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2019/2020 DORIAN AWARDS TIMELINE

Nomination Ballots out to Members
Friday December 27, 2019

Nomination Ballots Due
Thursday January 2, 2020

Nominations Announced
Friday January 3, 2020

Final Ballots Due
Tuesday a.m. January 8, 2020

Winners Announced
Tuesday p.m. January 8, 2020

11th Annual Dorian Awards Toast
Sunday February 2, 2020 (afternoon)

SEE COVERAGE OF OUR 2018-19
DORIAN AWARD WINNERS:

The Hollywood Reporter
The Washington Blade
Awards Daily

SCROLL DOWN FOR PAST ANNOUNCEMENTS

GALECA: THE SOCIETY OF LGBTQ ENTERTAINMENT CRITICS ANNOUNCES 10TH DORIAN AWARDS FILM AND TV NOMINEES

Comic Frank DeCaro Named Host of Group’s Jan. 12th Winners Toast

Thursday, Jan. 3, 2019 - Hollywood, CA - GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics has named its nominees for its milestone 10th Dorian Awards for the best in film and television of 2018. Leading in the movie categories with eight nominations is “The Favourite,” followed by “If Beale Street Could Talk,” “Can You Ever Forgive Me” and “Roma” with six nods each, and “A Star is Born” with four. The stars of the latest “Born” remake—Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga—are both up for Film Performance honors as well as the group’s Wilde Artist of the Year award.

Many of the nominations add some excitement to this year’s film awards season. On GALECA’s short list for best actor: “First Reformed” star Ethan Hawke and “BlacKkKlansman” lead John David Washington. “Hereditary”’s Toni Collette and Yalitza Aparicio of “Roma” vie alongside Gaga for best actress. “Widows” upstart Elizabeth Debicki and “Black Panther” standout Michael B. Jordan up the ante in supporting performance races. And former YouTube star turned “Eighth Grade” writer-director Bo Burnham scored a nomination for Screenplay of the Year.

The spectacular, practically candy-coated Marvel adventure “Panther” is one of the titles up for Visually Striking Film of the Year, while the Diane Keaton comedy “Book Club” and “Aquaman” are in the running for (or from?) the Campy Flick honor.

In TV categories, FX’s transgender-empowering drama “Pose” and BBC America’s biting cat-and-mouse thriller “Killing Eve” lead among drama series. “Eve” headliners Sandra Oh and Jodie Comer, true to their hit’s storyline, vie against each other for TV Performance—Actress, while Hugh Grant and his “A Very English Scandal” paramour Ben Whishaw face each other on the gentlemen’s side. Also making a fresh impression with GALECA, comprised of over 200 members in the U.S., Canada, Australia and the U.K.: HBO’s hitman comedy “Barry,” Pop network’s rich-family satire “Schitt’s Creek,” and Julia Roberts and her cryptic new Amazon conspiracy tale “Homecoming.”

“We’re thrilled by the strong variety of films and TV performances our diverse group of members has chosen to praise,” said GALECA President Diane Anderson-Minshall, Editorial Director of The Advocate. "In a lovely compliment to the Time’s Up movement, several categories, including Wilde Artist of the Year, Wilde Wit of the Year and Rising Star, are dominated by women this year. And it’s inspiring that the majority of our Director of the Year nominees are people of color, including Spike Lee, Barry Jenkins, and Alfonso Cuarón.”

“It’s hard to believe this is our 10th go-around of giving out our Dorian Awards,” added GALECA’s Executive Director John Griffiths. “In such oddly combative times, that’s really something to covfefe.”

Speaking of cheeky, along with its latest nominations, GALECA has announced that comedian and radio personality Frank DeCaro (“The Daily Show”, Sirius XM’s “The Frank DeCaro Show”) will preside as Master of Ceremonies at its invitation-only 10th Dorian Awards Winners Toast. The event will be held Saturday, January 12, noon to 2:30 at Paley restaurant in Hollywood’s historic Columbia Square.

De Caro, fondly remembered for his turn as the campy movie critic on “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart,” embodies “the perfect mix of wit and sincerity that suits our freewheeling Toast format,” said Griffiths. “He’s not only charming and funny, he has a deep respect for what it takes to make quality entertainment, remains sweetly starstruck even in these jaded times, and keeps his eye and heart on the big picture too.” DeCaro’s latest book, “Drag: Combing Through the Big Wigs of Show Business,” comes out from Rizzoli this spring.

Since GALECA’s first film and TV favorites were named in 2010, over 200 artists and productions have received a Dorian Award, while over 1000 have received nominations. Among its Film of the Year winners are “Argo” and “12 Years a Slave,” as well as two movies directed by Luca Guadagnino, “I Am Love” and “Call Me By Your Name.” With five Dorians each across various categories, “Moonlight” and “Carol” stand as the most awarded films in GALECA history, while “Transparent,” with six wins in best-series categories alone, reigns as the most honored TV title.

FULL LIST OF 10TH DORIAN AWARDS NOMINATIONS

Film of the Year

CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME?

THE FAVOURITE

IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK

ROMA

A STAR IS BORN

Director of the Year 
(Film or Television)

ALFONSO CUARON, ROMA

MARIELLE HELLER, CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME?

BARRY JENKINS, IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK

YORGOS LANTHIMOS, THE FAVOURITE

SPIKE LEE, BLACKKKLANSMAN

Film Performance of the Year — Actress 

YALITZA APARICIO, ROMA

TONI COLLETTE, HEREDITARY

OLIVIA COLMAN, THE FAVOURITE

LADY GAGA, A STAR IS BORN

MELISSA MCCARTHY, CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME?

Film Performance of the Year — Actor 

CHRISTIAN BALE, VICE

BRADLEY COOPER, A STAR IS BORN

ETHAN HAWKE, FIRST REFORMED

RAMI MALEK, BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY

JOHN DAVID WASHINGTON, BLACKKKLANSMAN

Film Performance of the Year — Supporting Actress 

ELIZABETH DEBICKI, WIDOWS

REGINA KING, IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK

EMMA STONE, THE FAVOURITE

RACHEL WEISZ, THE FAVOURITE

MICHELLE YEOH, CRAZY RICH ASIANS

Film Performance of the Year — Supporting Actor

MAHERSHALA ALI, GREEN BOOK

TIMOTHEE CHALAMET, BEAUTIFUL BOY

SAM ELLIOTT, A STAR IS BORN

RICHARD E. GRANT, CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME?

