76th Primetime Emmy Awards
76th Primetime Emmy Awards | |
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Date |
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Location | |
Presented by | Academy of Television Arts & Sciences |
Hosted by | |
Highlights | |
Most awards |
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Most nominations |
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Comedy Series | Hacks |
Drama Series | Shōgun |
Limited or Anthology Series | Baby Reindeer |
Television/radio coverage | |
Network | ABC |
Runtime | 3 hours, 8 minutes[1] |
Viewership | 6.9 million |
Produced by | Jesse Collins Entertainment |
Directed by | Alex Rudzinski |
The 76th Primetime Emmy Awards honored the best in American prime time television programming from June 1, 2023, until May 31, 2024, as chosen by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.[2] The awards ceremony was held live on September 15, 2024, at the Peacock Theater in Downtown Los Angeles, California, and was preceded by the 76th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards on September 7 and 8. During the ceremony, Emmy Awards were handed out in 25 different categories. The ceremony was produced by Jesse Collins Entertainment, directed by Alex Rudzinski, and broadcast in the United States by ABC. Eugene Levy and Dan Levy co-hosted the event.
At the main ceremony, Baby Reindeer, The Bear, and Shōgun tied for the most wins at four apiece, including Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series for Baby Reindeer and Outstanding Drama Series for Shōgun. Other winning programs were Hacks with three wins, including Outstanding Comedy Series, and Alex Edelman: Just for Us, The Crown, The Daily Show, Fargo, Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, The Morning Show, Ripley, Slow Horses, The Traitors, and True Detective: Night Country with one each. Including Creative Arts Emmys, Shōgun led all programs with 18 wins, a record for a show in one year; FX led all networks and platforms with 36 total wins.
Winners and nominees
[edit]The nominations for the 76th Primetime Emmy Awards were announced on July 17, 2024, in a virtual broadcast originating from the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood, Los Angeles, hosted by actor Tony Hale, actress Sheryl Lee Ralph and Television Academy chair Cris Abrego.[3] Including nominations at the 76th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards, Shōgun led all programs with 25 nominations.[4] It was also the second non-English language series to be nominated for Outstanding Drama Series after Squid Game, which was nominated two years earlier.[5] The Bear became the most-nominated comedy series for a single season in the awards' history with 23 nominations; the program surpassed the record held by the NBC comedy 30 Rock, which received 22 nominations in 2009.[6][7] Lily Gladstone of the series Under the Bridge and Kali Reis of the series True Detective: Nighty Country became the first indigenous American women to receiving acting nominations; along with D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai of the series Reservation Dogs, they were the first indigenous American actors to earn an acting nomination since August Schellenberg for his role in the television film Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee in 2007.[8] Netflix led all networks and platforms with 107 nominations. FX came in second place with 93 nominations, surpassing its own record of 56 nominations in 2016.[9]
The winners were announced on September 15, following the Creative Arts Emmys on September 7 and 8. With 36 total wins, FX led all networks and platforms for the first time.[10] Shōgun became the first non-English-language series to win Outstanding Drama Series and won a total of 18 awards, breaking the record of 13 set by John Adams in 2008 to become the most awarded program for a single year in Emmy history.[11] It also passed Game of Thrones's 12 wins in 2015, 2016, and 2019 for most wins by a drama series in a single season.[12] With its 11 wins, The Bear surpassed its own record for most wins for a comedy series in a single year. For their work on Shōgun, Hiroyuki Sanada and Anna Sawai were the first Japanese performers to win Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series and Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series, respectively.[13][14] Sawai also became the first Asian to win her category, while Sanada became the second Asian to do so in his category after Lee Jung-jae for his role in Squid Game in 2022.[15] Liza Colón-Zayas was the first Latina winner for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for her performance on The Bear.[16]
Winners are listed first, highlighted in boldface, and indicated with a double dagger (‡).[17][18][a] For simplicity, producers who received nominations for program awards have been omitted.
Programs
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Acting
[edit]Lead
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Supporting
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Directing
[edit]Writing
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Governors Award
[edit]The Governors Award was presented to screenwriter, producer and director of film and television Greg Berlanti in recognition of his significant impact on television and culture by depicting the underrepresented in film.[20]
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 | |
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Total | Major | ||
18 | 4 | Shōgun | FX |
11 | 4 | The Bear | FX |
6 | 4 | Baby Reindeer | Netflix |
0 | Saturday Night Live | NBC | |
5 | 0 | Jim Henson Idea Man | Disney+ |
4 | 1 | Ripley | Netflix |
0 | Blue Eye Samurai | Netflix | |
The Oscars | ABC | ||
3 | 3 | Hacks | Max |
1 | The Crown | Netflix | |
The Morning Show | Apple TV+ | ||
0 | Billy Joel: The 100th — Live at Madison Square Garden | CBS | |
Only Murders in the Building | Hulu | ||
Welcome to Wrexham | Hulu | ||
2 | 1 | The Daily Show | Comedy Central |
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver | HBO | ||
The Traitors | Peacock | ||
0 | Girls State | Apple TV+ | |
How I Met Your Father | Hulu | ||
Love on the Spectrum | Netflix | ||
Mr. & Mrs. Smith | Prime Video |
Nominations and wins by network
[edit]Nominations | Network | |
---|---|---|
Total | Major | |
107 | 27 | Netflix |
93 | 33 | FX |
91 | 23 | HBO / Max |
70 | 26 | Apple TV+ |
38 | 9 | ABC |
2 | CBS | |
37 | 8 | Prime Video |
33 | 4 | NBC |
26 | 7 | Hulu |
19 | 0 | Disney+ |
10 | 1 | MTV |
9 | 1 | Peacock |
6 | 1 | Bravo |
0 | Fox | |
Paramount+ | ||
5 | 1 | Comedy Central |
0 | BBC America | |
<5 | 3 | Showtime |
Wins | Network | |
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Total | Major | |
36 | 9 | FX |
24 | 6 | Netflix |
14 | 6 | HBO / Max |
9 | 2 | Apple TV+ |
7 | 0 | ABC |
Disney+ | ||
Hulu | ||
NBC | ||
5 | 0 | CBS |
4 | 0 | Prime Video |
3 | 1 | Peacock |
2 | 1 | Comedy Central |
0 | National Geographic |
Presenters
[edit]The following people presented awards or other segments:[23]
Ceremony information
[edit]On February 10, 2024, the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (ATAS, also known as the Television Academy) announced that the 76th Primetime Emmy Awards would be held on September 15; the corresponding Creative Arts ceremonies were announced for September 7 and 8.[24][25] It was the second Primetime Emmy Awards ceremony held in 2024 due to the 75th ceremony, originally slated to broadcast on September 18, 2023, taking place four months later on January 15, 2024, as a result of the 2023 Hollywood labor disputes.[26] ABC broadcast the gala as part of a four-year rotation deal among the "Big Four" broadcast networks signed in 2018.[27] The broadcast was made available for streaming on Hulu for the week following the ceremony.[28]
The ceremony was produced by Jesse Collins Entertainment (Jesse Collins, Dionne Harmon, and Jeannae Rouzan-Clay) for the second consecutive year.[29] Actor Eugene Levy and his son Dan were announced as co-hosts on August 16.[30] It was the first time a father-and-son duo co-hosted an Emmy ceremony.[31] According to Disney Entertainment chairperson Dana Walden, producers and network executives had asked comedian Jimmy Kimmel – who emceed the previous three ABC telecasts – to host the ceremony. However, Kimmel declined the offer saying he wanted to take a break after hosting the previous Academy Awards.[32] Alex Rudzinski and Rickey Minor served as director and musical director for the ceremony, respectively.[33] Two days before the ceremony, ABC aired a special episode of 20/20 entitled The 76th Emmys: A Night of Firsts. Hosted by Good Morning America co-anchor Robin Roberts, the special featured interviews with Eugene and Dan Levy and several of the ceremony's nominees.[34] Roberts also co-hosted the network's red carpet arrivals special preceding the main telecast with ABC News journalist Will Reeve.[35]
Building from the previous year, producers Collins, Harmon, and Rouzan-Clay announced during a press conference that several of the awards would be presented by actors grouped by "character archetypes", such as TV moms, dads, and villains.[36] Collins also revealed that the telecast would feature reunions in tribute to the 50th anniversaries of NBC variety/sketch program Saturday Night Live and ABC comedy series Happy Days, and the 25th anniversary of NBC drama series The West Wing.[37] In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, Eugene Levy echoed the producers' decision to focus on history and nostalgia, saying, "And [it's] also just paying tribute to television, certainly the nominees, but to the medium that gave us both our starts."[38]
