Critics Choice Awards 2021: Gillian Anderson wins Best Supporting Actress for Margaret Thatcher role
Critics Choice Awards 2021: Gillian Anderson mirrors her Golden Globes success as she wins Best Supporting Actress for her turn as Margaret Thatcher in The Crown
Gillian Anderson has scooped the Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series award for her turn as Margaret Thatcher in The Crown – a week on from winning the same gong at the Golden Globes.
Mayim Bialik and Leslie Jordan presented the award, with Anderson, 52, accepting the award from Prague, where she is filming her new project, White Bird.
She said: ‘Wow! Thank you to the Critics Choice Association and to my fellow nominees!’
Gong! Gillian Anderson has scooped the Best Supporting Actress in a Drama series award for her turn as Margaret Thatcher in The Crown – a week on from winning the same gong at the Golden Globes
She went on to thank the showrunner, producers and Director of Photography of The Crown – although her acceptance speech was mired by somewhat of a glitchy connection.
She then thanked ‘the entire amazing, amazing cast’ with a shout-out to Stephen Boxer, who played Denis Thatcher.
‘He played my hubby – a wonderful and very supportive interpretation,’ she said, adding: ‘I love you all and I love everyone on the planet. So thank you very much!’
A week ago, she took home a Golden Globe for the same role – her first since winning the Best TV Drama Actress for her portrayal of Special Agent Dana Scully in The X-Files in 1997.
Acclaimed: Anderson portrayed the British Prime Minister in season four of the Netflix royal drama
Mayim Bialik and Leslie Jordan presented the award, with Anderson, 52, saying: ‘Thank you to the Critics Choice Association and to my fellow nominees’
‘Oh, my gosh I’m so relaxed everything and then you are relaxed and you are relaxed and then all of a sudden, you start to freak out geez, on okay,’ she said upon hearing her name last Sunday.
Due to the coronavirus crisis, this year’s Critics Choice ceremony is the event’s first ever one to take place both virtually and in-person, with Taye Diggs returning to host for the third year in a row.
Daniel Kaluuya, 32, was the first British star to win big at the awards show, as he was given the Best Supporting Actor gong for his turn in Judas And The Black Messiah.
Judas and the Black Messiah sees William O’Neal [LaKeith Stanfield] infiltrate the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party to gather intelligence on Chairman Fred Hampton [Kaluuya] after he’s offered a plea deal by the FBI.
Winning! A week ago, she took home a Golden Globe for the same role – her first since winning the Best TV Drama Actress for her portrayal of Special Agent Dana Scully in The X-Files in 1997
This time last week: She wore a gorgeous green Dior gown to accept the trophy from the comfort of her own home last week
Kaluuya also earned the same prize at the Golden Globe Awards last week, which means he is certain to be tipped for this year’s Oscars.
The Get Out star beat fellow Brit Sacha Baron Cohen to the prize, as well as the late Chadwick Boseman, Bill Murray, Leslie Odom Jr. and Paul Raci.
Following its huge success at the Golden Globe Awards, The Crown is almost certain to have similar success during the Critics Choice Awards with five of the show’s cast members receiving nods.
Olivia Colman and Emma Corrin are pitted against each other as they are both nominated for the Best Actress in a Drama Series, Colman for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth II and Corrin for her role as the late Princess Diana.
Success! Daniel Kaluuya won Best Supporting Actor prize for Judas And The Black Messiah as the Brit actor scooped the first award of the night at the Critics Choice Awards 2021
The show also earned a nod for Best Drama Series, Josh O’Connor (Prince Charles) received a Best Actor in a Drama Series nomination, while Tobias Menzies (Prince Philip).
In all, the show emerged as the clear leader of the pack when the nominations were announced on Monday, with six nods received.
Also among those up for coveted prizes are Tracey Ullman for Mrs. America (Best Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or Movie Made for Television), Nicholas Hoult for The Great (Best Actor in a Comedy Series), and Hugh Grant for The Undoing (Best Actor in a Limited Series or Movie Made for Television).
John Boyega received a nod for Small Axe (Best Actor in a Limited Series or Movie Made for Television), as did Cynthia Erivo for The Outsider (Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series), who will be up against Wunmi Mosaku (Lovecraft Country).
The Crown and Ozark are both up for the Best Drama Series, with fellow nominees that include The Mandalorian (Disney Plus), Perry Mason (HBO), Lovecraft Country (HBO), This Is Us (NBC), The Good Fight (CBS All Access) and Better Call Saul (AMC).
For Ozark, in addition to Best Drama Series, are up for Best Actor in a Drama Series for Jason Bateman, Best Actress In A Drama Series for Laura Linney, Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series for Tom Pelphrey and Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series for Julia Garner and Janet McTeer.
