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  • Hugh Jackman and Sutton Foster Relationship Rumors: A Complete Timeline

    Hugh Jackman and Sutton Foster Relationship Rumors: A Complete Timeline

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    Rumors of a relationship between Hugh Jackman and Sutton Foster, who starred together in The Music Man on Broadway, began even before Jackman and Foster announced their respective divorces. The gossip ramped up in September of 2023, when Jackman announced his separation from Deborra-Lee Jackman, his wife of 27 years, and went into overdrive after Foster announced her own divorce from her husband of 10 years, Ted Griffin, in October.

    Neither Jackman nor Foster has confirmed or denied that they are in a relationship, but the rumors continue to circle.

    Here is a complete timeline of the rumored relationship between the Broadway stars, with the most recent developments first.

    January 4, 2024: Hours after Deadline reports that Jackman is expected to skip the Golden Globes on January 5, the 56-year-old actor is spotted taking in a show in Los Angeles. And not just any show. On January 4, DeuxMoi posted photos of Jackman attending Sutton Foster’s production of Once Upon a Mattress at the Ahmanson Theatre.

    In the photos, Jackman can be seen smiling while appearing to snap a photo of his seat neighbor, Carol Burnett, who was reportedly receiving a round of applause during intermission.

    November 13, 2024: An anonymous source tells Us Weekly that the relationship between Hugh Jackman and Sutton Foster is the primary reason for Jackman’s divorce. “Sutton and Hugh’s relationship is the reason Hugh and Deb got divorced,” the insider claimed. “A lot of people on Broadway knew, and we kept it quiet because both of them are so nice and great people. Everyone respected their privacy. But there was an affair and overlap.” Furthermore, the Us Weekly source says that Jackman and Foster are still together and going strong.

    October 23, 2024: Gossip blogger Tasha Lustig claimed in an Instagram post that Jackman had “blindsided” his ex-wife by “running off with the mistress,” per Us. The post was cosigned by Amanda de Cadenet, a friend of Jackman’s ex, who commented, “You are on point with this one. My beloved friend Deb is about to have her glow up any moment fyi!”

    October 22, 2024: Sutton Foster files for divorce from Ted Griffin after 10 years of marriage. Meanwhile, anonymous sources tell Page Six that Foster was planning to move on with Hugh Jackman, with whom she’d fallen in love. “They are 100% together and are in love and want to spend the rest of their lives together,” one source said.

    June 10, 2024: Foster gushes over Jackman in yet another interview. “He’s one of the greatest guys ever, an incredible costar,” Foster tells People, adding that he taught her “how to be an amazing leader.”

    December 13, 2023: InTouch quotes an anonymous source who claims that the Jackman and Foster romance was an “open secret” in Broadway circles. “[Jackman] has been besotted with Sutton from the moment he met her. He followed her around like a puppy!”

    September 15, 2023: Hugh and Deborra-Lee announce in a statement published by People that they had decided to end their 27-year marriage. “We have been blessed to share almost three decades together as husband and wife in a wonderful, loving marriage. Our journey now is shifting and we have decided to separate to pursue our individual growth,” the pair stated.

    December 2021: Previews of The Music Man begin, and Jackman and Foster begin gushing about one another in interviews and on social media.

    On Twitter, for instance, Jackman wrote, “There are hundreds of people who’ve made this moment happen. But there’s one in particular I pay tribute to – [Sutton Foster]. This show is nothing without you. You’re an exceptional talent and friend.”

  • The Golden Globes kicks off the awards party tonight – and there could be a few surprises

    The Golden Globes kicks off the awards party tonight – and there could be a few surprises

    While the Oscars bestows the film industry’s highest honours, the Golden Globes is the ceremony that gets the awards season party started.

    Emilia Perez, which stars Selena Gomez and tells the story of a Mexican drug lord who changes gender, leads the nominations with 10, while postwar epic The Brutalist, starring Adrien Brody, has seven, and papal thriller Conclave, starring Ralph Fiennes, has six.

    After surpassing Mamma Mia earlier this week to become the highest-grossing film ever adapted from a Broadway musical, Wicked has four nods – and seems certain to follow in the perfectly arched footsteps of Barbie by clinching the prize for cinematic and box office achievement.

    The Golden Globes also celebrates TV – with The Bear, Shogun, Only Murders In The Building, Baby Reindeer, The Penguin and Monsters among the big nominees.

    This year’s ceremony takes place in Los Angeles later today, so you’ll have to stay up late if you plan to follow in the UK.

    Ahead of the show, here are a few things to look out for.

    Musicals lead the way

    All singing, often dancing – it seems the world has really been holding space for musicals over the past 12 months.

    Operatic musical Emilia Perez comfortably has the most nominations of all the films in the running, while Wicked, starring Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo, has been the most talked about film of the year (not least because of the viral press tour).

    Both Erivo and Grande are nominated in acting categories – for Grande, it is her first Golden Globe nod for her performance as Glinda, and she competes in the best supporting female actor in a motion picture category against fellow pop star Gomez and Zoe Saldana, who also stars in Emilia Perez.

    Erivo is up for the award for best female actor in a motion picture musical or comedy, alongside Zendaya for romantic sports film Challengers, Karla Sofia Gascon for Emilia Perez, Demi Moore for The Substance, Amy Adams for Nightbitch, and a breakout performance from Mikey Madison for Anora, a film about a young sex worker who marries the son of a Russian oligarch.

