photo afp

Amy Madigan won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress at the 98th Academy Awards for her role as Aunt Gladys in the film Weapons.

The 75-year-old actor received the honour during the ceremony at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood. Madigan was presented the award by the previous year’s winner Zoe Saldaña.

Madigan had previously been nominated in the same category in 1985 for her role in Twice in a Lifetime. Her win for Weapons marks the first Oscar of her career.

After hearing her name announced, Madigan appeared surprised as she began her acceptance speech. “This is great,” she said at the start of her remarks.

During the speech, she spoke about how she had tried to plan what to say the previous evening. Madigan also thanked Weapons director Zach Cregger and acknowledged the other nominees in the Best Supporting Actress category, including Elle Fanning, Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas, Wunmi Mosaku and Teyana Taylor.

Madigan concluded her speech by thanking members of her family, including her daughter Lilly and her husband Ed Harris.

“The most important is my beloved Ed, who’s been with me forever and that’s a long ass time. And none of this would mean anything if he wasn’t by my side,” Madigan said.

Harris, an actor who has received four Academy Award nominations for films including Apollo 13, The Truman Show, Pollock and The Hours, has been married to Madigan since 1983.

Madigan was the only nominee for Weapons at the 2026 Academy Awards. Her performance in the film had already received recognition earlier in the awards season, including wins at the Critics’ Choice Awards and the Actor Awards, as well as a nomination at the Golden Globes.

Amy Madigan Oscars Win for ‘Weapons’ Breaks 40-Year Record — Who Is the Actress Behind Horror’s Most Terrifying Villain?

The 75-year-old veteran actress is the second performer ever to win Best Supporting Actress for playing a horror villain

Share on FacebookShare on LinkedInShare on RedditShare on FlipboardShare on Pocket

Amy Madigan Ed Harris

Ed Harris, a four-time Oscar nominee without a win, sat beside his wife of 42 years as she finally took home the statuette at the 98th Academy Awards. X

Amy Madigan won the Best Supporting Actress award at the 98th Academy Awards on Sunday for her portrayal of flesh-eating witch Aunt Gladys in Zach Cregger’s horror film Weapons, setting a new record for the longest gap between a first Oscar nomination and a first win for any actress.

The 75-year-old veteran triumphed 40 years and one month after her first nomination for 1985’s Twice in a Lifetime in 1986. The previous record holder was Geraldine Page, who won for The Trip to Bountiful at the 1986 Oscars, 32 years after her first nomination for Hondo in 1954.

‘This is great!’ Madigan exclaimed after letting out what observers described as a witch-like cackle. ‘Everybody is asking me in the press, ‘Well, it’s been 40 years, and, you know, what’s different about this time? What’s different is this little gold guy.’

A Historic Win for Horror

Amy Madigan Stunned as ‘Weapons’ Fans Turn Aunt Gladys Into a ‘Sex Icon’ After Critics Choice Awards Win 
Read more
Amy Madigan Stunned as ‘Weapons’ Fans Turn Aunt Gladys Into a ‘Sex Icon’ After Critics Choice Awards Win

Madigan’s victory marks only the second time an actress has won Best Supporting Actress for portraying a horror villain. The first was Ruth Gordon, who claimed the award in 1969 for playing satanic cult member Minnie Castevet in Rosemary’s Baby.

What makes the win even more striking is Madigan’s limited screen time. She appears in Weapons for fewer than 15 minutes, yet her performance as the heavily made-up, wig-wearing antagonist who terrorises a small town became a pop culture phenomenon. Her image inspired Halloween costumes, viral memes, and merchandise throughout the past year.

The role demanded physical commitment. Director Cregger has said Madigan insisted on performing almost all her own stunts, including an over-the-top chase sequence that involved running and crashing through walls and windows.

Amy Madigan

Madigan’s brief role as the heavily made-up, wig-wearing antagonist in Weapons turned her into a pop culture icon, inspiring costumes, memes, and merchandise. X

The Actress Hollywood Overlooked

Behind Aunt Gladys is an actress whose career spans more than four decades, yet she openly acknowledged feeling sidelined by the industry for years.

Madigan’s film credits include playing Kevin Costner’s wife in the beloved baseball classic Field of Dreams, John Candy’s girlfriend Chanice in John Hughes’ Uncle Buck, and Beatrice McCready in Ben Affleck’s directorial debut Gone Baby Gone.

Amy Madigan

Madigan in ‘Field of Dreams’, ‘Uncle Buck’, and ‘Gone Baby Gone’. X
She won a Golden Globe and earned an Emmy nomination for her portrayal of attorney Sarah Weddington in the 1989 television film Roe vs. Wade. Her work in the HBO series Carnivàle and recurring roles on Grey’s Anatomy and Fringe demonstrated her range across genres.

However, meaningful roles became scarce. ‘My husband works a lot more than I do,’ Madigan said in a 2010 interview with The Los Angeles Times. ‘You know what the situation is. The reality is you have to make your peace with it sometimes even when you have a depressive day.’

A Couple With Four Nominations and One Win

Madigan attended the ceremony with husband Ed Harris, to whom she has been married for 42 years, after they met during a 1980 rehearsal for the play Cowboy Mouth. While they later starred together in 1984’s Places in the Heart, their off-screen partnership began years earlier. Harris himself has earned four Oscar nominations but has never won. He received nods for Apollo 13The Truman ShowPollock, and The Hours.

‘The most important is my beloved Ed,’ Madigan said during her acceptance speech, ‘who’s been with me forever, and that’s a long ass time.’

Her victory capped a dominant awards season. She had already collected the Screen Actors Guild Actor Award and the Critics Choice Award for Supporting Actress. The win came in one of the tightest races in recent memory, with the major precursor awards split three ways between Madigan, Golden Globe winner Teyana Taylor for One Battle After Another, and BAFTA champion Wunmi Mosaku for Sinners.

What Comes Next

The success of Aunt Gladys has reportedly sparked plans for a prequel exploring the character’s origins. ‘Zach has a map of what he would like to do,’ Madigan told The Hollywood Reporter. ‘But as we know about this business, until it’s real, it’s not real. It would be such a blast, and it would be really great if we could revisit her in some way. I’m excited about that possibility.’

For an actress who spent years waiting for the phone to ring, Oscar night delivered more than a golden statuette. It offered proof that the best performance of a career can arrive at any age.