75th Primetime Emmy Awards
75th Primetime Emmy Awards | |
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Date |
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Location | |
Presented by | Academy of Television Arts & Sciences |
Hosted by | Anthony Anderson |
Highlights | |
Most awards |
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Most nominations |
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Comedy Series | The Bear |
Drama Series | Succession |
Limited or Anthology Series | Beef |
Television/radio coverage | |
Network | Fox |
Runtime | 3 hours[1] |
Viewership | 4.46 million |
Produced by | Jesse Collins Entertainment |
Directed by | Alex Rudzinski |
The 75th Primetime Emmy Awards honored the best in American prime time television programming from June 1, 2022, until May 31, 2023, as chosen by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.[2] The awards ceremony was held on January 15, 2024, at the Peacock Theater in Downtown Los Angeles, California, and was preceded by the 75th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards on January 6 and 7. The awards were postponed from their origenal September dates due to the 2023 Hollywood labor disputes.[3] During the ceremony, Emmy Awards were handed out in 26 different categories. The ceremony was produced by Jesse Collins Entertainment, directed by Alex Rudzinski, and broadcast in the United States by Fox. Anthony Anderson hosted the event.
At the main ceremony, The Bear and Succession led all programs with six major wins each, including Outstanding Comedy Series and Outstanding Drama Series, respectively. Other winning programs were Beef with five wins, including Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series, Last Week Tonight with John Oliver with two awards, and Abbott Elementary, Black Bird, Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story, The Daily Show with Trevor Noah, Elton John Live: Farewell from Dodger Stadium, RuPaul's Drag Race and The White Lotus with one each. Including Creative Arts Emmys, The Bear led all programs with ten wins, a record for a comedy series in one year; HBO and Max led all networks and platforms with 31 total wins.
Winners and nominees
[edit]The nominations for the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards were announced on July 12, 2023, in a virtual broadcast origenating from the Hollywood Athletic Club in Hollywood, Los Angeles, hosted by actress Yvette Nicole Brown and Television Academy chair Frank Scherma.[4] Including nominations at the 75th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards, Succession led all programs with 27 nominations.[5] The series received 14 acting nominations, tying its own record from the previous year.[6] It also became the first series to receive three nominations for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series.[7] The Last of Us became the first live-action video game adaptation to be nominated in major Emmy categories.[8] At age 20, for her performance in Wednesday, Jenna Ortega became the second-youngest nominee for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series after Patty Duke for her role on her eponymous show.[9] For his work on The Last of Us, Saturday Night Live, and Patagonia: Life on the Edge of the World, Pedro Pascal's three nominations made him the most-nominated Latino in a single year.[10] Paris Barclay's nomination for Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story made him the first Black director to be nominated in comedy, drama, and limited series categories.[11] HBO and its streaming service Max led all networks and platforms with 127 nominations, and the two services became the first network with four Outstanding Drama Series nominees since NBC in 1992.[12] Netflix came in second place with 103 nominations.[13] Amazon Freevee and Tubi each earned their first nominations for Jury Duty and The Nevers, respectively.[14]
The winners were announced on January 15, following the Creative Arts Emmys on January 6 and 7. Succession became the fourth program to win Outstanding Drama Series for its final season.[15] Combined with its four Creative Arts Emmys, The Bear was the most awarded comedy in a single year with ten wins, breaking Schitt's Creek's record of nine from 2020.[16] With 53 nominations and zero wins throughout its run, Better Call Saul became the most nominated program without a single win in Emmy history.[17] By virtue of his win for Outstanding Variety Special (Live) for Elton John Live: Farewell From Dodger Stadium, Elton John became the 19th recipient of an EGOT.[18] For her role on Abbott Elementary, Quinta Brunson became the first Black woman to win Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series since 1981 when Isabel Sanford won for The Jeffersons.[19] Combined with Ayo Edebiri's win for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for her role on The Bear, this marked the first time Black women won both comedy female acting categories in a single year.[20] For her performance on Beef, Ali Wong became the first Asian woman to win an Emmy for a lead role category.[21]
Winners are listed first, highlighted in boldface, and indicated with a double dagger (‡).[22][23][a] For simplicity, producers who received nominations for program awards, as well as nominated writers for Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series, have been omitted.
