If you have seen this movie and don't remember Andrew Garfield circling Scarlett Johansson and Natalie Portman in the king's court, that would be because he did not actually appear in the film. ( "Don't Lose Your Head" is not the bop that either Catherine of Aragon or Anna of Cleves get, but I digress). For those of you who took British Lit in college OR have seen Six: The Musical recently, this is the first "beheaded" in the "divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived" saga. Kathy Hoang/BuzzFeed, Michelle Faye/FX, Everett Collection: Mark Rogers/Lionsgate, Paramount Pictures, 20th Century Fox Film Corp., Macall Polay/Netflix, Sony Pictures Releasing Honorary mention: Angels in America (2017) - Prior WalterĬoming up dead last on this ranking is our horny Elizabethan drama about the incestuous love triangle of Anne Boleyn, her husband King Henry VIII, and her sister Mary Boleyn (the titular "other").
Thankfully, we’re here to give Andy the recognition that this year’s Oscars wouldn’t (the Academy couldn't come to their senses), by ranking all of his on-screen performances, from his niche early-career TV spots to all his ass-out leading man moments. But I’m fully convinced part of that respite will include recalibrating his plans to secure an EGOT after being passed over for so many awards this year. The actor recently told Variety that he would be taking some time off following his performance in Under the Banner of Heaven to “rest for a little bit” after the “washing machine” of awards season. There’s no way, especially post-Tony win, that Andy hasn’t allowed the possibility of procuring Emmy, Oscar, and Grammy awards to cross his mind.
He kicked off his journey to EGOT status with a Tony Award for Angels in America back in 2018, currently has two Best Actor nominations from the Academy under his belt, the voice of a grammy-worthy angel (as recently revealed in TTB) and now, a likely Emmy-bound limited series out. Boom! and an internet-dominating reprisal of his role as Peter Parker in Spider-Man: No Way Home, Garfield is back in the conversation yet again playing a doubtful mormon-detective in FX's Under the Banner of Heaven - his fourth recent performance in a deeply religious role following Hacksaw Ridge, The Eyes of Tammy Faye, and Silence.īesides his great hair, impressive accent work, and reputation for serving ass - occasionally with a side of a crisis in faith - and then dying, our biggest takeaway from watching every single one of his performances is that this man will EGOT in his lifetime. Welcome, friends, fans, and chronically thirsty online folks to the Andrew Garfield renaissance! Following headline-grabbing performances in The Eyes of Tammy Faye and Tick, Tick.