Thank you very much.
Thank you. Please sit down. Please sit down. Thank you. You have to forgive me,
I have lost my voice in screaming and lamentation this weekend and I have lost
my mind sometime earlier this year so I have to read.
Thank you, Hollywood
Foreign Press. Just to pick up on what Hugh Laurie said, you and all of us in
this room really belong to the most vilified segments of American society right
now. Think about it: Hollywood, foreigners and the press.
But who are we and,
you know, what is Hollywood, anyway? It’s just a bunch of people from other
places. I was born and raised and educated in the public schools of New Jersey,
Viola was born in a sharecropper’s cabin in South Carolina, came up in Central
Falls, R.I. Sarah Paulson was born in Florida, raised by a single mom in
Brooklyn. Sarah Jessica Parker was one of seven or eight kids from Ohio, Amy
Adams was born in Vicenza, Veneto, Italy and Natalie Portman was born in
Jerusalem. Where are their birth certificates?
And the beautiful
Ruth Negga was born in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, raised in Lon — no, in Ireland, I
do believe, and she’s here nominated for playing a small-town girl from
Virginia. Ryan Gosling, like all the nicest people, is Canadian. And Dev Patel
was born in Kenya, raised in London and is here playing an Indian raised in
Tasmania. So Hollywood is crawling with outsiders and foreigners and if we kick
them all out, you’ll have nothing to watch but football and mixed martial arts,
which are not the arts.
They gave me three
seconds to say this, so. An actor’s only job is to enter the lives of people
who are different from us and let you feel what that feels like. And there were
many, many, many powerful performances this year that did exactly that,
breathtaking, compassionate work.
But there was one
performance this year that stunned me. It sank its hooks in my heart, not
because it was good, it was — there’s nothing good about it. But it was
effective and it did its job. It made its intended audience laugh and show
their teeth.
It was that moment
when the person asking to sit in the most respected seat in our country
imitated a disabled reporter, someone he outranked in privilege and power and
the capacity to fight back. It, it kind of broke my heart when I saw it and I
still can’t get it out my head because it wasn’t in a movie. It was real life.
And this instinct to humiliate when it’s modeled by someone in the public
platform, by someone powerful, it filters down into everybody’s life because it
kind of gives permission for other people to do the same thing.
Disrespect invites
disrespect. Violence incites violence. When the powerful use their position to
bully others, we all lose.
OK, go on with that
thing.
OK, this brings me to
the press. We need the principled press to hold power to account, to call them
on the carpet for every outrage.
That’s why our
founders enshrined the press and its freedoms in our constitution. So I only
ask the famously well-heeled Hollywood foreign press and all of us in our
community to join me in supporting the Committee to Protect Journalists, ’cause
we’re going to need them going forward and they’ll need us to safeguard the
truth.
One more thing. Once
when I was standing around the set one day, whining about something, we were going
to work through supper or the long hours or whatever, Tommy Lee Jones said to
me: “Isn’t it such a privilege, Meryl, just to be an actor?” Yeah, it is. And
we have to remind each other of the privilege and the responsibility of the act
of empathy. We should be very proud of the work Hollywood honors here tonight.
As my, as my friend,
the dear departed Princess Leia, said to me once: “Take your broken heart, make
it into art.”
Thank you, Foreign
Press.
- the great Meryl Streep, at this year's Golden Globe Awards, receiving Cecil B. de Mille Lifetime Achievement Award.
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