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Tag: awards

  • Association of Latino Administrators and Superintendents (ALAS) Selects Carlos Garcia for its Lifetime Achievement Award

    Association of Latino Administrators and Superintendents (ALAS) Selects Carlos Garcia for its Lifetime Achievement Award

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    WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Association of Latino Administrators and Superintendents (ALAS) has named Carlos Garcia as the recipient of its 2024-25 ALAS Lifetime Achievement Award. Garcia was a founding member of ALAS and has also served as the association’s president, among other roles. Garcia was recognized at a special awards ceremony during the ALAS Gala Dinner Event being held October 11, 2024 at the Portland Marriott Downtown Waterfront on the final day of the ALAS 21st National Education Summit.

    “We are honored to recognize one of our founding members with the Lifetime Achievement Award,” said ALAS Executive Director Ulysses Navarrete. “Carlos Garcia’s dedication and leadership in helping historically marginalized students, namely Latinos, during his over 40-year career is truly an inspiration to all in the field. He demonstrates a “si se puede” attitude in all that he does and is a living example that if we want to see change, we need to get off the bench and into the game.”

    Garcia served as a superintendent for 16 years in four distinctive school districts: Sanger USD (CA), Fresno USD (CA), Clark County SD (NV) and San Francisco USD (CA) before retiring in 2012. In 2003, he was a founding member of the national ALAS, as well as the California Association of Latino Superintendents and Administrators (CALSA). He served as an ALAS board member from 2003 to 2006 and as President Elect in 2009, as President from 2010 – 2011, and as Past President from 2012 – 2013.

    During his more than 37-year career in education, Garcia built a strong track record for boosting student achievement and narrowing the achievement gap through his work as a teacher, principal, central office administrator and leader in classroom instruction. In addition to his role as superintendent, he taught at Rowland Unified School District (La Puente, CA) and Chaffey Joint Union High School District (Ontario, CA) before going on to serve as a principal for schools in the Pajaro Valley Unified School District (Watsonville, CA) and SFUSD’s Horace Mann Middle School. 

    Garcia is the recipient of the 2005 Nevada Superintendent of the Year Award and the 2010 Ferd Kiesel Memorial Distinguished Service Award among many other awards and accolades.

    Garcia has a passion for serving urban, underserved children. Growing up in a Los Angeles barrio himself, he made this his mission in education and in life. He is a transformational national leader and is a torchbearer for equity and social justice for all students and their communities. 

    The ALAS awards recognize individuals and organizations for their extraordinary education leadership and advocacy around issues impacting the education of Latino and other historically marginalized students. Other award recipients include Superintendent of the Year Dr. Debra Duardo, Central Office Administrator of the Year Joanne Fimbres, Principal of the Year Carlos Ramirez, Advocacy Award winner Dr. LeAnne Salazar-Montoya, ALAS Student of the Year Dafnee Marquez Padilla and ALAS Affiliate of the Year Arizona ALAS.

    The ALAS National Education Summit is the association’s flagship leadership development and networking event for administrators at schools and districts that serve primarily Latino and other historically marginalized youth. The event focuses on addressing challenges in the education system, particularly those impacting Latino students, and provides a forum for participants to engage in meaningful discussions and identify solutions that can be applied throughout the industry. The theme of this year’s Summit is “Embracing Tomorrow, Fostering Culture, Driving Change, and Promoting Collaboration.”

    For more information about ALAS, visit www.alasedu.org.

    About the Association of Latino Administrators & Superintendents (ALAS)

    The Association of Latino Administrators and Superintendents [ALAS] is committed to providing a perspective to all aspiring school and district administrators, including superintendents, through programs, services, advocacy and networks rooted in Latino experiences and culture. Our Vision, Mission and Goals are to provide leadership at the national level that assures every school in America effectively serves the educational needs of all students with an emphasis on Latino and other historically marginalized youth through continuous professional learning, policy advocacy, and networking to share practices of promise for our students and the communities where we serve.

    By the year 2026, Latino children will make up 30 percent of the school-age population. In the nation’s largest states – California, Texas, Florida, and New York- all of whom are ALAS State Affiliates – Latinos already have reached that level. It is of vital interest to invest in the education of every child, and the professional learning of all educators who serve Latino youth.

    eSchool News Staff
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    ESchool News Staff

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  • Michelin Will Announce Chicago, D.C., and New York Stars in December

    Michelin Will Announce Chicago, D.C., and New York Stars in December

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    Chicago restaurants must wait until December to learn if they’ve earned a Michelin star. Like last year, the tire guide will bundle announcements for Chicago, New York, and Washington, D.C. at a private party held in New York.

    Michelin will announce on Monday, December 9 at a ceremony held at the Glasshouse in New York. Last year’s announcement came in November, and the big news was Smyth joined Alinea as the only two restaurants in Chicago will a full three Michelin stars. Daisies also received a Green Star which recognizes a commitment to environmental sustainability. There is some irony as the tire company created the guide to encourage car travel.

    Twenty-one Chicago restaurants have Michelin stars, one of the highest restaurant honors. But in recent years, local tourism boards have been attracting the Michelin Guide to their cities to help boost travel. Some have questioned whether this waters down the honor. The bib gourmands, a designation that recognizes value for the money, will also be announced.

    The guide has been rating restaurants in Chicago since 2011. The guide arrived in New York in 2005 and in D.C. in 2017. The guide is in eight American markets: California, Florida (Miami/Orlando/Tampa), Colorado, Atlanta, and Texas. It’s also in Toronto, Vancouver, Mexico, and Quebec.

    A fundraiser for Northern Thailand

    Northern Thailand has been in crisis with floods and typhoons. The government ordered evacuations, shelters were set up, and hundreds of animals needed rescue. Waters have since receded, but aid is still required. NaKorn, an upscale restaurant that opened in 2016 in suburban Evanston, is holding a fundraiser dinner to help the community. Proceeds from the Sunday, October 20 event will benefit underprivileged children and families in Thailand. There are two seatings and reservations are available via OpenTable.

    Goose Island’s Rare Day

    Goose Island Beer Co. won’t hold its annual Propreitor’s Day, an event that celebrates the Chicago-area-only release of a Bourbon County Brand Stout variant. It’s the one packaged in a blue box and the flavors change every year. Instead, Goose has unveiled a replacement centering around another variant: Rare Day. The event will take place on Saturday, November 16 at the Goose Island Barrel House. There were two sessions, but the early session has already sold out. Tickets for the $160 event are on sale via Oznr.

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    Ashok Selvam

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  • ‘Sugarcane’ Leads Critics Choice Documentary Awards Nominations

    ‘Sugarcane’ Leads Critics Choice Documentary Awards Nominations

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    Sugarcane leads the nominations for the 2024 Critics Choice Documentary Awards, with eight nods, including for best documentary feature.

    Billy & Molly: An Otter Love Story, Daughters and Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story received six nominations each, including for best documentary feature.

    The other best documentary feature nominees are The Greatest Night in Pop, Jim Henson Idea Man, Music by John Williams, Piece by Piece, The Remarkable Life of Ibelin and Will & Harper.

    In addition to best doc feature, Sugarcane, which investigates the abusive legacy of Catholic-run Native American missionary schools, is up for best director and best new documentary filmmakers (Julian Brave NoiseCat and Emily Kassie), best cinematography (Christopher LaMarca and Emily Kassie), best editing (Nathan Punwar and Maya Daisy Hawk), best historical documentary, best political documentary and best true crime documentary.

    Billy & Molly‘s Charlie Hamilton James is up for best new documentary filmmaker and, with Johnny Rolt and Bertie Gregory, best cinematography. The film is also nominated for best score (Erland Cooper), best narration (written by Hamilton James and performed by Billy and Susan Mail) and best science/nature documentary.

    Daughters is up for best director and best new documentary feature (Natalie Rae and Angela Patton), best cinematography (Michael Cambio Fernandez), best editing (Troy Lewis and Adelina Bichis) and best score (Kelsey Lu).

    Super/Man is up for best director (Ian Bonhôte and Peter Ettedgui), best editing (Otto Burnham), best score (Ilan Eshkeri), best archival documentary and best biographical documentary.

    The 9th annual Critics Choice Awards are set to be presented at a ceremony on Sunday, Nov. 10 at New York’s Edison Ballroom, hosted by Erich Bergen, which will be livestreamed on YouTube, X and Facebook.

    A complete list of this year’s Critics Choice Documentary Awards nominations follows.

    BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
    Billy & Molly: An Otter Love Story (National Geographic)
    Daughters (Netflix)
    The Greatest Night in Pop (Netflix)
    Jim Henson Idea Man (Disney+)
    Music by John Williams (Walt Disney Studios)
    Piece by Piece (Focus Features)
    The Remarkable Life of Ibelin (Netflix)
    Sugarcane (National Geographic)
    Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story (Warner Bros. Pictures, DC Studios, HBO
    Documentary Films, CNN Films)
    Will & Harper (Netflix)

    BEST DIRECTOR
    Ian Bonhôte & Peter Ettedgui – Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story (Warner Bros.
    Pictures, DC Studios, HBO Documentary Films, CNN Films)
    Josh Greenbaum – Will & Harper (Netflix)
    Ron Howard – Jim Henson Idea Man (Disney+)
    Julian Brave NoiseCat & Emily Kassie – Sugarcane (National Geographic)
    Natalie Rae & Angela Patton – Daughters (Netflix)
    Benjamin Ree – The Remarkable Life of Ibelin (Netflix)

    BEST NEW DOCUMENTARY FILMMAKER(S)
    Brendan Bellomo & Slava Leontyev – Porcelain War (Picturehouse)
    Carla Gutiérrez – Frida (Amazon MGM Studios)
    Charlie Hamilton James – Billy & Molly: An Otter Love Story
    (National Geographic)
    Sue Kim – The Last of the Sea Women (Apple TV+)
    Julian Brave NoiseCat & Emily Kassie – Sugarcane (National Geographic)
    Natalie Rae & Angela Patton – Daughters (Netflix)

    BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
    Michael Cambio Fernandez – Daughters (Netflix)
    Charlie Hamilton James, Johnny Rolt, Bertie Gregory – Billy & Molly: An Otter Love Story
    (National Geographic)
    Christopher LaMarca, Emily Kassie – Sugarcane (National Geographic)
    Iris Ng, Eunsoo Cho, Justin Turkowski – The Last of the Sea Women (Apple TV+)
    Zoë White – Will & Harper (Netflix)
    Jessica Young – The Blue Angels (Amazon MGM Studios)

