Politics dominates SAG awards as Hollywood assails Trump’s immigration ban

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Politics took centre stage at the SAG awards as many stars delivered fiery speeches to directly or indirectly criticise Trump’s ban on Muslim travellers.

Hidden Figures was the surprise best film ensemble winner at Sunday’s Screen Actors Guild awards, a show overshadowed by politics as stars slammed US President Donald Trump for restricting entry for travellers from seven Muslim-majority nations. Hidden Figures, the true story of three black female mathematicians during the 1960s space race, ousted awards front-runners Manchester By the Sea and Moonlight to claim the night’s top prize.

“This story is about what happens when we put our differences aside and we come together,” star Taraji P Henson said. “Thank you for appreciating these women, they are hidden figures no more,” she added.

Fences, based on August Wilson’s award-winning stage play about blue-collar African-Americans, claimed two major acting awards. With awards darling La La Land out of the running for the top SAG prize for best ensemble, the win put Hidden Figures firmly into the race for the best picture Oscar, the top accolade in the film industry.

Actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus, whose father was an immigrant from Nazi-dominated France, said: 'The immigrant ban is a blemish and it's un-American'. PHOTO: DAILY MAIL

Voted for by about 120,000 U.S. actors, the two-hour televised SAG awards show often anoints top Academy Award winners since actors comprise the largest body of Oscar voters. A surprised Denzel Washington won the best actor for Fences, beating out front-runners Casey Affleck for Manchester By the Sea and Ryan Gosling for La La Land. Washington’s co-star Viola Davis, who won best supporting actress, thanked the late playwright Wilson for honouring “the average man, who happened to be a man of colour.”

The SAG awards honoured many actors of colour in a year when diversity in Hollywood has been in the spotlight. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced seven Oscar nominees of colour among its acting categories this month after two years when only white actors were nominated, prompting the hashtag #OscarsSoWhite.

According to Daily Mail, Actor Ashton Kutcher kicked off the awards by attacking Trump’s recent executive order. He said, “Everyone at airports who belong in my America, you are a part of the fabric of who we are…we welcome you”.

Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who won best comedy TV actress for playing flawed fictional U.S. President Selina Meyer on HBO’s political satire Veep, called Trump’s ban a “blemish”. “Because I love this country, I am horrified by its blemishes, and this immigrant ban is a blemish,” she said. “It is un-American.”

Actor Ashton Kutcher. PHOTO: DAILY MAIL

Mahershala Ali, who won best supporting actor for his role in independent drama Moonlight said he is the Muslim son of a mother who is a Christian minister. “She didn’t do backflips when I called her to tell her I converted 17 years ago, but I tell you now, we put things to the side,” he said.

Actors Simon Helberg and Jocelyn Towne made their opinions about the controversial ban clear while on the red carpet- with Towne wearing the words ‘Let them in’ written across her chest, and Helberg holding a sign reading ‘Refugees welcome’.

Emma Stone, winning best actress for musical romance La La Land, praised her fellow actors for “reflecting society.” “We’re in a tricky time in the world and in our country, and things are very inexcusable and scary and need action,” she said. “And I’m so grateful to be part of a group of people that care and want to reflect things back to society.”

Netflix Inc dominated the top television wins as women’s’ prison showOrange is the New Black won best comedy ensemble, British royal family show The Crown took the best actor and actress awards for a drama, and new 1980s sci-fi mystery series Stranger Things won best drama ensemble.