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Ledger wins posthumous Globe for ‘Dark Knight’

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Heath Ledger won the supporting-actor Golden Globe on Sunday nearly a year after his death, earning the prize for his diabolical turn as the Joker in the Batman blockbuster “The Dark Knight.”

The award was accepted by “Dark Knight” director Christopher Nolan, who said he and his collaborators were buoyed by the enormous acclaim and acceptance the film and Ledger’s performance have gained worldwide.

“All of us who worked with Heath on ‘The Dark Knight’ accept with an awful mixture of sadness but incredible pride,” Nolan said. “After Heath passed, you saw a hole ripped in the future of cinema.”

The Globe win boosts Ledger’s prospects for the supporting-actor honor at the Academy Awards, whose nominations come out Jan. 22, the one-year anniversary of the actor’s death from an accidental overdose of prescription drugs.

Only one actor has ever won a posthumous Oscar, best-actor recipient Peter Finch for 1976’s “Network.”

The robot romance “WALL-E” won the Golden Globe for best animated film, Sally Hawkins earned the best-actress prize in a musical or comedy as an eternal optimist in “Happy-Go-Lucky,” and Kate Winslet took supporting actress for “The Reader,” in which she plays a former Nazi concentration camp guard in a romantic fling with a teenager.

Hawkins, a relatively unknown British actress and newcomer to Hollywood’s awards scenes, was visibly nervous accepting her prize.

“I’ll try and get through as much as my voice and nerves and knees will let me,” said Hawkins, thanking family, cast mates and collaborators on the film, including director Mike Leigh.

“WALL-E” director Andrew Stanton thanked producer Pixar Animation and distributor Walt Disney, saying the unusual love story between two robots who communicate in beeps and squeaks “couldn’t have been made anywhere else.”

Winslet, who also was up for best dramatic actress at the Globes with the domestic drama “Revolutionary Road,” is a five-time Oscar nominee but has never won.

“You have to forgive me because I have a habit of not winning things,” Winslet said as she opened what she acknowledged was a long acceptance speech.

“Sorry this is going on a bit, but I’m going to make the most of it,” she said amid thanking everyone from her children to the film’s makeup artists.

“Slumdog Millionaire,” an underdog story some awards watchers think could emerge as an Oscar favorite, won its first two categories of the night, best screenplay for Simon Beaufoy and musical score for A.R. Rahman. The film’s four nominations also included best director and drama.

“We really weren’t expecting to be here in America at all at one time, so it’s just amazing to be here,” said Beaufoy, who adapted the script from Vikas Swarup’s novel “Q & A.”

Directed by British director Danny Boyle, “Slumdog Millionaire” features a generally unknown cast in the story of an orphan boy in Mumbai who rises from terrible hardship to become a champ on India’s version of “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire,” all the while trying to reunite with a lost love from his childhood.

Bruce Springsteen received the best song prize for the title track to “The Wrestler.”

“This is the only time I’m going to be in competition with Clint Eastwood,” said Springsteen, referring to the filmmaker who had a song nomination for writing the title tune to his “Gran Torino.” “It felt pretty good, too.”

The foreign-language film prize went to Israel’s “Waltz With Bashir,’’ director Ari Forman’s animated documentary about a soldier struggling to recall suppressed memories of his involvement in the war with Lebanon.

Among TV categories, “30 Rock” won best comedy series, with stars Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin earning the acting Globes in a musical or comedy.

List of winners of the Golden Globe Awards

By The Associated Press

Complete list of winners at Sunday’s 66th annual Golden Globes held by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association in Beverly Hills, Calif.:

MOTION PICTURES:

Picture, Drama: “Slumdog Millionaire.”

Picture, Musical or Comedy: “Vicky Christina Barcelona.”

Actor, Drama: Mickey Rourke, “The Wrestler.”

Actress, Drama: Kate Winslet, “Revolutionary Road.”

Director: Danny Boyle, “Slumdog Millionaire.”

Actor, Musical or Comedy: Colin Farrell, “In Bruges.”

Actress, Musical or Comedy: Sally Hawkins, “Happy-Go-Lucky.”

Supporting Actor: Heath Ledger, “The Dark Knight.”

Supporting Actress: Kate Winslet, “The Reader.”

Foreign Language Film: “Waltz With Bashir.”

Animated Film: “Wall-E.”

Screenplay: Simon Beaufoy, “Slumdog Millionaire.”

Original Score: A.R. Rahman, “Slumdog Millionaire.”

Original Song: “The Wrestler” (performed by Bruce Springsteen, written by Bruce Springsteen), “The Wrestler.”

TELEVISION:

Series, Drama: “Mad Men.”

Actor, Drama: Gabriel Byrne, “In Treatment.”

Actress, Drama: Anna Paquin, “True Blood.”

Series, Musical or Comedy: “30 Rock.”

Actor, Musical or Comedy: Alec Baldwin, “30 Rock.”

Actress, Musical or Comedy: Tina Fey, “30 Rock.”

Miniseries or Movie: “John Adams.”

Actress, Miniseries or Movie: Laura Linney, “John Adams.”

Actor, Miniseries or Movie: Paul Giammatti, “John Adams.”

Supporting Actress, Series, Miniseries or Movie: Laura Dern, “Recount.”

Supporting Actor, Series, Miniseries or Movie: Tom Wilkinson, “John Adams.”

Cecil B. DeMille Award: Steven Spielberg.

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