American Hustle, Breaking Bad win Screen Actors Guild awards

Cate Blanchette and Downton Abbey’s Maggie Smith receive best actress gongs

Breaking Bad actors Bryan Cranston (R), Anna Gunn (C) and Aaron Paul (L) hold awards at the 20th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards. Photograph: Paul Buck/EPA
Breaking Bad actors Bryan Cranston (R), Anna Gunn (C) and Aaron Paul (L) hold awards at the 20th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards. Photograph: Paul Buck/EPA

American Hustle, the 1970s caper comedy from the director David O. Russell, took the top prize, for best ensemble, at the Screen Actors Guild Awards in Los Angeles last night.

"He is an actors' director, he is the embodiment of it," Bradley Cooper, a star of American Hustle, said of Russell, whose film is considered an Oscar favourites.

The casts of Modern Family and Breaking Bad won in the comedy and drama TV categories, as expected.

"I've had so many crappy jobs, loading trucks downtown," said Bryan Cranston, who also won for best actor in a TV drama. "People yelling at you, 'Cranston, work harder, move faster!' And the only thing that got me through was imagining" that one day he could be a performer, he said, winning the statuette known as the actor.

READ SOME MORE

The ceremony, held at the Shrine Auditorium and broadcast on TBS and TNT, honoured many stars who are also Oscar nominees.

Cate Blanchett (Blue Jasmine) and Matthew McConaughey (Dallas Buyers Club) won for their lead performances, as they did at the Golden Globes less than a week ago.

McConaughey, receiving glowing recognition after two decades as a star, referred to “this bull ride that we take called acting” and said he was lucky to play characters where he can “humble myself to their humanity and get feverishly drunk on their obsessions.”

Lupita Nyong'o, of 12 Years a Slave, and Jared Leto, of Dallas Buyers Club, won for their supporting performances, reprising victories they've scored at other recent award ceremonies, and probably forecasting more trophies in their future.

Helen Mirren scooped the gong for best actress in a movie or mini-series for her performance in the biopic Phil Spector while Downton Abbey's Maggie Smith won the accolade for best actress in a drama series.

Rita Moreno earned a lifetime achievement prize. "This, I don't call it an award, I call it an honour," she said in the press room later. It's not about a single performance, "it's about a lifetime!" Moreno, the rare star who has won an Oscar, a Grammy, a Tony and an Emmy (a feat otherwise known as an EGOT), was told she had one minute of stage time to give her acceptance speech. "I went, wait a minute, I'm Puerto Rican, I can't even say hello in one minute," she said afterwards.

Onstage she included a bleep-worthy expletive as she collected her award. But backstage, she expounded on everything from the secret of life (living in the moment - stopping to smell the roses, she said, or the coffee) to her style choices.

Dressed in a studded leather Herve Leger jacket and a floral Roberto Cavalli gown, Moreno, 82, said, "I may be the only person here tonight who actually paid" for her finery. "It's not going back tomorrow." And, she added, "I feel I look swell."

Winners of the 20th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards

Movies:

Actor: Matthew McConaughey, Dallas Buyers Club

Actress: Cate Blanchett, Blue Jasmine

Supporting actor: Jared Leto, Dallas Buyers Club

Supporting actress: Lupita Nyong’o, 12 Years A Slave

Cast: American Hustle

Stunt ensemble: Lone Survivor

Television:

Actor in a comedy series: Ty Burrell, Modern Family

Actress in a comedy series: Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Veep

Comedy series cast: Modern Family

Actor in a movie or mini-series: Michael Douglas, Behind the Candelabra

Actress in a movie or mini-series: Helen Mirren, Phil Spector

Drama series cast: Breaking Bad

Actor in a drama series: Bryan Cranston, Breaking Bad

Actress in a drama series: Maggie Smith, Downton Abbey

Stunt ensemble: Game of Thrones

Life Achievement: Rita Moreno

New York Times