2014 Calvin Awards: Best Supporting Actress

By David Mumpower

February 13, 2014

You are getting very sleepy...

Jennifer Lawrence failed to defend her title in the category of Best Actress. She did, however, finish in the top three for the third time in four years. The first two performances occurred in Winter’s Bone and Silver Linings Playbook. This year, we are celebrating Lawrence’s crazy 1970s hair, cleavage-enhancing retro clothing and her hysterical science oven conversation. Suffice to say that Lawrence brings a lot to the character of Rosalyn Rosenfeld in American Hustle. In a story overflowing with colorful con people, Lawrence gets to play the one who is so crazy that she scares the rest of the criminals. The high point occurs when Rosenfeld walks straight up to a table full of mafia members then starts venting about the difficulties of marriage. Moments later, she forces a woman she hates to kiss her in a bathroom. Rosalyn Rosenfeld is a psychopath with a state of the art kitchen appliance, and we love her.

The rest of our top five is comprised of June Squibb and Sally Hawkins. I suspect that heading into 2013, everyone was expecting June Squibb to finally break out after 83 years of waiting for the perfect moment. She discovered the perfect vehicle with Nebraska, which required her to portray the mother of a middle-aged pair of sons. Throughout the movie, Squibb revealed a fire that belied her octogenarian status. In the process, she vaguely reminded everyone who watched Nebraska of their granny. Squibb is the emotional core of a tender, engrossing character drama. And she was already a teenager back when the Allies were kicking Hitler’s ass.

In Blue Jasmine, Sally Hawkins was asked to portray the straight woman to Cate Blanchett’s much spicier role as the titular lead. Ironically named Ginger, there is no spice whatsoever in Hawkins’ character. She is the fodder for all of the thoughtless, pointless, heartless criticisms provided by her adopted sister. The amusement of her portrayal lies in the fact that Jasmine is the train wreck of a human being. Hawkins' take on Ginger establishes her as a sunny optimist who is always looking for a good man and a little fun. She accepts that life is going to kick her in the teeth from time to time yet she leads with her heart anyway. Hawkins is the moral center of Blue Jasmine, and she steadies it in the face of a slew of dislikable characters whose oppressiveness could sour the audience.




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Our sixth and seventh place entrants are Amy Adams and Brie Larson. Adams, who is nominated in Best Actress as well, provides the human touch in Her, a movie ostensibly about a relationship between man and machine. Stuck in a loveless marriage with a dingbat, she too develops feelings for an operating system, demonstrating such a scenario is more than just a male fantasy. Larson is also nominated in Best Actress. She is lauded in Supporting Actress for her work in The Spectacular Now. Larson’s character dumps the lead at the start of the movie for what seems like a random reason. As the film proceeds, Larson’s adoration imbues the movie with a compassion for why we the viewers should care about the protagonist. The Spectacular Now marks the fourth time in four years that Brie Larson has received votes in the Best Supporting Actress category, but it is her first nomination.

Our final selections in Best Supporting Actress are Octavia Spencer, Jennifer Garner and Julia Roberts. Spencer triggered massive amounts of sympathy from our staff as she was forced to watch her son die tragically in Fruitvale Station. Garner provided the medical knowledge requisite to found the Dallas Buyers Club, even if she had not intended to do so. And Roberts demonstrated tremendous humanity as a put upon family member tired of hiding all of her family’s dirty secrets only to discover the worst one imaginable.

A few other actresses narrowly missed nomination in the category. Those include Margot Robbie (The Wolf of Wall Street), Carey Mulligan (Inside Llyewn Davis), Alexandra Maria Lara (Rush), Melonie Diaz (Fruitvale Station), Joanna Vanderham (What Maisie Knew), Emma Watson (The Bling Ring), Amy Acker (Much Ado about Nothing), Oprah Winfrey (Lee Daniels’ The Butler) and Daniella Kertesz (World War Z).

2014 Calvin Awards
Calvins Intro
Best Actor
Best Actress
Best Album
Best Cast
Best Character
Best Director
Best Overlooked Film
Best Picture
Best Scene
Best Screenplay
Best Supporting Actor
Best Supporting Actress
Best TV Show
Best Use of Music
Best Videogame
Breakthrough Performance
Worst Performance
Worst Picture



Top 10
Position Actress Film Total Points
1 Lupita Nyong'o 12 Years a Slave 116
2 Scarlett Johansson Her 92
3 Jennifer Lawrence American Hustle 77
4 June Squibb Nebraska 75
5 Sally Hawkins Blue Jasmine 60
6 Amy Adams Her 39
7 Brie Larson The Spectacular Now 37
8 Octavia Spencer Fruitvale Station 33
9 Jennifer Garner Dallas Buyers Club 29
10 Julia Roberts August: Osage County 28




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