Yeah, Meg Tilly, and Margaret Avery. Why?ITALIANO wrote:???mojoe92 wrote: Meg Tilly
Margaret Avery
Plus, Kahn and Clift aren't with us anymore.
and Kahn and Clift would be posthmortem... or whatever the hell that word is
Yeah, Meg Tilly, and Margaret Avery. Why?ITALIANO wrote:???mojoe92 wrote: Meg Tilly
Margaret Avery
Plus, Kahn and Clift aren't with us anymore.
???mojoe92 wrote: Meg Tilly
Margaret Avery
You know they considered Betty White.Mister Tee wrote:The Academy has followed SAG in the past, though: Sidney Poitier won the latter in, I believe, '99, and the Honorary Oscar 2 years later.
And that shows you how closely I pay attention to the SAG prozes. I didn't even remember that.tootpadu wrote:He got that one two years ago, which makes this award all the more redundant.Mister Tee wrote:For the record, I'd put James Earl Jones somewhere in a limbo between Bellamy/Wallach level and the genuine legend group represented by O'Toole. Jones, too, has put in about half a century, though it's been more diffuse -- his most famous work remains onstage or as a voice behind animation (Lion King) or intoning "This...is...CNN". None of this is to dispute his contibutions to film, from Dr. Strangelove through Field of Dreams. But he seems a firmer candidate for SAG Lifetime Achievement than the honorary Oscar.
He got that one two years ago, which makes this award all the more redundant.Mister Tee wrote:For the record, I'd put James Earl Jones somewhere in a limbo between Bellamy/Wallach level and the genuine legend group represented by O'Toole. Jones, too, has put in about half a century, though it's been more diffuse -- his most famous work remains onstage or as a voice behind animation (Lion King) or intoning "This...is...CNN". None of this is to dispute his contibutions to film, from Dr. Strangelove through Field of Dreams. But he seems a firmer candidate for SAG Lifetime Achievement than the honorary Oscar.