The 2018 Emmy Award nominations were announced Thursday morning. After a year of ineligibility, âGame of Thronesâ returned with a stunning 22 nominations, including best drama. Another HBO drama, âWestworld,â followed closely behind with 21 nominations. Last yearâs best drama series winner âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ drew 20 nominations. Additionally, Sandra Oh made history as the first Asian actress to be nominated for best lead actress in a drama series. On the comedy side, âSaturday Night Liveâ and âAtlantaâ were tops with 21 and 16 nominations, respectively. See the nominations list below as well as analysis and interviews from The Times tied to this yearâs nominations.
- Emmy nominations: A reflection of America, the bad and the good
- Benedict Cumberbatch had a very English reaction to news of his sixth Emmy nomination
- In âGame of Thronesâ and âHandmaidâs Tale,â the top Emmy nominees reflect a revolution at different points
- The Emmys will be full of color, as cultural diversity distinguishes major categories
- Sandra Oh on her historical Emmy nomination: âLetâs move it forwardâ
- Netflix nudges past HBO to top Emmy nominations list with 112
- The complete list of nominations
Emmy nominations: A reflection of America, the bad and the good
Was it something I said?
The television industryâs stars and creators should have been asking themselves that question Thursday morning when the 70th Primetime Emmy nominations were announced, and the list read more like a political indictment rather than a verdict of what did and didnât work this year on TV.
The wildly successful reboot of âRoseanneâ was almost entirely passed over after Roseanne Barr unleashed a late night/early morning racist tirade on Twitter that cost the comedian her career, scoring only a supporting actress nomination for Laurie Metcalf and her brilliant portrayal of liberal snowflake Jackie.
Contentious HBO talk show host Bill Maher used the N-word on his show during the Emmy eligibility period, and despite an outcry, was slow to apologize. The new nominations marked the first time in three years that âReal Time With Bill Maher,â which has been nominated 10 times previously, wasnât chosen as a top variety talk series contender â or included in any other category.
On-screen mother and daughter Cicely Tyson and Viola Davis nominated for same category, different shows
Cicely Tyson and Viola Davis play on-screen mother and daughter on âHow to Get Away With Murder,â but they were nominated for an Emmy in the same category as mother and daughter for different shows.
How does that work?
Well, Tyson, who plays Ophelia Harkness, was nominated Thursday for guest actress in a drama for playing Annalise Keatingâs mother in âHow to Get Away With Murder.â Meanwhile, Davis, who plays Keating on the same show, earned a nomination in the same category for âScandal.â
Shonda Rhimes, executive producer of both ABC shows, merged the storylines for a crossover episode where Davisâ Keating seeks help from âScandalâsâ main character, Olivia Pope, played by Kerry Washington.
Both shows congratulated the award-winning actresses on social media Thursday morning.
Judd Apatow on his Emmy nominations: âI had convinced myself that it wasnât gonna happenâ
Judd Apatow was in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, directing an episode of âCrashingâ for HBO when he learned that his documentary, âThe Zen Diaries of Garry Shandling,â had been nominated for an Emmy for outstanding documentary, and Apatow for best director in that category.
The film is an exhaustive look at the life and legacy of Shandling, with quite a few revelations and twists along the way.
Was this a surprise?
There are so many incredible docs being made right now that I had convinced myself that it wasnât gonna happen, mainly out of self-preservation. I brought myself so low that it made this high even better.
Edgar Ramirez on his Emmy nod for portraying âone of the most fascinating characters ever,â Gianni Versace
Playing the iconic, ill-fated fashion designer Gianni Versace, who was slain by a serial killer in 1997, was a âprofound, transformative life experience,â says Edgar Ramirez. But it was the themes of prejudice and homophobia in FXâs âThe Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Storyâ that really resonated for the Venezuelan-born actor, who on Thursday earned a supporting actor Emmy nomination for his work.
Where are we catching you?
Iâm in Atlanta. Iâm shooting a movie here. Itâs hot. Weâre one week away from shooting and in rehearsals right now. This was just such a surprise, honestly. I was trying not to think too much about it in the days leading up to it, because you never know. You canât obsess about these things, but when they happen, you celebrate the fact that the show got so much beautiful recognition. Iâm very, very happy.
Benedict Cumberbatch had a very English reaction to news of his sixth Emmy nomination
Benedict Cumberbatch received his sixth Emmy nomination as actor in a limited series for his portrayal of the titular character in Showtimeâs pitch-black dramedy âPatrick Melrose.â The show, about an Englishman struggling with rampant addiction rooted in memories of sexual abuse at the hands of his father, is based on a series of autobiographical books by Edward St. Aubyn. The show is as searing as it is hilarious â a heady mixture that attracted Cumberbatch from the start. The actor is in London working on another project and says he completely forgot it was Emmy nominations day.
Where were you when you got the good news?
I was in a car going home from East London where weâre doing some filming for a show about Brexit, and my phone just blew. I thought, âWhoa, whatâs going on here, is there a malfunction?â But then I saw, âCongratulations, huge love,â and what not, and thatâs how I found out. It was quite lovely.
