Golden Globes 2025: the winners, the losers, the red carpet – live!
Key events
WINNER: Jean Smart (Hacks) — female actor in a television series, musical or comedy
Adrian Horton
And the first TV award of the night goes to the ever-deserving Jean Smart of the excellent Hacks. “I’ve never been so happy to be called a Hack,” she said before thanking her co-star (and onscreen co-writer/assistant) Hannah Einbinder.
WINNER: Zoe Saldaña (Emilia Pérez) — female actor in a supporting role in a film
Adrian Horton
The first award of the night goes to an overwhelmed Zoe Saldaña for her acting/rapping/singing in the wild genre trip that is Emilia Pérez.
“My heart is full of gratitude,” she shouted through tears. “This is a first time for me and I’m just so blessed that I’m sharing this moment with Selena [Gomez] and Karla [Sofia Gascón] and Jacques [Audiard] … I know that it’s a competition but all I have witnessed is us showing up for each other and supporting each other.”
It’s showtime!
Adrian Horton
The celebs are seated, the champagne poured, and the 82nd Golden Globes are under way. The host, Nikki Glaser, best known as a pretty brutal roast comic, kept it pretty safe tonight – welcome to “Ozempic’s biggest night!” was her opening line – striking the right tone between ribbing and warmth.
“I am not here to roast you tonight,” she promised. “How could I really? You’re all so powerful, so talented … you could do anything, except tell the country who to vote for.”
Glaser took an equal opportunity roasting approach, with digs at TV (“tonight we celebrate the best of film and hold space for television”), streaming platforms (“I think I’ve seen more actual peacocks in my life than shows on Peacock”), Timothée Chalamet (“you have the most gorgeous eyelashes on your upper lip”), and Netflix’s Emilia Pérez (“without a doubt, the most audacious, groundbreaking film to auto-play after Is It Cake?”).
And she signed off with a very important reminder to the stars: “If you do lose tonight, please keep in mind that the point of making art is not to win awards. The point of making art is to start a tequila brand so popular that you never have to make art again.” All in all, a solid start!
Ellie Violet Bramley
The show’s about to begin so over and out from me, but not without one final look: Tilda Swinton, proving here that while colour was the main talking point when it came to the costumes in The Room Next Door – Swinton even said in a recent interview that “everybody in Pedro’s films dressed not only for each other but for Pedro! That’s what colour is for” – there’s an awful lot that a razor-sharp cut can do, too.
Ellie Violet Bramley
In a pleasing shift from Elphaba green, Cynthia Erivo has opted for an extremely ornate custom Louis Vuitton gown that could, in a certain light, be likened to a particularly beautiful doily.
Adrian Horton
If she wins tonight for best actress in a musical or comedy, the Emilia Pérez star Karla Sofia Gascón would become the first out trans actor to take home a film Golden Globe. (Michaela Jaé Rodriguez became the first trans actor to win a TV award three years ago, for Pose.) Gascón could also become the first out trans actor nominated for an Oscar – a prospect she discussed the Guardian in October.
“If it happens, I will be the happiest actress in the world,” she said. “If not, it doesn’t matter. All I could do – all I did – was to put my entire soul into the film. And I believe it is the best work of my life.”
Read the full interview here:
Benjamin Lee
In case you need a refresher, here’s a full list of nominations from Anora to Zendaya:
Benjamin Lee
“It is a comforting thing to be able to put your mind somewhere else, to something entertaining, that also has a bit of a mystery. People need that right now – to get away from everything and get lost.”
Here’s our interview with tonight’s best actress in a drama series nominee Kathy Bates, talking about Matlock:
Benjamin Lee
“I will not name names. But as recently as a couple of months ago, I had certain people telling me that I would never make another movie. So yes, absolutely, having the film heralded in this way is just great.”
Here’s our interview with tonight’s best director nominee Brady Corbet, talking about his epic saga The Brutalist:
Ellie Violet Bramley
Nobody does it quite like Zendaya. Her stylist, or image architect, as he likes to be known, Law Roach, told the New York Times ahead of time that the star would be wearing a Louis Vuitton look “inspired by Joyce Bryant, the glamorous Black singer of the 1940s and 50s who broke racial barriers in nightclubs”.
