And it's a moment, and I'm trying to be very present, but I'm absolutely in awe and totally in a parallel universe right now." But I'm very glad that I'm a person who doesn't take anything for granted. Later, she told Price, "I'm still shaking. "Oh, God, I'm not very good at this," she said, stumbling through her speech. Drew Barrymore, who co-starred with Jessica Lange, took the prize for best actress in a miniseries or TV movie for her role as the eccentric "Little Edie."Ī nervous Barrymore accepted the award, thanking producers for taking a chance on her for the role even though she's known to have a goofy reputation. HBO's "Grey Gardens," about reclusive mother and daughter Edith and "Little Edie" Bouvier Beale, relatives of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, was judged the best movie or miniseries made for TV. "`It was enough to be nominated with these wonderful women and Glenn Close, I'd bow down, but this dress would rip,"' said Margulies, the only nominee in her category from a broadcast network. Julianna Margulies won for best actress in a drama for her performance as a lawyer fighting back from the humiliation of her disgraced politician husband in "The Good Wife." It was her first Golden Globe in seven nominations, and she kissed her fellow "ER"' actor George Clooney on the way to the stage. The Golden Globe could give a burst of attention to Collette's series, "United States of Tara" at least, that was her expressed hope. "`I've had the most wonderful time creeping out the entire country for the last six months," said Lithgow, whose Trinity killer joined the series this season. Hall, who is undergoing treatment for Hodgkin's lymphoma, wore a wool cap as he accepted his award. Both men play serial killers who match wits on the bloody series. Hall won for best actor in a drama and John Lithgow won a supporting actor honor. "Mad Men" won despite a big night for Showtime's "Dexter." Michael C. The competitive pay cable networks Showtime and HBO both won three trophies. In the TV awards, "Mad Men," an acclaimed series about a 1960s-era ad agency, won its third straight award for best television drama, part of a big night for cable networks. Mike Tyson, one of the winners of the top prize for best comedy/musical "The Hangover," told Price he wasn't going to be a chaperone for the evening. for the crime romp "Sherlock Holmes." The supporting-performance Globes were won by Mo'Nique as an abusive welfare mother in "Precious" and Christoph Waltz as a gleefully bloodthirsty Nazi in "Inglourious Basterds." The acting prizes for musical and comedy went to Meryl Streep for the Julia Child story "Julie & Julia" and Robert Downey Jr.
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