82nd Annual Golden Globes® LIVE COVERAGE.

News

  • Industry

Nathan Lane on his 25th Broadway play: “It’s always about the writing”

Nathan Lane, one of the most versatile Broadway and Hollywood actors, and star of numerous plays, musicals, TV shows, and animated and live-action movies, is back on the stage with “Pictures From Home,” his 25th Broadway play. Born in Jersey City, New Jersey on February 3, 1956, Lane has appeared in more than 35 films, garnering two nominations for Golden Globes as a leading actor in the musical/comedy category for The Birdcage (1997) and The Producers (2006).
  • Awards

Viola Davis, Beyoncé, and Quinta Brunson Honored by Virtual NAACP Image Awards 2023

Leading up to the 54th Image Awards Ceremony taking place live on Saturday, February 25, and hosted by Golden Globe winner Queen Latifah, the NAACP has been holding a range of week-long activities in Los Angeles, including four virtual awards nights celebrating the best in film, television, literature, animation, and music. Being globally recognized as one of the most distinguished multicultural awards show, the NAACP Image Awards has been following its tradition of excellence, uplifting values that inspire equality, justice, and progressive change, and highlighting artists committed to that purpose, for over half of the century.
  • Film

Docs: “Strangers to Peace” Showcases Difficulties of Deprogramming Violence

The heavy weight of history, its almost gravitational pull toward chaos, and the dark intersection of this with both personal trauma and self-betterment are all jointly explored to moving effect in Strangers to Peace. This interesting new documentary examines the attempts of three individuals to leave FARC, a Marxist guerrilla army which has waged a bloody campaign to overthrow the Colombian government for more than 50 years.
  • Interviews

Zar Amir Ebrahimi Continues to Stand in Solidarity with the Women of Iran

There is a moment in Holy Spider (2022) when a serial killer (played by Mehdi Bajestani) holds tightly the throat of a reporter Rahimi (Zar Amir Ebrahimi) who posed as a prostitute to catch him. The murderer of 16 Iranian women yells at her, “Who are you?” The female character responds, “I am Zar!,” thus breaking the so-called fourth wall with the public and indicating that, for a moment, she is not a fictional character but herself as a woman.