MICHAEL B. JORDAN, BLACK PANTHER

LGBTQ Film of the Year 

BOY ERASED

CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME?

DISOBEDIENCE

THE FAVOURITE

LOVE, SIMON

Foreign Language Film of the Year

BURNING

CAPERNAUM

COLD WAR

ROMA

SHOPLIFTERS

Screenplay of the Year 

BO BURNHAM, EIGHTH GRADE

ALFONSO CUARON, ROMA

DEBORAH DAVIS AND TONY MCNAMARA, THE FAVOURITE

NICOLE HOLOFCENER AND JEFF WHITTY, CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME?

BARRY JENKINS, IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK

Documentary of the Year 

FREE SOLO

RBG

SHIRKERS

THREE IDENTICAL STRANGERS

WON'T YOU BE MY NEIGHBOR?

LGBTQ Documentary of the Year 

THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ANDRE

MCQUEEN

SCOTTY AND THE SECRET HISTORY OF HOLLYWOOD

STUDIO 54

WHITNEY

Visually Striking Film of the Year 

ANNIHILATION

BLACK PANTHER

THE FAVOURITE

IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK

ROMA

Unsung Film of the Year 

COLETTE

DISOBEDIENCE

THE HAPPY PRINCE

TULLY

WE THE ANIMALS

WIDOWS

Campy Flick of the Year 

AQUAMAN

BOOK CLUB

MAMMA MIA! HERE WE GO AGAIN

A SIMPLE FAVOR

SUSPIRIA

TV Drama of the Year

AMERICAN CRIME STORY: THE ASSASSINATION OF GIANNI VERSACE

THE HANDMAID'S TALE

HOMECOMING

KILLING EVE

POSE

TV Comedy of the Year

BARRY

GLOW

THE GOOD PLACE

THE MARVELOUS MRS. MAISEL

SCHITT'S CREEK

TV Performance of the Year — Actor 

DARREN CRISS, THE ASSASSINATION OF GIANNI VERSACE: AMERICAN CRIME STORY

HUGH GRANT, A VERY ENGLISH SCANDAL

BILLY PORTER, POSE

MATTHEW RHYS, THE AMERICANS

BEN WHISHAW, A VERY ENGLISH SCANDAL

TV Performance of the Year — Actress 

AMY ADAMS, SHARP OBJECTS

RACHEL BROSNAHAN, THE MARVELOUS MRS. MAISEL

JODIE COMER, KILLING EVE

SANDRA OH, KILLING EVE

JULIA ROBERTS, HOMECOMING

LGBTQ TV Show of the Year 

A VERY ENGLISH SCANDAL

AMERICAN CRIME STORY: THE ASSASSINATION OF GIANNI VERSACE

KILLING EVE

POSE

QUEER EYE

Unsung TV Show of the Year

THE BISEXUAL

DEAR WHITE PEOPLE

THE GOOD FIGHT

ONE DAY AT A TIME

SCHITT'S CREEK

TV Current Affairs Show of the Year

THE DAILY SHOW WITH TREVOR NOAH

FULL FRONTAL WITH SAMANTHA BEE

LAST WEEK TONIGHT WITH JOHN OLIVER

THE LATE SHOW WITH STEPHEN COLBERT

THE RACHEL MADDOW SHOW

TV Musical Performance of the Year

ADAM LAMBERT, “BELIEVE," 41ST KENNEDY CENTER HONORS

BILLY PORTER, MJ RODRIGUEZ AND OUR LADY J, “HOME," POSE

NOAH REID, “SIMPLY THE BEST," SCHITT’S CREEK

KEALA SETTLE, “THIS IS ME,” 90TH ACADEMY AWARDS

SUFJAN STEVENS, “MYSTERY OF LOVE,” 90TH ACADEMY AWARDS

Campy TV Show of the Year

AMERICAN HORROR STORY: APOCALYPSE

CHILLING ADVENTURES OF SABRINA

QUEER EYE

RIVERDALE

RUPAUL'S DRAG RACE

The "We’re Wilde About You!" Rising Star Award

AWKWAFINA

ELSIE FISHER

HENRY GOLDING

INDYA MOORE

MJ RODRIGUEZ

Wilde Wit of the Year 

(Honoring a performer, writer or commentator whose observations both challenge and amuse)

SAMANTHA BEE

HANNAH GADSBY

KATE MCKINNON

JOHN OLIVER

MICHELLE WOLF

Wilde Artist of the Year 

(Honoring a truly groundbreaking force in film, stage and/or television)

BRADLEY COOPER

HANNAH GADSBY

LADY GAGA

NICOLE KIDMAN

RYAN MURPHY

Timeless Award recipient TBA

ABOUT FRANK DECARO


Comedian, pop culture pundit and radio/TV personality Frank DeCaro has spent the last three years touring North America as the opening act for Lisa Lampanelli. He is best known for his 12 years as the host of the daily national radio program The Frank DeCaro Showon Sirius XM, and his lauded, six-year stint as the movie critic on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart on Comedy Central. He is the author of five books including The Dead Celebrity Cookbook, Unmistakably Mackie: The Fashion and Fantasy of Bob Mackie,A Boy Named Phyllis: A Suburban Memoir, and Drag: Combing Through the Big Wigs of Show Business, due from Rizzoli in spring 2019. Follow DeCaro @frankdecaroshow and visit his website, www.frankdecaro.com

• • • •  

November 2018
As an AFI Fest Community Partner again this year, GALECA was happy to host two films, Genèse
and The Juniper Tree (Björk's movie debut!) 

• • • •  

February 24, 2018
GALECA's 9th Dorian Awards Winners Toast
Location: Beverly Hilton Hotel, Beverly Hills, CA








• • • • 

2017-18 Dorian Awards Winners Announcement 

GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics
Name Dorian Award Winners (Film & TV)

Gay ❤ Story 'Call Me By Your Name' is Best Film

Greta Gerwig Takes Best Director

'Get Out' Auteur Jordan Peele Scores Best Screenplay and More

Sally Hawkins Wins Best Actress, Timothée Chalamet is Both Best Actor and Rising Star

'American Gods,' Kyle MacLachlan, Samantha Bee, ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race' Rule TV Categories

⭐ Meryl Streep is Group’s Latest 'Timeless Star’ Honoree

Wednesday, January 31, 2018 - Hollywood, CA — The distinctly unique GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics, comprised of over 200 gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, queer and ally entertainment journalists in the U.S., Canada and U.K., has announced its ninth annual Dorian Award winners. This year’s 26 TV and film categories, again running from mainstream to LGBTQ-centric, include inaugural awards for Supporting Film Performance. A handful of select recipients will join the group for GALECA’s annual Winners Toast on Saturday February 24th in Beverly Hills.