    BEST EDITING
    Otto Burnham – Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story (Warner Bros. Pictures, DC Studios,
    HBO Documentary Films, CNN Films)
    Rik Chaubet – Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat (Kino Lorber)
    Paul Crowder – Jim Henson Idea Man (Disney+)
    Troy Lewis, Adelina Bichiș – Daughters (Netflix)
    Nathan Punwar, Maya Daisy Hawke – Sugarcane (National Geographic)
    Robert Stengård – The Remarkable Life of Ibelin (Netflix)

    BEST SCORE
    Erland Cooper – Billy & Molly: An Otter Love Story (National Geographic)
    Ilan Eshkeri – Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story (Warner Bros. Pictures, DC Studios,
    HBO Documentary Films, CNN Films)
    Nathan Halpern – Will & Harper (Netflix)
    Uno Helmersson – The Remarkable Life of Ibelin (Netflix)
    Kelsey Lu – Daughters (Netflix)
    Marc Shaiman – Albert Brooks: Defending My Life (HBO | Max)

    BEST NARRATION
    Bad River (50 Eggs Films)
    Written by Mary Mazzio
    Performed by Quannah ChasingHorse & Edward Norton
    Billy & Molly: An Otter Love Story (National Geographic)
    Written by Charlie Hamilton James
    Performed by Billy Mail & Susan Mail
    Dahomey (Mubi)
    Written by Makenzy Orcel
    Performed by Lucrece Houegbelo, Parfait Viayinon, Didier Sedoha Nassegande, and Sabine
    Badjogoumin
    Made in England: The Films of Powell and Pressburger (Cohen Media Group)
    Written and performed by Martin Scorsese
    Queens (National Geographic)
    Written by Chloë Sarosh
    Performed by Angela Bassett
    Steve! (Martin) A Documentary in 2 Pieces (Apple TV+)
    Written and performed by Steve Martin

    BEST ARCHIVAL DOCUMENTARY
    Black Twitter: A People’s History (Hulu/Onyx Collective)
    The Greatest Night in Pop (Netflix)
    Jim Henson Idea Man (Disney+)
    Made in England: The Films of Powell and Pressburger (Cohen Media Group)
    Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat (Kino Lorber)
    Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story (Warner Bros. Pictures, DC Studios, HBO
    Documentary Films, CNN Films)

    BEST HISTORICAL DOCUMENTARY
    Bad River (50 Eggs Films)
    Dahomey (Mubi)
    The Greatest Night in Pop (Netflix)
    Made in England: The Films of Powell and Pressburger (Cohen Media Group)
    Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat (Kino Lorber)
    Sugarcane (National Geographic)

    BEST BIOGRAPHICAL DOCUMENTARY
    Frida (Amazon MGM Studios)
    I Am: Celine Dion (Amazon MGM Studios)
    Jim Henson Idea Man (Disney+)
    The Remarkable Life of Ibelin (Netflix)
    Steve! (Martin) A Documentary in 2 Pieces (Apple TV+)
    Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story (Warner Bros. Pictures, DC Studios, HBO
    Documentary Films, CNN Films)

    BEST MUSIC DOCUMENTARY
    The Greatest Night in Pop (Netflix)
    I Am: Celine Dion (Amazon MGM Studios)
    Music by John Williams (Walt Disney Studios)
    Piece by Piece (Focus Features)
    Road Diary: Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band (Hulu)
    Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat (Kino Lorber)

    BEST POLITICAL DOCUMENTARY
    Bad River (50 Eggs Films)
    Girls State (Apple TV+)
    Porcelain War (Picturehouse)
    Stopping the Steal (HBO | Max)
    Sugarcane (National Geographic)
    The Truth vs. Alex Jones (HBO | Max)

    BEST SCIENCE/NATURE DOCUMENTARY
    Apollo 13: Survival (Netflix)
    Billy & Molly: An Otter Love Story (National Geographic)
    Blink (National Geographic)
    The Last of the Sea Women (Apple TV+)
    Secrets of the Octopus (National Geographic)
    The Space Race (National Geographic)

    BEST SPORTS DOCUMENTARY
    Copa 71 (New Black Films)
    The Dynasty: New England Patriots (Apple TV+)
    Mountain Queen: The Summits of Lhakpa Sherpa (Netflix)
    Mr. McMahon (Netflix)
    Simone Biles Rising (Netflix)
    The Turnaround (Netflix)

    BEST TRUE CRIME DOCUMENTARY
    American Nightmare (Netflix)
    Black Box Diaries (MTV Documentary Films/Paramount+)
    Incident (The New Yorker)
    The Jinx – Part Two (HBO | Max)
    Stopping the Steal (HBO | Max)
    Sugarcane (National Geographic)

    BEST SHORT DOCUMENTARY
    I Am Ready, Warden (MTV Documentary Films/Paramount+)
    Incident (The New Yorker)
    Makayla’s Voice: A Letter to the World (Netflix)
    Once Upon a Time in Ukraine (Earle Mack Productions, Storyville Films, Goldcrest Films)
    The Only Girl in the Orchestra (Netflix)
    The Turnaround (Netflix)

    BEST LIMITED DOCUMENTARY SERIES
    America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders (Netflix)
    Black Twitter: A People’s History (Hulu/Onyx Collective)
    Mr. McMahon (Netflix)
    Ren Faire (HBO | Max)
    Secrets of the Octopus (National Geographic)
    Simone Biles Rising (Netflix)

    BEST ONGOING DOCUMENTARY SERIES
    30 for 30 (ESPN)
    America’s Most Wanted (Fox Broadcasting Company)
    The Food That Built America (History)
    Independent Lens (PBS)
    The Jinx – Part Two (HBO | Max)
    POV (PBS)

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    Hilary Lewis

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  • Zoe Saldana, Fede Alvarez and More Among 2024 Celebration of Latino Cinema & Television Honorees

    Zoe Saldana, Fede Alvarez and More Among 2024 Celebration of Latino Cinema & Television Honorees

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    The Critics Choice Association announced its list of honorees for its fourth annual Celebration of Latino Cinema & Television. The event will take place on Oct. 22 at the Egyptian Theater in Hollywood.

    “We are incredibly proud to have such a remarkable group of honorees,” said Critics Choice Association board member Clayton Davis. “This year’s roster of projects, helmed, produced, and starring Latino artists, is another stunning example of our community’s deep and rich talents. We cannot wait to honor them for their remarkable achievements.”

    The list of honorees includes:

    Zoe Saldaña: Groundbreaker Award – for her starring role in Netflix’s “Emilia Pérez,” which won her the Best Actress Prize for the ensemble cast at this year’s Cannes Film Festival.

    Fede Alvarez: Vanguard Award – for writing and directing the highest-grossing horror film in IMAX history, 20th Century Studios’ “Alien: Romulus.”

    Pablo Larraín: Director Award – for his work on Netflix’s “Maria.” The film competed in the Venice Film Festival and was one of the official selections for both the Telluride Film Festival and the New York Film Festival this year.

    Issa López: Director Award – Series – for her output on the HBO Original Series “True Detective: Night Country,” which notably received 19 Emmy nominations, the most for any limited or anthology series this year.

    Francesca Sloane: Showrunner Award – for her development of the Prime Video’s series “Mr. & Mrs. Smith.” It was nominated 16 times at this year’s Emmys and went home with two wins.

    Adriana Barraza: Actress Award – Film – for her dramatization of Maria in the Roadside Attractions’ film “My Penguin Friend.”

    Fernanda Torres: Actress Award – International Film – for her role in the Sony Pictures feature “I’m Still Here.” This film earned the Best Screenplay award at this year’s Venice Film Festival and has been selected as Brazil’s 2024 submission for Best International Feature Film at the Oscars.

    Emayatzy Corinealdi: Actress Award – Series – for her performance on the Hulu and Onyx show “Reasonable Doubt.” Starz will bestow a special STARZ #TakeTheLead designation onto Corinealdi’s award to highlight the narratives of women in underrepresented audiences.

    Ramón Rodríguez: Breakthrough Actor Award – Series – for his acting in the ABC series “Will Trent.”

    “Acapulco”: Comedy Series Award – The Apple TV+ show stars Emmy-winner Eugenio Derbez, Enrique Arrizon, Fernando Carsa, and Camila Perez.

    “Familia de Medianoche”: International Series Award – The Apple TV+ Spanish-language drama that features Renata Vaca, Joaquín Cosío, and Diego Calva.

    The host of the Celebration of Latino Cinema & Television will be Davis, who also writes and co-programs the event. He is also the Awards Editor for Variety and hosts the Emmy-winning series “Variety Studio: Actors on Actors” on PBS. It is produced by Madelyn Hammond and Javier Infante of Madelyn Hammond & Associates.

    Sponsors include Delta Air Lines, IMDbPro, Milagro Tequila, and STARZ #TakeTheLead. Partners include Dell Technologies and FIJI Water.

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    Emiliana Betancourt

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  • In ‘The Franchise,’ Aya Cash Learned Dark Hollywood Secrets—and Applied Some Personal Experience Too

    In ‘The Franchise,’ Aya Cash Learned Dark Hollywood Secrets—and Applied Some Personal Experience Too

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    When Aya Cash first auditioned for The Franchise, she didn’t get the part. The You’re the Worst and The Boys star had experienced such rejection plenty of times before, but this particular project—of a pedigree including Oscar-winning director Sam Mendes and Emmy-winning Veep producer Armando Iannucci—proved hard to let go of. So hard, in fact, that she jumped at the chance to try again. “They ended up getting rid of that role that I had auditioned for and not gotten…and so they wrote [a new] role,” she tells me over Zoom. “Then an audition came my way again—and I’m a glutton for punishment, so I thought, Well, let’s go get another rejection!” Instead, Mendes personally offered her the part on a video call.

    It’s the kind of Hollywood whiplash that The Franchise (premiering Sunday on HBO) depicts rather unsparingly. The series, created by Succession alum Jon Brown, is told through the eyes of a beleaguered crew working on a big-budget, green-screen-heavy comic book adaptation. The production is stuck in a crammed assembly line of releases planned by the fictitious Maximum Studios, whose problems resemble those of the current Marvel Cinematic Universe: diminishing box office returns, overworked visual-effects artists, auteur directors getting in over their heads. Cash portrays Anita, a producer who replaces her fired predecessor on the project and is swiftly placed in the impossible middle ground between executives and creatives. She dreams of using the project as a springboard to launch a boutique company and finally move on from the “franchise bullshit.”

    The Franchise takes direct, satirical aim at the state of modern filmmaking, leaving no perspective behind. This includes its depiction of the movie’s stars (played by Billy Magnussen, Richard E. Grant, and Katherine Waterston), who navigate their dysfunctional industry’s enduringly warped understandings of everything from gender politics to set conditions to artistic value. Soon to be entering her third decade as a professional actor, Cash knows a thing or two about all of that too—perhaps that’s why her weathered, biting take on Anita rings so true. She had a lot of material to draw from—beginning, of course, with her rocky start on this very project.

