美国电影金球奖提名吐故纳新 Television stalwarts* were pushed aside for shiny new fare at the Golden Globes on Monday, with U.S. broadcast networks edging their way back into the contest after years of domination by premium cable and streaming upstarts. FX’s limited series “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story,” which won big at the Emmys earlier this year, led all contenders* with five nominations for its dramatization* of the 1995 double murder trial of football star Simpson. In the best drama series field, the top Globes TV prize, there were four new contenders — HBO’s sci-fi series “Westworld,” heart-tugging family drama “This Is Us” from NBC , lavish British royal series “The Crown” and 1980s sci-fi mystery “Stranger Things,” both from Netflix. “This Is Us,” which also won nominations for supporting actresses Mandy Moore and Chrissy Metz, marked the first Golden Globes best drama series nomination for NBC in 10 years. “What a morning. The last time my phone started ringing like that at 5:30 a.m. I think my grandfather had died. This continues to be the wildest, craziest, and most rewarding ride for all of us,” said Dan Fogelman, creator of “This Is Us.” The clutch of new shows and actors meant there was no room for old Golden Globe favorites like Netflix’s “Orange Is the New Black,” “House of Cards” and “Narcos,” and Showtime’s “Homeland” and “The Affair.” ABC also got back into the game with modern African-American family comedy “Black-ish” landing nominations for best comedy series and actors Anthony Anderson and Tracee Ellis Ross. ABC also picked up two nods for drama series “American Crime.” (SD-Agenices) |