Call Me By Your Name, which led with nine nominations, was named 2017’s Film of the Year. The bittersweet story of two American men — a teen and a 20something — falling for each other in Italy also earned Timothée Chalamet a Dorian for Film Performance of the Year — Actor. Chalamet, seen in Dorian nominee Lady Bird as well, was also the group’s Rising Star pick. Meanwhile, Greta Gerwig, writer and helmer of the aforementioned Lady Bird, a female-focused coming-of-age drama, was named Director of the Year.

Jordan Peele, formerly of TV’s acclaimed Key and Peele sketch comedy series, earned Screenplay of the Year for Get Out, the heart-stopping thriller and acidic satire about a black man (Daniel Kaluuya) who discovers his white girlfriend’s “liberal” parents are secretly murderous racists. Peele was also crowned Wilde Artist of the Year (nominees included Gerwig, Patty Jenkins, David Lynch and Guillermo del Toro) and Wilde Wit of the Year (in a tie with Saturday Night Live fixture Kate McKinnon). For the second year in a row, the talented McKinnon scored TV Musical Performance of the Year for her wowza impersonation of Kellyanne Conway taking her "alternative facts" act to Broadway.

Film icon and feminist activist Meryl Streep was the group’s latest choice for Timeless Star, a career achievement honor previously won by such equally beloved stars (and human-rights champions) Jane Fonda, Dame Angela Lansbury and Sir Ian McKellen.

“Who doesn’t love Meryl Streep outside of non-feminist Donald Trump?” quipped Diane Anderson-Minshall, GALECA’s president as well as editorial director of The Advocate magazine. “Streep’s latest film, The Post, speaks to her commitment to playing, and supporting, strong women who push for or at least embody the need for equality. As The Washington Post’s firebrand Katherine Graham, she inhabited the role of the first female publisher of a major American newspaper — a woman who went from housewife to overseeing the revelations of both Watergate and the Pentagon Papers at a time when most of the men around her were too afraid to take on either. And this was all long before the #MeToo movement.”

Adds John Griffiths, GALECA’s Executive Director, "From Sophie’s Choice to Postcards from the Edge, Streep’s an incredibly stirring and affecting actress who transports, delights and nails various accents like no other. I’d say she definitely qualifies as a timeless star — and amid all the headlines about sexual harassment in Hollywood, she’s also a very relevant current voice.” Fun fact: Streep won a Dorian Award for The Iron Lady back in 2012.

In additional trademark races, God’s Own Country — 2017’s other visceral love story involving two gay men — won as GALECA's Unsung Film of the Year (the competition included director Angela Robinson’s Professor Marston and the Wonder Women). Awards-season darling The Shape of Water impressed as Visually Striking Film of the Year. And mother!, Darren Aronofsky’s over-the-top psychological chiller starring Jennifer Lawrence, was deemed Campy Flick of the Year.

Among TV categories, HBO’s sleek murder mystery Big Little Lies took TV Drama of the Year, with star Nicole Kidman (as a battered wife) triumphing too. Kyle MacLachlan was Kidman’s male counterpart for Twin Peaks: The Return. Starz’s provocative gods-among-us fantasy American Gods took Unsung TV Show, fittingly as its future the freshman series’ future is reportedly up in the air. And programs each celebrating their second win in a row: TBS’ Full Frontal with Samantha Bee (Current Events Show of the Year) and the Lady Gaga-loved gay performance contest RuPaul’s Drag Race (LGBTQ Show).

GALECA’S MISSION
Home of the Dorian Awards for the best in film and TV, GALECA aims to generate camaraderie in an unsettling media environment, and elevate professional entertainment criticism and journalism, all while bolstering art and humanity. Via panels, screenings, events and its occasional “Ten Best" lists, this 501 c-6 organization also strives to remind the everyone from at-risk youth to bullies that gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and queer people have a rich history of putting great movies and TV on the radar. How would the world fare without knowing what's campy?

GALECA 2017/18 DORIAN AWARDS — FULL LIST

FILM OF THE YEAR
BPM (Beats Per Minute) - The Orchard
Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics (WINNER)
Get Out - Universal
Lady Bird - A24
The Shape of Water - Fox Searchlight

DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR (FILM OR TELEVISION)
Sean Baker, The Florida Project – A24
Guillermo del Toro, The Shape of Water – Fox Searchlight
Greta Gerwig, Lady Bird - A24 (WINNER)
Luca Guadagnino, Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics
Christopher Nolan, Dunkirk – Warner Bros.
Jordan Peele, Get Out - Universal

BEST PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR -- ACTRESS
Sally Hawkins, The Shape of Water – Fox Searchlight (WINNER)
Frances McDormand, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri - Fox Searchlight
Margot Robbie, I, Tonya - Neon
Saoirse Ronan, Lady Bird - A24
Daniela Vega, A Fantastic Woman - Sony Pictures Classics

BEST PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR – ACTOR
Nahuel Perez Biscayart, BPM (Beats Per Minute) — The Orchard
Timothée Chalamet, Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics (WINNER)
James Franco, The Disaster Artist – A24
Daniel Kaluuya, Get Out - Universal
Gary Oldman, Darkest Hour – Focus Features

SUPPORTING FILM PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR -- ACTRESS
Mary J. Blige, Mudbound - Netflix
Tiffany Haddish, Girls Trip - Universal
Allison Janney, I, Tonya - Neon
Laurie Metcalf, Lady Bird - A24 (WINNER)
Michelle Pfeiffer, mother! - Paramount

SUPPORTING FILM PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR -- ACTOR
Willem Dafoe, The Florida Project – A24
Armie Hammer, Call Me By Your Name- Sony Pictures Classics
Richard Jenkins, The Shape of Water – Fox Searchlight
Sam Rockwell, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri - Fox Searchlight
Michael Stuhlbarg, Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics (WINNER)

LGBTQ FILM OF THE YEAR
BPM (Beats Per Minute) — The Orchard
Battle of the Sexes - Fox Searchlight
Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics (WINNER)
A Fantastic Woman - Sony Pictures Classics
God's Own Country – Samuel Goldwyn Films

FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM OF THE YEAR
BPM (Beats Per Minute) — The Orchard (WINNER)
A Fantastic Woman - Sony Pictures Classics
First They Killed My Father - Netflix
The Square – Magnolia Pictures
Thelma – The Orchard

SCREENPLAY OF THE YEAR (ORIGINAL OR ADAPTED)
James Ivory, Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics
Jordan Peele, Get Out - Universal (WINNER)
Greta Gerwig, Lady Bird - A24
Guillermo del Toro, Vanessa Taylor, The Shape of Water – Fox Searchlight
Martin McDonagh, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri - Fox Searchlight

DOCUMENTARY OF THE YEAR
(theatrical release, TV airing or DVD release)
Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story – Zeitgeist/Kino Lorber
The Death and Life of Marsha P. Johnson - Netflix
Faces/Places – Cohen Media Group (WINNER)
Jane ­– National Geographic/Abramorama
Kedi - Oscilloscope

VISUALLY STRIKING FILM OF THE YEAR
(honoring a production of stunning beauty, from art direction to cinematography)
Blade Runner 2049 – Warner Bros.
Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics
Dunkirk – Warner Bros.
The Shape of Water – Fox Searchlight (WINNER)
Wonderstruck - Amazon

UNSUNG FILM OF THE YEAR
BPM (Beats Per Minute) - The Orchard
Beach Rats - Neon
God's Own Country – Samuel Goldwyn Films (WINNER)
Professor Marston and the Wonder Women - Annapurna
Wonderstruck - Amazon

CAMPY FLICK OF THE YEAR
Baywatch - Paramount
The Disaster Artist – A24
The Greatest Showman – 20th Century Fox
I, Tonya - Neon
mother! - Paramount (WINNER)

TV DRAMA OF THE YEAR
Big Little Lies - HBO (WINNER)
The Crown - Netflix
Feud: Bette and Joan - FX
The Handmaid's Tale - Hulu
Twin Peaks: The Return - Showtime

TV COMEDY OF THE YEAR
Better Things - FX
GLOW - Netflix
The Good Place - NBC
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel - Amazon (WINNER)
Will & Grace - NBC

TV PEFORMANCE OF THE YEAR – ACTRESS
Clare Foy, The Crown - Netflix
Nicole Kidman, Big Little Lies - HBO (WINNER)
Jessica Lange, Feud: Bette and Joan - FX
Elisabeth Moss, The Handmaid's Tale - Hulu
Reese Witherspoon, Big Little Lies - HBO

TV PEFORMANCE OF THE YEAR -- ACTOR
Aziz Ansari, Master of None – Netflix
Sterling K. Brown, This Is Us - NBC
Jonathan Groff, Mindhunter - Netflix
Kyle MacLachlan, Twin Peaks: The Return - Showtime (WINNER)
Alexander Skaarsgård, Big Little Lies - HBO

TV CURRENT AFFAIRS SHOW OF THE YEAR
Full Frontal with Samantha Bee – TBS (WINNER)
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver - HBO
Late Night with Seth Meyers - NBC
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert - CBS
The Rachel Maddow Show - MSNBC

TV MUSICAL PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR
Lady Gaga, “God Bless America,” “Born This Way,” etc., Super Bowl LI - Fox
Kate McKinnon, “(Kellyanne) Conway!” Saturday Night Live - NBC (WINNER)
Brendan McCreary, John Mulaney, “I’m Gay,” Big Mouth – Netflix
Pink, “Beautiful Trauma,” American Music Awards - ABC
Sasha Velour, “So Emotional,” RuPaul's Drag Race – VH1

LGBTQ SHOW OF THE YEAR
Difficult People - Hulu
RuPaul's Drag Race – VH1 (WINNER)
Sense8 - Netflix
Transparent – Amazon
Will & Grace - NBC

UNSUNG TV SHOW OF THE YEAR
American Gods - Starz (WINNER)
Dear White People - Netflix
Difficult People - Hulu
At Home with Amy Sedaris - TruTV
The Leftovers - HBO

CAMPY TV SHOW OF THE YEAR
Dynasty
Feud: Bette and Joan (WINNER)
Riverdale
RuPaul's Drag Race
Will & Grace

‘WE’RE WILDE ABOUT YOU!’ RISING STAR AWARD
Timothée Chalamet (WINNER)
Harris Dickinson
Tiffany Haddish
Daniel Kaluuya
Daniela Vega

WILDE WIT OF THE YEAR AWARD
(honoring a performer, writer or commentator whose observations both challenge and amuse)
Samantha Bee
Stephen Colbert
Kate McKinnon (WINNER - TIE)
John Oliver
Jordan Peele (WINNER - TIE)

WILDE ARTIST OF THE YEAR
(honoring a truly groundbreaking force in the fields of film, theater and/or television)
Guillermo del Toro
Greta Gerwig
Patty Jenkins
David Lynch
Jordan Peele (WINNER)

TIMELESS STAR
(to a living actor or performer whose exemplary career is marked by character, wisdom and wit)
Meryl Streep (WINNER)

• • • •

GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics
2017 Dorian Award Film/TV Nominations Announcement

Call Me By Your Name, Get Out, Shape of Water Lead Film Categories

Feud, Will & Grace, Glow Highlight TV Races

Seth Meyers, David Lynch, Tiffany Haddish, Michelle Pfeiffer Also Vie

Wednesday, January 10, 2018 - Hollywood, CA — GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics, comprised of nearly 200 critics and journalists in the U.S., Canada and U.K., today released its ninth annual Dorian Award nominations for the year’s finest in film and TV.

Call Me By Your Name reigns with nine nominations, starting with Film of the Year. Earning both best actor and rising star nods: Timothée Chalamet, who plays the film’s teen protagonist besotted by 20something Armie Hammer — who received a nomination for supporting actor. The Shape of Water, director Guillermo del Toro’s fantastical love story coupling a woman and a creature plucked from the Amazon River, landed seven nominations. Meanwhile, the horrors-of-racism drama Get Out earned six nominations, four for writer-director Jordan Peele alone (in addition to helming and screenplay nods, he’s up for “Wilde Wit” and “Wilde Artist” kudos).