    Last year’s nominations were led by Greta Gerwig’s Barbie and Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer, the latter of which went on to win pretty much every award going, including best picture at the Oscars.

    While the Barbenheimer buzz was fun for a while, Oppenheimer’s domination made awards season pretty predictable (and, some might say, a little dull). This year, Wicked aside, there are no such obvious contenders.

    The Brutalist, which follows Brody as a Hungarian architect attempting to build a life in the US after the Second World War, seems to be a favourite for best drama, as well as a best actor win for its star, and best director for Brady Corbet.

    But it faces tough competition from Conclave, in which Fiennes plays a priest who has to select a new pope, as well as A Complete Unknown, starring Timothee Chalamet as Bob Dylan. Awards voters love a biopic, after all.

    In the musical/comedy category, experts for awards prediction site Gold Derby seem to be split three ways, between Wicked, Emilia Perez, and Anora – whose star Madison is also tipped to beat the likes of Erivo and Moore in her category.

    After a difficult few years, the Golden Globes are still in comeback mode.

    Following an expose over a lack of diversity among members, the ceremony was held in private and boycotted by celebs in 2022 and didn’t quite fully bounce back in 2023.

    Now, with a new organising body and after appearances by lots of A-listers last year, it looks set to bring some mega-watt star appeal once again.

    Angelina Jolie – a favourite for best actress for her portrayal of opera singer Maria Callas in Maria – Denzel Washington, Nicole Kidman, Chalamet and Moore are just a few of the big-name nominees, alongside Grande and Gomez. Pamela Anderson is also on the list – nominated for best actress in a drama for her performance in The Last Showgirl.

    And it’s not just Hollywood making up the star-studded guest list, as loads of British celebs are in the running for awards, too, from Eddie Redmayne for his performance in Sky’s The Day Of The Jackal, to Keira Knightley for Netflix’s Black Doves.

    Other British stars on the shortlists include Kate Winslet (nominated in both the TV and film categories for The Regime and Lee), Gary Oldman for hit Apple TV+ series Slow Horses, Hugh Grant for horror movie Heretic, Felicity Jones for The Brutalist, Colin Farrell for The Penguin, and Daniel Craig for his film Queer, based on the 1985 novella by William S Burroughs. And Erivo, too.

    Robbie Williams also gets a nod for best original song for his unique biopic, Better Man – his life story told through the medium of a computer-generated monkey.

    Unlike the Oscars, the Globes covers both TV and film and also includes genre splits – with separate awards for dramas, and comedies and musicals. It means there are a lot of nominees in the running for awards.

    Still, there were a few big names absent from the shortlists.

    While his co-star Washington is up for a supporting award, Gladiator II star Paul Mescal missed out on a nod – as did director Sir Ridley Scott.

    The original film won the best picture Golden Globe in 2001 and star Russell Crowe was nominated in the best acting category for his performance.

    British director Sir Steve McQueen’s Second World War drama film Blitz, starring Saoirse Ronan, is also absent from the nominations.

    And while Dune: Part Two is up for best picture and best original score by Hans Zimmer, director Denis Villeneuve has not been recognised.

    Yes, you read that right. While Tina Fey and Amy Poehler hosted the ceremony several times as a double act, comedian Nikki Glaser will be the first woman to take the reins solo.

    Some of the ceremony’s most memorable moments have come not from the stars, but the hosts themselves – Ricky Gervais’s caustic takedowns of the A-listers in the audience were always a favourite.

    It’s a big gig, with not just the audience to impress, but the millions who will watch and see the clips all over social media later on. Jo Koy, who hosted last year, didn’t go down particularly well.

    Fortunately, this year’s show should be suitably sharp in the hands of US stand-up Glaser, a comedian who is not afraid of being savage.

    “It’s the best of TV and film coming together with one common goal: to receive the love and validation they never got as children from their parents,” she said. “Sunday night is a night to celebrate TV and film, actors and directors, Xanax and tequila.”

  • Bad Bunny on His New Album, “Debí Tirar Más Fotos”

    Bad Bunny on His New Album, “Debí Tirar Más Fotos”

    Bad Bunny on His New Album, “Debí Tirar Más Fotos”

    Solcyré Burga

    January 5, 2025 at 5:09 PM

    Bad Bunny in a promotional image for his new album “Debí Tirar Más Fotos.” Credit – Eric Rojas

    Last summer, the global superstar Bad Bunny was driving through the streets of San Juan, Puerto Rico, crying and feeling sad “about a lot of things.” As he looked out his window, he saw the city’s beaches filled with blissed-out tourists — which somehow made him feel even worse. He began thinking about the relationship between Puerto Rico’s external perception and its sometimes-harsh realities and how that relates to his personal life.

    “Tourists come here to enjoy the beautiful places, and then they leave and they don’t have to deal with the problems that Puerto Ricans have to deal with day-to-day,” he explained to TIME in a Manhattan hotel room in late December, days before another yet another blackout blanketed Puerto Rico in darkness. “Translating that analogy to a romance, there are also people who arrive to share [memories with you] and only see the best part of you, the most beautiful part of you,” he says. “And they leave. They couldn’t see that part of each one of us: the defects, the trauma, the worries, the pains, the wounds of the past. It’s like they were a tourist in your life.”

