Celebrity
Harrison Ford tears up while accepting Life Achievement Award at SAG Actor Awards 2026
It’s not the years, honey, it’s the mileage.
Harrison Ford teared up while accepting the Life Achievement Award at Sunday’s 2026 SAG Actor Awards, thanking his wife, Calista Flockhart, and crediting other A-listers for their support over the years.
Woody Harrelson presented the prestigious honor to Ford, 83, in front of the star-studded crowd at the Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall in Los Angeles.
A montage highlighting the “Indiana Jones” star’s legendary seven-decade career also played before Ford stepped up to the podium.
“I feel incredibly grateful for this kind attention, but to be clear, I’m also quite humbled,” Ford began. “I’m in a room of actors, most of whom are here to receive a prize for their amazing work. While I’m here to receive a prize for being alive.
“That said, it’s a little weird to be getting a lifetime achievement award at the halfway point of my career,” he joked. “It’s a little early, isn’t it? I’m still a working actor.”
Ford went on to explain how he “was not an overnight success” and that he “struggled for about 15 years” going from acting jobs to carpentry until he “got a part in a wildly successful film.”
“None of this happened on its own,” he noted, before alluding to his roles as Han Solo and Indiana Jones in the iconic “Star Wars” and “Indiana Jones” franchises. “Thank you, George Lucas, thank you, Steven Spielberg.”
After also giving shout-outs to Francis Ford Coppola and his late manager of 30 years, Pat McQueeney, Ford spoke about when he was first drawn to acting in his early 20s.
“In my third year of college, I was a little lost,” he recalled. “I was failing at school, I felt isolated and alone, and then I found a company of people who ran plays: storytellers. People I once thought were geeks turned out to be my people. I found a calling.”
“The work I do with other actors is one of the great joys of my life,” he emphasized. “My career is built on their work as well as the work of directors and every crew member I’ve ever been on set with. To create together for an audience is an honor and a privilege.”
Following a joke about how Hollywood is a “tough business to get out of,” Ford celebrated how movies and TV shows “elevate our experiences” and bring us together with their “unique capacity for emotional connection.”
“Sometimes we make entertainment, sometimes we make art, and sometimes we make both of them at the same time,” he said. “And sometimes, if we’re really lucky, we can make a living.”
Ford wound his touching speech down by promising to “keep the door open for the next lost boy looking for a place to belong.”
“I’m indeed a lucky guy. Lucky to have found my people, lucky to have work to challenge me, lucky to still be doing it,” he acknowledged. “I don’t take that for granted.”
The “Patriot Games” star ended his speech by thanking several individuals close to him.
“I want to say thank you, from the bottom of my heart, to my peers, my beautiful wife, Calista, and my family who have given me love and courage through all of it,” he shared.
“And thank you, SAG-AFTRA, for giving me this prize. This is very encouraging.”
The Life Achievement Award is the highest honor that SAG-AFTRA presents to its members each year. Some of the award’s previous recipients include Jane Fonda, Barbra Streisand, Sally Field, Helen Mirren and Robert De Niro.
“I am deeply honored to be chosen as this year’s recipient of the SAG-AFTRA Life Achievement Award,” Ford said in a statement after he was announced as the 2026 recipient.
“To be acknowledged by my fellow actors means a great deal to me,” the “Star Wars” star continued. “I’ve spent most of my life on film sets, working alongside incredible actors and crews, and I’ve always felt grateful to be part of this community.”
SAG-AFTRA President Sean Astin, meanwhile, called Ford a “singular presence in American life” and “an actor whose iconic characters have shaped world culture” upon announcing the “Blade Runner” star as this year’s recipient in December 2025.
“His career has been endlessly exciting, always returning to his love of acting,” Astin shared. “We are honored to celebrate a legend whose impact on our craft is indelible.”
Although Ford’s Hollywood career began with several minor and uncredited roles throughout the 1960s, his big break came in 1973 when George Lucas cast him in “American Graffiti.”
Lucas went on to cast Ford as the iconic Han Solo in the first “Star Wars” film four years later, which solidified his leading man status and helped him land the role of Indiana Jones in Steven Spielberg’s “Raiders of the Lost Ark” in 1981.
He later starred in the sci-fi classic “Blade Runner” in 1982, followed by the neo-noir crime thriller “Witness” three years later.
Ford’s role as Detective Captain John Book in “Witness” earned him, so far, his only Oscar nomination for best actor.
More recently, the Chicago native returned to the roles that made audiences first fall in love with him, including “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” (2015), “Blade Runner 2049” (2017) and “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” (2023).
He also joined the Marvel Cinematic Universe as Thunderbolt Ross/Red Hulk in last year’s “Captain America: Brave New World.”
Although the majority of Ford’s career as an actor focused on the big screen, he began transitioning to TV in the 2020s for shows like “1923” and “Shrinking.”
His role as Dr. Paul Rhoades in the hit Apple TV+ series “Shrinking” landed Ford his first-ever Emmy nomination (for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series) in 2025.
Ford’s Life Achievement Award honor came nearly a month after the “Fugitive” star hinted that he might retire from acting once “Shrinking” concludes.
“Where do you go from here?” he told the Hollywood Reporter last month. “The kind of work that we’re able to do is remarkable given the tools we have to work with, and the notion that lies behind this series.”
“And if it was all over here, that would be sufficient,” the Hollywood legend added. “This has been a different kind of job for me, and I’ve been doing this for a long time.”
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