Tap dancer Chloe Arnold scores first Emmy nomination for choreography on âThe Late Late Showâ
Tap dancer and choreographer Chloe Arnold assumed the worst when she got an early-morning phone call from her manager. But when she found out the good news â snagging her first Emmy nomination for choreography on âThe Late Late Show With James Cordenâ â she couldnât contain her excitement.
She also thought back to her mentor, entertainment mogul and choreographer Debbie Allen.
âI remember when I was a kid, there was a picture of Debbie Allen winning her Emmy â sheâs cry-celebrating,â Arnold said. âThat was before I knew her. Then I got to see that Emmy at her house, and I just think itâs like it gives you that seed that itâs possible.â
Arnold stands out among five choreography nominations this year â four are from the dance reality show âSo You Think You Can Dance.â She has worked with late-night host James Corden for more than 30 episodes, choreographing promos and other prime-time specials. This nomination recognizes her choreography on Cordenâs âCrosswalk the Musicalâ segment, a wacky tribute to âThe Greatest Showman.â
In âGame of Thronesâ and âHandmaidâs Tale,â the top Emmy nominees reflect a revolution at different points
Blessed be the fruit, or all men must die?
One of these television quotes is encoded with subservience, the other with retribution, but each comes from a powerful drama battling for prominence. The 2018 Emmys race will be about many things, but front and center is the smack-down between HBOâs âGame of Thronesâ and Huluâs âThe Handmaidâs Tale.â
Both have multiple nominations â 22 for âThrones,â 20 for âHandmaidâsâ â and both are previous winners for drama series. But âHandmaidâsâ won last year, when âThronesâ wasnât eligible, so this will be the first time the shows are in competition against each other.
Will Westeros or Gilead prevail?
The Emmys will be full of color, as cultural diversity distinguishes major categories
Even as race continues to be one of the most divisive issues in the country, the celebration of cultural diversity is a dominant theme across the 70th Emmy Award nominations. Performers of color and series produced and written by minorities scored numerous nominations Thursday.
âAtlanta,â âblack-ish,â âThis Is Usâ and âWestworldâ are among the series receiving big nods that spotlight minorities in major creative and acting roles.
Hollywood has been rocked in recent years by controversies over the lack of awards recognition for people of color. But the stream of performers, producers and writers of color receiving Emmy nominations indicate that the Television Academy at least is placing a greater premium on honoring projects with diverse cultural perspectives.
Tatiana Maslany talks Emmy nomination and the 12 women she plays in âOrphan Blackâ
Canadian actress Tatiana Maslany won an Emmy in 2016 for her role in BBC Americaâs âOrphan Blackâ as the rebellious Sarah Manning ⌠and as the violent Helena ⌠and as soccer mom Alison Hendrix, along with nine other characters, all clones.
On Thursday morning, she learned sheâd again been nominated in the lead actress in a drama category for her work on âOrphan Black.â But her mind was on another role â her New York stage debut that very evening.
Big day for you: The New York premiere of âMary Page Marloweâ tonight at the Second Stage Theater, in which you play the title role, along with four other actors. And now the Emmy nom. How are you feeling?
Iâm very nervous. Iâm so excited, but really nervous. And everything that goes along with opening night. I canât believe I get to do it. And on top of it, to get this news this morning. It was a total shock. I didnât think people remembered the [TV] show. Itâs been off air for a while. And thereâs just so much amazing television right now. âAtlanta.â âHandmaidâs Taleâ â which I find really difficult to watch. A lot of my friends are watching it and saying, sadly, it resonates so much with whatâs happening in our culture. But the Emmy nomination, Iâm excited.
âStranger Thingsâ star David Harbour celebrated his Emmy nomination with a waffle
David Harbour, who plays a tough yet melancholic top cop in Netflixâs âStranger Things,â scored his second Emmy nomination Thursday for supporting actor in a drama series.
When his girlfriend brought the news of his nomination, Harbour was in the middle of an unglamorous task â teaching his puppy to poop on command.
âItâs so special and so gratifying,â Harbour said of the nomination. âThe television being made in this country right now is so wonderful, to be acknowledged by those people ⌠is just a dream come true.â
Speaking of television ⌠what are you watching right now?
I just binged the crap out of [Amazonâs] âCatastrophe.â Itâs a very different show than âStranger Thingsâ â itâs just so fun and beautiful. I actually went back and watched all of âTrue Detectiveâsâ Season 1 again, which I think is a true masterpiece.
Sandra Oh on her historical Emmy nomination: âLetâs move it forwardâ
Just days away from beginning production on Season 2 of BBC Americaâs âKilling Eve,â Sandra Oh was reviewing script drafts at her London flat the moment she made Emmy history.
Her part in the thriller is her first headlining role, and it yielded her first lead actress in a drama nod when Emmy nominations were announced Thursday. But the firsts didnât end there: Ohâs nomination carries an added layer of distinction because it makes her the first person of Asian descent to be recognized in the category in the award showâs 70-year run.