    Bad Bunny, born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, spent about half of 2024 abroad, showing off the best parts of himself: he wrapped up an arena tour that grossed more than $200 million, co-chaired the Met Gala alongside Jennifer Lopez and Zendaya, performed at Vogue World 2024 in Paris — where he took a private tour of the Louvre with his on-and-off love interest Kendall Jenner — and filmed Happy Gilmore 2 with Adam Sandler. He was the third-most streamed artist on Spotify, marking his sixth straight year in the top five.

    But all of his globetrotting and success only made Bad Bunny miss his home even more. Exacerbating that homesickness were the types of creeping criticisms that inevitably come with his level of success: from fans who accused him of abandoning his island for Hollywood; from critics who felt his 2023 album, Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar Mañana, lacked the joy or creative spark of his past music. On that album, Martínez seemed all too aware of his perilous position at the top: “I am the biggest star in the whole world,” he rapped on “Nadie Sabe.” “There are many people who want me to fail.”

    Read More: Bad Bunny’s Next Move

    For his next project, Bad Bunny could have attempted to reclaim his no. 1 position on Spotify (now occupied by Taylor Swift) by rapping in English or collaborating with superstars. Instead, he went in the opposite direction. Debí Tirar Más Fotos, his sixth solo studio album, which arrived Jan. 5, is his most culturally authentic, musically ambitious, and emotionally vulnerable album: a deep dive into his identity and sense of self. It shows him seeking refuge from heartbreak, stardom, and politics, all while plunging deeply into Puerto Rico’s musical history.

    This album is not for the tourists. Listeners will have to traverse deeper than the sandy coastlines of the island, and into the mountains: a place of resistance, he calls it. “This is an album of Puerto Rican music, and a completely different vibe from what any other artist has done,” he says. “I found what my roots are: the sound that represents me.”

    Turning to Traditional Puerto Rican Music

    For years, Bad Bunny’s signature songs about sex, pride, and heartbreak have been anchored by reggaeton beats ready-made for perreo in the club. But shortly after wrapping his 2023 trap-oriented album Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar Mañana, Martínez came to longtime producer MAG with an idea. “He wanted to create an album that takes you on a journey through the genres that make up Puerto Rican music,” says MAG, a Nuyorican-Dominican who produced most of Bad Bunny’s Un Verano Sin Ti, which remains the most streamed Spotify album ever.

    Sitting in a hotel conference room, dripped in a heavy silver cross chain, long black trench, and Louis Vuitton sunglasses, Bad Bunny plays one of the first songs created for the record. “NuevaYol,” its distinct spelling an homage to the dialect of his people, is built around a sample from El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico’s salsa classic “Un Verano en Nueva York.” Salsa, with roots in Cuba that were further nurtured by Boricuas in New York in the mid-20th century, is a prime example of the richness of the Puerto Rican diaspora. But few artists have attempted to blend salsa’s lively congas and syncopated brass arrangements with the harder, sleeker beats from Dominican dembow.

    The resulting song, with its genre-melding, cross-generational attention to detail, set the tone for the rest of the album. “NuevaYol” nods to the Puerto Rican community in the Big Apple, with shoutouts to salsa legend Willie Colón and Maria Antonia Cay, better known as “Toñita,” the owner of the last-standing Latino social club in Williamsburg, Brooklyn — a historically Puerto Rican neighborhood now facing rapid gentrification.

    Martínez’s album concept coalesced further at the Fiestas de la Calle San Sebastián in January 2024. The music festival, also known as “San Se,” is Puerto Rico’s way of marking the end of the holiday season, which lasts from November through mid-January. Yearning for the música típica of his childhood, Martínez started to write the plena-inspired “Café con Ron” sitting on a balcony as he watched the festival below. (Plena was birthed around a century ago amid Puerto Rico’s transfer from Spanish to U.S. rule, combining the musical traditions of freed African slaves, native Taino, and Europeans.)

    Later in the year, Martínez called a slew of up-and-coming musicians into the studio, mostly from the local music school Libre de Música San Juan, and some of them teenagers. Together, they created “Baile Inolvidable,” a salsa track complete with wailing trombones and a piano solo; “Turista,” a heartbreaking bolero that explores the hollowness of tourism; “Bokete,” with just a sprinkle of bachata; and “Pitorro de Coco,” inspired by the jíbaro music that originated in the Puerto Rican countryside and one of the two singles released in advance of the album. Martínez says that his mother cried when she first heard the song, and wrote to him: “From trap to jíbaro music, my heart is very happy. I never imagined it.”

    Martínez seems just as excited as his mom when he plays the album for TIME in New York. He sings along passionately to the lyrics of his collaborators — including the rising urbano artist RaiNao — and mimes playing the trombone and bongos.

    Bad Bunny is far from the only young star channeling the music of the past. Fellow Boricua artist Rauw Alejandro covered the Frankie Ruiz classic “Tú Con Él” on his November album. Hopping on Grupo Frontero’s smash hit “unx100to,” Martínez also contributed to the rising popularity of Regional Mexican music, which artist Peso Pluma has further reignited through his corridos.

    Debí Tirar features much more live musicianship than Martínez’s past records. His bandmates on the project mostly come from a new generation of Puerto Rican musicians, including the producer Big Jay and the band Chuwi. Martínez sought to both channel their energy and encourage younger generations to pursue the music of their ancestors. “To be able to collaborate in that way, and give space to new people instead of looking for those who are established in the industry,” he says, “was something that for me was part of the purpose.”

