Actress Cate Blanchett honored at London fest

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Actress Cate Blanchett honored at London fest

LONDON - Greek director Athina Rachel Tsangari’s comedy of manhood “Chevalier” was named best picture at the London Film Festival on Saturday, during a ceremony that honored Cate Blanchett with a major career award.

It was a fitting finale to a festival that sought to showcase the work of talented women both on screen and behind the camera.

Polish director Pawel Pawlikowski, who headed a prize jury that included actors Chiwetel Ejiofor and Kristin Scott Thomas, said Tsangari’s film about a battle of egos among six men on a yacht was “both a hilarious comedy and a deeply disturbing statement on the condition of Western humanity.”

Tsangari - whose film beat much-praised contenders including child-soldier saga “Beasts of No Nation” and searing Holocaust drama “Son of Saul” - thanked “all of the strong women who have inspired me - and all of the strong men.”

During a black-tie dinner ceremony at London’s 17th-century Banqueting House, Blanchett was awarded the British Film Institute Fellowship by her “Lord of the Rings” co-star Ian McKellen, in recognition of a career that has already netted her two Oscars, for “The Aviator” and “Blue Jasmine.”

The award was preceded by a compilation of clips from Blanchett’s 20-year film career, interspersed with praise from directors including Peter Jackson, Todd Haynes and Richard Eyre.

“It’s a cross between an obituary and a tribute,” Blanchett said. “I feel like I’ve died and gone to heaven.”

Blanchett said she’d never thought of her work as career, or even a choice. Acting, she said, “chose me.”

Blanchett starred in two films at the festival: Haynes’ 1950s-set lesbian romance “Carol” and James Vanderbilt’s “Truth,” in which she plays TV news producer Mary Mapes, who was fired over a story about former U.S. President George W. Bush’s military service.

American director Robert Eggers’ Pilgrim horror film “The Witch” won the festival’s first-feature prize. Jennifer Peedom’s Himalayan study “Sherpa” was named best documentary and “An Old Dog’s Diary” by Shai Heredia and Shumona Goel took the short-film trophy.

The 59th annual London festival aimed to put strong women center stage, opening with Sarah Gavron’s political drama “Suffragette” and featuring 46 female-directed films among its 240 features.

Founded in 1957 to show the best of the year’s world cinema to a British audience, the London Film Festival has boosted its profile in recent years.

Its prize-winners have a strong track record at the Oscars. The last two London winners, Andrey Zvyagintsev’s “Leviathan” and Pawlikowski’s “Ida,” faced off in this year’s foreign-language Academy Award race. “Ida” won.

The festival wrapped up Sunday with Danny Boyle’s “Steve Jobs,” starring Michael Fassbender as the Apple founder.

AP
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