LOS ANGELES (AP) - The James Bond adventure “Skyfall” and the fantasy series “Game of Thrones” have picked up prizes for best stunt work from the Screen Actors Guild.
The stunt honors were announced Sunday on the red carpet before the official SAG Awards ceremony, as stars were gathering for their guild’s big night.
JoBeth Williams and Scott Bakula announced the winners, noting the value of stunt players, who often are overlooked for their contributions to film and television.
“The stunt men and women of our union are critical to the work that gets done,” Bakula said. “They keep us healthy, they keep us alive, they keep us working. They keep our shows working.”
Among the early arrivals were Sally Field, Peter Facinelli, Steve Buscemi, Ellie Kemper, Busy Phillips and Alec Baldwin, who has won six-straight SAG awards for actor in a comedy series.
“It’s all the actors. It’s all the tribe,” Sally Field, a supporting-actress nominee for the Civil War epic “Lincoln,” said of the SAG honors. “I’ve always been incredibly proud to be a member of the tribe.”
“You get to see everyone here at the SAG Awards,” said Facinelli, a co-star of the “Twilight” movies and “Nurse Jackie,” which is nominated for best TV comedy cast. “It’s where the reunion happens.”
The SAG honors are the latest show in a puzzling Academy Awards season in which Hollywood’s top prize, the best-picture Oscar, looks up for grabs among several key nominees.
Among nominees for the 19th annual guild awards are Oscar winners Field, Daniel Day-Lewis and Tommy Lee Jones for “Lincoln”; Hugh Jackman and Anne Hathaway for the Victor Hugo musical adaptation “Les Miserables”; and Jennifer Lawrence, Bradley Cooper and Oscar recipient Robert De Niro for the oddball romance “Silver Linings Playbook.”
De Niro and Jones are in an exclusive supporting-actors group where all five nominees are past Oscar winners. The others are Alan Arkin for the Iran hostage-crisis thriller “Argo,” Javier Bardem for the James Bond adventure “Skyfall” and Philip Seymour Hoffman for the cult drama “The Master.”
Honors from the actors union, next weekend’s Directors Guild of America Awards and Saturday night’s Producers Guild of America Awards _ whose top honor went to “Argo” _ typically help to establish clear favorites for the Oscars.
But Oscar night on Feb. 24 looks more uncertain this time after some top directing prospects, including Ben Affleck for “Argo” and Kathryn Bigelow for “Zero Dark Thirty,” missed out on nominations. Both films were nominated for best picture, but a movie rarely wins the top Oscar if its director is not also in the running.
Steven Spielberg’s “Lincoln” would seem the Oscar favorite with 12 nominations. Yet “Argo” and Affleck were surprise best-drama and director winners at the Golden Globes, and then there’s Saturday’s Producers Guild win for “Argo,” leaving the Oscar race looking like anybody’s guess.
Affleck has made some nice jokes about his directing snub, wisecracking at one point that no one seemed surprised he didn’t get an acting nomination for “Argo,” either.
His colleagues just seem happy for all the attention the film has received.
“The thing is, we’re all very pleased we’ve been nominated for so many things,” “Argo” co-star John Goodman said before the SAG Awards.
The Screen Actors Guild honors at least should help to establish solid front-runners for the stars. All four of the guild’s individual acting winners often go on to receive the same prizes at the Academy Awards.
Last year, the guild went just three-for-four _ with lead actor Jean Dujardin of “The Artist” and supporting players Octavia Spencer of “The Help” and Christopher Plummer of “Beginners” also taking home Oscars. The guild’s lead-actress winner, Viola Davis of “The Help,” missed out on the Oscar, which went to Meryl Streep for “The Iron Lady.”
The guild also presents an award for overall cast performance, its equivalent of a best-picture honor. The nominees are “Argo,” “The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel,” “Les Miserables,” “Lincoln” and “Silver Linings Playbook.”
Yet the cast prize has a spotty record at predicting the eventual best-picture recipient at the Oscars. Only eight of 17 times since the guild added the category has the cast winner gone on to take the best-picture Oscar. “The Help” won the guild’s cast prize last year, while Oscar voters named “The Artist” as best picture.
Such past guild cast winners as “The Birdcage,” “Gosford Park” and “Inglourious Basterds” also failed to take the top Oscar.
Airing live on TNT and TBS, the show features nine television categories, as well.
Receiving the guild’s life-achievement award is Dick Van Dyke, who presented the same prize last year to his “The Dick Van Dyke Show” co-star, Mary Tyler Moore. Van Dyke’s award will be presented by his 1960s sitcom’s creator and co-star, Carl Reiner, and Alec Baldwin.
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Associated Press writer Beth Harris contributed to this report.
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