Forest Whitaker to present SAG’s Lifetime Achievement Award to James Earl Jones

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James Earl Jones (Associated Press photo)

The 15th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards ceremony will be simulcast live nationally on TNT and TBS at 7 tonight. from the Los Angeles Shrine Exposition Center. An encore presentation will air on TNT at 10 p.m.

Forest Whitaker will present Screen Actors Guild’s 45th Life Achievement Award to James Earl Jones at the SAG Awards, executive producer and director Jeff Margolis announced in a news release.

Whitaker joins a growing roster of actors who will honor their colleagues at the 15th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards that already includes Christina Applegate, Angela Bassett, Jon Hamm, John Krasinski, Eric McCormack, Kyra Sedgwick and William Shatner.

Screen Actors Guild is honoring James Earl Jones for his career achievement and humanitarian accomplishments. Past recipients of SAG’s Life Achievement Award include Charles Durning, Julie Andrews, Shirley Temple Black, James Garner, Karl Malden, Clint Eastwood, Edward Asner, Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, Sidney Poitier, Kirk Douglas, Elizabeth Taylor, Angela Lansbury, Robert Redford and George Burns.

Forest Whitaker and James Earl Jones first starred together in 1996 in the television biopic “Rebound: The Life of Earl ‘The Goat’ Manigault,” which won a San Francisco International Film Festival Award and was nominated for an NAACP Image Award. They collaborated again in 2001 in the Emmy Award-winning television adaptation of Anne Rice’s “Feast of All Saints.”

Whitaker’s definitive performance as Ugandan military dictator Idi Amin in “The Last King of Scotland” earned him his first Actor, as well as an Oscar, Golden Globe Award, BAFTA Film Award, Broadcast Film Critics Association Award and an NAACP Image Award, among others. Whitaker has also received two Actor nominations for his work on the made-for-television movies “Deacons for Defense” and “The Enemy Within.” He received Emmys for his guest starring performance on “ER” and as co-executive producer of the TNT telefilm “Door to Door.”

His prolific credits include the critically-acclaimed films “The Great Debaters,” “Bird” and “The Crying Game,” as well as box office hits such as “Panic Room,” “Phenomenon,” “Good Morning, Vietnam,” “A Rage In Harlem,” “Platoon” and “The Color of Money.” As a director, he helmed box office hit “Waiting To Exhale,” starring ensemble cast Whitney Houston, Angela Bassett, Loretta Devine and Lela Rochon, in addition to the Sandra Bullock starrer “Hope Floats” and “First Daughter,” starring Katie Holmes. In 2008, Whitaker wrapped filming on “Where the Wild Things Are” with director Spike Jonze. Whitaker is also in post-production for the film “Winged Creatures,” and recently completed filming “Powder Blue” and “Repossession Mambo.” Whitaker can next be seen in the upcoming “Hurricane Season,” and is currently filming “My Own Love Song” opposite Renee Zellweger.

Jones’ work in front of the cameras and on stage is as imposing as his magnificent basso profundo. He has appeared in countless television, film and stage productions over his 53-year career, including such films as the “Star Wars” trilogy, the “Lion King” films, “Primary Colors,” “Jefferson in Paris,” “The Sandlot,” “Clear and Present Danger,” “The Hunt for Red October” and “Patriot Games,” “Gang Related,” “Field of Dreams,” “Coming to America,” “The Greatest,” “Claudine,” and many others. His stature as one of the greatest actors of the past half-century has been underscored by numerous accolades. He received the National Medal of Arts in 1992 and a decade later was a Kennedy Center Honoree. Screen Actors Guild previously honored Jones in 1995 with an Actor nomination for his portrayal of South African priest Stephen Kumalo in the film adaptation of the Alan Paton classic, “Cry, the Beloved Country.” His role as Gabriel Bird on the television series “Gabriel’s Fire” earned him an Emmy, NAACP Image Award, and a Golden Globe nomination.

In 1969, Jones won a Tony for his breakthrough role as boxer Jack Johnson in the Broadway hit, “The Great White Hope.” His work in the 1970 film adaptation also garnered him an Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe and landed him on the cover of “Newsweek.” He won a second Tony in 1987 for August Wilson’s “Fences,” in which he played a former baseball player who finds it difficult to communicate with his son, and a Tony nomination in 1995 for the critically acclaimed revival of “On Golden Pond,” playing crotchety Norman Thayer opposite Leslie Uggams. Jones returned to Broadway this year to portray Big Daddy in a revival of “Cat On A Hot Tin Roof,” starring with Terrance Howard, Anika Noni Rose and Phylicia Rashad.

For more information on the awards, go to www.sag.org.

My colleague, George Lang, will be live-blogging the awards on his Staticblog if you want to check that out.

-BAM



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