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SAGS
| DAVID GERMAIN |
Johnny Depp
was a surprise lead actor winner Sunday at the Screen Actors Guild Awards
for Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl, while Charlize
Theron took the best-actress honour for the serial-killer drama Monster.
Depp, who did not attend the awards, won for his role as a jittery buccaneer
in the summer blockbuster, beating out Sean Penn, who had been considered
the favourite for Mystic River. Theron won for her portrayal of executed
murderer Aileen Wuornos, a role for which she gained 30 pounds and obscured
her cover-girl beauty behind false teeth, dark contact lenses and a splotchy
complexion. "I'm so honoured and proud to be an actor, 'cause God knows, I
don't know what else to do," said Theron, a native of South Africa. She
thanked her cast mates and director Patty Jenkins, along with "my angel and
my date tonight, my mom, who put me on the plane with a one-way ticket to
Hollywood when I was 19 years old. Thank you for being so brave and letting
me go to make my dreams come true." The supporting acting awards went to Tim
Robbins for the brooding drama Mystic River and Renee Zellweger for the
Civil War saga Cold Mountain. The ensemble acting award, the guild's
equivalent of a best-picture prize, went to The Lord of the Rings: The
Return of the King, the front-runner to win top honours at next Sunday's
Academy Awards. The SAG wins boost the individual actors' Oscar prospects.
Theron, Robbins and Zellweger have been viewed as front-runners through
awards season, and guild honours provide one last push among Oscar voters,
who must cast their ballots by the end of the day Tuesday. Robbins won for
his role as a man emotionally crippled by childhood trauma and suspected of
murder as an adult in Mystic River. "Oh, boy. That's so cool. Susan's got
one of these," Robbins said, referring to his romantic partner Susan
Sarandon, who won the guild's 1996 lead actress honour for Dead Man Walking,
which Robbins directed. "I'm going to get them alone in a dark room and see
what happens." Zellweger, who won the guild's lead actress award last year
for Chicago, was honoured this time as a salt-of-the-earth Confederate
handywoman in Cold Mountain. She thanked co-stars Nicole Kidman and Jude Law
and director Anthony Minghella. "I was spoiled for riches on this
experience," Zellweger said. "It was such an honour to go to work every day
beside you."
Among the guild's TV awards, Sex and the City won for comedy-acting ensemble on the night the series ended its six-year run on U.S. TV (The series finale airs in Canada on Bravo on March 26). The cast won the same prize two years ago, while star Sarah Jessica Parker won the comedy-actress honour in 2001. "You guys have been incredibly generous to us over the course of the show," said co-star Kristin Davis, who accepted the award with cast mates Kim Cattrall and Cynthia Nixon. "And so many of you have come to act with us. We've had more good-looking men on our show. . . . We will all miss you so much." Other comedy TV honours went to Megan Mullally for Will & Grace and Tony Shalhoub for Monk. Canadian Kiefer Sutherland of 24, and Frances Conroy of Six Feet Under, won for best dramatic TV actor and actress. Six Feet Under also was honoured for best acting ensemble in a drama. Angels in America earned Meryl Streep the award for actress in a TV movie or miniseries. Guild nominees were chosen by 4,200 randomly selected union members. The union's full membership of 98,000 was eligible to vote for winners. The guild presented its lifetime achievement award to 91-year-old Karl Malden, an Academy Award winner as supporting actor for A Streetcar Named Desire.-CP.