Also ranking high with GALECA members: Margot Robbie, a nominee for Film Performance of the Year — Actress for her gritty turn, twist and twirl as ice-blooded figure-skater Tonya Harding in I, Tonya. Joining Robbie on the ring is Chilean actress Daniela Vega for her work as a transgender waitress dealing with loss and indignities in A Fantastic Woman.

As for epics, Christopher Nolan’s Dunkirk did not get a best film nomination, but Nolan made GALECA’s Director of the Year short list — and the WWII epic is also up for Visually Striking Film of the Year alongside the likes of Blade Runner 2049. Meanwhile, BPM (Beats Per Minute), French director Robin Campillo’s dramatic account of friends facing the AIDS epidemic in 1990s France, scored an impressive five nominations, from Foreign Language Film of the Year to Unsung Film.

In TV categories, awards-season darlings Big Little Lies, Feud and The Crown — as well as women surnamed Kidman, Witherspoon, Foy and Lange — obviously delighted GALECA members as well. The male actor race includes a couple of nice surprises: Kyle MacLachlan for Twin Peaks: The Return and Jonathan Groff for Netflix’s droll crime thriller Mindhunter. Other shows getting some love include Hulu’s departing Difficult People, Netflix’s series version of Dear White People and Starz’s electric and provocative fantasy American Gods.

And, for TV Musical Performance of the Year, Lady Gaga, Pink, RuPaul’s Drag Race favorite Sasha Velour and comic John Mulaney all vie against Kate McKinnon’s Broadway-worthy sendup of Kellyanne Conway on Saturday Night Live.

The final Dorian verdicts, including GALECA’s latest pick for Timeless Star (a career achievement honor), will be announced Wednesday, January 31. Then, on Saturday afternoon, February 24, the group will gather to celebrate some of the winners at its annual, intimate Winners Toast in Los Angeles.

GALECA 2017/18 DORIAN AWARDS NOMINEES:

FILM OF THE YEAR
BPM (Beats Per Minute) - The Orchard
Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics
Get Out - Universal
Lady Bird - A24
The Shape of Water - Fox Searchlight

DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR (FILM OR TELEVISION)
Sean Baker, The Florida Project – A24
Guillermo del Toro, The Shape of Water – Fox Searchlight
Greta Gerwig, Lady Bird - A24
Luca Guadagnino, Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics
Christopher Nolan, Dunkirk – Warner Bros.
Jordan Peele, Get Out - Universal

BEST PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR -- ACTRESS
Sally Hawkins, The Shape of Water – Fox Searchlight
Frances McDormand, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri - Fox Searchlight
Margot Robbie, I, Tonya - Neon
Saoirse Ronan, Lady Bird - A24
Daniela Vega, A Fantastic Woman - Sony Pictures Classics

BEST PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR – ACTOR
Nahuel Perez Biscayart, BPM (Beats Per Minute) — The Orchard
Timothée Chalamet, Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics
James Franco, The Disaster Artist – A24
Daniel Kaluuya, Get Out - Universal
Gary Oldman, Darkest Hour – Focus Features

SUPPORTING FILM PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR -- ACTRESS
Mary J. Blige, Mudbound - Netflix
Tiffany Haddish, Girls Trip - Universal
Allison Janney, I, Tonya - Neon
Laurie Metcalf, Lady Bird - A24
Michelle Pfeiffer, mother! - Paramount

SUPPORTING FILM PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR -- ACTOR
Willem Dafoe, The Florida Project – A24
Armie Hammer, Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics
Richard Jenkins, The Shape of Water – Fox Searchlight
Sam Rockwell, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri - Fox Searchlight
Michael Stuhlbarg, Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics

LGBTQ FILM OF THE YEAR
BPM (Beats Per Minute) — The Orchard
Battle of the Sexes - Fox Searchlight
Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics
A Fantastic Woman - Sony Pictures Classics
God's Own Country – Samuel Goldwyn Films

FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM OF THE YEAR
BPM (Beats Per Minute) — The Orchard
A Fantastic Woman - Sony Pictures Classics
First They Killed My Father - Netflix
The Square – Magnolia Pictures
Thelma – The Orchard

SCREENPLAY OF THE YEAR (ORIGINAL OR ADAPTED)
James Ivory, Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics
Jordan Peele, Get Out - Universal
Greta Gerwig, Lady Bird - A24
Guillermo del Toro, Vanessa Taylor, The Shape of Water – Fox Searchlight
Martin McDonagh, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri - Fox Searchlight

DOCUMENTARY OF THE YEAR
(theatrical release, TV airing or DVD release)
Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story – Zeitgeist/Kino Lorber
The Death and Life of Marsha P. Johnson - Netflix
Faces Places – Cohen Media Group
Jane ­– National Geographic/Abramorama
Kedi - Oscilloscope

VISUALLY STRIKING FILM OF THE YEAR
(honoring a production of stunning beauty, from art direction to cinematography)
Blade Runner 2049 – Warner Bros.
Call Me By Your Name - Sony Pictures Classics
Dunkirk – Warner Bros.
The Shape of Water – Fox Searchlight
Wonderstruck - Amazon

UNSUNG FILM OF THE YEAR
BPM (Beats Per Minute) - The Orchard
Beach Rats - Neon
God's Own Country – Samuel Goldwyn Films
Professor Marston and the Wonder Women - Annapurna
Wonderstruck - Amazon

CAMPY FLICK OF THE YEAR
Baywatch - Paramount
The Disaster Artist – A24
The Greatest Showman – 20th Century Fox
I, Tonya - Neon
mother! - Paramount

TV DRAMA OF THE YEAR
Big Little Lies - HBO - HBO
The Crown - Netflix
Feud: Bette and Joan - FX
The Handmaid's Tale - Hulu
Twin Peaks: The Return - Showtime

TV COMEDY OF THE YEAR
Better Things - FX
GLOW - Netflix
The Good Place - NBC
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel - Amazon
Will & Grace - NBC

TV PEFORMANCE OF THE YEAR – ACTRESS
Clare Foy, The Crown - Netflix
Nicole Kidman, Big Little Lies - HBO
Jessica Lange, Feud: Bette and Joan - FX
Elisabeth Moss, The Handmaid's Tale - Hulu
Reese Witherspoon, Big Little Lies - HBO

TV PEFORMANCE OF THE YEAR -- ACTOR
Aziz Ansari, Master of None – Netflix
Sterling K. Brown, This Is Us - NBC
Jonathan Groff, Mindhunter - Netflix
Kyle MacLachlan, Twin Peaks: The Return - Showtime
Alexander Skaarsgård, Big Little Lies - HBO