Elsewhere, Schitt’s Creek received five nominations including Best Comedy Series as well as Best Actor in a Comedy Series for Eugene Levy and Best Actress in a Comedy Series for Catherine O’Hara as well as Best Supporting Actor and Actress in a Comedy Series for its stars Daniel Levy and Annie Murphy, respectively.
Normal People received a nod for Best Limited Series, as well as nods for its lead actor and actress, Paul Mescal and Daisy Edgar-Jones.
American-born, London-based Anya Taylor-Joy’s acclaimed efforts in Netflix show The Queen’s Gambit have earned her a Best Actress in a Limited Series or Movie Made for Television nod.
Kelly Clarkson received a nomination for Best Talk Show alongside the likes of Late Night with Seth Meyers, The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and Jada Pinkett Smith’s Red Table Talk.
What We Do In The Shadows (FX) has five nominations; Better Call Saul has four nominations as does The Plot Against America (HBO); This Is Us (NBC) has three nominations, The Undoing (HBO) also has three noms as well as Ted Lasso (Apple TV+) and The Queen’s Gambit (Netflix).
In the film categories, David Fincher’s Mank garnered an impressive 12 nominations, while Lee Isaac Chung’s Minari has been given 10 nods at the awards show, meaning these two films lead the pack at the 2021 ceremony.
Mank is Netflix’s black-and-white Citizen Kane origin story, and is up for Best Picture, Best Actor (Gary Oldman), Best Supporting Actress (Amanda Seyfried) and Best Director (Fincher), among others.
Minari, A24’s drama about a Korean-American family who seek a new life in Arkansas, has been nominated for Best Picture, Best Actor (Steven Yeun), Best Supporting Actress (Yuh-jung Youn), Best Director and Best Screenplay (both Chung).
Netflix’s Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom and Universal’s Tom Hanks western News Of The World follow with eight and seven nominations each, respectively.
As a result, streaming giant Netflix has received an impressive 46 nominations in total at the event.
The Best Picture category has 10 nominations: Mank, Minari, Da 5 Bloods, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, News of the World, Nomadland, One Night In Miami, Promising Young Woman, Sound of Metal and The Trial of the Chicago 7.
Spike Lee’s Da 5 Bloods, which was snubbed by this year’s Golden Globes, garnered six nominations in total, as did Aaron Sorkin’s The Trial of the Chicago 7.
Chadwick Boseman, who died of cancer last year aged 43, has been posthumously nominated for Best Actor in Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom and Best Supporting Actor in Da 5 Bloods, and has also been mentioned in Acting Ensemble for both movies.
Several British stars have been recognised at the event including Colman, 47, who received a nod for her role in The Father, while The Crown alum Vanessa Kirby features in the Best Actress category for Pieces of a Woman.
The actress, 32, will be up against fellow Brit Carey Mulligan, 35, for her performance in Promising Young Woman, which is also nominated for Best Picture.
The Crown’s Emerald Fennell, 35, who played Camilla on the Netflix show, also impressed, receiving two nominations in the Best Original Screenplay and Best Director categories for her work on Promising Young Woman (Focus Features).
Overall her movie got a whopping six nods from the Critics Choice Awards, also being featured in Best Picture, Best Hair and Makeup, Best Costume Design and Best Actress (Mulligan).
Promising Young Woman is a revenge thriller that follows Cassie (Mulligan), a barista who ends up on a warpath as she tries to seek out vengeance on those who have wronged her.
While Kirby’s film Pieces Of A Women tells the story of young woman, Martha, who when her home birth ends in tragedy, begins a year-long odyssey of mourning that fractures relationships with loved ones in a deeply personal story about her learning to live alongside her loss.
Mulligan and Kirby join Frances McDormand, Viola Davis, Andra Day, Sidney Flanigan and Zendaya in the best actress category.
Brits also dominated in the Best Actor group with Riz Ahmed, 38, Delroy Lindo, 68, Oldman, 62, and Anthony Hopkins, 83, all receiving nominations.
Ahmed was nominated for his role in Sound of Metal (Amazon Studios) and Lindo was chosen for his performance in Da 5 Bloods (Netflix).
Sound of Metal is about how a drummer’s life is thrown into freefall when he begins to lose his hearing while Da 5 Bloods follows four veterans who seek the remains of their squad leader and the fortune he helped them hide after Vietnam.
Oldman also joins them in this category for Mank, which received 12 nods at the awards show, and Anthony Hopkins is the fourth Brit featured for starring in The Father (Sony Pictures Classics) alongside Colman.
The movie follows an ageing Welshman, played by Hopkins, who must deal with his progressing memory loss, while Colman portrays his daughter.
Brit Paul Greengrass was also given a nod by the awards ahow alongside Luke Davies for the News of the World (Universal Pictures) in the Best Adapted Screenplay category.
And screenwriter Christopher Hampton shares a nomination with Florian Zeller for The Father as well.