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    Home » AFI honorees toast each other ahead of Golden Globe Awards 

    AFI honorees toast each other ahead of Golden Globe Awards 

    By SHOOTSaturday, January 7, 2017Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments4100 Views
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    Denzel Washington arrives at the AFI Awards at the Four Seasons Hotel on Friday, Jan. 6, 2017, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

    By Sandy Cohen, Entertainment Writer

    LOS ANGELES (AP) --

    The Golden Globes will be handed out Sunday (1/8), but many nominees got a practice run through the awards process Friday (1/6) at the American Film Institute's annual luncheon.

    Like the Globes, the AFI Awards celebrate outstanding work in film and television. Unlike the Globes, though, there is no competition: All 11 films and 10 TV shows recognized by AFI are considered winners.

    AFI president Bob Gazzale said nothing was expected of the honorees other than to "embrace and applaud each other as colleagues."

    With no television cameras and no agenda other than to schmooze and nosh, guests happily obliged.

    Sarah Paulson, an Emmy winner and Golden Globe nominee for her portrayal of Marcia Clark in "The People vs. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story," chatted with "Atlanta" creator and star Donald Glover, whose show and performance are up for awards on Sunday.

    AFI also recognized TV's "Veep," ''Game of Thrones," ''The Crown," ''Stranger Things," and "This Is Us" – all Golden Globe nominees – along with "Better Call Saul," ''The Americans" and "The Night Of."

    John Lithgow, a Golden Globe nominee for "The Crown," hung around with Jeff Bridges, who's nominated for his supporting role in "Hell or High Water."

    Former flames and fellow Globe nominees Emma Stone and Andrew Garfield socialized a bit before lunch. Garfield is nominated Sunday for his performance in Mel Gibson's "Hacksaw Ridge;" Stone is a lead actress nominee for her work in Damien Chazelle's "La La Land." AFI recognized both films Friday. Gibson and Chazelle are also Globe nominees for best director.

    Chazelle sat between his two leads, Stone and Ryan Gosling, on Friday. Gosling, also a Golden Globe nominee, quietly left the Four Seasons Hotel ballroom before "La La Land" was recognized onstage.

    AFI's other film winners included Golden Globe nominees "Hell or High Water," ''Moonlight," ''Manchester By the Sea" and "Zootopia," as well as "Sully," ''Silence," ''Fences" and "Arrival." The documentary "O.J.: Made in America" received a special award.

    AFI officials praised and showed clips from each honored production, but there were no acceptance speeches. Instead, producers, directors and stars of the winning films and shows sat with each other and cheered from their tables. Each received a framed certificate.

    Mahershala Ali and Naomie Harris, both up for Golden Globes for their supporting roles in "Moonlight," walked side by side to claim theirs.

    The only star to take the stage was "Fences" director and star Denzel Washington, whom Gazzale introduced as "someone greater than an icon in the community." Gazzale also noted that Washington's son, Malcolm, recently graduated from the AFI Conservatory, which announced a new Audi-sponsored scholarship for female directors Friday.

    "I'm hoping that one day he hires me," Washington quipped after being welcomed with a standing ovation.

    But when it came to talking about "Fences," he was almost speechless.

    "It's just a privilege, a responsibility, a duty and an honor to help in some small way to bring August Wilson's genius to the screen," Washington said. "I don't like to use the word proud, but (I'm) proud of it, and humbled by it all."

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    Tags:AFI AwardsArrivalFencesHell or High WaterMoonlight



    “Lord of the Rings” director Peter Jackson backs long shot de-extinction plan, starring the lost moa

    Tuesday, July 8, 2025
    Filmmaker Peter Jackson, left, and Colossal CEO Ben Lamm hold up bones from Jackson's collection of extinct moa bones in Wellington, New Zealand, 2024. (Courtesy of Colossal Biosciences via AP)

    Filmmaker Peter Jackson owns one of the largest private collections of bones of an extinct New Zealand bird called the moa. His fascination with the flightless ostrich-like bird has led to an unusual partnership with a biotech company known for its grand and controversial plans to bring back lost species.

    On Tuesday, Colossal Biosciences announced an effort to genetically engineer living birds to resemble the extinct South Island giant moa – which once stood 12 feet (3.6 meters) tall – with $15 million in funding from Jackson and his partner Fran Walsh. The collaboration also includes the New Zealand-based Ngāi Tahu Research Centre.

    "The movies are my day job, and the moa are my fun thing I do," said Jackson. "Every New Zealand schoolchild has a fascination with the moa."

    Outside scientists say the idea of bringing back extinct species onto the modern landscape is likely impossible, although it may be feasible to tweak the genes of living animals to have similar physical traits. Scientists have mixed feelings on whether that will be helpful, and some worry that focusing on lost creatures could distract from protecting species that still exist.

    The moa had roamed New Zealand for 4,000 years until they became extinct around 600 years ago, mainly because of overhunting. A large skeleton brought to England in the 19th century, now on display at the Yorkshire Museum, prompted international interest in the long-necked bird.

    Unlike Colossal's work with dire wolves, the moa project is in very early stages. It started with a phone call about two years ago after Jackson heard about the company's efforts to "de-extinct" – or create genetically similar animals to – species like the woolly mammoth and the dire wolf.

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