    Fighting For His Homeland

    Bad Bunny has long been engaged in politics, and he’s had as much reason as ever to speak out in the lead-up to the new album. In 2019, he joined protests that led to the ouster of Governor Ricardo Rosselló. He has been vocal about LGBTQ rights, and songs like “Andrea” call attention to gender-based violence. In 2022, he released a 23-minute documentary about Puerto Rico’s life-threatening blackouts, which have continued following the privatization of the island’s power grid, and the more gradual threat of gentrification for the music video of his song “El Apagón.”

    In October, Bad Bunny jumped into the U.S. election discourse after comedian Tony Hinchcliffe appeared at a Trump rally in New York at Madison Square Garden and declared: “There’s literally a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean right now. I think it’s called Puerto Rico.” Hinchcliffe later tried to dismiss the statement as a joke, but the backlash from the Latino community was swift and loud.

    Martínez responded quickly by posting a video on Instagram stories of Kamala Harris outlining her support of Puerto Rico. Martínez says he was in New York on the day of the rally with a group of badass friends (“cabrones”) who were all incensed. “We were playing [around] about getting there on the bus and prenderlo [lighting it up],” he says.

    Martínez says he understands, at some level, Hinchcliffe’s defense. “I consider myself a person who to a certain point likes dark humor,” he says. “But the detail was that it was not a standard comedy nor a comedy show, it was a political rally.”

    “Most people don’t know who the f-ck you are,” he continues, talking about Hinchcliffe. “They’re going to assume that you’re a politician at a political rally. So that awakens people who may be there and think the same as you, and say ‘Yes, Puerto Rico [is]….’ And all those racist people, at that moment, [it] gives them empowerment for a joke.”

    While this album is not always overtly political, Martínez does gesture toward Puerto Rico’s tenuous status within the American empire on the song “Lo Que Pasó a Hawaii.” Martínez says the song’s lyrics came to him in a dream, including the line “No quiero que pase contigo lo que pasó a Hawaii” (“I don’t want what happened in Hawaii to happen to you”). In 1898, both Puerto Rico and Hawaii were seized and declared U.S. territories. Hawaii became the 50th state in 1959 and is now significantly Americanized, while Puerto Rico remains an unincorporated territory and retains its own language and culture. Last fall, Martínez came out against the ruling New Progressive Party (PNP), which promotes statehood.

    Drawn by tax incentives, many wealthy foreigners have relocated to Puerto Rico, impacting locals’ access to housing and public beaches. Martínez contends that many show little interest in the island apart from what it can provide them. “Politically and historically, they know nothing about Puerto Rico, nor are they interested in knowing,” he says. “They don’t even know that Puerto Ricans on the island don’t even vote for the president, but they do know that they can go to the island to legally evade taxes. That’s something that shocked me.”

    While he says that his song “Lo Que Pasó a Hawaii” has a political bent, he asked that its message speak for itself. “Many times, when I want to express myself in a more political way, I do it in songs because it’s the best way I can,” he says. “I think that every Puerto Rican can listen to it and come to their own conclusion and do their research and understand it the way they think best.”

    Days before the album’s release, Martínez put out a short film which further explores those same themes of economic and cultural alienation. The film depicts an elderly man, played by iconic Puerto Rican filmmaker Jacobo Morales, coming to grips with a Puerto Rico in which country and rock tunes play on his walk to a gentrified bakery — which is staffed by an English-language server offering vegan quesitos.

    Read More: How Puerto Ricans Are Fighting Back Against the Outsiders Using the Island as a Tax Haven

    Despite Martínez’s devotion to his island, his ascension on the global stage and his association with the Kardashians has been taken as proof by some that he’s out of touch with his roots. But Martínez’s Puerto Rican heritage is the thing that will always differentiate him, particularly in white-dominated spaces like Hollywood. It’s a topic that comes up indirectly throughout the interview, especially as the conversation veers from politics to music and back again. He has used his music and platform to repeatedly show how the political is personal: How politicians have made decisions about the island’s roads, access to electricity, and public spaces, with foreigners attempting to privatize beaches for high-end luxury resorts, and all of these moves are felt acutely by locals. Puerto Rico has one of the highest poverty rates in the U.S., and Congressional actions in 2016 resulted in austerity measures that cut back public services on the island.

    Debí Tirar Mas Fotos’ focus on Puerto Rico is both a rejoinder and an attempt to create a safe space. If his 2022 smash album Un Verano Sin Ti represented Puerto Rico’s sunniest beaches, then Debí Tirar is a family affair in the campo, or countryside, of the island, he says. “They’re trying to take away my beaches, little by little: they keep coming and selling them,” he says. “There are a lot of people who are fighting, raising their voices, and protecting the beaches, but at the same time, it’s like we’re looking for a refuge in the countryside. A resistance in that way.”

    Healing and Nostalgia

    Nearly two years ago, Bad Bunny became a sudden fixture of U.S. gossip sites when he was photographed with the world’s highest-paid supermodel, Kendall Jenner. In the summer of 2024, they appeared together in Paris in matching outfits. But they are now rumored to no longer be together.

    Often embedded between upbeat melodies and rhythms, lyrically, Debí Tirar deals heavily with heartbreak: the longing for a text or phone call from a lover, making peace with the end of a relationship, and trying to get over the potential of what could have been. The titular song on the album, “DtMF,” touches on that feeling as Martínez mulls over what he neglected to do: kiss, embrace, and photograph a love he now misses.

