Silent-era film “The Artist” and family drama “The Descendants” were the top film picks at the Golden Globe Awards on Sunday in a loose-lipped awards show that even had host Ricky Gervais walking onto the stage with a drink in his hand.

“The Descendants,” starring George Clooney as a man steering his family through a tragic time when his wife is in a coma, won two Golden Globe trophies, including the top honor of best dramatic movie and another for Clooney as best dramatic actor.

Onstage he thanked writer/director Alexander Payne and backstage told reporters, “he knows how to tell stories. He knows how to make something funny and how to turn it around.”

Clooney called the movie “a coming-of-age film for a 50-year-old and a lot of us have dealt with people like that.”

“The Artist,” a romantic tale about a failing actor who finds love at a time when movies were changing from silents to talkies, picked up three awards including best musical or comedy and best actor in a musical or comedy for its star, French actor Jean Dujardin.

Onstage, Dujardin did the most appropriate thing — gave his speech, thanked his colleagues, then signed off by not saying a word. And true to stealing almost every scene of his in the movie, little dog Uggie detracted from an emotional speech by the film’s director, Michel Hazanavicius, when the dog begged for a treat.

Other key winners included Meryl Streep for best actress in a film drama with her portrayal of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in “The Iron Lady.” Streep, who is typically reliable with a funny acceptance speech had a difficult time reading hers this year when she forgot her glasses.

Michelle Williams took the trophy for best actress in a comedy or musical with her role as Marilyn Monroe in “My Week with Marilyn.

“I consider myself a mother first and an actress second. The person I most want to thank (is) my daughter, my little girl,” Williams said referring to her child with the late actor Heath Ledger. “I want to say thank you for sending me off to this job everyday with a hug and a kiss.”

Veteran Christopher Plummer, 82, won supporting actor with his portrayal of an elderly man who comes out as gay to his family in “Beginners,” bringing both poignancy and a touch of humor to their lives. Octavia Spencer, playing a beleaguered housemaid in the U.S. South during the civil rights era in “The Help” was best supporting actress.

Woody Allen was given a Golden Globe for his screenplay for “Midnight in Paris” and Steven Spielberg won best animated film with his rollicking “The Adventures of Tintin.”

Iranian film “A Separation” was named best foreign language film, and its director, Ashgar Farhadi, used the opportunity to tell world audiences that “my people. I think they are a truly peace-loving people.”

OSCAR RACE LOOMS

The Golden Globe Awards are given out by the roughly 90 members of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association at what annually is among the key events during Hollywood’s awards season because of the media exposure it brings.

Many of the movies and stars that win here also go on to compete for Oscars later this year, and “The Artist,” which was the most-nominated film coming into the Golden Globes with six nods overall, will certainly become a frontrunner for the world’s top film honors, as will “Descendants” and “The Help.”

Oscar nominations from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will given out on January 24.

Unlike the Oscar voters, HFPA members also vote on their favorite TV shows and performances and in that arena “Homeland,” about a modern-day CIA agent tracking returning war soldiers who may be terrorists, took home two Golden Globes for best drama series and best actress in a drama for Claire Danes.

Best actor in a drama TV series went to Kelsey Grammer for his role as a stern corporate manager in “Boss.”

“Modern Family,” a take on extended families in current-day America, took the prize for best comedy and its stars enjoyed one of the more memorable moments of the night when star Sofia Vergara gave their acceptance speech in Spanish, with English translation from creator Steve Levitan.

Best actress in a TV comedy went to Laura Dern for “Enlightened” and the comedic actor trophy was won by Matt LeBlanc for “Episodes.”

Coming into the show, all eyes were on host Gervais, who ruffled the feathers of many a Hollywood celebrities last year at the Golden Globes. While he didn’t tone down his jokes for the 2012 audience — making fun of Johnny Depp, Jodie Foster, Kim Kardashian and the HFPA itself — it seemed the stars were in the mood for his biting wit this time around.

“I thought he did a great job,” Clooney told reporters backstage. “I think he handled tonight like a proper good host again … people were expecting a lot of trash talk, and he did a little bit of that, and he made me laugh, he was very funny.”

In fact, it seemed Gervais’ humor was rather tame at some points compared to others who made penis jokes onstage and used foul language. At one point, Gervais came onstage drinking a beer, but somehow that seemed fitting for an awards show that bills itself as one big Hollywood party.

 

The Hollywood star began dating former wrestler Keibler following his summer split from Italian beauty Elisabetta Canalis, and she has been accompanying Clooney to red carpet events ever since. She even met his parents at the Los Angeles premiere of The Descendants last week.

