‘Sinners’ wins best ensemble at Actor Awards ahead of Oscars
After a near awards-season sweep by “One Battle After Another,” “Sinners” won best ensemble at the Screen Actors Guild’s 32nd Actor Award on Sunday, setting up a potential nail-biter finale in two weeks at the Academy Awards.
The guild’s awards, formerly known as the SAG Awards, are one of the most closely watched Oscar precursors. Actors make up the largest slice of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and their choices at the Actor Awards often align.
The victory for Ryan Coogler’s blues-soaked vampire saga showed that it has a strong chance to win at the Oscars, too, despite a long run of awards for Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another,” including top prizes from the Golden Globes, the Producers Guild Awards, the BAFTAs and the Directors Guild Awards.
Surprise win for best actor
Michael Jordan also won best male actor, upsetting the category favorite, Timothée Chalamet and handing the 39-year-old Jordan the most significant prize of his acclaimed career.
Jordan’s win, for his performance in Ryan Coogler’s “Sinners,” was one of several surprises. Even Jordan looked shocked as the Shrine Auditorium audience in Los Angeles rose to its feet.
“I wasn’t expecting this at all,” said Jordan, who reflected on starting out as an actor before he paused to appreciate the moment. “Yeah, man, this is pretty cool.”
Buckley again
As expected, Jessie Buckley won best female actor for her performance in “Hamnet.” But the other actor races have been harder to call. On Sunday, Sean Penn won best supporting male actor for “One Battle After Another” and Amy Madigan won best supporting female actor for “Weapons.”

The 75-year-old Madigan, who had never before been nominated by the guild, was visibly surprised. Partway through her winding and charming acceptance speech, she looked down at the statuette.
“It’s like when you were little and you had the Barbie and then you got Ken and whipped down his drawers and went, ‘Hey, that’s nothing,’” joked Madigan before apologizing for getting distracted.
Posthumous award
Catherine O’Hara posthumously won best female actor in a comedy series for her performance as a movie executive in the showbiz satire “The Studio.” O’Hara died at the age of 71 on Jan. 30 from a blood clot in the lungs. At the Shine Auditorium in Los Angeles, the crowd stood in a standing ovation for O’Hara after she was announced as the winner.
Seth Rogen, cocreator of “The Studio,” accepted the award on her behalf. He recalled a passionate collaborator who would, the night before a scene, invariably send a polite email with suggested rewrites. Rogen said O’Hara “showed that you could be a genius and you could be kind.”
“If you have people in your lives who don’t know her work,” Rogen said, “show them O’Hara dancing to Harry Belafonte in ‘Beetlejuice,’ show them O’Hara hurting her knee in ‘Best in Show’ and doing that amazing thing where she hobbles around and tell the people as they are laughing that that’s Catherine O’Hara and we were lucky that we got to live in a world where she so generously shared her talents with us.”
With two weeks to go until the Academy Awards, the 32nd Actor Awards on Sunday are the final pre-Oscars showdown for “One Battle After Another” and “Sinners.”