    However, Martínez says that the songs on Debí Tirar aren’t necessarily about specific people. “I have written songs inspired by people that people don’t have a f-cking clue who they are,” he says. “The meaning of the song can vary in many things, like the absence of a person who is no longer with you, or a love. But it can be many other things too, that are no longer there.”

    To solely identify Debí Tirar as an album about romantic love would be an incomplete reading. In retreating further to his roots, Bad Bunny delivers authenticity as he celebrates the markers of his heritage as a way to bring back joy — a feeling that Martínez has sought both in the midst of heartbreak and as his career has taken him away from Puerto Rico for prolonged periods. “At times you are perhaps a little nostalgic, a little sentimental… But at the same time, you are enjoying other things: playing dominoes with grandparents or with the family,” Martínez says. “Since we are also in Puerto Rico, we are at home, we are with the group: That is a reason to be happy, to be content.”

    The search for that nostalgic element is reflected in the date of the album release, which Martínez intentionally chose to fall on Víspera de Reyes, a celebration within Puerto Rico’s Christmas season in which revelers listen to jíbaro, plena, and bomba. “It can be mixed with lots of modern-day music and rhythms,” he says, reminiscing on the sounds of his grandfather’s favorite music that he hopes will now be heard year-round.

    Whereas in Nadie Sabe, Bad Bunny gloats about his achievements and success, Martínez is more humble about his stardom during our discussion about Debí Tirar’s final track “La Mudanza.” “People see me as this giant superstar who has done all these things and is recognized,” he says, “But nothing would be possible if my parents hadn’t met and made me.” The final track of the album, which he says is all about his rise to global fame, is partially a tribute to his family. Artfully rapping over a salsa beat, he shares the story of how his parents met, giving shout-outs to his grandparents, nieces and nephews, and ultimately, his countrymen. “Yo soy de P f-ckin’ R,” he deliberately includes on the last song, a reference to his 2020 hit that became an anthem of Puerto Rican pride.

    Martínez understands all too well the push and pull between immigrants chasing their dreams abroad while still yearning for home. Sitting in the hotel room, some 10 miles from where he performed two iconic sold-out shows at Yankee Stadium and shot part of his music video for the massively popular “Tití Me Preguntó,” he speaks tenderly of New York. He recounts a memory of when he was 12, and his mom surprised him with a trip to the city. “I started to cry, and she thought it was because I was so excited,” he recalls. “It was because I didn’t want to go. I said, ‘I don’t want to leave. I’m never going to leave Puerto Rico.’”

    Contact us at letters@time.com.

  • The Golden Globes are Sunday night. Here’s five things to look for

    The Golden Globes are Sunday night. Here’s five things to look for

    After a rocky few years and the disbanding of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the Golden Globes have seemingly stabilized. Now the question is: Can they still put on a good show?

    The 82nd Golden Globes, beginning Sunday night at 8 p.m. EST, will hope to rekindle some of the frothy comic energy of the days when Ricky Gervais or Tina Fey and Amy Poehler hosted. Last year’s comeback edition, hosted by Jo Koy, was widely panned, but it delivered where it counted: Ratings rebounded to about 10 million viewers, according to Nielsen. CBS signed up for five more years.

    This time, comedian Nikki Glaser will be emceeing the ceremony from the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California. The Globes, now owned by Todd Boehly’s Eldridge Industries and Dick Clark Productions, will be broadcast live by CBS and available to stream live for subscribers to Paramount+ with Showtime beginning at 8 p.m. Eastern.

    While Glaser doesn’t have as widely seen contenders as last year, when “Oppenheimer” and “Barbie” were the headliners, the show does promise about as much star power as Hollywood can muster. Nominees including Zendaya, Timothée Chalamet, Angelina Jolie, Daniel Craig, Denzel Washington, Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo and Selena Gomez.

    Jacques Audiard’s Netflix musical “Emilia Pérez” comes in as the lead nominee, with 10 nods, followed by Brady Corbet’s postwar epic “The Brutalist,” with seven, and Edward Berger’s papal thriller “Conclave,” with six. Among the top-nominated series are “The Bear,” “Shogun” and “Only Murders in the Building.”

    Here are a few things to look for heading into Sunday’s Globes:

    The best actor in a drama category is a bruiser, with a field of Ralph Fiennes (“Conclave”), Adrien Brody (“The Brutalist”), Daniel Craig (“Queer”), Colman Domingo (“Sing Sing”), Sebastian Stan (“The Apprentice”) and Chalamet, for the Bob Dylan film “A Complete Unknown.” While Fiennes or Brody might take it, a win for Chalamet would be the first major award for the 29-year-old star — and surely would get the Oscar talk going.

    Just days before the Globes, Blake Lively sued “It Ends With Us” director Justin Baldoni and several others tied to the romantic drama, alleging harassment and a coordinated campaign to attack her reputation for coming forward about her treatment on the set. Baldoni, who has denied it, joined in a suit accusing The New York Times for libel in its story on her allegations.

    Whether or not any of this gets mentioned on the Beverly Hilton Ballroom stage, it will surely be on the minds of many attendees. Among the nominees for box-office achievement is “Deadpool & Wolverine,” which star and was co-produced by Ryan Reynolds, Lively’s husband. Glaser, whose sharply barbed jokes at a roast of Tom Brady helped catapult her to this moment, isn’t known for biting her tongue.