    Vanity Fair: I’m not sure how you generally take rejection, but did you feel any reluctance about jumping back in to audition for The Franchise again?

    Aya Cash: To be brutally honest, I take all rejection horribly. It’s part of my job to be rejected, and yet I’ve never gotten good at it. I always take it personally. I’m always convinced it’s completely my fault, and I’m devastated. Going where you’re wanted is also a good MO. But sometimes with these jobs, you have to prove it. And the job that changed my entire life, You’re the Worst, I also didn’t get the first time around—I had been rejected by the network, and then Stephen [Falk] really fought for me. So I auditioned again and got it. I was never made to feel second-class or [like] I didn’t deserve to be there by the network, so it had worked out. Maybe that experience helped me go, Okay, well, let’s do it again.

    By Griff Lipson.

    As someone who’s worked in Hollywood for many years, what struck you about the content of this show as feeling particularly honest? What were you excited to dig into?

    If you play tennis, you were super excited when Challenges came out. If you’re a potter, the Kelly Reichardt movie with Michelle [Williams], Showing Up, you’re like, Oh, it’s my thing! So to explore how the sausage gets made in Hollywood, you just feel like, Oh, I’m actually already the expert on this. People would not believe the craziness that goes on behind the scenes. It’s pure magic what you see on camera; it’s so composed and makes so much sense because behind the scenes it’s hundreds of people making this thing happen. It felt really special to also honor those people. You spend more time with crews than you do with your family often, because you’re working 15, 16 hours a day. To get to see those people represented also felt very special and exciting.

    It also pinpoints many silly things actors have to do. What felt most familiar?

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    David Canfield

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  • ‘Hacks’ Gets the Last Laugh, Upsets ‘The Bear’ for Best Comedy at Emmys 2024

    ‘Hacks’ Gets the Last Laugh, Upsets ‘The Bear’ for Best Comedy at Emmys 2024

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    Never count out Deborah Vance. In a stunning upset, the Max original comedy Hacks beat out heavy favorite and reigning champion The Bear to win the outstanding-comedy trophy at the Emmys 2024.

    “I have no thoughts in my brain,” said Hacks cocreator Paul W. Downs when accepting the award. The visibly shocked Downs went on to thank his cast and crew before shouting out the importance of having elder representation onscreen. “About 20% of our population is over 60…and they’re only 3% of our characters on television,” he said. “I’m a great young supporting actor, [but] I really want to be a good old lead.”

    With The Bear coming off six Primetime Emmy wins for its first season, including outstanding comedy series; lead actor for Jeremy Allen White; supporting actor for Ebon Moss-Bachrach; and supporting actress for Ayo Edebiri, season two of the show seemed almost insurmountable heading into Sunday’s Emmys. However, soft reviews for The Bear’s third season—which came out less than two months before the Television Academy began final voting for The Bear’s second installment—coupled with raves for Hacks’ third season—which found Jean Smart’s aging comedian, Deborah Vance, recommitting to her dream of hosting a late-night television program—proved to be too much for The Bear to handle.

    This was the first time Hacks and The Bear faced off at the Emmys, and the showdown initially seemed to be a blowout, with White and Moss-Bachrach repeating wins in the lead-actor and supporting-actor comedy categories. The Bear seemed even more unstoppable when Liza Colón-Zayas took home her first Emmy for outstanding supporting actress in a comedy series, beating out stiff competition from acting legends like Meryl Streep, Carol Burnett, and Hacks’ own Hannah Einbinder.

    But when Smart won her third Emmy for lead actress, besting The Bear’s Edebiri—who made the move from supporting actress to lead actress between seasons one and two—it was clear that the race was still on. An outstanding-writing-for-a comedy-series win for Hacks star and cocreator Downs and his wife, cocreator Lucia Aniello, plus an outstanding-directing win for Bear creator Christopher Storer—honored for his work on the seminal Christmas episode “Fishes”—made clear that it was a coin toss as to who would prevail in the biggest comedy race of the night.

    In the end, the dishes Carmy and Sydney served up were no match for the comedic stylings of Vance and Ava. While accepting the best-comedy trophy, Aniello highlighted the importance of comedy and teased that a fourth season of Hacks was imminent. “It can bridge divides. When you laugh with someone, you have something in common with them…. It speaks truth to power. It really does. So support your local comedian,” said Aniello. “We have to go, because we start shooting the next season in five days.”

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    Chris Murphy

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  • Emmys 2024: See All the Winners Here

    Emmys 2024: See All the Winners Here

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    The Emmys 2024 may wind up looking an awful lot like the delayed 2023 Emmys that took place in January, in that three front-runner shows seem all but certain to sweep the awards in the drama, comedy, and limited-series categories. The last time Emmys were handed out, those separate factions were ruled by Succession, The Bear, and Beef, respectively. This time around, The Bear should still come out on top in comedy (even if its recent third season, ineligible for the 2024 Emmys, has dampened enthusiasm for the series somewhat)—but drama will be dominated by the FX epic Shōgun, which enters the night having received a cool 25 total Emmy nominations. In fact, Shōgun already won 14 of those awards at the Creative Arts Emmys, making its further command feel like a forgone conclusion.

    We’re predicting wins for Shōgun in best drama as well as both best actor in a drama (Hiroyuki Sanada for playing the imposing feudal leader Lord Yoshii Toranaga) and best actress in a drama (Anna Sawai for her role as the deceptively placid Lady Mariko). It’s an Emmy hat trick that could well be matched by the night’s likely big winner in the limited-series categories: Baby Reindeer, a surprise Netflix hit written by and starring Scottish comedian Richard Gadd. Gadd himself is nominated in both corresponding categories; he’s almost certain to win one of them, if not both. And the dark comedy’s leading lady, Jessica Gunning—competing here in the supporting-actress category, even though her character, the stalker Martha, is the engine of Baby Reindeer—should expect to beat out big names like Dakota Fanning, Diane Lane, and Lily Gladstone for an Emmy of her own.

    As for The Bear? Well, Emmy voters unreservedly loved its second season, which they’ll be awarding tonight; the FX comedy earned 23 Emmy nods this year, second only to its network mate Shōgun. We should see star Jeremy Allen White take home a second consecutive best-actor-in-a-comedy prize; the bigger question is whether his costar Ayo Edebiri, who’s moved this year from supporting to lead actress, can come out on top in a tough field that also includes returning winners Quinta Brunson (of Abbott Elementary) and Jean Smart, the arguable front-runner in the category for her career-defining work in Hacks.

    So who will come out on top? Watch along as the Primetime Emmy Awards unfold, and keep refreshing this page for a list of winners we’ll be updating in real time.

    DIRECTING FOR A LIMITED SERIES

    WINNER: Ripley — Steven Zaillian
    Baby Reindeer — Weronika Tofilska for “Episode 4”
    Fargo — Noah Hawley for “The Tragedy of the Commons”
    Feud: Capote vs. the Swans — Gus Van Sant for “Pilot”
    Lessons in Chemistry — Millicent Shelton for “Poirot”
    True Detective: Night Country — Issa López

    SCRIPTED VARIETY SERIES

    WINNER: Last Week Tonight With John Oliver
    Saturday Night Live

    SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A LIMITED SERIES OR TV MOVIE

    WINNER: Jessica Gunning, Baby Reindeer
    Dakota Fanning, Ripley
    Lily Gladstone, Under the Bridge
    Aja Naomi King, Lessons in Chemistry
    Diane Lane, Feud: Capote vs. the Swans
    Nava Mau, Baby Reindeer
    Kali Reis, True Detective: Night Country

    REALITY COMPETITION PROGRAM

    WINNER: The Traitors
    The Amazing Race
    RuPaul’s Drag Race
    Top Chef
    The Voice

    ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES

    WINNER: Jean Smart, Hacks
    Quinta Brunson, Abbott Elementary
    Ayo Edebiri, The Bear
    Selena Gomez, Only Murders in the Building
    Maya Rudolph, Loot
    Kristen Wiig, Palm Royale

    SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES

    WINNER: Elizabeth Debicki, The Crown
    Christine Baranski, The Gilded Age
    Nicole Beharie, The Morning Show
    Greta Lee, The Morning Show
    Lesley Manville, The Crown
    Karen Pittman, The Morning Show
    Holland Taylor, The Morning Show

    SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES

    WINNER: Liza Colón-Zayas, The Bear
    Carol Burnett, Palm Royale
    Hannah Einbinder, Hacks
    Janelle James, Abbott Elementary
    Sheryl Lee Ralph, Abbott Elementary
    Meryl Streep, Only Murders in the Building

    ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES

    WINNER: Jeremy Allen White, The Bear
    Matt Berry, What We Do in the Shadows
    Larry David, Curb Your Enthusiasm
    Steve Martin, Only Murders in the Building
    Martin Short, Only Murders in the Building
    D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, Reservation Dogs

    SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES

    WINNER: Billy Crudup, The Morning Show
    Tadanobu Asano, Shōgun
    Mark Duplass, The Morning Show
    Jon Hamm, The Morning Show
    Takehiro Hira, Shōgun
    Jack Lowden, Slow Horses
    Jonathan Pryce, The Crown

    SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES

    WINNER: Ebon Moss-Bachrach, The Bear
    Lionel Boyce, The Bear
    Paul W. Downs, Hacks
    Paul Rudd, Only Murders in the Building
    Tyler James Williams, Abbott Elementary
    Bowen Yang, Saturday Night Live


    Listen to Vanity Fair’s Little Gold Men podcast now.

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    Hillary Busis

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  • Toronto Awards Takeaways: Feinberg on an Off-Year for the Fest

    Toronto Awards Takeaways: Feinberg on an Off-Year for the Fest

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    The Toronto International Film Festival — which I have been attending since 2007, and from which I just returned — has long been an important launching pad for Oscar contenders, from 1981’s Chariots of Fire to 1999’s American Beauty to 2008’s Slumdog Millionaire to 2018’s Green Book. But a few years ago, that status was jeopardized when the fest grew resentful of the fact that a number of films that it was advertising as “world premieres” or “North American premieres” were, in fact, first sneak-screening at the Telluride Film Festival, which takes place a few days before it does.

    Even though virtually no TIFF attendee would have balked at seeing a film that had previously screened for a relatively small number of people in a remote town in the Rockies, TIFF decided to adopt a hard-line position: it told film makers and backers that if they showed their film somewhere else in North America before TIFF, that film would not be permitted to screen in any of the marquee venues at TIFF during the fest’s opening weekend — the Friday, Saturday and Sunday that follow Thursday’s opening night screening — which is the stretch of time when most media are on the ground to cover the fest.

