Too few harsh female roles: Theron, the Queen of Glamour
Honoured by peers for her Monster portrayal
Depp carries off spoils as SAG's best actor
DAVID
GERMAN
LOS
ANGELES—Johnny Depp poached some unexpected plunder at the Screen
Actors Guild Awards. Depp was the surprise best-actor winner for
Pirates Of The Caribbean: The Curse Of The Black Pearl at
Sunday's guild event, Hollywood's last major film honours before
this Sunday's Academy Awards. Depp, who did not attend the awards
ceremony Sunday, beat out Sean Penn, who had been the favourite to
win for Mystic River. The guild's other film prizes went to
the Oscar front-runners: Charlize Theron as best actress for the
serial-killer drama Monster, Tim Robbins as supporting
actor for the dark murder thriller Mystic River and Renée
Zellweger as supporting actress for the Civil War epic Cold
Mountain. Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King,
considered a shoo-in for Sunday's best-picture Oscar, won the
guild's ensemble-acting award, the union's equivalent of a
best-picture honour. "This film deserves every award it can
possibly get. This is the most enormous undertaking, I think, in
film history," said John Rhys-Davies, who played the dwarf Gimli
in director Peter Jackson's Lord Of The Rings trilogy. "May
we all have the chance to be involved in something where
everything is right. Brilliant casting, brilliant directing,''
Rhys-Davies said backstage, surrounded by cast mates that included
Sean Astin, Liv Tyler, Billy Boyd and Andy Serkis. "And this cast
always marched to the sound of the guns, no matter what.'' Among
the guild's TV awards, Sex And The City won for
comedy-acting ensemble on the same night the series ended its
six-year run. The cast won the same prize two years ago and 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. "We will all miss you
so much.'' With final ballots due from Oscar voters by today, the
guild's movie winners gained a last-minute push for Hollywood's
biggest awards.
Though
Penn lost, he still has momentum from last month's Golden Globe
win as best dramatic actor, while Depp faces a handicap at the
Oscars, which historically leans toward meaty drama such as
Mystic River over broad comedy like Pirates Of The
Caribbean. Theron, who has dominated many pre-Oscar honours,
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.
Backstage, Theron said she hoped Monster and such dark
dramas as Monster's Ball, which earned Halle Berry an Oscar
two years ago, will lead to more harsher roles for actresses. "I'm
saddened by the fact that there aren't a lot of conflicted female
characters out there," Theron said, noting that male performers
such as Jack Nicholson and Robert De Niro have had ample
opportunities to play darker roles. "There's so few times that
women get to do a Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? the way
Elizabeth Taylor did. "Those conflicted women who might not be
perfect are a part of our society. I hope that writers will be
encouraged to write more of those parts," she said. Some winners
used the guild awards to make a plug for union solidarity and to
encourage studios and producers to curtail so-called "runaway
production" — a trend toward shooting in Canada, Mexico, Eastern
Europe and other locations to take advantage of tax breaks or
lower labour costs. U.S.-based actors and crew members say
production elsewhere has cost them work. "I'd like to encourage
all the power that's in this room to try to bring back some of
those productions into the United States of America," Robbins
said. -AP
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