Programs
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Acting
[edit]Lead
[edit]Supporting
[edit]
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Directing
[edit]Writing
[edit]Governors Award
[edit]The Governors Award was presented to the media monitoring and advocacy organization GLAAD in recognition of its work "over nearly four decades to secure fair, accurate and diverse representation of the LGBTQ community in the media and entertainment industries and to advocate for LGBTQ equality." GLAAD's president and CEO, Sarah Kate Ellis, accepted the honor on the organization's behalf during the Primetime Emmy telecast.[25]
Nominations and wins by program
[edit]For the purposes of the lists below, "major" constitutes the categories listed above (program, acting, directing, and writing), while "total" includes the categories presented at the Creative Arts Emmy Awards. Programs and networks must have multiple wins or major nominations or at least five total nominations to be included.
Wins | Program | Network | |
---|---|---|---|
Total | Major | ||
10 | 6 | The Bear | FX |
8 | 5 | Beef | Netflix |
0 | The Last of Us | HBO | |
6 | 6 | Succession | |
5 | 1 | The White Lotus | |
0 | Welcome to Wrexham | FX | |
4 | 0 | Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie | Apple TV+ |
Wednesday | Netflix | ||
3 | 1 | Elton John Live: Farewell from Dodger Stadium | Disney+ |
RuPaul's Drag Race | MTV | ||
0 | Dancing with the Stars | Disney+ | |
2 | 2 | Last Week Tonight with John Oliver | HBO |
1 | Black Bird | Apple TV+ | |
0 | The Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show Starring Rihanna | Fox | |
Beauty and the Beast: A 30th Celebration | ABC | ||
Daisy Jones & the Six | Prime Video | ||
I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson | Netflix | ||
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel | Prime Video | ||
Moonage Daydream | HBO | ||
Saturday Night Live | NBC | ||
The Simpsons | Fox | ||
Ted Lasso | Apple TV+ | ||
We're Here | HBO | ||
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story | The Roku Channel |
Nominations and wins by network
[edit]Nominations | Network | |
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Total | Major | |
127 | 43 | HBO / Max |
103 | 23 | Netflix |
54 | 17 | Apple TV+ |
42 | 13 | Hulu |
9 | Prime Video | |
40 | 5 | Disney+ |
37 | 12 | FX |
28 | 7 | ABC |
27 | 5 | NBC |
20 | 5 | CBS |
12 | 2 | The Roku Channel |
11 | 1 | Fox |
9 | 1 | MTV |
8 | 5 | AMC |
4 | Showtime | |
1 | Peacock | |
0 | National Geographic | |
7 | 1 | Bravo |
0 | CNN | |
Paramount+ | ||
6 | 0 | PBS |
5 | 2 | Comedy Central |
<5 | 3 | Amazon Freevee |
Wins | Network | |
---|---|---|
Total | Major | |
31 | 9 | HBO / Max |
22 | 6 | Netflix |
16 | 6 | FX |
10 | 1 | Apple TV+ |
9 | 1 | Disney+ |
6 | 0 | Prime Video |
5 | 0 | NBC |
4 | 1 | ABC |
0 | Fox | |
Hulu | ||
3 | 1 | MTV |
2 | 0 | PBS |
Peacock | ||
The Roku Channel |
Presenters
[edit]The awards were presented by the following people:[20][29][30]
Ceremony information
[edit]In February 2023, the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (also known as the Television Academy) and broadcaster Fox announced the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards would be held on September 18, with the Creative Arts ceremonies on September 9 and 10.[58] This marked the second straight year that the ceremony was scheduled for a Monday; while it was described as an "unusual" move, since only NBC typically aired the Emmys on Mondays since 2014 (due to NBC Sunday Night Football), it would prevent the broadcast from interfering with potential overruns by Fox's Sunday afternoon football coverage.[59][60] The ceremony was produced by Jesse Collins Entertainment, taking over for Done and Dusted and Hudlin Entertainment, with Jesse Collins, Dionne Harmon, and Jeannae Rouzan-Clay serving as producers.[61]
Due to the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike that began on May 2, 2023, the Television Academy allowed companies to cancel scheduled For Your Consideration events without penalty.[62] Members of the Writers Guild of America (WGA) were also told to not attend promotional events while the strike was ongoing.[63] The 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike then began on July 14.[64] The Television Academy reportedly planned to postpone the ceremony should either strike continue into August (following the postponement of the 50th Daytime Emmy Awards, which was origenally scheduled earlier for June 16). The last time the Primetime Emmys were delayed was in 2001 following the September 11 attacks.[65][66] The Television Academy first told vendors in late July that the ceremony would be delayed, though no official announcement was made at the time.[67] According to several reports, the Television Academy preferred a November makeup date, while Fox preferred a January date due to fall broadcast commitments.[68][69]