    Over the years since this policy was adopted, we have not been able to get a real sense of its impact, partly because in several of those years the pandemic and the strikes were already making TIFF feel very different. But this year, with neither the pandemic nor the strikes an issue, we found out. As one top awards strategist put it to me, “Opening weekend just felt dead.” Indeed, there were chunks of empty seats throughout the major venues; there was little buzz on the streets and in the restaurants; and there were very few world premieres of films with any real awards potential.

    Amazon/MGM’s Unstoppable and The Fire Inside proved to be solid entertainments, but with very limited awards paths. A24’s We Live in Time is an effective tearjerker, but it’s more The Fault in Our Stars than A Star Is Born. Searchlight’s Nightbitch stars the great Amy Adams, and some liked it more than others, but it’s not going anywhere with the Academy. And I could go on. The only opening weekend world premiere of an awards hopeful that seemed to matter at all was the one for The Wild Robot, an animated feature which was produced by DreamWorks Animation (in its 30th year on the scene) and will be distributed by Universal.

    It wasn’t until Monday, though, that the fest began to roll out heavy-hitter contenders like Netflix’s Emilia Pérez and and Neon’s Anora (by way of Cannes and Telluride), Focus’ Conclave (via Telluride) and Vertical’s The Order, A24’s Babygirl and Queer and Sony Classics’ I’m Still Here and The Room Next Door (all directly from the Lido). And by that time, much of the press — and therefore much of the potential awards buzz — was gone.

    TIFF certainly caught some bad breaks this year. For one thing, it’s not a particularly deep awards season to begin with, which meant that the fest had limited options. Additionally, while a few big names showed up — among them, Elton John (on behalf of the Disney+ documentary feature Elton John: Never Too Late), Robbie Williams (Paramount’s Better Man), plus a bunch of Netflix talent including Angelina Jolie (Maria), Denzel Washington (The Piano Lesson), Will Ferrell (Will & Harper) and Selena Gomez and Zoe Saldaña (Emilia Pérez) — many others did not. Nicole Kidman (A24’s Babygirl) had to bow out after her mother passed away. None of the stars of Focus’ Conclave — Ralph Fiennes, Stanley Tucci and John Lithgow — were able to get out of work obligations in Europe. Emilia Pérez helmer Jacques Audiard suffered a back injury that prevented him from traveling. And the list goes on.

    But for the most part, the humdrumness of this year’s fest feels like the result of self-inflicted injuries — and not just the silly festival-exclusivity policy.

    My understanding is that TIFF outright rejected September 5, which was the hottest sales title that played at the Venice and Telluride film fests — and, THR reported this morning, has landed at Paramount — ostensibly because it might generate controversy related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. So, fearing a backlash, the fest did not screen a film that is going to get a best picture Oscar nomination and maybe even win — it could have done so on opening night, which was, appropriately enough, Sept. 5 — but did screen Russians at War, a documentary thats sympathetic portrayal of Russians involved in the Ukraine conflict did result in protests of such a scale that the fest ended up pulling the film.

    The rest of the TIFF sales market was largely comatose. The only deals of real note were A24’s acquisition of the U.S. distribution rights for The Brutalist, a nearly four-hour VistaVision film with an intermission, after it generated a strong response at Venice; and Hulu’s surprising eight-figure purchase of the opening night film Nutcrackers, which stars Ben Stiller, but about which there was decidedly muted enthusiasm.

    A lot of other films, many with big-name talent, came to the fest hoping to find a buyer, but left without one, including The Last Showgirl (Pamela Anderson and Jamie Lee Curtis), On Swift Horses (Jacob Elordi and Daisy Edgar-Jones), The Friend (Naomi Watts and Bill Murray) and Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight (the feature directorial debut of Embeth Davidtz).

    Which brings us to the TIFF audience award, which has long been a harbinger of Oscar success — each of its last 13 winners went on to at least a best picture Oscar nomination, and three of them, 2013’s 12 Years a Slave, 2018’s Green Book and 2020’s Nomadland, took home that prize — but which this year, we learned this morning, went to Mike Flanagan’s The Life of Chuck.

    The Life of Chuck may be a lovely film, but it had virtually no profile coming in to the fest, generated virtually no discussion at the fest, and still does not even have a U.S. distributor. Passed over for it were Emilia Pérez (which finished second), Anora (which finished third) and The Wild Robot (which the fest apparently tried to boost a little by giving it twelve screenings).

    In other words, if TIFF’s relevance to this awards season was in doubt prior to the announcement of the audience award, the audience award announcement certainly did not help its standing.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • Toronto: Actress-Centric ‘The Room Next Door’ and ‘Nightbitch’ Premiere, Face Different Awards Paths

    Toronto: Actress-Centric ‘The Room Next Door’ and ‘Nightbitch’ Premiere, Face Different Awards Paths

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    Pedro Almodóvar’s The Room Next Door and Marielle Heller’s Nightbitch, the two most highly-anticipated films that screened at the Toronto International Film Festival on Saturday night, are in some ways very similar: both are adaptations of novels by filmmakers who have been bringing quality films to TIFF for years, and both center on complex female protagonists played by first-rate actresses. But their receptions at the fest, and their awards prospects moving forward, couldn’t be more different.

    The Room Next Door, which is Spaniard Almodóvar’s English-language feature directorial debut, came to Toronto via the Venice Film Festival, and was unveiled here just hours after the Venice jury bestowed upon the film its highest honor, the Golden Lion — which is somehow the first top prize from a major film festival that the 74-year-old auteur has ever been awarded.

    Adapted from Sigrid Nunez’s 2020 novel What Are You Going Through?, the film stars two Oscar-winning heavyweights — Tilda Swinton, with whom Almodóvar previously collaborated on the 2020 short The Human Voice, and Julianne Moore, working with him for the first time — as old chums who grew apart but reconnect after Moore’s character, a bestselling author, learns that Swinton’s character, a veteran war correspondent, has received a bleak diagnosis. Their rekindled friendship is then tested by an unusual request by one of the other.

    There has always been something in Almodóvar’s writing and/or direction that has elicited from his actresses some of the best work of their careers, and this film — despite some overall shortcomings that may relate to the filmmaker’s decision to venture into the English language and American culture — is no exception.

    It will be interesting to see how Sony Classics — Almodóvar’s longtime U.S. distributor, which is set to release this film before the end of the year on a date still to be determined — ends up campaigning for the two women, who were — along with John Turturro, who plays a character who was a lover of both women — guests of honor at the company’s annual TIFF press dinner on Saturday night. Swinton has a particularly juicy part, or — spoiler alert — as it turns out, parts, so it’s hard for me to see her not going lead. Moore has at least as much screen time, but her character revolves around Swinton’s, so I think a case could be made for her to go lead or supporting.

    Elsewhere, you should look out for the film in the category of best picture; Almodóvar for best director and best adapted screenplay; Eddie Grau’s work for best cinematography; and Alberto Iglesias’ original score (the most recent of Iglesias’ four Oscar noms came for his score of Almodóvar’s 2021 film Parallel Mothers).

    Nightbitch, meanwhile, was adapted from Rachel Yoder’s 2021 book of the same name, and was directed by Heller, who previously premiered at TIFF her 2018 film Can You Ever Forgive Me? and 2019 film A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood (both of which went on to receive acting Oscar noms, with the former also picking up a screenplay nom). The film, which Heller says she worked on while experiencing postpartum depression after the birth of her second child, is essentially about how tough motherhood is and how resilient mothers are, as demonstrated by the experience of Amy Adams’ character, who loves her young son but increasingly — and justifiably — resents the sacrifices that she has been forced to make in order to parent him.

    Nightbitch is finally reaching audiences after a long and troubled gestation, during which its story and tone appear to have been impacted. (Its unusual title, in case you were wondering, refers to a metaphor that feels strained and then gets somewhat lost in the film.) Adams, needless to say, is a tremendously gifted actress, and she does her darndest in this film, on which she also served as a producer. But, in terms of awards season, I think that this film, across the board, is going to have a hard time finding traction. It’s just a bit all over the place.

    As a result, Searchlight, which is set to release it on Dec. 6, will probably focus more of its awards efforts on the two other contenders it has on its slate this season, A Real Pain and A Complete Unknown.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • Nicole Kidman Wins Best Actress, and Loses Her Beloved Mother, in One Overwhelming Moment

    Nicole Kidman Wins Best Actress, and Loses Her Beloved Mother, in One Overwhelming Moment

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    In Oscar terms, we’ve lived through a whole season in about a week—at least when it comes to the best actress race.

    Between the Venice, Telluride, and Toronto Film Festivals, what once felt like a shapeless and wide-open lead actress field has come into abrupt, exciting focus. Credit Nicole Kidman’s thrilling but bittersweet Volpi Cup win in Venice this evening. Her performance in Babygirl, Halina Reijn’s acclaimed erotic drama, is among the very best of her screen career—fearless, vulnerable, and slyly comic at once. But she was unable to accept the award in person, as after just returning to Venice for the closing ceremony, she received some tragic personal news.

    “Today I arrived in Venice to learn shortly thereafter that my beautiful, brave mother, Janelle Ann Kidman, has just passed,” Kidman wrote in a statement, which Reijn read while accepting the award on her behalf. “I’m in shock and I have to go to my family, but this award is for her. She shaped me, she guided me, and she made me. I’m beyond grateful that I get to say her name to all of you through Helena. The collision of art and life is heartbreaking, and my heart is broken.”

    As Kidman steps out of the public eye to be with her family, she’s likely to remain on many voters’ minds as the race continues. Let’s start with Telluride, where several potential players cemented their status as major contenders. There was Saoirse Ronan’s The Outrun, which played well enough in Sundance, and first-time campaigners Mikey Madison (Anora) and Karla Sofía Gascón (Emilia Pérez), coming off of their movies’ Prize-winning launches in Cannes. The Colorado mountains offered each film a second wave of screenings, and goodness did both play spectacularly—as well as, if not better than the world premieres on the ground. Ronan was also honored with a Tribute Medallion, Telluride’s highest honor for actors, while I heard of hundreds being turned away from Anora and Emilia screenings due to demand. For those that did find a seat, the films and performances were received extremely well.