At a time when Hollywood is reckoning with calls for greater inclusiveness, the historic aspect of Ohâs nomination serves as yet another sobering reminder of the industryâs deep-rooted diversity problem.
Henry Winkler on his Emmy nod: âI literally donât have the wordsâ
Despite a long and storied career, Henry Winkler said he was overcome with joy when he found out about his nomination for supporting actor in a comedy for the HBO show âBarryâ (in which he plays hilarious acting teacher Gene Cousineau). Winkler is currently in Iola, Wis., to sign copies of his childrenâs book âEverybody Is Somebody #12 (Hereâs Hank),â but he was still in bed, having breakfast, when his eldest son called him with the good news.
How are you feeling right now?
Iâm unbelievably good. I am thrilled, because not only did I get a nomination, but the show got one, and [creators] Bill [Hader, also the star] and Alec [Berg] got nominated. Iâm just over the moon. I literally am speechless.
Samantha Bee talks Emmy noms and Ivanka Trump flap: âIâm not afraid to court controversyâ
Samantha Bee is the lone woman on the list of Emmy nominees for variety talk series. On her TBS show âFull Frontal With Samantha Bee,â she bravely and loudly voices her opinions about politics and the stew of controversial current events that have riveted the world this year, but she didnât feel brave on Emmy nominations morning. She was literally hiding (âlike a total chickenâ) at the hair salon, getting her roots done with a head full of tinfoil, while her staff livestreamed the nominations in the office.
How does this kind of validation feel?
I felt a great sense of happiness, and then I regretted that move [of going to the salon] because everyone was celebrating at the office, and I havenât seen them yet. The Champagne is flowing. Itâs a good day for a million different reasons, but Iâm so happy that our Puerto Rico special was nominated.
Pamela Adlon scores Emmy nomination despite Louis C.K. scandal
Like Laurie Metcalf, Pamela Adlon survived scandal to hear her name called on Emmy-nominations morning.
Adlon earned a nod for lead actress in a comedy series for her work on FXâs âBetter Things,â which she also created.
Although she was first recognized by the Television Academy last year for her âBetter Thingsâ performance, a second nomination was in question because of her association with troubled comedian Louis C.K.
C.K. served as an executive producer on the first and second seasons of âBetter Things.â He also directed several episodes, and was the only other writer who worked on Season 2, other than Adlon herself.
However, the comedian and âLouieâ creator-star was accused of sexual misconduct by five women in November. He soon released a statement confirming that the allegations were true, at which point FX severed ties with him and his production company, Pig Newton.
Going forward, he will not be listed as an executive producer on the series.
Like Adlon, Metcalf managed to earn an Emmy nomination for supporting actress in a comedy series despite the controversial tweets sent by âRoseanneâ star and creator Roseanne Barr, which led to the sitcomâs abrupt cancellation.
âIt is what it isâ: Mark Duplass talks first Emmy nomination for âWild Wild Countryâ
Netflixâs âWild Wild Country,â about an Oregon religious group â sex cult? â led by the Indian mystic Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, snagged an Emmy nomination Wednesday for documentary series. It is executive producer Mark Duplassâ first Emmy nomination.
But at home in his pajamas, shortly after learning of the award nomination, Duplass seemed mostly pleased for series directors Maclain Way and Chapman Way.
You seem so calm, business as usual todayâŚ
You know, Iâm in my house, having my second cup of coffee. I just finished dropping off my niece at her acting class. Emmy noms are incredible to bring awareness to the show, but the truth of the matter is: It is what it is. Itâs not something Iâm gonna stop my life for. Iâd say the predominant feeling is just pride for the Way brothers.
Megan Amram earns two Emmy noms for her show about really wanting an Emmy
TV writer Megan Amramâs plan to win an Emmy is now in full swing after receiving two Emmy nominations for her short form comedy series, âAn Emmy for Megan.â
Amram â whose writing credits include âThe Good Place,â âParks and Recreationâ and âSilicon Valleyâ â created the web series in April with the purpose of getting the Television Academyâs attention for Emmy consideration.
âIt worked,â she tweeted Thursday morning after the nominations were announced.
The comedy writer played to and mocked the categoryâs minimal rule requirements on the show, which streams on Vimeo. Per Hollywood tradition, Amram purchased a billboard to launch her campaign.
Amram plays a fictionalized version of herself and name drops celebrities she knows in various episodes to keep the audience engaged during each episode, though the episodes are just long enough to qualify as a TV show, some ending at a little over two minutes in length.
âAn Emmy for Meganâ received nominations for actress in a short form comedy or drama series and short form comedy or drama series.
And Amram is serious about wanting to win.