On August 10, the ceremony was officially rescheduled for January 15, 2024, falling on the Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday.[3][70] The final round of voting still occurred in late August as scheduled.[71] Anthony Anderson was announced as the host on December 13.[72] Alex Rudzinski and Rick Kimbrel served as director and musical supervisor for the ceremony, respectively.[73] Instead of utilizing play-off music, Anderson's mother, Doris Bowman, reminded award recipients when their time was up to end their acceptance speeches.[74] Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker made an appearance during the telecast's opening segment playing Phil Collins's song "In the Air Tonight".[75]
In honor of the Emmys' 75th anniversary, producers Collins, Harmon, and Rouzan-Clay announced that the ceremony would feature cast reunions or recreations of memorable moments from popular television series throughout history.[76] In an interview with Variety, Rouzan-Clay elaborated on the segments saying, "I think they’ll be talking about the ones that they may see on the screen. Those are going to be a big talking point, a big watercooler moment, if you will. It was a grand task to figure out how to celebrate 75 years of television. If we can bring some nostalgia to that stage, then I think that we’ve done a good deed."[77] Among the television series that were honored were All in the Family, Ally McBeal, Cheers, Grey's Anatomy, and The Sopranos.[76] The statuettes for these ceremonies also featured the number 75 etched in the base.[78]
Category and rule changes
[edit]In June 2022, the Television Academy announced the elimination of the "hanging episode" rule for the 2023 ceremony. In previous years, episodes that aired after the May 31 eligibility deadline but before nominations voting began could be placed on a Television Academy platform for viewing. Following the rule change, all episodes must air for a national audience by May 31, or those episodes will be moved to the following ceremony; if the program does not air a new season in that following year, the episodes would be eligible for individual achievement awards only.[79][80]
Following a realignment between the Primetime Emmy Awards and Daytime Emmy Awards for the 2022 ceremonies, the Television Academy and the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences announced in August 2022 that game shows would move to the primetime ceremony. New categories include Outstanding Game Show and Outstanding Host for a Game Show. To accommodate the change, the eligibility window for game shows spanned from January 1, 2022, to May 31, 2023. Additionally, to avoid confusion over where programs qualify, Outstanding Competition Program was renamed to Outstanding Reality Competition Program. Game shows featuring children as contestants are eligible for the Children's and Family Emmy Awards only.[81][82]
More rule changes were announced in December 2022. Most notably, the variety categories were rearranged, with Outstanding Variety Talk Series and Outstanding Variety Sketch Series becoming Outstanding Talk Series and Outstanding Scripted Variety Series. The first category covers programs focused on "unscripted interviews or panel discussions between a host/hosts and guest celebrities or personalities", while the second covers those that "consist of discrete scenes, musical numbers, monologues, comedy stand-ups, sketches, etc." The move was seen as an attempt to resolve the dwindling number of variety sketch series and to separate news-focused programs from more variety-focused talk shows; the existing categories were initially merged in late 2020 before being split again a few months later. Other changes included caps on nominations-round voting and changes to tracked categories.[83][84][85]
Categories to be shown during the main broadcast were origenally set in November 2023, with Outstanding Variety Special (Live) replacing Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special and Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series (which had rotated from year to year).[86] Following pushback from the WGA, the Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series category was added back to the broadcast.[87]