    Over in Venice, beyond Kidman’s Babygirl, Angelina Jolie’s tour-de-force Maria launched. While the movie divided critics, her work at its center is undeniable, and the emotional biopic met a warmer reception overall in Telluride. With the Oscar winner out and about in Colorado, she’s clearly putting her might behind this one, and is not one to be counted out—especially with Netflix backing her campaign. (They’ve secured nominations in the category of late for Annette Bening and Ana de Armas, whose movies similarly received mixed reviews.) Here in Toronto, I also just caught another Venice premiere, Walter Salles’s terrific I’m Still Here, where Fernanda Torres is simply transcendent as Brazilian human rights activist Eunice Paiva. Sony Classics is handling that movie, The Outrun, and The Room Next Door—with a lovely Julianne Moore running in lead—so they have their hands full. But any discussion of this race without Torres is, to my mind, an incomplete one—and in an era of a globalizing Academy, merits serious consideration.

    On Friday night, Toronto then introduced two intriguing, if less obvious, names to the mix. Screening opposite each other, Mike Leigh’s Hard Truths and John Crowley’s We Live in Time offer diametrically opposed experiences—the former a prickly, intimate, uncompromising character study, and the latter a classically packaged tearjerker. Yet in the former, Marianne Jean-Baptiste is sensational, reuniting with the director behind the film that earned her an Oscar nomination, Secrets & Lies. Her role here is even richer, if a bit less broadly accessible. We Live in Time, meanwhile, certainly doesn’t have that problem—who doesn’t want to cry along to Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield’s tragic love story? But while Pugh gives yet another major, wrenching performance as a young woman facing the end of her life, A24 will have to work to position the film in a way where voters take it as more than a basic weepie.

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    David Canfield

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  • Telluride: Zoe Saldaña, Selena Gomez and Karla Sofía Gascón on ‘Emilia Pérez,’ Breaking Barriers and Yearning to Be Seen Differently (Exclusive)

    Telluride: Zoe Saldaña, Selena Gomez and Karla Sofía Gascón on ‘Emilia Pérez,’ Breaking Barriers and Yearning to Be Seen Differently (Exclusive)

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    On Sunday, for the first time since the Telluride Film Festival’s North American premiere of Jacques Audiard’s one-of-a-kind musical Emilia Pérez on Friday, the three principal stars of the top-tier Oscar contender — Zoe Saldaña, Karla Sofía Gascón and Selena Gomez — sat down for an extensive group interview about their lives, their careers and the film for which they and costar Adriana Paz were jointly awarded the Cannes Film Festival’s best actress prize in May.

    Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter, the ladies reflected on the special bond that they formed while co-creating Audiard’s film, which revolves around a frustrated lawyer and a cartel leader who recruits her to help carry out a covert operation without the cartel leader’s spouse finding out.

    They also discussed — candidly and, at times, emotionally — the different hurdles they each faced en route to Emilia Pérez; the most daunting aspects of playing their characters in the film; and the ways in which the project is already reshaping their careers, and has the potential to bring about even greater changes.

    The comments of Gascón, 52, Saldaña, 46, and Gomez, 32, can be read in the transcript below, which has been lightly edited for clarity and brevity, and reflects a translator’s rendition of Spanish-speaker Gascón’s words.

    I’ve observed many selfies, hugs and kisses between the three of you this weekend! Can you talk about the bond that you share? I imagine it formed during the making of the movie, and perhaps was rekindled at Cannes, but even three months after that, you seem to really enjoy being with each other.

    SELENA GOMEZ I’m so grateful to have women around me that lift me up in every way. And yes, I have a special connection with these women. I feel so grateful that I get to go on this journey with them. We’re also happy for each other and we cheer each other on, and I love that. That can be rare.

    ZOE SALDAÑA I think that the award that we all received in Cannes was only possible because of the collaboration and camaraderie that we had. Everybody had their own respective journeys, of course. But we were rooting for each other from the beginning, and that was palpable. And for that to be seen and recognized? It’s really nice.

    KARLA SOFÍA GASCÓN We are a nice family. I’m so happy to be associated with these amazing people and actresses. And we’ve gotten to see each other every five minutes here in Telluride, which is such an incredible place! We’re in the middle of these high mountains, with incredible greenery all around us, and cinemas full of people. I never suspected that I could find cinemas so crowded in a tiny town in the middle of nowhere at the far end of Colorado.

    I want to go back to the very beginning, if we can, and talk about how this film was pitched to each of you, because I think it’s — in the best way — complicated to explain it to someone even after seeing it…

    GASCÓN They did a lot of work to show us what we would need to do in the movie. They had already pre-recorded something that I would label a video novel — there was the music; there were the dialogues, acted out — and this gave us a deeper idea of what we needed to do.

    Zoe, I read something in which you said the film was originally intended to be more of an opera?

    SALDAÑA Well, first, just going back to what you said, “when they pitched you this movie” — we were pitched to Jacques. (Laughs.)

    GOMEZ Yeah, that’s true.

    SALDAÑA Jacques doesn’t pitch you anything. Jacques shares with you his excitement, and then, if he invites you along, you say “yes.” It was an opera, and they were all going to have their own journeys, but there was going to be an intertwining along the way. Once I heard the songs, as an American person, I was like, “Well, this sounds like a musical.” But once I read the script, I realized, “It’s an opera.” But it kept evolving — throughout the journey of us rehearsing with Jacques, then learning the choreography, recording our songs, shooting, and then going back to the studio, these songs kept evolving as our characters kept growing. And Jacques never allowed any of us — even himself — to get in the way of that. And that process was quite scary, because there was a lot of improvising.

    GOMEZ No, it’s very true.

    Selena, you’ve been acting for your whole life. Have you ever been a part of any other project that evolved in a way similar to this one?

    GOMEZ I had a similar feeling when I did [Harmony Korine’s 2012 film] Spring Breakers. What I mean by that is because of the way Harmony directs, I felt challenged as an actor. That’s when I realized I had the bug, and that I’d rather be a part of something in the smallest way with the greatest filmmakers and actors and wonderful people I could meet, than needing to be the center of attention.

    I heard somewhere that when Jacques approached you, it was because he had seen and liked you in Spring Breakers, but didn’t really know anything else about you. Is that right?

    GOMEZ That’s correct, yes.

    What did you make of that?

    GOMEZ I thought it was really refreshing, and it made me feel like I earned the part. Like Zoe said, it’s Jacques who picked us — we were the ones begging — so it was really exciting.

    Karla, in America people are just getting to know you, but you’ve been acting for a long time. Can you explain what was going on in your life and career at the time that this film first crossed your radar?

    GASCÓN I was doing what any actress does: I was doing the best I could every day — and my life was definitely much more tranquil than it is now! [laughs] I was working in Mexico. I had just finished shooting a Netflix series indeed called Rebelde. And I was able to go to the supermarket and do my own grocery shopping. Then this whole whirlwind started. It’s a dream. I don’t know if it’s going to turn into a nightmare …

    GOMEZ No!

    SALDAÑA No!

    GASCÓN Or stay a dream.

    Karla, Jacques has said that meeting you really made him reimagine the character that you ended up playing, and that speaking with you helped him to provide a more sensitive and accurate depiction of the trans experience…

    GASCÓN As an actress, I was given a character that is incredible, with such an arc — it’s something that any actor or actress would dream of coming across in their life, a kind of character that Marlon Brando or Meryl Streep or Al Pacino or Javier Bardem would play. I never thought that something like that would come into my life. The role was just too wonderful to be true. When I had my very first meeting with Jacques, for me, it was love at first sight — like when you meet the girl of your dreams, and you stare into her little eyes, and you think she’s perfect, that was exactly what happened between the two of us. And then when we started building the movie. Jacques is the kind of filmmaker that builds a movie little by little. He’s very open to changes. And when I came into the picture, and then Zoe and Selena, he composed the film around our strengths. He has this uncanny talent to identify people’s strengths and build on them, which draws the best out of his actors and actresses. So yes, the story changed when I came into the picture, but not so much because of me. All I did was do what I’ve done my entire life: the best I could.

    Zoe and Selena, I know that your family roots are in Spanish-speaking places. Selena, you’ve sung a bit in Spanish. But have either of you ever previously been asked to act in Spanish as much as in this film? And was it exciting or daunting or something?

    SALDAÑA No, but it was always a wish. It’s my native tongue. But the older I’ve gotten, I’ve found it’s like ballet — if you don’t use it, you lose it. So I jumped at the opportunity to be able to do this, and to combine all the mediums of art that I love, that I watch and that I live for. It was like God was listening. I never thought that something like this was going to ever come my way, so when it did I went all in.

    GOMEZ I was very terrified to meet Jacques. I probably rehearsed for three months, and I didn’t think I’d get this role because I’m not fluent. When I got on board, I started working with Jacques and, with the help of everyone else, started figuring out what my character could be that would best suit me. We found this really good middle-ground of me [her character] being younger [than her character’s husband, played by Gascón] and having family in America [hence her character’s tendency to speak English]. And that’s very true to me even now [during our interview, listening to Gascón speak Spanish] — I can understand some of it. I’m part of that generation, I guess, where Latinx [people living in America are] half in, half out. It’s something, like Zoe said, that you have to practice every day. But I do appreciate who I am and where I came from.

    I’d like to ask each of you about some of the other specific challenges that you faced. Karla, you play Emilia both before and after her transition. I wondered if that, for a trans actress, was daunting, painful, or just part of the job?

    GASCÓN For me, all of it was challenging. I had to give 300 percent of myself. It’s a movie in which I sing, and I’m not a singer. It’s a movie in which I dance, and I move like Robocop. I had to change my voice twice, because even in the Emilia register [as opposed to the Manitas register], she speaks with much higher-pitched tones than I do. So the movie was full of challenges for me — but that’s why one is an actress or an actor. You do it so that you’re able to insert yourself into other people’s lives; and then, thanks to them [those characters], and the help of others, you evolve. So that wasn’t something that gave me fear. Rather, it’s something that allowed me to sharpen my chops. And I put a lot of myself into my character, so what truly cost me is leaving the character. I was deeply immersed into the abyss that is Emilia Pérez. So the most challenging part for me was actually getting out of the character.

    A quick follow-up, Karla. Movies are rarely shot in sequence, but I can see that posing real issues for you and your performance. Were you having to go back and forth between the pre-transition and post-transition character, or were you able to shoot all of one part and then the other?

    GASCÓN We did try to shoot it as chronologically as possible, but as you know, when you’re shooting a movie, that’s impossible to do all the time. There were many times where we had to go back and forth, where I had to do the transition to Manitas and then go back to Emilia in the present, and then to Emilia in the past several times. But I found that to be a lot of fun. This is what makes me want to be an actress. When I would sit down in the make-up chair and see the prosthesis that they would put on me, I was so impressed. I would look at myself and say, “Wow, this is why I chose to do this job, to put myself into another person’s skin and to understand another person better.”