TV CURRENT AFFAIRS SHOW OF THE YEAR
Full Frontal with Samantha Bee – TBS
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver - HBO
Late Night with Seth Meyers - NBC
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert - CBS
The Rachel Maddow Show - MSNBC

TV MUSICAL PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR
Lady Gaga, “God Bless America,” “Born This Way,” etc., Super Bowl LI - Fox
Kate McKinnon, “(Kellyanne) Conway!” Saturday Night Live - NBC
Brendan McCreary, John Mulaney, “I’m Gay,” Big Mouth – Netflix
Pink, “Beautiful Trauma,” American Music Awards - ABC
Sasha Velour, “So Emotional,” RuPaul's Drag Race – VH1

LGBTQ SHOW OF THE YEAR
Difficult People - Hulu
RuPaul's Drag Race – VH1
Sense8 - Netflix
Transparent – Amazon
Will & Grace - NBC

UNSUNG TV SHOW OF THE YEAR
American Gods - Starz
Dear White People - Netflix
Difficult People - Hulu
At Home with Amy Sedaris - TruTV
The Leftovers - HBO

CAMPY TV SHOW OF THE YEAR
Dynasty
Feud: Betty and Joan
Riverdale
RuPaul's Drag Race
Will & Grace

‘WE’RE WILDE ABOUT YOU!’ RISING STAR AWARD
Timothée Chalamet
Harris Dickinson
Tiffany Haddish
Daniel Kaluuya
Daniela Vega

WILDE WIT OF THE YEAR AWARD
(honoring a performer, writer or commentator whose observations both challenge and amuse)
Samantha Bee
Stephen Colbert
Kate McKinnon
John Oliver
Jordan Peele

WILDE ARTIST OF THE YEAR
(honoring a truly groundbreaking force in the fields of film, theater and/or television)
Guillermo del Toro
Greta Gerwig
Patty Jenkins
David Lynch
Jordan Peele

GALECA’S MISSION
GALECA, a 501 C-6 nonprofit, aims to generate camaraderie in an unsettling media environment, champion constructive film and TV criticism and elevate entertainment journalism. Via panels, screenings, events and its occasional “Ten Best" lists, GALECA also strives to remind the world, and our at-risk youth that LGBTQs have a rich history of putting great movies and TV on the pop culture radar. After all, how would the world fare without knowing what's campy?

CONTACT
Diane Anderson-Minshall, GALECA President
diane@retrogradecommunications.com
John Griffiths, GALECA Executive Director
jdgriffiths@earthlink.net

• • • • 

Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Name
Ten Best Actresses of All Time

Group’s members give thanks for an array of impressive women and unforgettable performances

HOLLYWOOD, CA, Wednesday, November 23, 2016 – The Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association today announced its members’ collective picks for the organization’s latest “Ten Best” list: GALECA’s Ten Best Actresses of All Time.

The 160-plus members of GALECA, a nonprofit group comprised of professional film and TV critics and entertainment journalists in the U.S., Canada and the U.K., were each asked to name their 10 choices for the finest female actors throughout the history of film and television, without ranking the stars. The actresses with the most mentions are noted below.

Note: Actresses who did not make the top 10 here but came closest among the 100 or so listed by members include Joan Crawford, Judi Dench, Sally Field, Judy Garland, Audrey Hepburn, Nicole Kidman, Jessica Lange, Helen Mirren, Elizabeth Taylor and Kate Winslet.

The Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association’s Ten Best Actresses of All Time (again, in alphabetical order) are:

Ingrid Bergman: The Swedish star is best known to your average Joe as misty-eyed Ilsa in Casablanca, but Bergman devotees know that she starred in many more, including a trio of Hitchcock films and George Cukor’s stellar thriller Gaslight. Bergman is also responsible for another gift to cinema: her daughter, actress Isabella Rossellini.

Cate Blanchett: Whether she’s playing a tortured 16th-century monarch or having clandestine glove lunches in 1952, Cate Blanchett radiates. She’s the kind of actress that demands your attention, and you gratefully give it. She’s picked up a host of Oscar and/or Golden Globe nominations (and a few wins) for her stunning performances in such modern classics as Elizabeth, Blue Jasmine and Carol (the latter two also earned her GALECA Dorian Awards).

Bette Davis: The grande dame of Hollywood’s Golden Age, Bette Davis commanded attention with her striking visage and powerful performances in films like All About Eve, The Little Foxesand What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (Davis’ off-camera battles with costar Joan Crawford in the latter fuel the upcoming TV series Feud). But from the get-go, she was blazing trails as one of filmdom’s most distinct, eye-expressive actresses.

Viola Davis: Bette’s not the only Ms. Davis to stand out on the screen (big or small). This Juilliard-trained powerhouse has shown there’s no role she can’t conquer, winning two Tonys, two Oscar nominations (for Doubt and The Help) and, finally, like Stanwyck, an Emmy. That parade of awards will only keep growing as she lends her trademark thoughtfulness to more juicy roles like her current one as Annalise Keating in TV’s How to Get Away With Murder.

Jane Fonda: Fonda (a GALECA Timeless Star career-achievement honoree) may have come from Hollywood royalty, but she’s been paving her own way with intelligence and subversive wit since the sixties. Be it in the daring crime thriller Klute, feminist office comedy 9 to 5 to or gray-haired sitcom Grace and Frankie, Fonda is a nervy, magnetic presence. And few actresses have such a knack for shedding light on important issues with her brave performances. Witness her Oscar-winning turn in Coming Home.

Katharine Hepburn: Few actresses, or actors, have the sort of self-possessed presence that came so naturally to Kate Hepburn. Even after her early success in was deemed a flash in the pan by the 1940s, she showed that talent and a hell of a lot of moxie can’t be quashed. Hepburn picked up three of her four Oscars later in life (see On Golden Pond), working until the age of 87. Her dedication to her art and her iconoclastic personal style translate to indelible.

Isabelle Huppert: The French-born Cannes’ darling Huppert has been making waves in the film industry for over 40 years now, with no signs of slowing down. Her haunting performance in 2001’s The Piano Teacher may be her best known work in the U.S., but the BAFTA- and Cesar-winning chameleon has over 50 films under her belt, a testament to her status as one of the world’s most spectacularly natural acting talents. See her cast a spell in the current drama Elle.