âBut remember: itâs not called #TwoNominationsForMegan, itâs called #AnEmmyForMegan,â she tweeted Thursday. âBecause what matters is that trophy. SEE YOU ON THE WINNERâS PODIUM/STAGEâ
Emmy snubs and surprises: New faces are in, old institutions are out and Sandra Oh makes history
Emmy voters remembered how much they loved Tatiana Maslany and Ted Danson, didnât have much patience for âTwin Peaksâ and finally embraced Trevor Noahâs vision for âThe Daily Show.â
Yes, Emmy nominations day wouldnât be complete without the annual airing of grievances, globally trademarked as Snubs and Surprises, though given the depth of choices available to voters, a âsnubâ isnât really a snub, a word that implies an active rebuff. What weâre talking about are more like omissions. Unless itâs Jimmy Fallon. Then, yes, dude was snubbed, even after going on an apology tour for tousling Donald Trumpâs hair.
But this yearâs slate of nominations showed a little bit more creativity than the past, even if some of the choices were a little bit odd. (Nominating a record five âSaturday Night Liveâ cast members for a so-so season that often found the ensemble shunted aside for guest players is just bizarre.)
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Issa Rae and Ricky Martin among Emmysâ first-time performer nominees
Thirty-six actors and actresses earned Primetime Emmy nominations on Thursday for work they did in front of the camera.
The new performance-category faces include TV veterans, such as late-night host James Corden and âSaturday Night Liveâ fixtures Aidy Bryant and Kenan Thompson, who all had nominations in off-camera roles in previous years. (Likewise, many of these other first-timers have been Emmy-nominated before for non-performer categories.)
Rising stars Issa Rae (âInsecureâ), Tiffany Haddish (âSNLâ) and Yvonne Strahovski (âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ) also received recognition, as did Strahovsiâs costar and onscreen husband, Joseph Fiennes.
Meanwhile, âGame of Thronesâ actor Nikolaj Coster-Waldau (a.k.a. Jaime Lannister), âThe Crownâ royals Matt Smith and Vanessa Kirby and âThe Assassination of Gianni Versaceâ stars Darren Criss, Ricky Martin and PenĂŠlope Cruz are also in the running for acting awards alongside several costars whoâve been nominated in performance categories before.
Musician John Legend, who already has several Grammys, an Oscar and a Tony Award, was nominated for NBCâs âJesus Christ Superstar: Live in Concert,â putting him in the running for lofty EGOT status if he wins. His âJesus Christ Superstarâ costars Sara Bareilles and Brandon Victor Dixon also received their first Emmy nods.
Hereâs the complete list of this yearâs first-time performer nominees:
- Megan Amram, âAn Emmy For Meganâ
- Sara Bareilles, âJesus Christ Superstar: Live in Concertâ
- Zazie Beetz, âAtlantaâ
- Jessica Biel, âThe Sinnerâ
- Cameron Britton, âMindhunterâ
- Aidy Bryant, âSaturday Night Liveâ
- James Corden, âJames Cordenâs Next James Cordenâ
- Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, âGame of Thronesâ
- Darren Criss, âThe Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Storyâ
- PenĂŠlope Cruz, âThe Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Storyâ
- Alexis Denisof, âI Love Bekka & Lucyâ
- Brandon Victor Dixon, âJesus Christ Superstar: Live in Concertâ
- Joseph Fiennes, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
- Lee Garlington, âBrokenâ
- Betty Gilpin, âGLOWâ
- Matthew Goode, âThe Crownâ
- Naomi Grossman, âCtrl Alt Deleteâ
- Tiffany Haddish, âSaturday Night Liveâ
- Melvin Jackson Jr., âThis Eddie Murphy Role is Mine, Not Yoursâ
- Kelly Jenrette, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
- Diarra Kilpatrick, âAmerican Kokoâ
- Vanessa Kirby, âThe Crownâ
- John Legend, âJesus Christ Superstar Live in Concertâ
- Ricky Martin, âThe Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Storyâ
- Kelli OâHara, âThe Accidental Wolfâ
- Adina Porter, âAmerican Horror Story: Cultâ
- Destorm Power, âCaught The Seriesâ
- Issa Rae, âInsecureâ
- Jimmi Simpson, âWestworldâ
- Matt Smith, âThe Crownâ
- Yvonne Strahovski, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
- Michael Stuhlbarg, âThe Looming Towerâ
- Miles Tagtmeyer, âBrokenâ
- Kenan Thompson, âSaturday Night Liveâ
- Katt Williams, âAtlantaâ
- Letitia Wright, âBlack Museum (Black Mirror)â
For the complete list of nominees, click here.
Netflix nudges past HBO to top Emmy nominations list with 112
Netflix dethroned HBO, the longtime king of Emmy nominations, Thursday by hauling in 112 Emmy Awards nominations â the most of any network.
HBO, which has been the industry leader for nearly two decades, came in second with 108 nominations. However, HBOâs ambitious âGame of Thronesâ scored the most nominations of any series in television with 22, including in the most coveted category of outstanding drama.
