Mad Men Gets One Final Emmy Chance, and Other News From This Year's Nominations
As the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences announced the
nominations for the 67th Emmy Awards, it made room for Jon Hamm's
acclaimed series, which will try to go out on top with a best drama Emmy
win.
Emmy voters came up with the usual mixture of surprises and snubs as
they attempted to spotlight the very best of television at a time when
there is far too much quality TV, on more outlets than ever before, to
possibly recognize everything worthy.
One last chance to recognize Mad Men—and Hamm
After winning the outstanding drama Emmy four years in a row, Mad
Men—with 11 nominations for its final season, bringing its total to 116
nominations, and 15 wins—has the chance to take one last bow on the Emmy
stage. The same goes for Hamm, who stunningly has gone 0-for-7 at the
Emmys as lead drama actor. In fact, none of the show's stellar actors
has won an Emmy for work on the show (Elisabeth Moss and Christina
Hendricks are also nominated this year). Hamm, who is up for his eighth
time for Mad Men, is a double nominee this year; he also nabbed a comedy
guest actor nomination for Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt.
Joining Mad Men in taking a final Emmy laps this year: Parks &
Recreation; The Newsroom (for which Jeff Daniels grabbed another acting
nominee); and a trio of late-night shows, The Colbert Report, Late Show
with David Letterman and The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.
A huge day for streaming services, and HBO
After trying, and failing, to crack the Emmys in 2014 with Alpha House,
Amazon roared into the field this year with 12 nominations, including
11 for Transparent (recognized for comedy series and lead comedy actor
Jeffrey Tambor, who is the front runner in that category).
Netflix, meanwhile, increased its nomination tally to 34 from 31 last
year. That number would likely have been even greater had new Academy
rules not forced Orange Is the New Black to compete as a drama instead
of a comedy.
HBO increased its Emmy nomination tally to 126 this year, up from 99 in
2014, with 24 of those nominations going to Game of Thrones. On the
broadcast side, Fox made the biggest leap, from 18 nominations to 35,
thanks to shows like Empire and The Last Man on Earth. ABC also jumped
from 37 to 42, while CBS declined slightly from 47 to 41, and NBC went
down from 46 to 41. The CW, with only a single nomination for Emmy
hopeful Jane the Virgin, was steady with two nominations.
First time's the charm
This year, voters nominated
several first-year shows and performances. How to Get Away With
Murder's Viola Davis and Empire's Taraji P. Henson scored drama lead
actress nominations, while Blackish's Anthony Anderson and The Last Man
on Earth's Will Forte were pleasant surprises in the comedy actor
category. First-year shows Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt and Better Call
Saul broke into the comedy and drama races. And a pair of longtime Emmy
favorites, Lisa Kudrow and Lily Tomlin, landed nominations for The
Comeback and Grace & Frankie, respectively.
In addition to finding room for the freshman class, voters also recognized perpetually overlooked Tatiana Maslany, for her clone-tastic turn on Orphan Black.
So. Many. Snubs.
Even with the comedy and drama series categories expanded from six to
seven nominees this year, several worthy shows and performances were
overlooked. For the third year running, The Americans, one of TV's best
shows, was shut out of the major categories (including best drama, lead
actor for Matthew Rhys and lead actress for Keri Russell), with only two
nominations for writing and guest actress Margo Martindale (who
appeared in a single scene this year).
Jane the Virgin, one of this year's best new shows and a big winner at
the Golden Globes, failed to score a nomination for best drama or its
effervescent lead actress, Gina Rodriguez. Despite its acting nomination
for Henson, Fox's megahit Empire couldn't crack the best drama
category, while Terrence Howard was shut out as lead drama actor. Even HBO, with its 126
nominations, had hoped that new drama The Leftovers would get some Emmy
love, but not even the most worthy performer from that show, Carrie
Coon, could grab a nomination.
Emmy voters also snubbed two of last year's acting winners, The Big
Bang Theory's Jim Parsons and The Good Wife's Julianna Marguiles, who
didn't make the cut this year.
0 comments:
Post a Comment