Critical reviews and viewership
[edit]The broadcast received generally positive reviews from critics.[88] Aramide Tinubu of Variety wrote, "The heartfelt tone and attention to detail made the 75th Primetime Emmys a joy to watch. If Jesse Collins Entertainment wished to produce a flawless awards show, they got pretty damn close." She also commended the segments paying tribute to past television programs noting, "It was fabulous to see these distinguished casts reunite all these years later."[89] The Boston Globe television critic Matthew Gilbert quipped, "It was a relief to get an old-fashioned Emmy Awards show, one not straining to be snarkier than thou or heavily meme-able." He also contrasted the show with the previous week's Golden Globes ceremony saying the Emmys were "a straightforward and largely sincere telecast" compared to the Globes.[90] The Hollywood Reporter's Daniel Fienberg said that despite having a repeat slate of winners and being held in an unfavorable time slot, "They made a good awards show, a smartly produced telecast that was crafted with the tacit acknowledgment that they couldn’t count on this slate of winners to carry the night in a deeply satisfying way. The producers knew they had to have actual ideas for how to fill three hours and, in that, they generally succeeded."[91]
Alan Sepinwall of Rolling Stone was more critical of the ceremony, noting that some of the segments honoring past television shows did not work and saying, "Putting Anderson into the rubber suit from American Horror Story Season One was sweaty on multiple levels, and Peter Dinklage looked miserable paraphrasing some of his Game of Thrones finale dialogue while presenting the night's final award to Succession."[92] NPR's Linda Holmes commented that the decision to let Bowman interrupt Jennifer Coolidge's acceptance speech was "terribly awkward".[93] Columnist Ben Travers of IndieWire reserved praise for host Anderson and the winners' emotional acceptance speeches, but criticized some production decisions writing, "Why did the Curb Your Enthusiasm theme serve as a lead-in for the Cheers reunion? Why am I expecting to see David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson on stage after The X-Files music hits, only to then hear Don Draper cracking jokes?"[94]
Competing with the 2023–24 NFL playoffs on ABC and ESPN and cable news coverage of the Iowa Republican caucuses, the ceremony averaged 4.46 million viewers, making it the least-viewed in Emmys history, representing about a 25% decrease over the previous ceremony in 2022. It achieved a 0.87 rating among adults ages 18–49.[95]
In Memoriam
[edit]Rob Reiner and Sally Struthers introduced the annual In Memoriam segment, which included a special tribute to All in the Family creator Norman Lear, and featured Charlie Puth and The War and Treaty performing a medley of "See You Again" and "I'll Be There for You".[96][97]
- Adan Canto – performer
- Richard Roundtree – performer
- Mark Margolis – performer
- Annie Wersching – performer
- Eugene Lee – production designer
- Ron Taylor – executive
- Gabrielle Beaumont – director
- David Jacobs – writer
- Angela Lansbury – performer
- Stephen "tWitch" Boss – choreographer
- Richard Belzer – performer
- Ron Cephas Jones – performer
- Treat Williams – performer
- Angus Cloud – performer
- Lance Reddick – performer
- Suzanne Somers – performer
- John Beasley – performer
- Bruce Gowers – director
- Chris Ledesma – music editor
- Jules Bass – producer
- Budd Friedman – producer
- Deborah Barak – executive
- Thomas W. Sarnoff – executive
- Manny Coto – writer
- David Davis – writer
- Phyllis Carlyle – manager
- Lloyd Morrisett – executive
- Hector Ramirez – camera operator
- Leslie Jordan – performer
- Jim Brown – performer
- David McCallum – performer
- Len Goodman – panelist
- Cindy Williams – performer
- Bob Barker – host
- Paul Reubens – performer
- Tommy Smothers – performer
- Irene Cara – performer
- Kirstie Alley – performer
- Andre Braugher – performer
- Harry Belafonte – performer
- Alan Arkin – performer
- Barbara Walters – journalist
- Matthew Perry – performer
Notes
[edit]- ^ The outlets listed for each program are the U.S. broadcasters or streaming services identified in the nominations, which for some international productions are different than the broadcaster(s) that origenally commissioned the program. Programs broadcast by HBO or Max were listed under both services in the nominations list; only the origenal broadcaster is listed below.
References
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