SALON

MacLaine earns AFI honor for her many lives

Topics: From the Wires,

MacLaine earns AFI honor for her many livesShirley MacLaine attends the AFI Life Achievement Award Honoring Shirley MacLaine at Sony Studios on Thursday, June 7, 2012 in Culver City, Calif. The AFI Lifetime Achievement Honoring Shirley MacLaine airs on June 24, 2012 at 9 p.m. on TV Land. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP) (Credit: Chris Pizzello/invision/ap)

CULVER CITY, Calif. (AP) — It’s not just a single life that gets toted up when Shirley MacLaine receives a career award. It’s all her lives — past, present and future.

MacLaine earned the American Film Institute’s life-achievement award Thursday night with friends and colleagues praising her accomplishments in this life — and cracking jokes about the reincarnation believer’s other lives.

Co-stars Julia Roberts, Jack Nicholson, Jack Black, Sally Field, Meryl Streep and others contributed to the loving roast of MacLaine, along with such friends, co-workers and admirers as Katherine Heigl, Don Rickles, Morgan Freeman and 1972 Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern.

“Tonight we’re here to honor a person I have known, a person I have loved my whole life,” said MacLaine’s younger brother, Warren Beatty, the 2008 recipient of the AFI honor.

Some stars lovingly ribbed MacLaine for her belief that she has lived many past lives. Black, MacLaine’s co-star in her current comic drama “Bernie,” presented a hilarious reel of himself congratulating the actress at career honors from prehistoric times to the Elizabethan era to U.S. colonial days.

“This is not the first lifetime-achievement award she’s won over the ages,” Black said.

Carrie Fisher, who wrote the 1990 comic drama “Postcards from the Edge” that starred MacLaine and Streep, joked that MacLaine “is actually some future person’s past life. Can you imagine that lucky bastard?”

Nicholson, MacLaine’s fellow Academy Award winner from 1983′s “Terms of Endearment,” said MacLaine loves her audiences and “is the only person outside of the clergy promising them eternal life.”

The 40th recipient of the annual AFI honor, MacLaine received the best-actress Oscar for “Terms of Endearment” and was nominated four other times for such films as 1958′s “Some Came Running,” 1960′s “The Apartment” and 1977′s “The Turning Point.”

The awards show, held in a historic Sony Pictures soundstage where MGM shot “The Wizard of Oz,” will air June 24 on TV Land.

The ceremony featured taped segments with MacLaine recalling colorful episodes from her career, clips from her films such as “Sweet Charity,” ”Being There,” ”Guarding Tess” and her debut in Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Trouble with Harry,” and a segment on her collaborations with Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and their Rat Pack pals.

“Downton Abbey” co-star Elizabeth McGovern introduced a clip of MacLaine’s upcoming guest appearance on the British drama series, with MacLaine playing McGovern’s mother.

MacLaine made a grand entrance to the dinner that preceded the show, taking the stage then working her way through the crowd with hugs and kisses for Beatty and wife Annette Bening, Streep, Rickles, Jennifer Aniston and others.

Streep presented the award to MacLaine, saying the actress cut a path for other women in Hollywood by doing much of her best work in middle age, when good female roles typically dry up.

“Some performers are just indelible. We fall early and we fall hard for them, and we follow them for the rest of our lives,” Streep said. “That’s our Shirl. That’s you, babe.”

Accepting the award from Streep, also a past winner of the AFI prize, MacLaine paid respect to the Jacks in her life, including Nicholson, Black and “The Apartment” co-star Jack Lemmon.

She also had fond words for all of the leading men she has known, “those I made love to on the screen and those I made love to off the screen. I swear, I remember only half.”

MacLaine thanked the women who shared her dinner table for the evening, among them Streep and “Steel Magnolias” co-star Field, saying they had been her “other half of the sky, my sustaining belief that women who speak the truth will make the world a better place.”

And she put in her own wisecrack about the prospects of future lives.

“For all of the over-achievers in this room, we should relax and enjoy it,” MacLaine said, “because if we don’t do it now, we’ll do it next time.”

___

Online:

American Film Institute: http://www.afi.com

Next Article

Related Stories

Featured Slide Shows

The week in 10 pics

close X
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook
  • Thumbnails
  • Fullscreen
  • 1 of 11
  • Lisa Montgomery embraces her nephew Thursday after a tornado tore apart her home in Cleburne, Texas. The twister killed six people and destroyed entire swaths of the North Texas town.
    Credit: AP/LM Otero

  • Jack McMahon, the defense attorney for abortion doctor Kermit Gosnell, speaks outside the Criminal Justice Center in Philadelphia Tuesday. His client was convicted of killing three babies in his clinic, and will serve multiple life sentences.
    Credit: AP/Matt Rourke

  • A photo taken Monday captures Vice President Joe Biden's response to a Milwaukee second-grader's innovative proposal to end America's epidemic of gun violence. This guy!
    Credit: AP/Jenny Aicher

  • Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., flanked by a grouper-eyed Michele Bachmann, addresses the IRS' admission that it targeted Tea Party groups in advance of the 2012 election. In an op-ed for CNN Thursday, the Kentucky senator slammed the president for his faux outrage.
    Credit: AP/Molly Riley

  • Ousted IRS chief Steven Miller is sworn in on Capitol Hill Friday. Miller testified before the House Ways and Means Committee on the extra scrutiny the agency gave conservative groups applying for tax-exempt status.
    Credit: AP/J. Scott Applewhite

  • Attorney General Eric Holder pauses as he testifies on Capitol Hill before the House Judiciary Committee Wednesday. Holder is under fire, among other things, for the Justice Department's gathering of phone records at the Associated Press.
    Credit: AP/Carolyn Kaster

  • O.J. Simpson sits during an evidentiary hearing at Clark County District Court in Las Vegas, Nev., Thursday. Simpson, who is currently serving a nine-to-33-year sentence in state prison for armed robbery and kidnapping, is using a writ of habeas corpus to seek a new trial.
    Credit: AP/Las Vegas Review-Journal/Jeff Scheid

  • Major Tom to ground control: On Sunday astronaut Chris Hadfield recorded the first music video from space, a cover of David Bowie's "Space Oddity."
    Credit: AP/NASA/Chris Hadfield

  • When it rains it pours. President Barack Obama speaks during a news conference Thursday with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, inexplicably inspiring an #umbrellagate Twitter meme.
    Credit: AP/Jacquelyn Martin

  • A smoke plume rises high above a road block at the intersection of County A and Ross Road east of Solon Springs, Wis., Tuesday. No injuries were reported, but the the wildfire caused evacuations across northwestern Wisconsin.
    Credit: AP/The Duluth News-Tribune/Clint Austin

  • Recent Slide Shows

  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook
  • Thumbnails
  • Fullscreen
  • 1 of 11

Comments are not enabled for this story.