Adrian Horton
While there’s no clear frontrunner for the film awards, the TV side of things is easier to predict. Three shows dominated September’s Emmy awards: FX’s Shōgun for best drama (taking the space left by the dearly departed Succession, which cleaned up at last year’s Globes); Netflix’s Baby Reindeer for limited series; and Max’s Hacks for comedy.
The Globes are traditionally the tipsy, erratic aunt of awards season, so who knows what will happen; we’ll have a better sense of the new voting body’s taste in the years to come. But I’d expect another sweep for the industry-favorite Shōgun – Anna Sawai and Hiroyuki Sanada deserve! – and a strong night for Hacks, given the waning popularity of The Bear, last year’s dominant comedy series (that is not a comedy series).
But there could still be some surprises. Kate Winslet in the little-watched The Regime over True Detective’s Jodie Foster? Was the new HFPA charmed by Adam Brody in Nobody Wants This? Perhaps.
Benjamin Lee
“Most people aren’t even aware what they’re feeling as they’re feeling it. Or they’re leaning away from it while interacting with other people. It makes me cringe when I watch a movie and it’s, ‘Oh, look how sad this guy is.’ Wouldn’t he be concealing that?”
Here’s our interview with tonight’s best supporting actor nominee Kieran Culkin, talking about his role in the comedy drama A Real Pain:
Ellie Violet Bramley
Opera gloves – as worn by screen stars such as Marilyn Monroe and Audrey Hepburn – have been finding popularity on TikTok and here Pamela Anderson, nominated for a Globe for her role in the The Last Showgirl, has added a note of theatricality to an all-black ensemble that might otherwise have fallen a bit flat.
Benjamin Lee
The Globes might not be as respected as the Oscars but they’re often way more entertaining, a looser atmosphere and easier access to alcohol assisting things.
There’s almost always a presenting skit that’s genuinely hilarious (early guess is that tonight’s might come courtesy of Melissa McCarthy) with last year giving us this moment of genius from Kristen Wiig and Will Ferrell:
The pair are pros at lifting the Globes, having shown everyone how to do it back in 2013:
Ellie Violet Bramley
There’s a lot to compute here, not least with the mismatching patterns that remind me of static. But any outfit on Colman Domingo, nominated for his part in the film Sing Sing, feels worth trying to compute. The king of the red carpet brooch recently told W magazine: “I’ve always loved dressing. I have an Easter Sunday picture of me as a kid: I’m wearing a red, white, and blue jacket with brown trousers and a tie that’s really big. My mom said, ‘Oh baby, that doesn’t match,’ and I said, ‘But I like it! It makes me feel good!’ Which is why I’m not afraid of a little fringe or a ruffle.” And the red carpet is a more interesting place for it.
Benjamin Lee
“I play a shadow. The Catholic church is very patriarchal, the cardinals are only men, but the nuns aren’t subservient. They have enormous power. It was important to underline their silence, but that silence doesn’t have to be powerless. I grew up in Rome and went to Catholic school. I knew how to play that because I lived it.”
Here’s our interview with tonight’s best supporting actress nominee Isabella Rossellini, talking about Conclave:
Benjamin Lee
Going into tonight, there are already a few historic nominations, such as Karla Sofía Gascón being the first out trans performer to get a film acting nod, but there could be some further records to come:
-
Fernanda Torres could become the first Brazilian actor to win in the best actress in a drama category, for her performance in I’m Still Here
-
Yura Borisov could become the first Russian actor to win best supporting actor, for his performance in Anora
-
Payal Kapadia could become the first Indian film-maker to win best director, for All We Imagine as Light
-
Sofia Vergara could become the first Colombian actor to win best actress in a limited series, for her role in Griselda
-
Quinta Brunson or Ayo Edebiri could become the first Black actor to win best actress in a comedy series for the second time
-
Hans Zimmer could tie Dimitri Tiomkin for the most best original score wins if he takes it home for Dune: Part Two
Adrian Horton
Trust Jeremy Strong will show up to the function in a funny hat – though, plot twist, the king of “monastic chic” is not wearing brown!