City
Epaper

Billie Eilish dedicates her award to people struggling emotionally at Palm Springs gala

By IANS | Updated: January 5, 2024 15:50 IST

Los Angeles, Jan 5 Singer-songwriter Billie Eilish and her brother Finneas won Chairman’s Award for their chart-topper ‘What ...

Open in App

Los Angeles, Jan 5 Singer-songwriter Billie Eilish and her brother Finneas won Chairman’s Award for their chart-topper ‘What Was I Made For?’ from ‘Barbie’ at the Palm Springs International Film Festival’s annual gala hosted by Mary Hart.

Billie Eilish paid a tribute to her parents and recalling their journey as aspiring actors, Eilish got candid about the emotional song’s personal meaning, reports Variety.

She dedicated her award to “Anyone who experiences hopelessness and the feeling of existential dread, and feeling like ‘what’s the point'.”

“We all feel like that occasionally,” Eilish said. “I have really not wanted to be here. Sorry, dark, damn. I’ve spent a lot of time feeling that way. I want to say to anyone that feels that way, be patient with yourself, and know that it’s worth it all. And I think it’s good to be alive.”

As per Variety, ‘Barbie’ writer-director Greta Gerwig presented Eilish and her brother Finneas with the glass trophy, after she herself accepted the Director of the Year award, presented by her stars Margot Robbie and America Ferrera. Gerwig recalled that when she saw her first movie in a theatre, ‘The Muppets Take Manhattan’, she ran toward the screen and tried to get into the movie. “I will spend the rest of my life running to the screen to get in,” she vowed.

It was an emotional night for many of the honorees. ‘The Holdovers’ star Paul Giamatti, who received the Icon Award from his ‘Sideways’ co-star Sandra Oh, paid tribute to his late mother, who passed away prior to the 2004 comedy, and older sister, who died before the opening of Alexander Payne’s latest critically acclaimed film.

“I never thought of myself as an icon,” said Giamatti, who ran down some of his best roles and paid tribute to the directors he has worked with. “I’ve played some weird, difficult guys,” he said, “and sometimes it’s hard to get inside their heads.”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalFormer pilot points to chip malfunction, not pilot error in initial report on AI171 tragic crash

InternationalPakistan: JUI-F chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman calls for internal change in PTI-led Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government

AurangabadRegistration for medical courses admissions to commence on July 21

InternationalEmpowering girls through education: Namo Lakshmi Yojana fuels dreams across Gujarat

International"Aid shipments have been restored": Zelensky confirms resumed US aid

International Realted Stories

InternationalIsraeli strike kills one in south Lebanon amid ceasefire tensions

InternationalRussian astronomers observe 17 solar flares coinciding with global heat waves

InternationalGermany calls on the European Union to negotiate with Washington "pragmatically" over tariffs

InternationalEAM S. Jaishankar to Visit Singapore and China from July 13–15; To Attend SCO Foreign Ministers’ Meet

InternationalUN warns of humanitarian crisis as Afghan migrants return from Iran, Pakistan