And the couple’s romance is continuing to heat up, literally – Clooney is whisking his new lady and their relatives off to Cabo San Lucas this week to celebrate Thursday’s holiday.

She tells People magazine, “We’re going to Cabo with our friends and family!”

Clooney and Keibler are becoming regulars in the popular Mexican getaway – they vacationed there last month for the sportswoman’s 32nd birthday.

 

George Clooney turned 48 last Wednesday, but the A-list hunk still parties like a rock star half his age.

While filming “Up in the Air” in Miami, a “tipsy” Clooney was seen by our spies walking into Blade nightclub at the Fountainebleau via a series of secret underground tunnels. “He was drinking vodka and Patron, but it looked like he’d had enough,” says a snitch. Sure enough, at the resort’s other nightclub, LIV, witnesses later saw a “stumbling George throw up in the VIP area.”

Clooney tells us: “That never happened, although I was sitting next to someone who did throw up.”

Meanwhile, Dennis Rodman was back on the sauce at the “Celebrity Apprentice” finale afterparty at the Museum of Natural History.

The ex-NBA star, who recently entered an outpatient rehab program for his drinking problem, “completely dismissed his former co-stars and hung out in VIP getting drunk with two trashy-looking girls and Sylvester Stallone’s brother, Frank,” says an eyewitness. “His assistant kept pushing away people who wanted to take photos with him. It was really sad.”

(source)

 

Theirs was the quintessential “ER” love affair, but if producers had their original way, there would have been no romance between George’s Dr. Doug Ross and Julianna’s Nurse Hathaway — don’t believe me? See for yourself in this Access Hollywood interview:

George Clooney returns to ER TONIGHT on NBC @ 10/9c!

 

George Clooney was a little overserved at a St. Louis bar last weekend.

In town filming “Up in the Air,” the Oscar-winner made his way to Sub Zero Vodka Bar, where patrons got a good view of him “definitely stumbling.” Says our eyewitness: “He was attempting to make his way down the block to his hotel, but was having a hard time getting there.”

(source)

 

Clooney on ‘hope’ for Darfur. You can find out more on TODAY Friday, Feb. 20.

Feb. 19: Actor and activist George Clooney talks to NBC’s Ann Curry from a Darfurian camp in Sudan and defines what “hope” might mean to refugees living there.


 

It looks as though George Clooney’s London party last week to raise funds for the victims of war-torn Dafur was one not to be forgotten — or perhaps forgotten at least for some.

The star-studded soiree was saturated with A-list celebs including Eva Mendes, Matt Damon, Guy Ritchie, Scarlett Johansson, Bono and Claudia Schiffer. But according to insiders, it was host Clooney and his good friend Cindy Crawford that closed the party down well into the wee hours.

The 42-year-old former supermodel was snapped sneaking into her hotel around 4 a.m. Friday morning, looking particularly worse for wear. (photo above)

Hmmm, one can’t help but wonder how much money was spent on beverages when it could have gone to the cause at hand…

(source)

 

Apparently, George Clooney may have figured out there’s no girlfriend like an old girlfriend. The bedroom-eyed Oscar winner has quietly circled back to Krista Allen, friends tell us.

Their on-and-off long-running romance began in 2002 when George cast Krista in “Confessions of a Dangerous Mind.” (This was after his marriage to Talia Balsam and linkages with Kelly Preston, Celine Balitran, Charlize Theron, Renee Zellweger, Jennifer Lynn Siebel and Mariella Frostrup. But who’s counting?)
George and Krista dated for close to two years, till Allen broke it off in March 2004. He moved on to model Lisa Snowden, but then he and Krista tried again in 2006. After that, he dated Sarah Larson, cocktail waitress and “Fear Factor” winner, for most of a year.

Throughout, says a friend, “Krista has always been there for him. She admits she just can’t get over him.”
And something about Krista brings him back. “George really loves her,” says the source.

A relationship with Krista, 37, would mean a ready-made family for George, 47, who once vowed that he wouldn’t remarry or have children by the time he was 50. Krista has an 11-year-old son, Jake, with production manager Justin Moritt.

But it may not be an issue. Says the source, “George adores Krista’s son.”

Reps for the two declined to comment.

Meanwhile, George has been shooting in Puerto Rico, where Hurricane Omar slowed down production of “The Men Who Stare at Goats.” He plays a former member of the U.S. Army’s First Earth Battalion, a unit that employs paranormal powers in their missions. Next up for the actor is “Up in the Air,” in which he plays a “career transition counselor” who’s looking to accumulate 1 million frequent flier miles and land a job at a mysterious management company called MythTech.

(source)

 

Brad Pitt and George Clooney






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