It’s not years, honey, it’s mileage.
Harrison Ford shed tears while accepting his Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2026 SAG Acting Awards on Sunday, thanking his wife Calista Flockhart and praising other A-listers for their support over the years.
Woody Harrelson presented the 83-year-old Ford with the prestigious honor in front of a star-studded crowd at the Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall in Los Angeles.
A montage highlighting the “Indiana Jones” star’s legendary 70-year career also played before Ford took the podium.
“While we greatly appreciate this consideration, it is also true that we are extremely humbled,” Ford began. “I’m in a room of actors, most of whom are here to accept awards for great work, while I’m here to accept awards for being alive.
“It’s a little strange to receive a lifetime achievement award at the halfway point in your career, though,” he joked. “It’s a bit early, isn’t it? I’m still a working actor.”
Ford went on to explain that he was “not an overnight success” and that he “struggled for about 15 years” from acting to working as a carpenter “before I landed a movie that was a huge success.”
“None of this happened in isolation,” he said, before referencing their roles as Han Solo and Indiana Jones in the iconic “Star Wars” and “Indiana Jones” series. “Thank you, George Lucas. Thank you, Steven Spielberg.”
After giving a shout out to Francis Ford Coppola and the late Pat McQueenney, who was his manager for 30 years, Ford spoke about when he first fell in love with acting in his early 20s.
“When I was in my third year of college, I was a little lost,” he recalls. “I was depressed at school, feeling isolated and alone. Then I found a group of people who run theater, storytellers. People I once thought were nerds turned out to be my people. I had found my calling.”
“Working with other actors is one of the great joys of my life,” he emphasized. “My career has been built not only on their work, but on the work of all the directors and crew I’ve ever been on set with. It’s an honor and a privilege to work with them to create this work for audiences.”
Following a joke about how Hollywood is “a tough business to break out of,” Ford praised how movies and TV shows “enhance our experiences” and unite us with their “unique ability to create emotional connections.”
“Sometimes we make entertainment, sometimes we make art, sometimes we make both at the same time,” he said. “And if you’re really lucky, sometimes you can make a living doing it.”
Mr. Ford concluded his moving speech by promising to “keep the door open for the next lost boy looking for a place to belong.”
“I’m a really lucky guy. I’m lucky to have found my friends, I’m lucky to have a job that challenges me, and I’m lucky to still be doing it,” he admitted. “I don’t take that for granted.”
The “Patriot Games” star ended his speech by thanking several people close to him.
“I would like to express my deepest gratitude to my colleagues, my beautiful wife Calista, and my family for giving me love and encouragement through all of this,” he said.
“And thank you to SAG-AFTRA for giving me this award. This is very encouraging.”
The Life Achievement Award is the highest honor SAG-AFTRA bestows on its members each year. Previous winners include Jane Fonda, Barbra Streisand, Sally Field, Helen Mirren, and Robert De Niro.
“I am deeply honored to be selected as this year’s SAG-AFTRA Lifetime Achievement Award recipient,” Ford said in a statement after being announced as the 2026 recipient.
“It means a lot to me to be recognized by my fellow actors,” the Star Wars star continued. “I’ve spent most of my life on film sets, working with amazing actors and crew, and I’ve always been grateful to be a part of this community.”
Meanwhile, when SAG-AFTRA Chairman Sean Astin announced the Blade Runner star as this year’s recipient in December 2025, he called Ford a “unique figure in American life” and “an actor whose iconic characters have shaped global culture.”
“His career was endlessly exciting and he always returned to his love of acting,” Astin said. “We are honored to celebrate a legend who had an indelible impact on our craft.”
Ford’s Hollywood career began with a few bit and uncredited roles throughout the 1960s, but his big break came in 1973 when George Lucas cast him in American Graffiti.
Four years later, Lucas cast Ford in the iconic role of Han Solo in the first Star Wars film, which cemented his status as a leading man and helped him land the role of Indiana Jones in Steven Spielberg’s 1981 film Raiders of the Lost Ark.
He then starred in the classic sci-fi film “Blade Runner” in 1982, and three years later in the neo-noir crime thriller “Witness.”
Ford received his only Best Actor Oscar nomination for his role as Detective Captain John Book in The Witness.
Most recently, the Chicago native returned to the roles that first captivated audiences, including Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015), Blade Runner 2049 (2017) and Indiana Jones and the Dial (2023).
He also joined the Marvel Cinematic Universe as Thunderbolt Ross/Red Hulk in last year’s Captain America: Brave New World.
While most of Ford’s career as an actor was focused on the big screen, he began transitioning to television in the 2020s with shows like “1923” and “Shrinking.”
Ford received his first Emmy nomination for Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series in 2025 for his role as Dr. Paul Rose on Apple TV+’s hit series “Shrinking.”
Ford’s Lifetime Achievement Award honor came nearly a month after the “Fugitive” star hinted that he might retire from acting once “The Shrinking” wrapped.
“Where do we go from here?” he told The Hollywood Reporter last month. “Given the tools we use and the concept behind this series, the type of work we can do is remarkable.”
“And if it’s all here, that’s enough,” the Hollywood legend added. “This is a different kind of job for me, and I’ve been doing this for a long time.”