Julianne Moore: Moore has the makings of a modern legend. She landed on the radar with her high of a performance in 1997’s Boogie Nightsand she’s been building a noticeably meaty list of credits ever since. Her subtle and natural style has made her a household name and a favorite during Academy Awards season (and she won a GALECA Dorian Award for Still Alice). While Moore is usually cast in dramas like the heart-wrenching The End of the Affair, her comedic timing in The Big Lebowski is proof she has the chops to do it all.

Barbara Stanwyck: The stunningly "real” Stanwyck rose from a childhood filled with poverty and strife to become one of early Hollywood’s most dynamic actresses. The former Ziegfeld Follies dancer elicited tears in Stella Dallas, mesmerized in the noir classic Double Indemnity and delighted in the screwball comedy The Lady Eve. “Missy” later turned heads in television, winning three Emmys, including one for her gutsy performance in The Thorn Birds.

Meryl Streep: Enigmatic, brilliant, timeless. Meryl Streep’s career is as varied as can be, with Oscar-winning performances in The Iron Lady (which also earned her GALECA’s Dorian Award), Sophie’s Choice and Kramer vs. Kramer to fun frolics in films like Mamma Mia and The Devil Wears Prada. Streep completely loses herself in her roles, making her not only fascinating, but (shhh) GALECA’s number-one Best Actress of All Time.

• • • • 

Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Fete
Carol and Screenwriter Phyllis Nagy
at Annual Winners Toast

Transparent, Grace and Frankie
Cast Members Discuss
Their Awarded Shows

MONDAY MARCH 7, 2016 - HOLLYWOOD, CA Members of the Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association, comprised of nearly 150 entertainment journalists nationwide, gathered Sunday in Los Angeles to celebrate their 2015 Dorian Award winners across film and TV.

GALECA’s top titles and performances of the year were announced January 19, but the group eschews the award show format for an afternoon party where select winners enjoy champagne and some lighthearted questions before the crowd at its annual Winners Toast.

This year, Oscar nominee Phyllis Nagy, presented her Dorian Award for Screenplay of the Year for Carol, was asked by GALECA Board Member Trish Bendix (AfterEllen) about adapting novelist Patricia Highsmith’s classic lesbian romance for the screen. “Retaining the novel’s sense of mystery” was key, said Nagy.

The writer also noted that the film, an international success, seemed to ruffle feathers in some circles. “Hollywood still isn’t used to seeing strong lesbian characters. Carol is a woman who knows what she wants,” Nagy said of the determined divorcee (Cate Blanchett) who intrigues younger Therese (Rooney Mara) in 1950s New York.

GALECA obviously responded to the film — Bendix and the organization’s president, John Griffiths (Us Weekly), had to jump in to help Nagy pose with Carol’s five awards in all. The movie, hailed by GALECA as a work “of precise beauty and huge emotional impact,” also had won Film of the Year, LGBTQ Film of the Year, Director of the Year - Todd Haynes and Film Performance of the Year - Actress for Blanchett.

Alexandra Billings, the groundbreaking transgender actress who costars on Amazon’s Transparent, accepted that show’s awards for TV Comedy of the Year, LGBTQ TV Show of the Year and TV Performance of the Year - Actor (Jeffrey Tambor). Billings, asked about her place as the first transgender performer to play a transgender character in a TV production, had fun roasting that turn in 2005’s Romy and Michelle: In the Beginning. The comedy prequel was “awful!” Billings had higher praise for her current gig, in which she plays Davina, a warm transgender woman who helps show Tambor’s character Maura transition. Transparent is “funny because it’s real and true. And [creator] Jill Soloway is a nut!”

Accepting on behalf of Jane Fonda for the Grace and Frankie’s star’s Timeless Award — GALECA’s career achievement honor previously given to the likes of Sir Ian McKellen — her sitcom costar Baron Vaughn raved about the legendary actress’s “approachable” charms and professionalism.

On the Netflix hit, about the unlikely friendship between fastidious Grace (Fonda) and aging hippy Frankie (Lily Tomlin) and their suddenly out husbands, Vaughn plays Tomlin’s adopted son Bud. “When I’m in scenes with Jane and Lily, I’m thinking I’m basically the new Dolly Parton,” quipped Vaughn, referencing a certain Fonda/Tomlin/Parton comedy classic.

Other swells attending GALECA’s Hasty Pudding-esque Toast, held at Wilde Wine Bar and Restaurant in Los Angeles, were actor Jason Stuart (Unsung Film of the Year winner Tangerine and the upcoming The Birth of a Nation), rising star Corey Craig (Pee Wee’s Big Holiday) and reality star/actor Massimo Dobrovic (Euros of Hollywood). The afternoon was capped by Natalie Denise Sperl of the L.A. rock band Kill My Coquette, who sang a tribute to the late David Bowie.

GALECA, an established 501 C-6 nonprofit, aims to generate camaraderie in an unsettling media environment, champion constructive film and TV criticism and elevate entertainment journalism as a whole.

Via panels, screenings, events and our occasional “Ten Best” lists, GALECA also strives to remind the world that the LGBTQ-munity has a significant history of helping improve pop culture at large. After all, how would the world fare without knowing what’s campy?

 

“There is only one thing in life worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about.”—Oscar Wilde

We apologize if any of the below links to stories trumpeting GALECA and our Dorian Awards have — oh, dear — expired.

2019

Let’s Go There with Shira and Ryan / Channel Q Let’s Go There: GALECA

Los Angeles Times Critics groups band together to redefine who covers Hollywood

TV Insider 7 Times the Dorian Awards Gave LGBT Trailblazers Their Due

The Hollywood Reporter Dorian Awards: ‘The Favourite’ Named Film of the Year

The Advocate LGBTQ Critics Celebrate Love Triangles and . . . 

Vulture Oscar Futures: Can A Quiet Place and Crazy Rich Asians Crack Best Picture?

