Advertisement
Advertisement
Cinema
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Director Chloé Zhao arrives on the red carpet during 41st Deauville American Film Festival in France in September 2015. Photo: EPA-EFE

Golden Globes: Nomadland’s Chloé Zhao is first Asian woman to land Golden Globes directing nomination

  • The Chinese-American filmmaker has already clinched several directing awards for the movie, which took the top prize at the Venice and Toronto film festivals
  • Before this year, the best director race featured women nominees only seven times in 77 years
Cinema

Nomadland director Chloé Zhao was nominated for a Golden Globe on Wednesday morning, making her the first ever woman of Asian descent recognised in the directing category.

Zhao’s nomination should not come as a surprise. Nomadland earned the top prize at the Venice and Toronto film festivals and the Chinese-American filmmaker has been picking up accolades for her work throughout the season, including best director awards from various critics organisations such as the National Society of Film Critics, the Los Angeles Film Critics Assn. and the New York Film Critics Circle.

The Globes made history this year with three women in the directing category, as Zhao was joined by Promising Young Woman director Emerald Fennell and One Night in Miami filmmaker Regina King.

But the Hollywood Foreign Press Association has a long history of overlooking women filmmakers. Before this year, the Golden Globes’ best director race has featured women nominees only seven times in 77 years. The last woman nominated in the category was Ava DuVernay, who was a contender at the 2015 Globes for Selma.

Frances McDormand stars in Nomadland. Photo: Searchlight Pictures via TNS

The Golden Globes also has a spotty record when it comes to the work of Asian-American filmmakers.

Due to HFPA’s rules that fail to recognise the true diversity of the American experience, acclaimed Asian-American stories such as Lulu Wang’s The Farewell (2019) and Lee Isaac Chung’s Minari have been forced to compete at the Globes as foreign-language films instead of in the marquee drama and comedy/musical film categories.

(Their filmmakers and actors are still eligible in other categories, and Farewell star Awkwafina made history with her own win last year.)

Nomadland, on the other hand, follows Frances McDormand as a woman who hits the road searching for work after the death of her husband and collapse of her small factory town. Like Zhao’s previous films (2015’s Songs My Brothers Taught Me and 2017’s The Rider), Nomadland features non-actor cast members who play fictionalised versions of themselves.

Among the filmmakers of Asian descent who have previously been nominated for the Golden Globe for directing are Parasite director Bong Joon Ho, Brokeback Mountain director Ang Lee (who has won twice) and Elizabeth director Shekhar Kapur.

Zhao’s next project is the highly anticipated Marvel Cinematic Universe instalment The Eternals.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Asian female director lands first at Golden Globes
2