Current:Home > MarketsLily Gladstone is the Golden Globes’ first Indigenous best actress winner -AssetScope
Lily Gladstone is the Golden Globes’ first Indigenous best actress winner
View
Date:2025-04-12 11:08:05
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — When Lily Gladstone took the stage Sunday night to accept her first Golden Globe, she spoke to the live TV audience in the Blackfeet language.
“This is a historic win,” she said, becoming the Globes’ first Indigenous winner of best actress in a drama. “This is for every little rez kid, every little urban kid, every little Native kid out there who has a dream, who is seeing themselves represented and our stories told — by ourselves, in our own words — with tremendous allies and tremendous trust from and with each other.”
Gladstone, 37, won for her role as Mollie Burkhart in Martin Scorsese’s epic “Killers of the Flower Moon.” In the film, her character’s family was murdered in a reign of terror in which the Osage were targeted for the headrights to their oil-rich land in Oklahoma.
In the audience, co-star Leonardo DiCaprio wore a pin in solidarity.
“I have my Osage pin on tonight because, you know, the Osage nation, we’re standing in unison with them for this movie,” he said before the show.
Gladstone and DiCaprio walked the red carpet with their respective mothers. After her win backstage, she paid homage to her parents for supporting her dreams.
The actor said her father watched from home, where they will have a “big ol’ feast.”
“Every time I’ve felt a level of guilt or it wasn’t really possible, my mom and my dad my whole life never once questioned that this is what I was meant to do,” said Gladstone, who is an only child. “They would always support me when it was the times of famine and the times of feast.”
It’s “a beautiful community, nation, that encouraged me to keep going, keep doing this,” Gladstone said of the Blackfeet Nation. “I’m here with my mom, who, even though she’s not Blackfeet, worked tirelessly to get our language into our classrooms so I had a Blackfeet-language teacher growing up.”
The actor, who grew up between Seattle and the Blackfeet Reservation in Montana, was named one of 2023’s AP Breakthrough Entertainers.
Gladstone said she typically greets people in her Blackfeet language.
“It’s often how I introduce myself in a new group of people, especially when it’s significant,” she said. “It was one of the more natural things I could do in the moment.”
On the subject of a possible Oscar win, Gladstone told The Associated Press: “It would be an incredible moment in my life, but it would mean so much more than just me.”
“It is, of course, something I have to think about, insofar as I would just really love to speak some of my language — and teach myself a little bit more of my language — to have and to hold in that moment,” she continued.
Gladstone is the second Native actress to receive a nomination at the Globes after Irene Bedard, who received a nod for the 1995 television movie “Lakota Woman: Siege at Wounded Knee.”
“I don’t have words,” Gladstone said. “I’m so grateful that I can speak even a little bit of my language, which I’m not fluent in, up here, because in this business, Native actors used to speak their lines in English, and then the sound mixers would run them backwards to accomplish Native languages on camera.”
Speaking of the award, Gladstone said: “It doesn’t belong to just me. I’m holding it right now. I’m holding it with all my beautiful sisters in the film.”
___
Associated Press writer Beth Harris contributed to this report.
___
For more coverage of the 2024 Golden Globes, visit https://apnews.com/hub/golden-globe-awards.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- West Virginia governor pushing for another income tax cut as time in office winds down
- 6 people killed in Wisconsin house fire
- Where Is Desperate Housewives' Orson Hodge Now? Kyle MacLachlan Says…
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- California to bake under 'pretty intense' heat wave this week
- 3 killed and 2 injured in shooting near University of Cincinnati campus, police say
- Groups oppose veto of bill to limit governor’s power to cut off electronic media in emergencies
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Meet the Americans competing at the 2024 Tour de France
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Messi injury update: Back to practice with Argentina, will he make Copa América return?
- Pennsylvania man killed when fireworks explode in his garage
- West Virginia governor pushing for another income tax cut as time in office winds down
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Two Georgia firefighters who disappeared were found dead in Tennessee; autopsy underway
- Over 100 stranded Dolphins in Cape Cod are now free, rescue teams say − for now
- Judge releases transcripts of 2006 grand jury investigation of Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking
Recommendation
See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
Who was Nyah Mway? New York 13-year-old shot, killed after police said he had replica gun
See Travis Kelce Celebrate Taylor Swift Backstage at the Eras Tour in Dublin
NHL teams cut ties with four players charged in 2018 sexual assault case
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
New clerk sworn in to head troubled county courthouse recordkeeping office in Harrisburg
Campaign to get new political mapmaking system on Ohio’s ballot submits more than 700,000 signatures
Police officer fatally shoots man at homeless shelter in northwest Minnesota city of Crookston