Ahead of Sunday night's Golden Globe Awards, attendees gathered on the red carpet to chat and appear for the media.
Stone's decision to bring King isn't a wholly unprecedented move; in 2015, the year Reese Witherspoon played Cheryl Strayed in Wild, the film based on Strayed's book, she took the author as her date.
He added that it's been years since a white man has been this nervous in Hollywood, and said that for the male nominees in the audience, it's the first time in months "it won't be terrifying to hear your name read out loud". "Domestic workers know the power of organizing and see this moment of unity among women across industries as a turning point for our movement end sexual harassment and violence once and for all".
A number of these activists represent women outside of the entertainment industry, in areas where the type of abuse Time's Up aims to eradicate is as deeply entrenched as is Hollywood.
Streep, nominated for her performance in "The Post", plans to attend the show with Ai-jen Poo, the director of the National Domestic Workers Alliance and co-director of the Caring Across Generations Campaign.
Laura Dern will bring Mónica Ramírez, and attorney and advocate dedicated to ending violence against women, particularly against farmworkers, Latina and immigrant women.
Time's Up organizers Meryl Streep, Amy Poehler and Michelle Williams, who attended with #MeToo founder Tarana Burke, all wore black on the carpet. Clemente is a community organizer, political commentator and 2008 vice presidential candidate for the Green Party ticket.
- Calina Lawrence, a Suquamish Tribe member, singer and activist for, among other causes, Native American treaty and water rights, will be going with Ms. Woodley.
Larasi, who came as a guest of Emma Watson, is the executive director of Imkaan, a network of British network organizations that fights violence against black and minority women.
In their joint red carpet interview, King spoke before Stone.
"Every day should be a platform for conversations that are helpful for the human race to be better", she said. "Her generation." She was wearing black, she said, "to support men and women who have been silenced by sexual harassment and sexual violence".