Jessica Biel discusses earning her first Emmy nomination for âThe Sinnerâ
In the wake of the tragic deaths of Anthony Bourdain and Kate Spade earlier this year, an even brighter media spotlight has shone on mental health issues, particularly depression and suicide â which gives even more resonance to Jessica Bielâs mother with ambiguous, violent tendencies, in USA Networkâs âThe Sinner.â
On Thursday, Biel was nominated for an Emmy for lead actress in a limited series for her role as Cora â a complex character who is not only entertaining to play, she says, but has given her a vehicle to address some pretty weighty and topical issues.
Where are we catching you this morning and how did you find out you were nominated?
I live in L.A. and New York â but currently Iâm in Amsterdam. Itâs early evening here â my husband [Justin Timberlake] is on tour. So it was like 5 p.m. for me when I found out â Iâd just gotten off a plane from London, I was sitting in the car with my kid.
Donald Glover and Bill Hader earn five Emmy nominations apiece
Donald Glover and Bill Hader are putting the multi into multihyphenate.
The two earned five Emmy nominations apiece Thursday morning.
Glover earned nods for lead actor in a comedy series, directing for a comedy series, and writing for a comedy series â all for his sophomore season of FXâs âAtlanta.â
His fourth nomination came for guest actor in a comedy series from when he hosted âSaturday Night Liveâ this past season.
Hader was also nominated for lead actor in a comedy series, directing in a comedy series and writing for a comedy series for his rookie HBO comedy âBarry.â Like Glover, Hader was also nominated for guest actor in a comedy series for his turn hosting âSaturday Night Live.â
In addition to their individual nominations, both Glover and Hader were nominated as producers on their comedy series, which will duke it out for comedy series.
This is the second year in a row Glover has earned at least four nods. Last year, he took home the Emmy Awards for lead actor and directing.
In total, âAtlantaâ drew 16 nominations â the most of any comedy series, while âBarryâ pulled in 13.
See the complete list of nominations here.
John Legend is one letter away from EGOT status with new Emmy nomination
First-time nominee John Legend is now just an Emmy Award away from EGOT status, scoring a nomination Thursday that could make the elusive acronym a reality.
Legend got a nod for actor in a limited series or movie for his work on the NBC special âJesus Christ Superstar: Live in Concert,â giving him a shot at winning all four major entertainment honors: Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, Tony.
The 39-year-old is joined on EGOTâs doorstep by fellow âJesus Christ Superstarâ nominees Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, who were executive producers. Lyricist Rice also wrote the book. The two have been Emmy-nominated in the past.
In addition to Legendâs 10 Grammy Awards from 28 nominations, he won an original song Oscar in 2015 for âGloryâ (from the film âSelmaâ) and a Tony in 2017 as a producer on âJitney,â which took the award for best play revival.
When the Emmy Awards are handed out in September, Legend, Webber and Rice could join the dozen current EGOT winners â Whoopi Goldberg, Mel Brooks, Audrey Hepburn and Rita Moreno, among them â whoâve conquered those four competitive categories.
Barbra Streisand, Liza Minnelli, Harry Belafonte and Quincy Jones are among the six other EGOTs whoâve hit that fabled milestone thanks to noncompetitive honors along the way.
âJesus Christ Superstar: Live in Concertâ notched a total of 13 nominations, including one for outstanding live variety special.
Click here for more of The Timesâ coverage of Thursdayâs Emmy nominations.
Bill Hader was shooting âIT 2â when he received his comedy series Emmy nom for âBarryâ
Bill Hader stepped into the Emmy spotlight Thursday with âBarry,â the show he co-created with Alec Berg. It earned multiple nominations, including for comedy series and lead actor in a comedy series. Hader plays the title character â a former Marine turned hit man who follows a mark from the Midwest to Los Angeles, where he gets bitten by the acting bug.
Where were you when you found out the good news?
Iâm in a hotel in Hamilton, outside of Toronto shooting âIT 2.â We were up all night shooting. I had gone to the gym [and] was eating breakfast and then my phone started blowing up. I was so tired and turned around that I forget that today was Thursday and Emmy nominations. Not that I donât care.
Laurie Metcalf emerges from the ashes of âRoseanneâ with an Emmy nomination
Some actresses are as good as gold, but Laurie Metcalf is something even better. Sheâs good as Teflon.
The decorated actress, who has taken home two Tony Awards and an Oscar nomination in the past two years, just earned another feather in her cap â this one maybe the most unlikely of all.
After the ABC revival of âRoseanneâ was canceled in the wake of racist tweets by its eponymous star, Roseanne Barr, Emmy prospects looked grim for the cast members left behind.
But never count Metcalf out at the Emmys.
The actress earned a nomination for supporting actress in a comedy for her portrayal of Jackie Harris. Her nomination was one of only two for âRoseanne,â which also earned a nod for multi-camera editing Thursday morning.
Metcalfâs nomination was right in line with her previous Emmys recognition. During the original run of âRoseanne,â Metcalf was nominated three times for her work as Harris and won all three times.
Can she keep her streak alive? Find out when the Emmys are handed out on Sept. 17.
Lin-Manuel Miranda, RuPaul, Tiffany Haddish and more react to Emmy nominations
Itâs Emmy nominations morning, and Hollywood is overflowing with stars celebrating their recognition.