    “Emilia Pérez” may have be favored over “Wicked” for the best comedy or musical award, but Jon M. Chu’s theatrical hit is also in the mix for the Globes’ nascent cinematic box office achievement award. Either, or both, of the leading ladies of “Wicked” could also win: Erivo in the leading actress category, and Grande in supporting.

    The Globes, taking place about two weeks before the inauguration of President-elect Donald Trump, could get very political if presenters and winners are so inclined to continue what’s been a mutually antagonistic relationship between Hollywood and Trump. That may be unlikely, though; so far in Hollywood’s awards season, most nominees have tried to stay out of the fray.

    That’s with a major exception, though, in “The Apprentice,” the young Trump drama starring Sebastian Stan and Jeremy Strong. Both were nominated by the Globes. Stan was also nominated a second time for his performance in “A Different Man.”

    It’s been an unusually uncertain awards season so far in many respects. No one movie has really stepped forward as the leading best picture contender, though several films — including “Conclave,” “Anora,” “Wicked,” “Emilia Pérez” and “The Brutalist” — can all make a decent case. The Globes don’t typically do much to sort out the field, but a strong showing from any of the above could add fuel to their Oscar campaign.

  • A Melania Trump documentary from director Bruce Ratner will be released by Amazon

    A Melania Trump documentary from director Bruce Ratner will be released by Amazon

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Incoming first lady Melania Trump will be the subject of a new documentary directed by Brett Ratner and distributed by Amazon Prime Video. The streaming arm of the tech giant got exclusive licensing rights for a streaming and theatrical release later this year, the company said Sunday.

    Filming is already underway on the documentary. The company said in a statement that the film will give viewers an “unprecedented behind-the-scenes look” at Melania Trump and also promised a “truly unique story.”

    The former and now future first lady also released a self-titled memoir late last year. Her husband takes office on Jan. 20.

    The film is the latest connection between Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Donald Trump. The company in December announced plans to donate $1 million to the President-elect’s inauguration fund, and said that it would also stream Trump’s inauguration on its Prime Video service, a separate in-kind donation worth another $1 million.

    The two men had been at odds in the past. During his first term, Trump criticized Amazon and railed against the political coverage at The Washington Post, which Bezos owns. But he’s struck a more conciliatory tone recently as Amazon and other tech companies seek to improve their relationship with the incoming president.

    In December, Bezos expressed some excitement about potential regulatory cutbacks in the coming years and said he was “optimistic” about Trump’s second term.

    Bezos in October did not allow the Post to endorse a presidential candidate, a move that led to tens of thousands of people canceling their subscriptions and to protests from journalists with a deep history at the newspaper. This weekend, a cartoonist quit her job after an editor rejected her sketch of the newspaper’s owner and other media executives bowing before the president-elect.

    The film also marks the first project that Ratner has directed since he was accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women, including actor Olivia Munn, in the early days of the #MeToo reckoning in November 2017. Ratner, whose lawyer denied the allegations, directed the “Rush Hour” film series, “Red Dragon” and ”X-Men: The Last Stand.”

    Fernando Sulichin, an Argentine filmmaker, is executive producing the film, which began shooting in December.

    Melania Trump, Donald Trump’s third wife, has been an enigmatic figure since her husband announced he was running in the 2016 election. She had sought to maintain her privacy even as she served as first lady, focusing on raising their son, Barron, and promoting her “Be Best” initiative to support the “social, emotional, and physical health of children.”

    While she appeared at her husband’s campaign launch event for 2024 and attended the closing night of the Republican National Convention this summer, she has otherwise stayed off the campaign trail, though the demands of again being first lady may dictate a higher public profile after Inauguration Day.

  • A Melania Trump documentary from director Bruce Ratner will be released by Amazon

    A Melania Trump documentary from director Bruce Ratner will be released by Amazon

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Incoming first lady Melania Trump will be the subject of a new documentary directed by Brett Ratner and distributed by Amazon Prime Video. The streaming arm of the tech giant got exclusive licensing rights for a streaming and theatrical release later this year, the company said Sunday.

    Filming is already underway on the documentary. The company said in a statement that the film will give viewers an “unprecedented behind-the-scenes look” at Melania Trump and also promised a “truly unique story.”

    The former and now future first lady also released a self-titled memoir late last year. Her husband takes office on Jan. 20.

    The film is the latest connection between Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Donald Trump. The company in December announced plans to donate $1 million to the President-elect’s inauguration fund, and said that it would also stream Trump’s inauguration on its Prime Video service, a separate in-kind donation worth another $1 million.

    The two men had been at odds in the past. During his first term, Trump criticized Amazon and railed against the political coverage at The Washington Post, which Bezos owns. But he’s struck a more conciliatory tone recently as Amazon and other tech companies seek to improve their relationship with the incoming president.

    In December, Bezos expressed some excitement about potential regulatory cutbacks in the coming years and said he was “optimistic” about Trump’s second term.

    Bezos in October did not allow the Post to endorse a presidential candidate, a move that led to tens of thousands of people canceling their subscriptions and to protests from journalists with a deep history at the newspaper. This weekend, a cartoonist quit her job after an editor rejected her sketch of the newspaper’s owner and other media executives bowing before the president-elect.

