The Art of the Meryl Streep Acceptance Speech
But the real reason I’m in the tank for Streep is simple: I want to see her acceptance speech. The Meryl Streep acceptance speech is an art unto itself: elegant, loopy, cunningly self-aware, and impeccably delivered—in short, everything you expect from a Meryl Streep performance, condensed to three minutes. Where else can you see fake humility, fake gratitude, and fake spontaneity delivered with such aplomb? Take her 2004 Emmy win, for “Angels in America”:
From her trademark breathy sigh (translation: “Gee, they just keep giving me these things”) and her droll opening line—”There are some days when I myself think I’m overrated … but not today”—this speech is a gem: funny, faux-scatterbrained, and self-consciously grand. When the orchestra tries to play her off, not only does she sing along to the music, she uses it as inspirational underscoring as she thanks Tony Kushner.
- Michael Schulman on the history of Meryl Streep acceptance speeches, and why she should win the Oscar for “Iron Lady”: http://nyr.kr/xEteYM
22 Feb 2012 / Reblogged from bookofblues with 357 notes
In honor of Meryl’s Best Actress win tonight. The Iron Lady is at the top of my list.
everything about her is an art.
WE LOVE THIS. WE LOVE MERYL. Yet we are torn. WE ALSO LOVE MICHELLE WILLIAMS. WHO WILL WIN BEST ACTRESS? Only time will...
She is seriously, wonderful.