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    You are at:Home»Gaming»Amy Madigan’s historic Oscars 2026 win echoes Heath Ledger’s Joker
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    Amy Madigan’s historic Oscars 2026 win echoes Heath Ledger’s Joker

    Earth & BeyondBy Earth & BeyondMarch 16, 2026004 Mins Read
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    Amy Madigan’s historic Oscars 2026 win echoes Heath Ledger’s Joker
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    On Sunday night, Weapons star Amy Madigan won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress at the 2026 Academy Awards. The 75-year-old actor — long celebrated for films like Love Child, Alamo Bay, Field of Dreams, and Gone Baby Gone, not to mention the best HBO show ever according to me, Carnivàle — won her first Oscar for a performance that few would have predicted could go all the way even last August: the magic-wielding, makeup-abusing villainess Aunt Gladys.

    Madigan’s win is both an industry’s long-overdue stamp of approval and a small shock within the category. At first glance, her victory doesn’t scream “Oscar history.” But place the Best Supporting Actress race beside Best Supporting Actor over the past two decades, and something becomes clear: Men win Oscars for playing villains all the time. Women almost never do.

    In 2008, Heath Ledger’s Oscar-winning turn as the Joker in The Dark Knight set a gold standard for a certain kind of mythmaking baddie. A year before, Javier Bardem picked up the same statue for his work as Anton Chigurh in No Country for Old Men; a year later, Christoph Waltz swept up for Inglourious Basterds. Even Robert Downey Jr.’s Oscar-winning role as Lewis Strauss in Oppenheimer — a pronounced villainous turn for Downey Jr. after 15 years spent playing the noble Iron Man — feels like part of the trend.

    The Supporting Actress category tends to reward something different. Many recent winners — Anne Hathaway in Les Misérables, Viola Davis in Fences, Alison Janney in I, Tonya, Regina King in If Beale Street Could Talk, Da’Vine Joy Randolph in The Holdovers — collectively define the “Supporting Actress” as a dimensional co-lead who anchors emotional drama rather than narrative conflict. You’d have to go way back to Ruth Gordon’s 1968 win for Rosemary’s Baby to find anything resembling Aunt Gladys in the winner’s circle.

    Madigan brings Best Supporting Villain mystique in Weapons. Her screen time is brief — even less than Ledger’s in The Dark Knight — but every appearance feels seismic. It’s not just the Joker-esque facepaint. Through Madigan’s almost-over-the-top-but-neeeeever-over-the-line choices, her Gladys embodies the film’s supernatural lore and delights in the discomfort she causes.

    “There’s an amount of physicality and physical humor in it, and I have always done that in almost all the things I have done,” Madigan told the Los Angeles Times last fall. “I enjoy that and that’s just a part of who I was as a kid, and I’m still that person.”

    That spirit shaped the character’s unforgettable look, which Madigan says she developed with costume designer Trish Summerville and special makeup effects designer Jason Collins. The result is a woman with, as Madigan put it, “a certain joie de vivre about her.” She doesn’t give a damn about anything but her own mission.

    The Oscar race itself was hardly a foregone conclusion. Madigan entered the ceremony in a tight three-way contest with Wunmi Mosaku (Sinners) and Teyana Taylor (One Battle After Another), each performer carrying different precursor wins into the night. With Elle Fanning and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas also both nominated for Sentimental Value, the category was widely considered one of the evening’s biggest toss-ups. Maybe Madigan prevailed because the Academy loves honoring a veteran. But also: Aunt Gladys refused to be ignored.

    You know when a supporting character makes an Oscar-worthy impression because Hollywood starts thinking bigger. A Gladys-centric prequel is already reportedly in development at Warner Bros. Pictures. Whether it ultimately materializes may depend on the still-unfolding takeover drama involving Paramount Global and Skydance Media, which seems to have also involved witchcraft.

    But Madigan’s Oscar could change the equation. Years after Ledger’s posthumous win for The Dark Knight, Joaquin Phoenix stepped into Gotham’s chaos and won his own trophy for Joker. Villainy, it turns out, has franchise power. If Aunt Gladys returns, Madigan’s win may be remembered not just as overdue recognition — but as the moment the Academy finally embraced a female villain the way it once crowned the Joker. I hope it’s as huge as it feels.

    Amy echoes Heath Historic Joker Ledgers Madigans Oscars win
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