    The film also marks the first project that Ratner has directed since he was accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women, including actor Olivia Munn, in the early days of the #MeToo reckoning in November 2017. Ratner, whose lawyer denied the allegations, directed the “Rush Hour” film series, “Red Dragon” and ”X-Men: The Last Stand.”

    Fernando Sulichin, an Argentine filmmaker, is executive producing the film, which began shooting in December.

    Melania Trump, Donald Trump’s third wife, has been an enigmatic figure since her husband announced he was running in the 2016 election. She had sought to maintain her privacy even as she served as first lady, focusing on raising their son, Barron, and promoting her “Be Best” initiative to support the “social, emotional, and physical health of children.”

    While she appeared at her husband’s campaign launch event for 2024 and attended the closing night of the Republican National Convention this summer, she has otherwise stayed off the campaign trail, though the demands of again being first lady may dictate a higher public profile after Inauguration Day.

  • A Melania Trump documentary from director Bruce Ratner will be released by Amazon

    A Melania Trump documentary from director Bruce Ratner will be released by Amazon

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Incoming first lady Melania Trump will be the subject of a new documentary directed by Brett Ratner and distributed by Amazon Prime Video. The streaming arm of the tech giant got exclusive licensing rights for a streaming and theatrical release later this year, the company said Sunday.

    Filming is already underway on the documentary. The company said in a statement that the film will give viewers an “unprecedented behind-the-scenes look” at Melania Trump and also promised a “truly unique story.”

    The former and now future first lady also released a self-titled memoir late last year. Her husband takes office on Jan. 20.

    The film is the latest connection between Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Donald Trump. The company in December announced plans to donate $1 million to the President-elect’s inauguration fund, and said that it would also stream Trump’s inauguration on its Prime Video service, a separate in-kind donation worth another $1 million.

    The two men had been at odds in the past. During his first term, Trump criticized Amazon and railed against the political coverage at The Washington Post, which Bezos owns. But he’s struck a more conciliatory tone recently as Amazon and other tech companies seek to improve their relationship with the incoming president.

    In December, Bezos expressed some excitement about potential regulatory cutbacks in the coming years and said he was “optimistic” about Trump’s second term.

    Bezos in October did not allow the Post to endorse a presidential candidate, a move that led to tens of thousands of people canceling their subscriptions and to protests from journalists with a deep history at the newspaper. This weekend, a cartoonist quit her job after an editor rejected her sketch of the newspaper’s owner and other media executives bowing before the president-elect.

    The film also marks the first project that Ratner has directed since he was accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women, including actor Olivia Munn, in the early days of the #MeToo reckoning in November 2017. Ratner, whose lawyer denied the allegations, directed the “Rush Hour” film series, “Red Dragon” and ”X-Men: The Last Stand.”

    Fernando Sulichin, an Argentine filmmaker, is executive producing the film, which began shooting in December.

    Melania Trump, Donald Trump’s third wife, has been an enigmatic figure since her husband announced he was running in the 2016 election. She had sought to maintain her privacy even as she served as first lady, focusing on raising their son, Barron, and promoting her “Be Best” initiative to support the “social, emotional, and physical health of children.”

    While she appeared at her husband’s campaign launch event for 2024 and attended the closing night of the Republican National Convention this summer, she has otherwise stayed off the campaign trail, though the demands of again being first lady may dictate a higher public profile after Inauguration Day.

  • A Melania Trump documentary from director Bruce Ratner will be released by Amazon

    A Melania Trump documentary from director Bruce Ratner will be released by Amazon

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Incoming first lady Melania Trump will be the subject of a new documentary directed by Brett Ratner and distributed by Amazon Prime Video. The streaming arm of the tech giant got exclusive licensing rights for a streaming and theatrical release later this year, the company said Sunday.

    Filming is already underway on the documentary. The company said in a statement that the film will give viewers an “unprecedented behind-the-scenes look” at Melania Trump and also promised a “truly unique story.”

    The former and now future first lady also released a self-titled memoir late last year. Her husband takes office on Jan. 20.

    The film is the latest connection between Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Donald Trump. The company in December announced plans to donate $1 million to the President-elect’s inauguration fund, and said that it would also stream Trump’s inauguration on its Prime Video service, a separate in-kind donation worth another $1 million.

    The two men had been at odds in the past. During his first term, Trump criticized Amazon and railed against the political coverage at The Washington Post, which Bezos owns. But he’s struck a more conciliatory tone recently as Amazon and other tech companies seek to improve their relationship with the incoming president.

    In December, Bezos expressed some excitement about potential regulatory cutbacks in the coming years and said he was “optimistic” about Trump’s second term.

    Bezos in October did not allow the Post to endorse a presidential candidate, a move that led to tens of thousands of people canceling their subscriptions and to protests from journalists with a deep history at the newspaper. This weekend, a cartoonist quit her job after an editor rejected her sketch of the newspaper’s owner and other media executives bowing before the president-elect.

    The film also marks the first project that Ratner has directed since he was accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women, including actor Olivia Munn, in the early days of the #MeToo reckoning in November 2017. Ratner, whose lawyer denied the allegations, directed the “Rush Hour” film series, “Red Dragon” and ”X-Men: The Last Stand.”

    Fernando Sulichin, an Argentine filmmaker, is executive producing the film, which began shooting in December.