Collider ‘The Favourite’ and ‘Can You Ever Forgive Me?’ Lead 10th Annual Dorian Nominations

2018

The Credits (MPAA) Get To Know GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics

Greg in Hollywood GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics celebrates at its Dorian Awards Winners Toast

IMRU Radio Interview with GALECA Executive Director John Griffiths

Oh No They Didn’t! Big Little Lies, Call Me By Your Name top Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics best of 2017 list

IndieWire ‘Call Me by Your Name’ Sweeps Dorian Awards

The Hollywood Reporter ‘Call Me by Your Name’ Leads Dorian Award Nominations

Collider ‘Call Me by Your Name’, ‘The Shape of Water’ Lead Dorian Award Nominations

San Francisco Chronicle ‘Call Me,’ ‘Little Lies’ top LGBTQ critics noms

Tom + Lorenzo Dorian Awards Nominations

Edge LGBTQ Critics Group Announces Dorian Award Nominations

2017

Awards Watch GALECA Names “Ten Best Films You Never Knew Were LGBTQ”

Lesbian News Ten Films You Never Knew Were LGBTQ

E! News Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association Winners Toast

Gay Star News Moonlight star Trevante Rhodes on how film’s success has led to ‘amazing life moments’

Shadows on the Wall Dorian Awards Winners Toast



Yahoo! 
‘Moonlight’ Named Best Film of the Year by Gay and Lesbian Critics Group

Los Angeles Times ‘Moonlight,’ Viola Davis, Carrie Fisher win honors from gay critics

San Francisco Chronicle ‘Moonlight,’ ‘O.J.’ film and TV drama honored by LGBT critics

Indiewire ‘Moonlight’ Sweeps Gay and Lesbian Critics Association’s Dorian Awards

Awards Circuit Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association Names ‘Moonlight’ Best of Year

Attitude Moonlight Named Best Film of the Year by Gay Critics Group

South Florida Gay News ‘Moonlight’ Bests Field in Gay and Lesbian ‘Dorian’ Awards

Reel Urban News “Moonlight” is the leading LGBT Film for 2017 Dorian Awards

Cine Vitor (Brazil) Moonlight: Sob a Luz do Luar é o grande vencedor do Dorian Awards

Die Academy (Germany) Moonlight führt die GALECA-Nominierungen an

Movie Marker (UK) Nominees: 2017 Dorian Awards

The Hollywood Reporter ‘Moonlight’ Leads Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics’ Dorian Award Nominations

2016

Yahoo! Gay Critics Pick top 10 Actresses of All Time

Edge Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Fete Carol and Screenwriter Phyllis Nagy at Annual Winners Toast

The Seattle Lesbian Critics Fete ‘Carol’ and Screenwriter Phyllis Nagy at Annual Winners Toast

Variety ‘Carol’ Sweeps Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Awards

The Guardian Carol sweeps gay and lesbian critics’ awards after Oscar snub

The Advocate ‘Carol’ Sweeps Gay Critics’ Dorian Awards

The Hollywood Reporter ‘Carol’ Earns Multiple Mentions as Dorian Award Nominees Are Unveiled

Gay Star News Carol starring Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara gets seven Dorian Award nods

Queerty Stonewall Has Been Nominated for an Award . . . Really

Awards Daily Dorian Award Nominees

Pop Goes the News Canada’s Jacob Tremblay, Emma Donoghue Up For Dorian Awards

2015

Out The 10 Best LGBT Films Every Straight Person Should See

Awards Watch GALECA’s Ten Best LGBTQA Films Every Non-LGBTQA Person Should See

IndieWire The 10 Best LGBT Films Every Straight Person Should See

Monsters & Critics George Takei Thanks Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association PHOTOS 

Greg In Hollywood Recap of the GALECA Winners Toast

The Seattle Lesbian GALECA’s Top Ten Movies That Costar Oscar

Out The Top 10 Movies About the Academy Awards – The Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association have ranked the top films that costar ‘Oscar’

AwardsWatch Gay and Lesbian Critics (GALECA) Name ‘Boyhood’ Film of the Year

The Hollywood Reporter Oscars: ‘The Imitation Game’ Finally Plays the Gay Card

The Wrap Dorian Awards: ‘Birman’ and ‘Transparent’ Lead Nominations for Gay and Lesbian Critics (Exclusive)

Perez Hilton Golden Globe Winner Transparent Leads LGBTQ Critics’ Dorian Awards Nominations

AfterEllen Jodie Foster, Lisa Cholodenko and more nominated for GALECA’s Dorian Awards

2014 

The Hollywood Reporter Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Name ‘12 Years a Slave’ Best Film

Global News (Canada) Roll out the red carpet: A guide to season’s big awards shows

Edge Avante-Garde Celebs Gather at GALECA’s Winners Toast


The Hollywood Reporter
Watch Your Words, Matthew McConaughey

The Wrap Dorian Awards: Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Announce TV and Film Nominations

FourTwoNine GALECA honors Lily Tomlin as Timeless Star, releases complete list of Dorian Awards nominees

2013

BuzzFeed “Argo,” Anne Hathaway And Lindsay Lohan Honored By Gay Critics

Queerty Gay Critics Name Hathaway, “Argo” … And “Liz & Dick” Winners of 2013 Dorian Awards

Out The Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association (GALECA) 2013 Nominees

The Big Gay Picture Show GALECA Announce Dorian Awards Winners

New Now Next Magic Mike, Game of Thrones Nominated for Dorian Awards

GLAAD Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Assoc. Announce Dorian Award Nominees

2012

The Hollywood Reporter Gay and Lesbian Critics Name British Drama ‘Weekend’ Best Film of the Year

Express (U.K.) Streep and Fassbender lead Gay & Lesbian Critics awards

Gay TV (Italy) Il Film “Weekend” Triofna Ai Dorian Awards, Gli Oscar del Cinema Gay

The Washington Blade Gay critics pick ‘Weekend’ as best film

Movie Dearest Awards Watch: The 2012 Dorian Awards

Reuters Muppets, Bieber, “Skin” among 2012 Dorian Award nominees

2011

The New York Times And The Campy Award Goes To…

IndieWire “I Am Love,” Annette Bening Lead Gay & Lesbian Critics’ Awards

The Hollywood Reporter ‘Glee,’ ‘I Am Love’ Score Dorian Awards

Uproxx Surprise: Gay Critics honor ‘Burlesque’ for campy film of the year

Playbill “Glee,” Chris Colfer, Jane Lynch, Angela Lansbury, Annette Bening Win Dorian Awards

Greg in Hollywood Gay & Lesbian Entertainment Critics announce Dorian Award winners for favorites in film & television

2010

The Wrap  ‘A Single Man,’ ‘Glee,’ ‘Grey Gardens’ Top Dorian Awards

The Hollywood Reporter ‘A Single Man’ Tops Dorian Awards

Broadway World GLEE and ‘Grey Gardens’ Win Dorian Awards

Edmonton Journal (Canada) A Single Man lauded at first Dorian Awards



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