New Golden Globes honour will be named after Carol Burnett

The 85-year-old Burnett will be on hand to accept her namesake award during the January 6 ceremony

FILE - In this March 10, 2016, file photo, comedian-actress Carol Burnett appears at the 2016 Texas Film Awards at Austin Studios in Austin, Texas. The Golden Globe Awards will introduce a new TV special achievement trophy at next month’s telecast and name it after its first recipient, comedic icon Burnett. (Photo by Jack Plunkett/Invision/AP, File)
Powered by automated translation

The Golden Globe Awards will introduce a new TV special achievement trophy at next month's telecast and name it after its first recipient — comedic icon Carol Burnett.

The Hollywood Foreign Press Association said Tuesday the Carol Burnett Award — the small-screen version of the group's film counterpart, the Cecil B DeMille Award — will annually honour someone "who has made outstanding contributions to television on or off the screen."

The first Carol Burnett Award will, fittingly, go to Burnett, a five-time Golden Globe winner who was the first woman to host a variety sketch show, The Carol Burnett Show, which ran for 11 years and received 25 Emmy Awards.

The 85-year-old Burnett will be on hand to accept her namesake award during the January 6 ceremony, live on NBC.

In a statement, association President Meher Tatna hailed Burnett for breaking barriers while making us laugh. "We are profoundly grateful for her contributions to the entertainment industry and honoured to celebrate her legacy forever at the Golden Globes," she said.

__________________

Read more:

Famous faces spotted at the Brilliant is Beautiful charity event in Dubai — in pictures

Kevin Hart steps down as Oscars host

The big winners at the 40th Cairo International Film Festival

__________________

In addition to her work on TV, theatre and movies, Burnett has established several scholarships around the country, including the Carol Burnett Musical Theatre Competition at her alma mater, The University of California, and the Carrie Hamilton Foundation, to honour the memory of her daughter, who died in 2002.

The Globes are making another change this year: the actual award has been redesigned to be taller and heavier. The new design is two pounds heavier and nearly an inch taller and replaces the previous version's marble base with an all-metal design. The iconic design of a globe wrapped in a film strip remains at the top.