    Melania Trump, Donald Trump’s third wife, has been an enigmatic figure since her husband announced he was running in the 2016 election. She had sought to maintain her privacy even as she served as first lady, focusing on raising their son, Barron, and promoting her “Be Best” initiative to support the “social, emotional, and physical health of children.”

    While she appeared at her husband’s campaign launch event for 2024 and attended the closing night of the Republican National Convention this summer, she has otherwise stayed off the campaign trail, though the demands of again being first lady may dictate a higher public profile after Inauguration Day.

  • A Melania Trump documentary from director Bruce Ratner will be released by Amazon

    A Melania Trump documentary from director Bruce Ratner will be released by Amazon

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Incoming first lady Melania Trump will be the subject of a new documentary directed by Brett Ratner and distributed by Amazon Prime Video. The streaming arm of the tech giant got exclusive licensing rights for a streaming and theatrical release later this year, the company said Sunday.

    Filming is already underway on the documentary. The company said in a statement that the film will give viewers an “unprecedented behind-the-scenes look” at Melania Trump and also promised a “truly unique story.”

    The former and now future first lady also released a self-titled memoir late last year. Her husband takes office on Jan. 20.

    The film is the latest connection between Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Donald Trump. The company in December announced plans to donate $1 million to the President-elect’s inauguration fund, and said that it would also stream Trump’s inauguration on its Prime Video service, a separate in-kind donation worth another $1 million.

    The two men had been at odds in the past. During his first term, Trump criticized Amazon and railed against the political coverage at The Washington Post, which Bezos owns. But he’s struck a more conciliatory tone recently as Amazon and other tech companies seek to improve their relationship with the incoming president.

    In December, Bezos expressed some excitement about potential regulatory cutbacks in the coming years and said he was “optimistic” about Trump’s second term.

    Bezos in October did not allow the Post to endorse a presidential candidate, a move that led to tens of thousands of people canceling their subscriptions and to protests from journalists with a deep history at the newspaper. This weekend, a cartoonist quit her job after an editor rejected her sketch of the newspaper’s owner and other media executives bowing before the president-elect.

    The film also marks the first project that Ratner has directed since he was accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women, including actor Olivia Munn, in the early days of the #MeToo reckoning in November 2017. Ratner, whose lawyer denied the allegations, directed the “Rush Hour” film series, “Red Dragon” and ”X-Men: The Last Stand.”

    Fernando Sulichin, an Argentine filmmaker, is executive producing the film, which began shooting in December.

    Melania Trump, Donald Trump’s third wife, has been an enigmatic figure since her husband announced he was running in the 2016 election. She had sought to maintain her privacy even as she served as first lady, focusing on raising their son, Barron, and promoting her “Be Best” initiative to support the “social, emotional, and physical health of children.”

    While she appeared at her husband’s campaign launch event for 2024 and attended the closing night of the Republican National Convention this summer, she has otherwise stayed off the campaign trail, though the demands of again being first lady may dictate a higher public profile after Inauguration Day.

  • A Melania Trump documentary from director Bruce Ratner will be released by Amazon

    A Melania Trump documentary from director Bruce Ratner will be released by Amazon

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Incoming first lady Melania Trump will be the subject of a new documentary directed by Brett Ratner and distributed by Amazon Prime Video. The streaming arm of the tech giant got exclusive licensing rights for a streaming and theatrical release later this year, the company said Sunday.

    Filming is already underway on the documentary. The company said in a statement that the film will give viewers an “unprecedented behind-the-scenes look” at Melania Trump and also promised a “truly unique story.”

    The former and now future first lady also released a self-titled memoir late last year. Her husband takes office on Jan. 20.

    The film is the latest connection between Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Donald Trump. The company in December announced plans to donate $1 million to the President-elect’s inauguration fund, and said that it would also stream Trump’s inauguration on its Prime Video service, a separate in-kind donation worth another $1 million.

    The two men had been at odds in the past. During his first term, Trump criticized Amazon and railed against the political coverage at The Washington Post, which Bezos owns. But he’s struck a more conciliatory tone recently as Amazon and other tech companies seek to improve their relationship with the incoming president.

    In December, Bezos expressed some excitement about potential regulatory cutbacks in the coming years and said he was “optimistic” about Trump’s second term.

    Bezos in October did not allow the Post to endorse a presidential candidate, a move that led to tens of thousands of people canceling their subscriptions and to protests from journalists with a deep history at the newspaper. This weekend, a cartoonist quit her job after an editor rejected her sketch of the newspaper’s owner and other media executives bowing before the president-elect.

    The film also marks the first project that Ratner has directed since he was accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women, including actor Olivia Munn, in the early days of the #MeToo reckoning in November 2017. Ratner, whose lawyer denied the allegations, directed the “Rush Hour” film series, “Red Dragon” and ”X-Men: The Last Stand.”

    Fernando Sulichin, an Argentine filmmaker, is executive producing the film, which began shooting in December.

    Melania Trump, Donald Trump’s third wife, has been an enigmatic figure since her husband announced he was running in the 2016 election. She had sought to maintain her privacy even as she served as first lady, focusing on raising their son, Barron, and promoting her “Be Best” initiative to support the “social, emotional, and physical health of children.”

    While she appeared at her husband’s campaign launch event for 2024 and attended the closing night of the Republican National Convention this summer, she has otherwise stayed off the campaign trail, though the demands of again being first lady may dictate a higher public profile after Inauguration Day.