    Zoe, I know you have a background in dance, but even so, that big opening number, in which you also sing, must have been a big undertaking. And I read that you had very little rehearsal time?

    SALDAÑA There was rehearsal — not as extensive as we would want to have in order for us to be able to do this with our eyes closed — but that is what made way for just the nuances that would come up. Sometimes when you over-rehearse something, it just becomes stale. And even performances can become stale if you don’t rediscover them. So Jacques kept us on our feet, in that sense. But also, I think he knew that he wasn’t done writing the story. Sometimes he would just get up and leave, and you’re like, “Where’s he going?” Sometimes he would send you an email in the middle of the night, because he was up and something came to him. So he was constantly living with this story, and that inspired us all to live with our characters. And there were things that were coming up for me about Rita. I recognize her. So many women are like her — women that live around the abuse and misuse of power by men, that live as quiet warriors, that always have to get things done — and their life is more real in their imagination than it is in real life. Rita navigated this relationship with power. She was drawn to it, and yet she hated it, defending all these crooks around her. So this thing that she has with Emilia was: “What would happen if I get really close to a power that is so big and violent and can hurt me? What if it works? What if I pull it off? Can it free me?” It was always a question. Every day, things kept coming up. That’s what led me to sometimes go home and get in an Epsom salt bath and go, “I don’t know what the fuck I’m doing but I’m just going to do it. I’m just going to feel it. I’m not going to think about it. I’m just going to be moldable.” In the end it was like, “Don’t fucking think. Just feel.”

    Selena, I imagine that singing — which we get to hear you do in this film, most notably with “El Camino” — might have been a little less daunting of an assignment for you than for the others. So other than that, what, for you, was the most daunting thing that you had to figure out?

    GOMEZ I guess kind of all of it. I really did my best in my audition, and I hadn’t heard anything, so I really didn’t think that I would get it. When I did, I felt like I needed to let go of everything, so I stopped working on my music and anything else, and solely focused on this. And the music [that she performs] in this movie would make me feel better, because I am comfortable in that area, but it was still a little daunting to go into a space where I didn’t speak the same language as the director [French] and I wasn’t fluent Spanish. Every day I’d wake up and rehearse the lines over and over again. And I’d call, in the middle of the night, my Spanish teacher. That part was probably the most daunting, but it was also fun.

    Finally, let’s talk about what the response to the film has meant to each of you. There was the shared best actress prize in Cannes — only the fifth time that a Cannes jury has shared that prize between costars. There’s now the fall film festivals, where the film is continuing to build momentum. And there’s the whole awards season to come, which you guys and your film will clearly be a central part of. What do you make of it all?

    SALDAÑA I am happy that this industry that I’ve been a part of for almost 20 years is getting to see a very fundamental part of me that I felt I never got to showcase. I’m proud of my journey. I would never change it. Please understand, I like being in space! [A reference to her roles in the blockbuster Avatar, Avengers and Guardians of the Galaxy film franchises.] But I love Jacques Audiard, and I love art. And getting the recognition? Just having people that I look up to be like, “Oh, hey! You?!” I spent so many years wanting it, and then I stopped wanting it. I thought it was never going to happen. So having someone like Jacques kind of go, “I see you”? It’s healing, because I’ve had to navigate this world and feel kind of, at times, invisible. There is a place that I’ve existed in, and I’ve been told by a lot of people in positions of power, “No, this is what you can do. This is all you can do.” And last summer I was like, “I hear you — but I’m going to do more.” For that to have been acknowledged? For us to have been acknowledged? I was watching it [the Cannes awards ceremony] live in Texas ’cause I was shooting. I was with my folks and my husband’s folks and my children and my sisters and my dog and my cat. And to see my sons crying because they called my name? [chokes up] I don’t know where this is going to lead, but it led here today, and I’m taking it day by day. I’m so grateful that this movie brought me back to ballet and brought me back to myself. And anything else? I’m here.

    Selena, you’ve been celebrated for your music and for your great TV program Only Murders in the Building. But to be celebrated for work in film, which I know you’ve been wanting to do more of, must be particularly meaningful to you.

    GOMEZ I hope that this is just the beginning. I really, really tried my hardest to throw myself into this. And I was so grateful [for the Cannes recognition] — Zoe was the first to call me to tell me and congratulate all of us for the award. And I remember thinking, “Oh, I think this is something special that we have here.” And we don’t take a second of it for granted.

    Karla, you were the spokesperson for the group at that awards ceremony. Any final thoughts?

    GASCÓN Well, I’ve been reflecting these last few days, what I’ve been thinking about is that beyond what can happen to myself or to my career as an actress, there’s so much more. I sort of feel that I’m the true embodiment of the Joker. If you think of the Joker character, he was a character who spent his whole life being mocked and being insulted and being the victim of violence — and then it ended up with him making a revolution. Well, I feel that way. I am somebody who has spent her whole life being insulted, being rejected and being a target of violence. And now, all of a sudden, I have this opportunity in my hands to be able to change things for the better, to change other people’s lives, as well.

    GOMEZ Amen.

    Well, thank you guys so much. I really appreciate it.

    SALDAÑA I’m going to go cry.

    GOMEZ Me too. Have some tea and cry.

    GASCÓN Thank you so much.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • The Making of ‘Nickel Boys’: How a Pulitzer-Winning Novel Became a Radical, Harrowing Film

    The Making of ‘Nickel Boys’: How a Pulitzer-Winning Novel Became a Radical, Harrowing Film

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    So RaMell, how did you set up the filming between the actors to create this visual approach?

    Ross: The film is conceived as all one-ers. In one scene, we shot everything from Elwood’s perspective, and then everything from Turner’s—one from the first hour, and then the other for the second. Very rarely did we shoot both perspectives on a scene, though, because of the way it was written and scripted. We don’t always go back and forth. So it’s shot like a traditional film, except the other character is not there. They’re just asked to look at a specific point in the camera.

    Typically, the other actor is behind the camera, reading the lines and being the support to make the other person feel like they’re actually engaged with something relatively real. Because they’re all one-ers, though, the choreography is quite difficult. The challenging part was nailing the movement of the camera to feign what it would be like for a person to look, but not to overemphasize the concept of looking. If you try too hard to be POV, it’s impossible. That becomes the focus of interest to the audience, then you lose their connection. It’s why we shot entirely on long-lenses, 50mm and 80mm; this is not a GoPro thing.

    Herisse: We’re being asked to do something that you’ve always been told not to do.

    Ellis-Taylor: “Don’t look at the camera!” [Group laughs]

    Herisse: And it is intrusive, so to kind of unlearn that and make it become the person that you are talking to—Turner, usually—was new and a challenge. But I found it exciting because of that. With time, it got easier. You can still be free in that, it just looks a little different.

    Wilson: It felt physically restrictive. I didn’t realize until I was allowed to move—like when I was walking on the beds—like, I haven’t been moving!

    Ellis-Taylor: RaMell was really good about saying it, but not saying it. I think about the scene where young Elwood is looking in a storefront, and it took us forever to get that, because the shot had to align. I can only say you have to lean into it and be like, Okay, this is going to take a long time, but I’m going to trust the process. In the scene where I visit Elwood, we were talking about where she was at that point. I was a little more disheveled and RaMell, you’re like, I don’t feel it. It felt like a technical thing, but I never felt inhibited by it, oddly. I should have felt, like, What the fuck? [Group laughs] Oddly I didn’t.

    You continue the approach you’d introduced in Hale County in a lot of ways, this time by also visually honoring the book’s POV structure. How did it come to you with Nickel Boys?

    Ross: It is the way I shot Hale County. There are three scenes in that movie where the camera is used the same way, and that was unconscious proof-of-concept to myself…. I’ve long had a POV film in mind, an art film, and then Dede [Gardner] comes along with this book. I thought, “At one point did Elwood realize that he was Black?” That’s a visual thing to me: Looking around the world, people are this; something isn’t weird then, but it’s weird in hindsight. That was the first mode of making the movie that I thought of. But I didn’t think that anyone would make the movie. I made the treatment. I asked [Joslyn Barnes] to cowrite. We built it out. When we finished the script, we weren’t like, “We’re going to make this movie!” We were like, Yo, I really love this script. What do you want do next? Because there’s no way that MGM/Amazon are going to make a POV film with these archival images built out. And it was greenlit.

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    David Canfield

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  • Documentary Zurawski v Texas Reveals the Personal Devastation of Antiabortion Laws

    Documentary Zurawski v Texas Reveals the Personal Devastation of Antiabortion Laws

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    When filmmakers Maisie Crow and Abbie Perrault heard that it seemed likely that Roe v. Wade would be overturned, they sprang into action, thinking about how they could explore the devastating repercussions of that decision. “We really felt like we needed to couple the trauma and devastation with some sort of hope,” says Crow. “And we found that in Molly Duane and the case that she was filing in Texas.”

    The pair, who had previously worked together on the 2021 documentary At the Ready, met attorney Duane through the Center for Reproductive Rights. She represents a woman named Amanda Zurawski, who nearly died when a Texas law prevented her from receiving an abortion after her pregnancy became nonviable. Zurawski subsequently joined with four other women and two doctors to sue the state.

    Zurawski v Texas, which covers the case and will have its world premiere at the Telluride Film Festival, is a deeply moving film investigating how Texas’s antiabortion laws have caused grief, loss, trauma, and in some cases near-death experiences. The laws prohibit most abortions even when a woman’s pregnancy is deemed unviable.

    With executive producers that include Hillary Clinton, Chelsea Clinton, and Jennifer Lawrence, Zurawski v Texas takes one of the nation’s most pressing issues and makes it personal, told through the brave women who share their stories of loss and heartache. “Policies and war, they can just seem such faraway issues that will never happen to us. And that’s why films like this can be so impactful—to show the actual lives that are affected,” says Lawrence. “Not just how easily it could happen to you or someone you love, but to be a true witness to what happens when you’re not just failed by your government, but condemned by it.”

    Samantha Casiano learned at a 20-week ultrasound that her fetus had no chance of survival.

    Like many people across the nation, Chelsea Clinton learned of the US Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade when the Court’s draft opinion leaked in May of 2022. “I was sitting on the edge of my bathtub and just sobbing hysterically,” she says. “And I think what I was really grappling with that night was, ‘I’m not surprised, but I still am so completely shattered by what we’ve allowed to happen to women in our country.’”

    She woke up the next morning determined to jump into action. Through their production company HiddenLight, which she founded with her mother, the pair joined the Zurawski v Texas team as executive producers. “No pregnant woman should ever be denied necessary medical care. The health care emergencies these women faced know no political boundaries; they affect all of us, our daughters, mothers, friends, and entire families,” says Hillary Clinton. “I hope that millions of people will watch Zurawski v Texas because I know it will help bring to life what is happening to women across the country at the most fundamental human level.”

