Michael B Jordan upends Oscars race as Sinners wins big at Actor Awards
US actor Michael B Jordan has scored a surprise win at the Actor Awards, formerly known as the SAG Awards, giving him a surge of momentum in the final weeks before the Oscars.
He was named best actor for his role in vampire horror Sinners, which also scored the top prize of the night - best ensemble cast.
"I don't even know where to begin, I wasn't expecting this at all," Jordan said in his acceptance speech, adding that he felt "so honoured and privileged" to have been nominated.
"To be recognised by you all, 'thank you' does not come anywhere near to encompassing what we feel, the gratitude," Lindo said.
Other Actor Award winners included Sean Penn (One Battle After Another) and Irish actress Jessie Buckley (Hamnet), as well as a surprise supporting actress victory for Amy Madigan (Weapons) and a posthumous win for Catherine O'Hara (The Studio).
In his speech, Jordan paid tribute to his mother Donna, who he has been bringing to events as his guest throughout awards season, for supporting his acting career from a young age.
"Mom, thank you for driving me back and forth to New York when we didn't have enough money to go through the Harlem tunnel, when we were looking for gas money, parking spaces," he said.
Jordan also thanked Sinners director Ryan Coogler and his co-stars, commenting: "Everybody that had something to do with this movie, you gave us your time and your talents and vulnerability and allowed me to do my best work."
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Voting for this year's Actor Awards ceremony closed on Friday, five days after the Baftas ceremony, where the N-word was shouted while Lindo and Jordan were on stage.
Lindo acknowledged the incident at another awards event on Saturday, telling the audience: "We appreciate the support and love we have been shown in the aftermath of what happened last weekend.
"It's a classic case of something that could've been very negative becoming very positive," he told the NAACP Image Awards. "Thank you so much for the support."
Elsewhere, actress Catherine O'Hara, the Home Alone and Schitt's Creek star who died in January, was named best TV comedy actress for her role in Hollywood satire The Studio.
Paying tribute to O'Hara and accepting the prize on her behalf, the show's creator Seth Rogen said: "She really showed that you can be a genius, and be kind, and one of those things does not have to come at the expense of the other.
"Something I've been marvelling at over the last few weeks was her ability to be generous and kind and gracious while never minimising her own talents, and her own ability to contribute to the work we were doing."
He added: "She knew she could destroy, and she wanted to destroy every day on set."
O'Hara's win was one of several for The Studio, which also won best comedy ensemble and best comedy actor for Rogen.
Other TV winners included Michelle Williams (Dying For Sex), Keri Russell (The Diplomat) and British actor Owen Cooper (Adolescence), but he was not present at the Los Angeles ceremony to collect his trophy.
Medical drama The Pitt won best drama ensemble and best TV drama actor for Noah Wyle, who told his co-stars filming the series had "been challenging, difficult and rewarding in ways I couldn't possibly fathom, but I look at your faces and I wouldn't change one thing".
Hamnet star Buckley said it was "such a privilege" to win best actress, a category she has been sweeping throughout awards season.
"To share those scenes with you in Hamnet, I will cherish that for the rest of my life," Buckley said. "Your wild imagination, your brave untethered womanhood, your ferocious gentleness is a guiding light to me.
She added: "To get to work with my heart in my hand and stand beside my brilliant daring friends who show me their heart, I mean what a way to spend a life, thank you."
Adapted from Maggie O'Farrell's novel, Hamnet tells the semi-fictionalised story of the death of William Shakespeare's 11-year-old son.
Amy Madigan weaponises supporting actress race
Elsewhere, Amy Madigan scored a surprise win in the best supporting actress category for her role as a terrifying aunt in horror film Weapons.
"It's such an honour to be here, I've been doing this a long-ass time," laughed the 75-year-old.
"Gladys has surprised me because she's getting a lot of love back," she said of her character in Weapons, an eccentric woman who turns up in a US town just before the local schoolchildren go missing.
"I'm overwhelmed and so happy," she added. "I wasn't expecting this, but it does really mean a lot to me from my peers."
Madigan won a Critics Choice Award early in awards season, but lost momentum in recent weeks after losses at the Golden Globe and Bafta Film Awards.
Her Actor Award win gives her a late boost of momentum as the Oscars race reaches its final stages.
Harrison Ford won the life achievement prize after a six-decade career including roles in Star Wars, The Fugitive and Blade Runner.
"It's a little weird to be getting a lifetime achievement award at the half-point of my career," the 83-year-old joked. "It's a little early isn't it?"
He continued: "Being able to deliver the work we create together to an audience is an honour and a privilege. And because of that privilege, I've come to know myself.
"This is a tough business to get into. In my case it's been a tough business to get out of, thank god, because I love what I do.
Ford concluded: "I'm a lucky guy, lucky to have found my people, lucky to have work that challenges me, lucky to still be doing it. I don't take that for granted."
Formerly known as the SAG Awards, the Actor Awards are held in Los Angeles and voted for by other actors.
Taking place late in awards season, the event give a valuable indication of momentum ahead of the Academy Awards.
Sinners is heading into the Oscars with 16 nominations, the highest number for any film in Academy Awards history.
Set in the 1930s Mississippi Delta, it tells the story of two twin brothers (played by Jordan) who hope to open a new music venue, before they encounter an evil force.




