Tinsel Town Troublemakers - Meet the Stars Going Against the Grain

    

    On Monday, March 15, 2026, thirty-six year old actress Jessie Buckley won the best actress Academy Award for her role in the Shakespeare-inspired film Hamnet. Dedicating the award to "the beautiful chaos of a mother's heart," Buckley also took a moment during her acceptance speech to thank her husband for his support and to send a special message of love to her young daughter, who she "can't wait to discover life beside," creating a precious picture of what really matters in the actress's life amidst the fever pitch of Hollywood's biggest night. Buckley's speech is also particularly powerful as it acts as a counterpoint to the general Hollywood consensus that says that marriage and children are nothing but roadblocks to self-gratifying success and, as such, are better avoided or disposed of. 
    Previously explored in a Heartbeat Press The Blacklist column, this attitude was on stark display at another award ceremony in 2019, where actress Michelle Williams credited previous abortions for her success (sparking cheers and applause from the attending audience) and is the general attitude of Tinsel Town, where residents either have no love for Pro-Life ideals or, alternatively, have gone along with majority morality because of an innate need to conform. Psychology suggests that this need to be a part of something is not always a bad thing, but, in cases where it is used as a pulse point for anonymity-driven atrocity endorsement, the "herd" is not on the right side of history. Psychology also suggests that deviating from Herd Mentality is not impossible - but doing so often takes strength and (in many cases) personal past experience coaxing morality down the path less traveled. To this end, Jessie Buckley is not the only actor in Hollywood who values life and familial fulfillment; her allies are simply, seemingly, few and far between. However, that hardly matters when their stories are as powerful as their voices are thunderous. 
    Actress and proud mother of four Patricia Heaton (Everybody Loves Raymond and The Middle) is Pro-Life and has absolutely no qualms about declaring those beliefs loud enough for everyone to hear. Having been quoted supporting mothers ("A woman experiencing an unplanned pregnancy also deserves to experience unplanned joy." - 2010), Heaton has also been particularly vocal about the need to recognize the science behind pregnancy, which is often ignored when making way for abortion justification. Heaton has been quoted on this issue several times, saying, "I know this is hard for you to grasp; but women of all kinds who are pro-science and anti-violence don't believe that ending the life of your developing son or daughter in your womb is liberating or progressive. It's tyrannical and barbaric," and "Life begins at conception. Said every scientist ever." Known for playing fierce mothers who don't apologize for defending their children, Patricia Heaton evidently carries that same gumption into real life and her personal principles. 
    Kelsey Grammer, famous for playing TV's most pedantic psychiatrist, knows a little something about Herd Mentality and he is part of the Pro-Life movement. After carelessly accepting abortion for decades, Grammer changed his views and has spoken about the transformation as recently as 2025, while promoting his memoir Karen: A Brother Remembers. In an interview, the actor spoke about the sorrow he felt over the loss of his sister and likened it to the grief and guilt he has born toward children that he allowed two former partners to abort. One was willingly terminated in order to save the life of a preborn twin (though there are success stories where selective abortion proved to be unnecessary) and the other was done because Grammer did not have the strength to champion his child's life. Speaking on this death, Grammer said he was "willing" to keep the child but "did not plead with her to save his life." However, the murder of the actor's sister six months after the abortion and the natural growth of personal morals over the years have since shifted Grammer's perspective on the preciousness of life, which he now boldly defends. Fervently clinging to a faith that also grew out of sorrow, Grammer recognizes the redemption that all his failings have been afforded, saying, "Jesus made a difference in my life. That's not anything I'll apologize for." 
    Pro-Life pariah status in Hollywood is not only limited to TV. World famous film actress Brooke Shields has condemned abortion, calling the practice's use as birth control "very wrong," and Dune actor Timothée Chalamet has vocally bucked another aspect of the self-centered Cinema City starter-kit by noting his earnest desire to be a father one day, calling a life without children "bleak." Even celebrities like Justin Bieber, Jack Nicholson, and Celine Dion have championed the Pro-Life movement because they were each saved from abortion by mothers who valued and chose life. 
    Clearly, the Pro-Life movement is not absent from a city known for its worship of self-promotion at any cost. It is simply present in a small but formidable minority that sees no reason why truth cannot win the day, and that is precisely where the power of the Pro-Life movement lies. After all, if the movies are to be believed, the underdog always triumphs. 



Photo Credit: Ouchiku Studio.com 

See Also: March 2026 Edition Other News and Book Reviews