From social media missives to statements from publicists, everyone was excited to be embraced by the Television Academy.
Comedian Tiffany Haddish, who was nominated for her work hosting âSaturday Night Live,â slyly suggested that she might buy a new dress for the occasion. (Does that mean sheâs retiring that famous Alexander McQueen dress she got plenty of use out of last awards season?)
Jonathan Van Ness is nominated for âGay of Thronesâ and âQueer Eyeâ â and he âcanât evenâ
âQueer Eyeâsâ Jonathan Van Ness scored his second Emmy nomination Thursday morning â and he âcanât even,â as one of his famous taglines goes.
Bonus? Van Ness is basking in the glory of four more nominations for Netflixâs âQueer Eye,â which features the hairstylist guru in all his fabulous splendor.
Van Ness, along with Erin Gibson, Kate Lilly, Matt Mazany and Ross Buran, is nominated for Funny or Dieâs âGay of Thrones,â for which he is an executive producer. Van Ness was previously nominated in 2016 for his work on the series.
The eight-episode show reviews HBOâs Emmy-sweeping drama âGame of Thrones,â which Van Ness recaps with his signature sass right from the salon chair.
Van Ness also uses his self-care abilities and over-the-top personality with Fab 5 costars Karamo Brown, Bobby Berk, Antoni Porowski and Tan France in âQueer Eye.â
âOh my god,â Van Ness wrote on Twitter on Thursday morning. â⌠Thank you sooo much @funnyordie @netflix Iâm so grateful.â
The Netflix reboot of âQueer Eyeâ received four Emmy nominations for structured reality program, casting for a reality program, cinematography for a reality program and picture editing for a structured or competition reality program.
âTo be recognized in this way moves me to tears,â Van Ness wrote on Instagram. âThe gratitude, the love, gahhhhhh!!â
âModern Familyâ shut out of Emmysâ comedy series category
For the first time in eight years, âModern Familyâ will not compete for an Emmy for outstanding comedy series come September.
The long-running ABC half-hour show, which has won five times for comedy series, was shut out of the race when nominations were announced Thursday morning.
This year saw a sleuth of newcomers invade the category, including HBOâs âBarryâ and Amazonâs âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,â which earned 13 and 14 nominations, respectively.
In addition to missing out on the comedy series category, the stars of âModern Familyâ failed to earn nominations for the first time ever. The show boasts several previous Emmy winners, including Julie Bowen, Ty Burrell and Eric Stonestreet.
âModern Familyâ earned just one nomination, for sound mixing for a comedy or drama series (half-hour) and animation.
See the complete list of nominations here.
Hereâs how many 2018 Emmy nods each show and platform received
âGame of Thrones,â âSaturday Night Live,â âWestworldâ and âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ collected the most Emmy Award nominations on Thursday morning.
Meanwhile, the platform breakdown saw streaming giant Netflix oust premium cable channel HBO from the top of the nominations tally. Netflix racked up 112 nods while HBO earned 108. Trailing were broadcaster NBC with 78 nominees and cable network FX with 50.
âItâs been another record-breaking year with more than 9,100 entries in 122 unique categories for the initial nomination round of voting,â Television Academy Chairman and CEO Hayma Washington said in a statement. âThe continued growth of the industry has provided opportunities for acclaimed new programs to emerge, while allowing last seasonâs breakthrough programs to thrive.â
Hereâs a breakdown of the nominees by show, with five or more nominations, and platform, with 10 or more nominations, according to the academy.
BY SHOW
- âGame of Thronesâ (HBO): 22
- âSaturday Night Liveâ (NBC): 21
- âWestworldâ (HBO): 21
- âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ (Hulu): 20
- âThe Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Storyâ (FX): 18
- âAtlantaâ (FX): 16
- âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ (Prime Video): 14
- âBarryâ (HBO): 13
- âThe Crownâ (Netflix): 13
- âJesus Christ Superstar Live in Concertâ (NBC): 13
- âGodlessâ (Netflix): 12
- âStranger Thingsâ (Netflix): 12
- âGLOWâ (Netflix): 10
- âRuPaulâs Drag Raceâ (VH1): 10
- âThe Voiceâ (NBC): 10
- âLast Week Tonight With John Oliverâ (HBO): 9
- âTwin Peaksâ (Showtime): 9
- âThe Oscarsâ (ABC): 8
- âThis Is Usâ (NBC): 8
- âAmerican Horror Story: Cultâ (FX): 7
- âGenius: Picassoâ (National Geographic): 7
- âJaneâ: 7
- âSilicon Valleyâ (HBO): 7
- âUSS Callister (Black Mirror)â (Netflix): 7
- âThe Alienistâ (TNT): 6
- âAnthony Bourdain: Parts Unknownâ (CNN): 6
- âDancing With the Starsâ (ABC): 6
- âblack-ishâ (ABC): 5
- âBlue Planet IIâ (BBC America): 5
- âThe Defiant Onesâ (HBO): 5
- âFahrenheit 451â (HBO): 5
- âOzarkâ (Netflix): 5
- âPatrick Melroseâ (Showtime): 5
- âSo You Think You Can Danceâ (Fox): 5
- âWild Wild Countryâ (Netflix): 5
- âWill & Graceâ (NBC): 5
Los Angeles Times complete Emmy Awards database
BY PLATFORM
- Netflix: 112
- HBO: 108
- NBC: 78
- FX Networks: 50
- CBS: 34
- ABC: 31
- Hulu: 27
- Prime Video: 22
- Showtime: 21
- National Geographic: 17
- FOX: 16
- VH1: 12
- CNN: 10
For the complete list of nominees, click here.