    In the film, we watch Duane as she fights in the court system for more clarity on antiabortion laws, which have left medical practitioners unsure of what abortion procedures are allowed. Zurawski’s water broke at 18 weeks pregnant, but she was denied an abortion even as her health rapidly declined. It wasn’t until she became septic that she was able to end her pregnancy. Another woman followed in the film, Samantha Casiano, learned at a 20-week ultrasound that her fetus had no chance of survival. Yet she was forced to carry her baby to term, and watched her daughter suffer for the four short hours of her life.

    In an exclusive clip debuting here, Duane is captured practicing for the court case, as we see many of the women also preparing to appear in court. Throughout the film, Duane reveals the emotional toll that the case takes on her as well. “It became clear how much she threw herself into her work,” says Crow. “It didn’t take very long for her to be comfortable in front of the cameras.”

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    Rebecca Ford

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  • Can Nikki Glaser Save the 2025 Golden Globes?

    Can Nikki Glaser Save the 2025 Golden Globes?

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    Celebrities, prepare to be roasted. Variety has announced that comedian Nikki Glaser will host the 82nd Golden Globes Awards.

    “I am absolutely thrilled to be hosting the Golden Globes,” Glaser told Variety. “It’s one of my favorite nights of television and now I get a front row seat (actually, I think I have to host from the stage).”

    A veteran comic and host of Max’s Fboy Island, Glaser ascended to new heights this year with her viral roast of football legend Tom Brady on Netflix’s The Roast of Tom Brady a.k.a The Greatest Roast of All Time. “I didn’t know how big it was until it was over because, obviously, it was live,” Glaser told VF earlier this year. “Text messages were rolling in like someone in my life had died.” Glaser followed up her roast with an HBO comedy special called Someday You’ll Die, nominated for outstanding variety special at this year’s Emmys.

    Now she’s taking on one of the least sought-after gigs in town: award show host. Four-time Oscar host Jimmy Kimmel recently turned down the opportunity to return to that show in 2025, saying that taking on the gig “was just too much.” Last year’s Governor Awards host, John Mulaney, also reportedly turned down the gig. As of writing, the 2025 Oscars still do not have a host.

    The Golden Globes—dubbed Hollywood’s Party of the Year for the ceremony’s more laid-back feel and sometimes tipsy acceptance speeches—also has a spotty track record with hosts. Ricky Gervais was the go-to emcee in the 2010s, hosting for the fifth and final time in 2020. But after the longtime Golden Globes voting body, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, was rocked by multiple scandals in 2021—which returning hosts Tina Fey and Amy Poehler had no trouble making light of—the awards regrouped, dissolving the HFPA and canceling the telecast in 2022.

    Since returning to television, the Globes have been hosted by Emmy-winning comedian Jerrod Carmichael in 2023, and, most recently, comedian Jo Koy in 2024. Koy notoriously flopped as host, lobbing punchlines that earned weak laughs and causing celebrity guests like Taylor Swift to visibly turn on him as the night wore on. It wasn’t all bad news for Koy, though: the 2024 Golden Globes ceremony averaged 10 million viewers, up nearly 50% from the previous year, and reached its largest audience since 2020. Still, after the ceremony, Koy told ABC program GMA 3 that it had been a rough night.“It’s a tough room,” he said. “And it was a hard job, I’m not going to lie.”

    Glaser, however, sounds up for the challenge. “The Golden Globes is not only a huge night for TV and film, but also for comedy,” she said in a statement. “It’s one of the few times that show business not only allows, but encourages itself to be lovingly mocked (at least I hope so). (God I hope so). It’s an exciting, yet challenging gig because it’s live, unpredictable, and in front of Hollywood’s biggest stars (who also might be getting wasted while seated next to their recent exes).”

    The 2025 Golden Globe Awards will take place on January 5th, 2025, airing live on CBS Television Network and streaming on Paramount+. Unlike Koy, who said he only had a week and a half to prepare material for his hosting stint, Glaser’s got ample time to get ready—and after her Brady roast, it’s clear that she thrives in live situations. Nominees, you might want to start thickening your skin now.

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    Chris Murphy

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  • UDL-Con: International 2024: A Groundbreaking Success With UDL Guidelines 3.0 Launch

    UDL-Con: International 2024: A Groundbreaking Success With UDL Guidelines 3.0 Launch

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    CAST is thrilled to announce the tremendous success of UDL-Con: International 2024, the world’s largest Universal Design for Learning (UDL) convention, which took place in Sacramento, CA, from July 30-31, 2024. The sold-out conference featured 87 sessions with over 155 presentersThis historic event marked the launch of the UDL Guidelines 3.0, attracting over 450 in-person attendees and thousands more online from 14 countries and 43 states to explore the latest advancements in inclusive education.

    UDL-Con: International 2024 delivered remarkable moments:

    • Keynote Addresses: Mirko Chardin shared insights on culturally connected teaching and the role of personal narratives in fostering equity, while Paula Kluth discussed her extensive experience in creating responsive learning environments for all students.
    • Panel Discussions and Interactive Workshops: Thought-provoking conversations and engaging sessions demonstrating the innovative future of UDL.

    Direct Quotes from UDL-Con: International

    • Loui Lord Nelson, Anne Meyer UDL Design Award Recipient: “This conference has reignited my passion for teaching and provided practical strategies to make my classroom more inclusive. The new guidelines are a game-changer for educators everywhere.”
    • Kavita Rao, David Rose UDL Research Award Recipient: “UDL-Con: International has been a fantastic opportunity to connect with like-minded professionals. The updated guidelines reflect CAST’s commitment to inclusive education.”
    • Dara Ryder, UDL Innovative Practice Award Recipient: “The energy and enthusiasm at this conference were palpable. The UDL Guidelines 3.0 offers fresh perspectives and innovative approaches that will benefit all learners.”
    • Donald Walker, Career & Technical Education Trainer at CAST: “UDL-Con and the 3.0 Guidelines remind us that learning is about providing space for ALL learners to be who they are.”

    Insights from Leadership

    CAST’s CEO, Lindsay Jones, stated, “We are delighted to unveil UDL Guidelines 3.0 at such a prestigious event. These guidelines reflect our ongoing dedication to creating inclusive learning environments. The positive feedback from UDL-Con: International participants underscores the need for our work.”

    Co-Chair Reflections

    Jenna Gravel, Interim Chief Research and Development Officer, and Co-chair expressed, “The collaborative spirit at UDL-Con: International was truly inspiring. This next iteration of the Guidelines symbolizes a collective effort across the UDL community, and we are excited to learn how these updated guidelines will be implemented in learning environments worldwide.”

    Featured Workshop Sessions

    • “Implementing UDL in Higher Education” – Hosted by Kavita Rao (In-Person)
    • “Innovative Approaches to Accessible Learning” – Conducted by Dara Ryder (Online)
    • “Engaging Students through UDL” – Facilitated by Loui Lord Nelson (In-Person)
    • “Chances and Choices” – Presented by Andratesha Fritzgerald (Online)

    Acknowledgment of Sponsors

    UDL-Con: International 2024 was made possible through the generous support of our sponsors: Landmark College, ReadSpeaker, Savvas, Goalbook, 1EdTech, Cognitopia, Educating All Learners, Habitat Learn, Instructure, Seesaw, and Texthelp.

    For more information, contact Kisha Barton, Senior Director of Communications, at kbarton@cast.org and visit www.cast.org.

    Event Images

    About CAST:

    CAST is a nonprofit education organization that created the Universal Design for Learning framework and UDL Guidelines.

    Source: CAST

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  • OWIS Students Win Big at 10th SASMO Competition

    OWIS Students Win Big at 10th SASMO Competition

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    Students of One World International School Digital Campus won a number of medals at the recently held Singapore and Asian Schools Math Olympiad (SASMO), while competing against more than 55,000 students from more than 7,000 other schools.  

    Three of these winners are ranked in the Top 100 in Singapore and will have a choice to represent the country at the upcoming edition of Singapore International Math Olympiad Challenge (SIMOC) – a shot in the arm for OWIS Digital Campus which is part of Global Schools Group.

    OWIS students won one gold, five silver and four bronze medals, alongside two honourable mentions at the Olympiad where students from more than 35 countries participated. 

    SASMO is one of the top Maths Competitions in Singapore which gives students a platform to showcase their acumen in the subject. The 19th edition of the Olympiad was held in June.

    OWIS Grade 4 student Zhang Yimin was the Gold winner, while Yuan Iijma (Grade 7), Pranav Singh (Grade 4), Shubhang Silakari (Grade 5), Mihit Gajjar (Grade 5) and Chen Ziling (Grade 8) won Silver in their categories. 

    Pia Nahar (Grade 3), Samaira Mishra (Grade 4), Madhav Garg (Grade 6) and Harrish Mohan (Grade 3) were bronze medal winners. Song JaeJun and Shaan Malusare got honourable mentions.

    All medal winners have qualified to participate in the prestigious 10th Singapore International Math Olympiad Challenge (SIMOC) to be held between July 20 to 23.

    “This remarkable achievement reflects not just the talent of our students but also the academic excellence that OWIS has to help them achieve their levels of success,” said Ms. Angela Henderson, Primary head of school of OWIS Digital Campus. “The students’ success at SASMO 2024 not only brings honour to our school but also brings to light the dedication to holistic education, where academic rigour is seamlessly integrated with social, emotional and physical development.”

    One World International School, one of the fastest-growing international schools in Asia, offers high-quality international education in a nurturing multicultural environment. OWIS Punggol Digital Campus aims to develop independent, inquiring, lifelong learners, while fostering internationally-minded individuals.

    The campus is environmentally friendly, with facilities that include digital classrooms, indoor and outdoor sports arenas, a fully-equipped gym, a 200-metre running track, a stadium grandstand, outdoor basketball courts, adventure parks, and a multi-purpose hall for six badminton courts, 2 indoor basketball courts – all fitted with TV screens, videos and projectors. 

    ABOUT GLOBAL SCHOOLS GROUP

    Global Schools Group (GSG), headquartered in Singapore, is an award-winning interconnected network of leading international schools across the world. Founded in 2022 to serve global communities with high quality education, GSG schools are truly global at heart transcending boundaries to provide a world-class learning experience through the scale, diversity and experience of its widespread network.

    GSG mission is to nurture young minds into future global leaders.

