'Lincoln' star Daniel Day-Lewis co-stars with Obama chair
Accepting the Stanley Kubrick honor for excellence in film at tonight's Britannia Awards, "Lincoln" star Daniel Day-Lewis brought an empty chair with him onto the stage.
He prefaced his remarks by noting that he had stayed up until 2 a.m. watching election coverage and was still hearing Wolf Blitzer in his head. Then he warmly greeted the chair.
"I know that as an Englishman this is absolutely none of my business," he said, ""but I'm just so very grateful it was you.
"I love Clint Eastwood," Day-Lewis added. "This is no satirical comment on him or his politics. When I saw him talking to a chair in front of a group of strangers, I thought, 'I've got to try that.' That's a challenge.
"I didn't pull it off quite as well as him – I've got some way to go."
Earlier in the evening, Britannias host Alan Cumming joked that Day-Lewis prepared for receiving his award by checking into the Beverly Hilton a month early and eating nightly meals of "tasteless chicken."
Day-Lewis later went on to describe the responsibility he felt playing Abraham Lincoln.
"I feel that if I go down in flames with this, bringing the film with me, having desecrated the memory of the most dearly loved president this country has ever known, perhaps the greatest man of the 19th century, I'd probably never rise again."


A native of Los Angeles raised by two parents and "Hill Street Blues," Jon Weisman ankled his scriptwriting career and began working for Variety in 2004, subsequently serving as associate editor of features and television reporter before becoming awards editor. He promises not to use this platform to retroactively campaign for Oscars for “The Misfits,” though he’d feel justified in doing so.
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