their guidance and their sacrifices. He would thank his team ... he would say something beautiful, something inspiring, something that would amplify that little voice inside all of us that tells you, you can, that tells you to keep going, that calls you back to what you are meant to be doing at this moment in history."
She went on to say, "I don't have his words but we have to take all the moments to celebrate those that we love."
Nominees Chloé Zhao ("Nomadland"), Emerald Fennell ("Promising Young Woman") and Regina King ("One Night in Miami") bring the total number of woman nominated in the category in the Globes' 78-year history to eight.
The other best director nominees this year were David Fincher ("Mank") and Aaron Sorkin ("The Trial of the Chicago 7").
Zhao, King and Fennell join a short but prestigious list of fellow female nominees in the category. Barbra Streisand, Jane Campion, Sofia Coppola, Ava DuVernay and Kathryn Bigelow have also been nominated in the category, with Streisand being the sole winner among them.
Streisand won the best director Golden Globe for the 1983 film "Yentl."
In hailing King's accomplishment for her directorial feature film debut, Amazon Studios also pointed out that she is now the second Black woman nominated in the category.
Zhao, meanwhile, is the first woman of Asian descent to be nominated in the category.
Anya Taylor-Joy took home a well deserved win for her role as chess prodigy Beth Harmon in Netflix's limited "The Queens Gambit."
Taylor-Joy was up against some of Hollywood's veteran actresses like Nicole Kidman for HBO's "The Undoing," and Cate Blanchett for "Mrs. America."
"The Queen's Gambit" has received critical acclaim, telling the story of an orphan who overcomes addiction to become an internationally known chess star.
The show also took home an award for best limited series for TV.