    Source: Global Schools Group

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  • Spring USA Becomes First Certified Commercial Induction Cooktop Partner Under EPA’s ENERGY STAR Program

    Spring USA Becomes First Certified Commercial Induction Cooktop Partner Under EPA’s ENERGY STAR Program

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    SPRING USA & EPA LEAD INDUCTION EFFICIENCY EFFORTS IN THE U.S. FOODSERVICE INDUSTRY

    Spring USA, along with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), announces the first commercial induction cooktops to earn ENERGY STAR® certification. Spring USA’s flagship line of induction ranges, MAX Induction, becomes the nation’s first commercial induction cooktops to be certified within the induction category of the ENERGY STAR Commercial Electric Cooktops program.

    As part of this certification process, each range was tested in a laboratory recognized by the EPA to meet high-performance standards on energy transfer, heat-up response, and energy efficiency. 

    The ENERGY STAR recognition demonstrates that Spring USA is leading the way with efficient foodservice equipment design by targeting energy and emissions within back-of-house and front-of-house operations. Spring USA is the first induction manufacturer to hold this distinction.

    Kristine Holtz, CEO of Spring USA, stated, “As the leader in induction, our products are designed to offer exceptional efficiency and performance that result in cost-savings, safer working conditions by emitting less residual heat, and reduced carbon emissions. We are committed to empowering commercial operators with a proven, energy-efficient option and are honored to have worked closely with the EPA and ENERGY STAR teams to help minimize environmental impact within the foodservice industry.”

    Ann Bailey, Branch Chief for ENERGY STAR Labeled Products at the Environmental Protection Agency, added, “We welcome Spring USA as a new ENERGY STAR partner and commend them on their efforts to achieve ENERGY STAR certification for their commercial grade induction cooktops! The EPA’s ENERGY STAR team is excited to have certified products in this Commercial Electric Cooktop category. Congratulations to Spring USA and welcome to the ENERGY STAR partnership!”

    In addition to being the premier induction partner of the ENERGY STAR Commercial Electric Cooktops program, Spring USA also assisted in the development of the program guidelines and testing protocols, alongside other leading manufacturers in the industry.

    About Spring USA®

    Spring USA, a global leader in the foodservice equipment industry, was first to introduce countertop induction and functional banquet furniture to the United States. Known for its innovation and design of reliable, durable, and beautiful products, Spring USA specializes in induction cooking & warming equipment, induction-ready buffetware & cookware, mobile cooking stations, food protection systems, and custom-built tables with hidden induction and cooling elements. Chosen by industry professionals worldwide, Spring USA’s commitment to quality is unwavering and unmatched. To learn more, visit: springusa.com.

    About ENERGY STAR®

    ENERGY STAR is the government-backed symbol for energy efficiency, providing simple, credible, and unbiased information that consumers and businesses rely on to make well-informed decisions. Thousands of industrial, commercial, utility, state, and local organizations rely on their partnership with EPA to deliver cost-saving energy efficiency solutions. Since 1992, ENERGY STAR and its partners helped American families and businesses avoid more than $500 billion in energy costs and achieve more than 4 billion metric tons of greenhouse gas reductions. To learn more, visit: energystar.gov.

    Source: Spring USA

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  • Oscars: Submissions Now Open for 97th Awards

    Oscars: Submissions Now Open for 97th Awards

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    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scienceswebsite for submissions to be considered for the 2025 Oscars is now open, the Academy announced Friday.

    The Academy is currently accepting general entries (best picture and other categories), animated features, animated shorts, documentary features, documentary shorts, international features, live action shorts, original scores and original songs.

    Submissions are due on different dates between Aug. 15 and Nov. 14, depending on the submission’s category and the date of its qualifying run. (General entries, animated features, documentary features and short films of all sorts have two different due dates, one for submissions that qualified before July 1 and another for submissions that qualified on or after that date.)

    The 97th Oscars will take place at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood on Sunday, March 2, 2025. Early contenders include spring indie Challengers; summer blockbuster Inside Out 2; Cannes standouts Anora, Emilia Pérez and The Substance; and Sing Sing, a drama that opens in theaters today.

    The 2024 Oscars, which took place this past March, saw Oppenheimer named best picture and win six other awards including best director (Christopher Nolan), best actor (Cillian Murphy) and best supporting actor (Robert Downey Jr.). Best actress went to Poor Things Emma Stone and best supporting actress was won by The Holdovers Da’Vine Joy Randolph.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • Ready or Not, We’re Predicting the Emmy Nominations

    Ready or Not, We’re Predicting the Emmy Nominations

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    If you feel like we were just talking about Emmy shows, you’re not wrong. The 2023 Emmy season only ended earlier this year, when the delayed ceremony aired in January. But here we are on the eve of Emmy nominations once again. And yet again, the Little Gold Men team is taking our best stab at predicting all the nominees in the major categories.

    On this week’s Little Gold Men (listen below), we walk through the reasons we think Shōgun should have a strong showing in the drama categories—including the fact that the hit new show doesn’t have a holdover winner like Succession to compete against this year. “It actually captured the zeitgeist and did so by being a very artistically driven show, which is increasingly rare to do these days,” says David Canfield. The bigger question in the drama categories is if a show like Fallout will reap Emmy love (we think it will).

    On the comedy side, it feels like a two-show race between The Bear and Hacks. But we wonder if the tepid response to The Bear’s third season will have any effect on its chances to win these categories down the road. As for limited series? Expect Netflix’s breakout Baby Reindeer to lead the pack. We also dive deep into the acting categories and even touch on the reality-series races, which are often slow to change but could see some fresh blood this year.

    Beyond all this talk of Emmy season, we dig into this weekend’s most promising new movie release: A24’s Sing Sing, which feels like the first real Oscar contender to hit theaters this year. Plus, we analyze some early fall-festival announcements, like Steve McQueen’s Blitz opening London and Beetlejuice Beetlejuice landing at Venice—and what those choices could indicate for their Oscar chances.


    Listen to Vanity Fair’s Little Gold Men podcast now.

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    Rebecca Ford

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  • Vanity Fair’s 2024 Emmy Nomination Predictions

    Vanity Fair’s 2024 Emmy Nomination Predictions

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    First, a reminder: the Emmys 2024 haven’t actually happened yet. The Emmy Awards held this past January were in fact honoring TV shows released between June 2022 and May 2023; they were handed out in 2024 only because the 2023 WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes pushed the ceremony out of its usual September perch. So: Now that that’s out of the way, which TV series should we expect to walk away with nominations for the actual Emmys 2024? VF’s experts have educated guesses for every major category.

    COMEDY SERIES

    Abbott Elementary
    The Bear
    Curb Your Enthusiasm
    The Gentlemen
    Hacks
    Only Murders in the Building
    Reservation Dogs
    What We Do in the Shadows

    Five returning nominees here feel fairly locked in. We’ll start with reigning champ The Bear, which—while a bit more dramatic than your average comedy-series contender—has swept races not just at the Emmys, but at the Golden Globes, Critics Choice Awards, and various industry guilds. It’s the front-runner. After a two-year hiatus, Max’s Hacks returned triumphant and has emerged as the primary challenger with its series-best season three. Abbott Elementary and Only Murders in the Building have been Emmy mainstays for their first seasons too, and will comfortably return to the fold for their own strong third seasons. Curb Your Enthusiasm meanwhile is up for its final season more than 20 years after its first nod in this category.

    After that, things get tricky. The big remaining streamers each have one newbie they’d love to sneak in, with each carrying obvious advantages and disadvantages. Apple TV+ has Palm Royale, the starriest and most heavily marketed of the bunch. But it’s designated “rotten” on Rotten Tomatoes and faded in visibility over the spring. Prime Video’s I’m a Virgo was severely underseen—and aired a full year ago—but ranked among the best-reviewed shows in 2023. The best-positioned may be Netflix’s The Gentlemen, which, while not an obvious awards play on its face—Guy Ritchie hasn’t exactly been in the Academy’s conversation ever—was a success for the streamer that critics also embraced.

    Can all three freshmen get in? Those first two face especially tough hurdles, especially when past nominee What We Do in the Shadows is a proven hit with the TV Academy, and another acclaimed FX half-hour, Reservation Dogs, is on its last chance for its final season—after being completely snubbed above the line until now, no less. Maybe, given the scattered nature of the field, enough voters have come around for Reservation Dogs to sneak in. —David Canfield

    ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES

    Larry David, Curb Your Enthusiasm
    Theo James, The Gentlemen
    Steve Martin, Only Murders in the Building
    Martin Short, Only Murders in the Building
    Jeremy Allen White, The Bear

    This category is straightforward. Jeremy Allen White will be back for The Bear’s second season, primed to win once again. The only other 2023 nominee on the ballot is Only Murders in the Building’s Martin Short, so expect him to return as well. His costar, Steve Martin, fell off after being nominated for season one, but I’d bet on him finding his way back as a nominee—along with Curb’s Larry David, also snubbed for his most recent season—given the lack of alternatives. The most viable of them is The Gentlemen’s Theo James, seeing as he’s fresh off his first Emmy nod for The White Lotus and The Gentlemen found a significant audience. You could argue past Emmy winner Jharrel Jerome stands a shot for his terrific work in I’m a Virgo, or that Kelsey Grammer could get checked off for the Frasier revival, but I’m not convinced either series is on the TV Academy’s radar enough to put their leads ahead of a rather obvious five. —DC

    ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES

    Quinta Brunson, Abbott Elementary
    Ayo Edebiri, The Bear
    Maya Rudolph, Loot
    Jean Smart, Hacks
    Kristen Wiig, Palm Royale

    We’ve got a race here, as three of the presumed nominees are coming off wins for their respective roles. Jean Smart won for Hacks two years ago, before taking off the last cycle. In her place, Quinta Brunson took home the gold for Abbott Elementary. Ayo Edebiri won the supporting-actress prize for The Bear’s first season, but this time around is bumping up to lead. All three are certain at least to make it to nominations. Beyond them? Even when Only Murders was at its hottest, voters snubbed Selena Gomez, so although this is her best chance, it remains a climb. It’s unclear just how many Academy members watched—and for that matter, liked—Apple’s relevant contenders, Palm Royale and Loot, but both Kristen Wiig and Maya Rudolph are Academy favorites. Their charming, consistent runs on the campaign trail these last few months may just be enough to get them into the race. For those looking outside the box, I’d hope Netflix’s push for Girls5Eva nets Renee Elise Goldsberry the nod she’s been unfairly denied thus far. It’s one of the best comic performances on TV. —DC

    SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES

    Lionel Boyce, The Bear
    Paul W. Downs, Hacks
    Matty Matheson, The Bear
    Ebon Moss-Bachrach, The Bear
    Oliver Platt, The Bear
    Tyler James Williams, Abbott Elementary

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