This year’s tributees assembled for a press conference Tuesday morning ahead of the awards, which will be aired on CTV in Canada at at 8PM ET/PT, on demand on Crave, and streaming internationally via Variety.com at 8:30PM ET/ 5:30PM PT.

Connecting to the TIFF Talk conference from their homes, from California (Zhao and Hopkins) and New Orleans (Blanchard) to London (Winslet), the honorees said they appreciated the lockdown time spent with their families. Winslet and Blanchard (winner of the TIFF Variety Artisan Award) were glad their kids could finally return to school. And 82-year-old Hopkins was beating the virus with Rachmaninoff, he said. “I play piano four hours a day. It keeps my brain active.” Related 2023 Brings a Diverse Set of Oscar Contenders. Will the Final Nominees Reflect that? ‘Living’: The Prime of Mr. Bill Nighy Related Oscars 2023: Best Makeup and Hairstyling Predictions Oscars 2023: Can Anyone Top ‘Maverick’ in Best Sound?
Everyone was missing the communal festival experience, being able to “literally crash into people in hotel lobbies,” said Winslet, “and the excitement of running into people you admire. Anthony, I’ve been watching you since I was a baby and wish we were in the same space and could hug and connect. It’s sad not to get that bit of TIFF. It is about closeness, and connecting to people through their films and artistry…even on this strange platform, it’s important to keep connecting and sharing like this.” Both Winslet and Hopkins embraced performing in intimate and rewarding low-budget films, they said. Acting in period relationship drama “Ammonite” opposite Saoirse Ronan “terrified” Winslet: “I was given the opportunity to play someone I thought, ‘I’m not sure I can do.’” Neon Even though Florian Zeller’s play-to-film “The Father” is “intense and disturbing,” said Hopkins, “it was free and easy with Olivia. I enjoyed it.”

Instead of being in Venice to accept her Golden Lion, TIFF Ebert Director Award-winner Zhao attended the Friday night Telluride drive-in in Pasadena with star Frances McDormand for “Nomadland” (December 4, Searchlight). Zhao edited both “Nomadland” and her upcoming 2021 Marvel film “Eternals” at the same time, she said: “It was stressful, but it was a blessing. When one isn’t going great, emotionally I think the other one is going to work. It was a nice balance, editing both films, it was informative for both, sometimes I learn something on one and take it to the other. It was a fruitful experience.” Also a Golden Lion winner was Mira Nair (“Monsoon Wedding”), who is accepting the TIFF Jeff Skoll Award in Impact Media Tuesday night before closing the festival September 19 with her first TV series, “A Suitable Boy.” After debuting “Monsoon Wedding” in Venice in 2001, Nair and her team repaired to a local hotel “and got on tables and put on the soundtrack and had the best party of Venice,” she said. “Festivals are like magnets. We are diseased with cinema, we are wonderfully sick people who need to know there is an audience.” The winner of the TIFF Emerging Talent Award, Tracey Deer, thanked TIFF’s studio and filmmaker labs for helping her to develop her first film “Beans,” a ten-year personal journey. Canadian musician Shawn Mendes will perform as part of the pre-recorded Awards broadcast, which is hosted by ETALK’s Chloe Wilde and Tyrone Edwards. Presenters include Hopkins’ “The Father” costar Olivia Colman, “One Night in Miami” director Regina King, “Da 5 Bloods” star Delroy Lindo, Ava DuVernay, Colin Farrell, Jodie Foster, Tabu, and more. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.

TIFF Tribute Awards Boost Oscar Contenders Kate Winslet and Chloe Zhao - 47