Anthony Bourdain nominated posthumously for âParts Unknownâ Emmy
Anthony Bourdain was nominated posthumously for an Emmy in the outstanding informational series or special category Thursday morning, giving him a chance to earn his fifth TV honor come September.
CNNâs âAnthony Bourdain: Parts Unknownâ notched a total of six nominations for 2018, five of them in Creative Arts Emmy categories.
Since 2010, the celebrity chef and world traveler had earned four Emmy statues for the show along with a host of nominations in various categories for it, âThe Tasteâ and âAnthony Bourdain: No Reservations.â
Appreciation: Anthony Bourdain, 1956-2018
â[I]t is not a travel show, really, or a food show, but an encyclopedia of human variety, ingenuity, adaptation, survival and aspiration,â Times TV critic Robert Lloyd said of âParts Unknownâ in June.
âWhere most travel-based shows have a touristic bent, Bourdainâs, which ranged from Korea to Koreatown, Iran to Antarctica, Chicago to Shanghai to Borneo to Senegal, were never about where you, as a viewer, as a consumer, could go â he often went places you couldnât â and what to do when you got there,â Lloyd wrote.
âLeah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermathâ on A&E, âMy Next Guest Needs No Introduction With David Lettermanâ on Netflix, âStarTalk With Neil deGrasse Tysonâ on National Geographic and âViceâ on HBO are also nominated for informational series or special for 2018.
The complete list of 2018 Emmy nominees
The nominations for the 2018 Emmy Awards were announced today in Los Angeles. The 70th Primetime Emmy Awards will take place Sept. 17 at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles. The ceremony will be hosted by Michael Che and Colin Jost.
Drama series:
âThe Americansâ
âThe Crownâ
âGame of Thronesâ
âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
âStranger Thingsâ
âThis Is Usâ
âWestworldâ
Comedy series:
âAtlantaâ
âBarryâ
âblack-ishâ
âCurb Your Enthusiasmâ
âGlowâ
âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ
âSilicon Valleyâ
âUnbreakable Kimmy Schmidtâ
For âKilling Eveâ star Sandra Oh, an Emmy nomination that will go down in history
Sandra Ohâs first headlining TV role in BBC Americaâs âKilling Eveâ has yielded her first lead actress in a drama Emmy nomination â and a place in history.
Ohâs nomination Thursday carries an added layer of distinction because it makes her the first person of Asian descent to be nominated in the category in the 70-year run of the award show.
At a time when Hollywood is reckoning with calls for greater inclusivity, the historic aspect of Ohâs nomination serves as another sobering reminder of the industryâs deep-rooted diversity problem.
Not that reminders are needed. It was only three years ago that Viola Davis stood up on the Emmy stage as the first African American winner in the category for her role in âHow to Get Away With Murder.â And just last year, Donald Glover made history as the first black person to win the Emmy for directing his comedy series âAtlanta.â
Oh, however, is not an Emmy newcomer. The 46-year-old actress scored five supporting Emmy nominations during her 10-year run as Dr. Cristina Yang in ABCâs popular âGreyâs Anatomy.â
Hailing from the mind of Phoebe Waller-Bridge (âFleabagâ), âKilling Eveâ premiered in April on BBC America to critical acclaim and, week after week, had viewers taking notice of Ohâs quirky and layered performance as Eve Polastri, a brainy British intelligence agent who becomes fixated with the young female assassin (Jodie Comer) sheâs tracking.
The thriller steadily established itself as a bright spot for BBC America through word of mouth. It yielded weekly ratings growth over the course of its eight-episode run, and its finale garnered 1.25 million total viewers when viewing over three days is tallied, up 86% from its premiere. The cable network wasted little time in renewing the series for a second season.
âKilling Eveâ marks Ohâs most noticeable return to television since her exit from âGreyâs Anatomyâ in 2014. Since then, she took on other roles on screen and stage, including as a social worker in the third season of ABCâs âAmerican Crimeâ and as a writing professor in the local staging of Julia Choâs âOffice Hour.â
How to watch Thursdayâs Emmy nominations
And the nominees areâŚ
After months of FYC events, mailers and billboards, the official nominations announcement for the 70th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards is mere hours away. âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ Emmy-nominated actress Samira Wiley and âThe Blacklistâ grad Ryan Eggold are set to unveil this yearâs nominees from the Wolf Theatre at the Television Academy in North Hollywood.