Categories to be shown during the main broadcast were set in July 2024, with Outstanding Variety Special (Live) returning to the Creative Arts ceremony; as part of a rotation agreement with the Writers Guild of America, Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special also replaced Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series at the main ceremony.[39]
Critical reviews and viewership
[edit]The broadcast generally received mixed to negative reviews from critics.[40] Allison Herman of Variety compared the ceremony to the previous one noting, "the 76th Emmys were a far less dynamic and more stilted watch than the January show." She also criticized production elements such as the music director's choices for presenters' walk on music, recurring sound technical issues, and the grouping of presenters based on character archetypes.[41] Ben Travers of IndieWire found Eugene and Dan Levy's performances as hosts underwhelming, which was not helped by their reminder to the audience that "they weren't stand up comedians, but actors acting like hosts." He reserved praise for several presenters such as Candice Bergen, Billy Crystal, and the cast of Only Murders in the Building, but he ultimately found the ceremony to be "another awards show resigned to its diminishing fate."[42] Lili Loofbourow, writing for The Washington Post, found the hosts to be "pleasant but forgettable" and that the onslaught of repeat winners bogged down the ceremony.[43]
In a more positive review, Judy Berman of Time complimented the Levys and said, "The emcees imbued what is always a long night—and was, this time around, full of predictable wins—with many moments of lighthearted fun, without trying too hard to roast their fellow actors or land headline-making zingers."[44] Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter called the ceremony "an above-average show", noting that surprise winners kept "audiences on their toes" and that they often gave the best speeches. However, he criticized the reunion tributes noting that the presenters' dialogue felt bland and poor written in comparison to the prior ceremony's tributes. He also called the choice of Jelly Roll's performance of "I Am Not Okay" "tonally questionable" and wrote that Jimmy Kimmel's tribute to comedian Bob Newhart "absolutely warped the mood in a room that wasn’t sure if this was the time to laugh about how often Jon Stewart wins Emmys."[45] Robert Lloyd wrote in the Los Angeles Times that the telecast was a "sweet, positive show that at the same time avoided the air of self-congratulation". He noted the Levys' "father-and-son dynamic", with Dan's role as "the hipper son" and Eugene as the "befuddled dad", was at the heart of their shared time together.[46]
Competing with a Sunday Night Football game on NBC, the ceremony was viewed by 6.9 million people in the United States, making it the most-viewed in Emmys in three years, representing a 54% increase over the previous year's ceremony.[47][48] It also achieved a 1.03 rating among adults ages 18–49.[47]
In Memoriam
[edit]The In Memoriam tribute, which featured singer Jelly Roll performing his song "I Am Not Okay", paid tribute to the following individuals:[49][50]
- Martin Mull – performer
- Joyce Randolph – performer
- Dan Wilcox – writer
- Robert Butler – director
- Jerry Foley – director
- Jamie Kellner – executive
- Stephanie Leifer – executive
- Eric Gilliland – writer
- Bob Ellison – writer
- Piper Laurie – performer
- E. Duke Vincent – producer
- Jeannie Epper – stunt performer
- Bill Klages – lighting designer
- Terry Carter – performer
- Dr. Ruth Westheimer – host
- Dabney Coleman – performer
- Richard Moll – performer
- Lee Gabler – agent
- Paula Weinstein – producer
- George A. Sunga – producer
- Jac Venza – producer
- Kenneth Patterson – camera operator
- Susan Wojcicki – executive
- Leo Chaloukian – sound designer, Academy president 1989–1993
- Don Buchwald – agent
- George Schenck – writer
- Samm-Art Williams – writer
- Peter Marshall – host
- Rod Holcomb – director
- Frances Sternhagen – performer
- Phil Donahue – host
- Louis Gossett Jr. – performer
- Martin Starger – producer
- Ryan O'Neal – performer
- Andrea Fay Friedman – performer
- Gena Rowlands – performer
- Richard Simmons – TV personality
- Shannen Doherty – performer
- Robert MacNeil – journalist
- Chance Perdomo – performer
- Carl Weathers – performer
- Richard Lewis – performer
- Donald Sutherland – performer
- James Earl Jones – performer
- Bob Newhart – performer
At the end of the tribute, comedian and talk show host Jimmy Kimmel briefly eulogized Newhart.[51]
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 originally commissioned the program. Programs broadcast by HBO or Max were listed under both services in the nominations list; only the original broadcaster is listed below.
References
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