Hollywood had a very French moment this week, and honestly, it was pure drama, charm, and a little bit of adorable awkwardness. Comedy king Jim Carrey walked into the 51st César Awards and walked out with hearts, cheers, and an honorary trophy, all after giving a full speech in French. Yes, French. Accent, pauses, jokes and all!
The crowd loved every second. And the gossip? They were totally on their feet.
A Hollywood star meets French cinema royalty
Carrey, known worldwide for hits like ‘The Mask’ and ‘How the Grinch Stole Christmas’, received the honorary César, a special award usually given to global icons. Last year’s recipient was none other than Julia Roberts, so the bar was high.
The actor was introduced on stage by director Michel Gondry, who worked with him on Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind over two decades ago.
Carrey spoke entirely in French, admitting he is still learning the language. With a strong American accent, he compared acting to sculpting clay, saying each role is shaped by the actor’s heart.
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Then came a surprise twist: he revealed his distant ancestor, Marc-François Carré, was born in Saint-Malo, France, centuries ago before moving to Canada. “This square has come full circle,” he joked, playing on the French word “carré.”
He ended with classic self-deprecating humour: asking if his French sounded “almost mediocre” and admitting his tongue was tired..
Carrey attended with daughter Jane, grandson Jackson, and girlfriend Mina. He thanked them on stage with heartfelt lines, then gave a touching tribute to his late father Percy Joseph Carrey, calling him the funniest man he ever knew and crediting him for teaching love, generosity, and laughter.
Career built on laughter and depth
Before becoming a movie superstar, Carrey started as a stand-up comedian and rose to fame on ‘In Living Color’. Then ‘1994’ happened. Boom! Back-to-back hits like ‘Ace Ventura: Pet Detective’, and ‘Dumb and Dumber’ turned him into a global sensation.
But he didn’t stop at comedy. Powerful roles in ‘The Truman Show’, and ‘Man on the Moon’ showed his serious acting range and won him two Golden Globes.
France had already honoured him before naming him a Knight of the National Order of Arts and Letters in 2010. He also received the Charlie Chaplin Award at the BAFTA Britannia Awards for comedy classics like ‘Liar Liar’ and ‘Bruce Almighty’.