Fittingly, the question on every TV fanâs mind is: How can I watch at home?
Beginning at 11:30 a.m. EST/8:30 a.m. PDT, the nominations ceremony will be available to livestream here via Emmys.com.
Although many of the featured categories are the same year in and year out, the Academy usually manages to sneak in a surprise or two, such as last year when Shemar Moore revealed that his nominations copresenter Anna Chlumsky had been nominated once again for best supporting actress in a comedy series for her work on âVeep.â
With perennial favorite âVeepâ out of the running this year due to an extended hiatus, the comedy categories promise a few more surprises come Thursday morning.
After the nominations are announced, hit refresh on this blog for analysis, reactions and much more.
Envelope Emmy roundtables 2018: Watch the full interviews and more
Criticâs picks for Emmy nominations: Love for Kristen Bell, âTwin Peaksâ and ⌠âDetectoristsâ
I want to say first that I find the Emmys nonsensical. Giving out trophies for something as various and impossible to quantify as creative work seems to me not just silly, but actually inimical to creativity, which does not need your stinking badges and, indeed, suffers when it strives to win them. Nevertheless, I offer these names, which might as easily be (many) others, in the spirit of spreading the love.
Comedy series: âDetectoristsâ (Acorn TV). Written and directed by and starring Mackenzie Crook, this beautiful pastoral comedy â set around metal-detecting hobbyists searching for Saxon gold and spiritual connection â makes a song out of the present and past, what changes and what remains.
Drama series: âTwin Peaks: The Returnâ (Showtime). Superbly unaccountable, the extremely belated, happily inconclusive third and final season of David Lynchâs Northwest noir supernatural comic melodrama was a show in which you not only never knew what would happen next, but how it would happen â as farce, horror, in color or black and white, a tribute to Georges MĂŠliès, or something made by people who had never worked a camera before.
Criticâs picks for Emmy nominations: Expect âHandmaidâs Taleâ and âAtlantaâ
Drama series
Iâd love to root for something new â a show that hasnât been nominated or won before, or perhaps a series that just debuted â but nothing on television beats the second season of Huluâs âThe Handmaidâs Tale.â This year, the dark drama stretched its dystopian narrative beyond the Margaret Atwood novel from which it was adapted and hit even closer to the bone in its themes of subjugation, authoritarianism and religious persecution. All that, and it also managed to make a tune covered by the Bay City Rollers sound meaningful. Close behind, however, are other shows familiar to the Emmys where women ruled: âGame of Thronesâ and âThe Crown.â And if the world were turned upside down? âStranger Things.â
Actor, drama
As the self-absorbed, cruel patriarch John Paul Getty of âTrust,â Donald Sutherland elevated this compelling original drama from good to great with a stellar performance. Even if you have seen that other drama about the 1970s kidnapping of John Paul Getty III, this narrative (helmed by director Danny Boyle) lays bare the moral bankruptcy of the worldâs wealthiest man.
Emmys 2018: Five races weâll be watching when nominations are announced
Five first-year TV shows earned Emmy nominations last year for best drama series, offering a rare, almost revolutionary jolt of change to a set of awards that, over the years, have celebrated monotony and excellence in equal measure.
This being the Emmys, all five of those series â âThe Handmaidâs Tale,â âStranger Things,â âThe Crown,â âThis Is Usâ and âWestworldâ â are expected to be nominated again this year ⌠and probably the year after that ⌠and ⌠you get the idea. Emmy story lines revolve around whether a particular program or performance will finally fall out of favor (Iâm looking at you, âModern Familyâ) as much as which shows will break through with voters.
That being said, this yearâs Emmy races offer a few areas of interest beyond the same old, same old. Here are five Iâll be paying close attention to when the nominations are revealed Thursday morning.
This year, the path to the Emmys goes through the Arbyâs takeout window
On a recent weekday morning, Zach Galifianakis manned the drive-through window at the Arbyâs on Sunset Boulevard, handing out roast beef sandwiches to Television Academy members who had exclusive run of the place for an Emmy event promoting the FX comedy series âBaskets.â
Later that evening, many of those same Emmy voters made their way downtown to the opulent hipster haven Ace Hotel, where they enjoyed gourmet sandwiches (cucumbers took precedence over red meat) from beloved L.A. bakery Joanâs on Third before a âThis Is Usâ for-your-consideration screening. (âFeel free to film, tweet and photograph this event using the hashtag #ThisIsUsFYC,â a publicist firmly suggested following a sizzle reel outlining myriad reasons to vote for the NBC series.)
With hundreds of TV shows submitting more than 9,000 entries for Emmy consideration, sometimes you need to be firm with direction. Emmy voting begins Monday, and the Television Academyâs 23,000-plus members are eyeing the towering stacks of (unwatched) screeners sitting on the floors of their offices and perhaps pondering ways to lose the weight they gained from three solid months of attending dinners and parties designed to sway their decision.