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This image released by IFC Films shows Ellar Coltrane at age six in a scene from the film,"Boyhood." (AP Photo/IFC Films) Image Credit: AP

Revellers in Hollywood’s quickening awards season will be pushed to two sides of the dance floor in Thursday’s Golden Globes nominations: drama and comedy.

The 72nd annual Golden Globe Awards will be announced on Thursday at 5.20 UAE time. The nominations will be streamed live from the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, California, on GoldenGlobes.com, with top categories also carried live by NBC’s Today. Kate Beckinsale, Jeremy Piven, Paula Patton and Peter Krause will be on hand to read the nominees.

The Hollywood Foreign Press Association’s way of dividing the movie world in half should result in some extra love for funnier films often edged out by their more serious brethren. Expect the likes of Wes Anderson’s Grand Budapest Hotel, the Disney musical Into the Woods and Bill Murray’s St Vincent to find room among this season’s favourites such as Boyhood, Birdman, Selma and The Imitation Game.

The drama-comedy separation isn’t always clean (the black-and-white yuckfest Nebraska somehow squeaked into comedy last year), but the Globes’ embrace of comedy (along with hosts Tina Fey and Amy Poehler) has often made for a livelier mix.

For the third time in a row, the Globes telecast will be hosted by Fey and Poehler. The show will air live from the Beverly Hilton on Sunday, January 11. Last year’s awards drew 20.9 million viewers, marking it the most-watched Globes since 2004.

The Hollywood Foreign Press, a collection of about 85 largely freelance journalists, is known for their occasionally curious picks and their penchant for finding reason to honour big-name celebrities. So some curveballs will likely be tossed on Thursday, though their influence on the larger Oscar race will be less certain.

Thus far, Richard Linklater’s long-in-the-making coming-of-age drama Boyhood has emerged as the awards season favourite, taking top honours from the New York Film Critics Circle and the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. But support is also strong for the Michael Keaton-led Birdman (which topped the Gotham Independent Awards), the civil rights drama Selma, the Second World War code-breaker tale The Imitation Game and the Stephen Hawking biopic The Theory of Everything.

On Wednesday, the Screen Actors Guild — a strong predictor of the Academy Awards since its memberships overlap a lot — nominated the ensemble casts of Birdman, Boyhood, The Imitation Game, The Theory of Everything and Grand Budapest Hotel.

Last year, the Globes chose the eventual Academy Awards best-picture winner, 12 Years a Slave, as its best drama. Best comedy or musical went to American Hustle.