Shogun' and 'Hacks' win top Emmys; 'The Bear' and 'Baby Reindeer' each get 4
Sanada was the first Japanese actor to win an Emmy. Sawai became the second just moments later
AP
-
“To all the Latinas who are looking at me,” she said, her eyes welling with tears. “keep believing, and vote.”PHOTO:AP
Los
Angeles, 16 Sept
“Shogun”
had historic wins in an epic 18-Emmy first season, “Hacks” scored an upset for
best comedy on what was still a four-trophy night for “The Bear,” and “Baby
Reindeer” had a holiday at an Emmy Awards that had some surprising swerves.
“Shogun,"
the FX series about power struggles in feudal Japan, won best drama series,
Hiroyuki Sanada won best actor in a drama, and Anna Sawai won best actress.
Sanada was the first Japanese actor to win an Emmy. Sawai became the second
just moments later.
”Shogun'
taught me when we work together, we can make miracles,” Sanada said in his
acceptance speech on the stage of the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles.
Along with
14 Emmys it claimed at the precursor Creative Arts Emmys, it had an unmatched
performance with 18 overall for one season.
“Hacks” was
the surprise winner of its first best comedy series award, topping “The Bear,”
which most had expected to take it after big wins earlier in the evening.
Jean Smart
won her third best actress in a comedy award for the third season of Max's
“Hacks,” in which her stand-up comic character Deborah Vance tries to make it
in late-night TV. Smart has six Emmys overall.
Despite
losing out on the night's biggest comedy prize after winning it for its first
season at January's strike-delayed ceremony, FX's “The Bear” star Jeremy Allen
White won best actor in a comedy for the second straight year, and Ebon
Moss-Bachrach repeated as best supporting actor.
And Liza
Colón-Zayas was the surprise best supporting actor winner over competition that
included Meryl Streep, becoming the first Latina to win in the category.
“To all the
Latinas who are looking at me,” she said, her eyes welling with tears. “keep
believing, and vote.”
Netflix's
darkly quirky “Baby Reindeer” won best limited series. Creator and star Richard
Gadd won for his lead acting and his writing and Jessica Gunning, who plays his
tormentor, won best supporting actress.
Accepting
the series award, Gadd urged the makers of television to take chances.
“The only
constant across any success in television is good storytelling," he said.
"Good storytelling that speaks to our times. So take risks, push
boundaries. Explore the uncomfortable. Dare to fail in order to achieve.”
“Baby
Reindeer” is based on a one man-stage show in which Gadd describes being
sexually abused along with other emotional struggles.
Accepting
that award, he said, “no matter how bad it gets, it always gets better.”
The
Associated Press does not typically name people who say they have been sexually
abused unless they come forward publicly as Gadd has.
Jodie
Foster won her first Emmy to go with her two Oscars when she took best actress
in a limited series for “True Detective: Night Country.”
Foster
played a crusty sheriff investigating a mass killing in the round-the-clock
dark of an Alaskan winter on the HBO show. While her castmate Kali Reis missed
out on becoming the first Indigenous actor to win an Emmy in the supporting
category, Foster praised her, and the show's collaboration with Indigenous
contributors.
“The
Inupiaq and Inuit people of northern Alaska who told us their stories, and they
allowed us to listen," Foster said. "That was just a blessing. It was
love, love, love, and when you feel that, something amazing happens.”
Greg
Berlanti, a producer and writer on shows including “Dawson's Creek” and
“Everwood,” received the Television Academy's Governors Award for his
career-long contributions to improving LGBTQ visibility on television. He
talked about a childhood when there was little such visibility.
“There
weren't a lot of gay characters on television back then, and I was a closeted
gay kid," Berlanti said. "It's hard to describe how lonely that was
at the time,”
The long
decline of traditional broadcast TV at the Emmys continued, with zero wins
between the four broadcast networks.
In the
monologue that opened the ABC telecast, Dan Levy, who hosted with his father
and “Schitt's Creek” co-star Eugene Levy, called the Emmys “broadcast TV's
biggest night for honoring movie stars on streaming services.”
Though
other than Foster, movie stars didn't fare too well. Her fellow Oscar winners
Streep and Robert Downey Jr. had been among the favorites, but came up empty.
“Robert
Downey Jr. I have a poster of you in my house!” Lamorne Morris, who beat Downey
for best supporting actor in a limited series, said from the stage as he
accepted his first Emmy.
The evening
managed to meet many expectations but included several swerves like the win for
“Hacks.”
“We were
really shocked,” “Hacks co-creator Jen Statsky, who also won for writing, said
after the show. ”We were truly, really surprised."
And
“Shogun” got off to a quiet start, missing out on early awards and not getting
its first trophy until past the halfway point.
Still, it
shattered the record for Emmys for one season previously held by the 2008
limited series “John Adams” in 2008. And its acting wins would have been hard
to imagine before the series became an acclaimed phenomenon.
Sanada is a
63-year-old longtime screen star whose name is little known outside Japan, even
if his face is through Hollywood films like “The Last Samurai” and “John Wick
Chapter 4.” Sawai, 32, who was born in New Zealand and moved to Japan as a
child, is significantly less known in the U.S. She wept when she accepted best
actress.
"When
you saw me cry on stage, it was probably the 12th time I cried today,"
Sawai said backstage. “It was just mixed emotions, wanting everyone to win all
that. I may cry again now.”
“The Bear”
would finish second with 11 overall Emmys, including guest acting wins at the
Creative Arts ceremony for Jamie Lee Curtis and Jon Bernthal.
The Levys
in their opening monologue mocked the show being in the comedy category.
“In honor
of The Bear' we will be making no jokes,” Eugene Levy said, to laughs.
Elizabeth
Debicki took best supporting actress in a drama for playing Princess Diana at
the end of her life in the sixth and final season of “The Crown.”
“Playing
this part, based on this unparalleled, incredible human being, has been my
great privilege," Debicki said in her acceptance. "It's been a gift.”
Several
awards were presented by themed teams from TV history, including sitcom dads
George Lopez, Damon Wayans and Jesse Tyler Ferguson and TV moms Meredith
Baxter, Connie Britton, and Susan Kelechi Watson.-AP
Leave a Reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *