The Emmy Awards have wrapped. âBig Little Liesâ was a big winner along with Donald Glover, âSaturday Night Liveâ and âThe Handmaidâs Tale.â Lena Waithe made history as the first black woman to win for writing in a comedy series, âHandmaidâsâ was the first streaming show to win drama, and Donald Glover was the first black man to win directing in comedy. Check out our behind-the-scenes stories, fashion breakdowns and red carpet interviews.
Donald Glover at the Emmys: âItâs been a pretty good year. I know everyone else is having an awful one, but mine is OKâ
Dressed in a smart purple suit and looking pleasantly dazed, Donald Glover entered the press room Sunday night clutching the two Emmys that helped him make history. One for best director for a comedy series, and the other for best actor in the same series, âAtlanta.â
âI feel crazy,â Glover said. âIâm all right. Itâs been a pretty good year. I know everyone else is having an awful one, but mine is OK.â
Like many others who came to the backstage podium, he touched on politics.
âI donât really have much to say other than what I said; itâs pretty obvious people in dystopian societies donât realize theyâre in dystopian societies. I just want people to be aware, I think people are aware.â
Glover credited his history of working alongside incredible directors, including Ridley Scott, with helping him become a director in his own right.
âDirectors usually donât get to work with other directors, but Iâve gotten to work with a bunch of great directors. Iâve had a lot of research, so I guess it paid off.â
Despite the excitement surrounding his Emmy wins, Glover said he has not even begun to process what it all means.
âIt has not sunk in at all. I donât know whatâs happening right now, it feels like a dream,â he said. âI donât want to make the best indie movie, I want to make the best movie. I donât believe in labels like that. Iâm glad I made history, but thatâs not what I was trying to do. I was trying to make the best product. I just wanted to make a really great show.â
Hereâs how âHandmaidâs Taleâ writer-producer and double winner Bruce Miller got ready for the Emmys
Before he became a double Emmy winner-- for both drama series and writing for a drama series-- and before he helped Hulu make streaming TV history, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ producer spent Emmy morning, well, watching television.
âI sat with my daughter and watched âBuffy the Vampire Slayer,ââ Bruce Miller said when we asked him on the red carpet about his Emmy pre-game.
Gee, maybe there is something to be said about the power of strong female characters, Hollywood.
Praise be.
Lorne Michaels on TV in turbulent times: âPeople trust television â certainly, our president doesâ
To say that âSaturday Night Liveâ has experienced a renaissance this year with one of its most politically charged seasons would be as understated as Alec Baldwinâs pursed lips when heâs impersonating Trump.
Asked about the importance of TV in turbulent times, Lorne Michaels, the creator and executive producer of the late-night sketch comedy show, says it comes down to trust.
âI think on a certain level, people trust television â certainly, our president does,â Michaels told The Times on the Emmys red carpet.
âThe hard part of this last season was things were changing so quickly,â he added. âSomething that you wrote on Wednesday was no longer relevant by Friday. ...You have to keep up. And when people are following the news, and paying attention the way they were this entire election, it helps us.â
That boost translated to nine Emmy wins this year for the show, including a win for variety sketch series as well as a supporting actor in a comedy series win for Baldwin and supporting actress for Kate McKinnon, who portrayed Hillary Clinton.
For more on âSaturday Night Liveâsâ big night, check out Times staff writer Meredith Blakeâs piece here.
Watch Stephen Colbert explain why everythingâs better on TV
Stephen Colbert understands that sometimes you want to go where everybody knows your name. Scratch that. Where you know everybodyâs name. Because theyâre on TV. And youâre watching it.
Regardless, the host of the 2017 Emmy Awards opened his show with a song-and-dance number reminding the world that when, well, the world gets to be a little too much, thereâs always refuge to be found on television.
As delightful as Colbertâs performance is, the entire bit is elevated by a surprise appearance by Chance the Rapper, who implored viewers to watch TV, sure, but to also not blind themselves to the pressing social issues of our time.
Chanceâs rap in full:
Yo, Stephen, what a beautiful segue
Let me take over, I can make us some headway
I love television, itâs a pleasant distraction
But just imagine taking action
I like âBrooklyn Nine-Nine,â in fact Iâm addicted
But whereâs the cop show where one gets convicted?
I miss the classics, I still think âMASHâ rocks
But if Hawkeye can be a soldier, why not Laverne Cox
âBobâs Burgersâ make you smile, but please donât ignore
The decline of the independent, family-run store
I get them finales they got you focused
Just record the show and try to show up at the protest
Ya heard
The song can be heard in full above. And read more about Colbertâs hosting gig here.
The stars aligned for the glittery Governors Ball, the Emmysâ official after-party
After the Emmy Awards wrapped, it was off to the Governors Ball, the eveningâs official post-party celebration.
Nobody who was anybody escaped the river of formally clad folks walking from the Microsoft Theater to the nearby L.A. Convention Center, where a score of stairs awaited those whoâd been walking in heels all day. Jimmy Kimmel was spotted making the trip, as were Priyanka Chopra, GLAAD President Sarah Kate Ellis and directing nominee Lesli Linka Glatter.
Tables packed with glasses of Champagne and bottles of water greeted the guests as they reached their destination and entered a room that had been transformed for the evening.
Massive Emmy statues flanked the entry and dots of blue light looked like stars on a dark sky surrounding the festivities. Hanging from the ceiling were hundreds â maybe thousands? â of gold tubes that gave the effect of walking through the heart of a fantastical pipe organ.
In the middle of the room, a round, tiered, rotating stage rose toward the ceiling. As the celebration began, a quartet of women in shining gold dresses played the strings on instrumental renditions of tunes by Michael Jackson, Bruno Mars and Journey. The dancing wouldnât start until much later.
Susan Sarandon arrived promptly, chatting while Seth MacFarlane fought the flow of bodies to pop back outside for a bit. Debra Messing made her way across the room, and Thandie Newton simply glowed as the hundreds of guests streamed in.
At a table in the A-list cluster of seats, presenter Anika Noni Rose of BETâs âThe Quad,â chiffon skirt surrounding her like a pink cloud, tucked into the Patina Catering meal right off the bat. Alec Baldwin flew solo past her, toting his third Emmy as if he had carried one around his whole life.
Staff in tuxedos, gold bow ties and white gloves stood at the ready at half a dozen engraving stations near the back of the large ballroom, waiting to personalize the winnersâ statues. Along with a trophy, each winner took home a pricey, specially packaged silver bottle of Sterling wine.
The meal started off with a salad laden with heirloom tomatoes, plums, red quinoa and balsamic jelly. Pan-roasted filet mignon with roasted grapes, purple potatoes and a horseradish puree followed, topped off by a finger-thin brownie bar with dulce de leche and roasted cherries.
Two hours into the party, the number of famous faces still in the crowd was remarkable. To name a few: Sterling K Brown and his wife, âAtlantaâsâ LaKeith Stanfield, Dave Chappelle, Chris Sullivan of âThis Is Us,â Jeffrey Wright of âWestworld,â Cicely Tyson and Padma Lakshmi.
Then it was off to a long line of black SUV limos and shuttles waiting to take people off to other parties thrown by HBO, Netflix, Hulu and more â with a Groundwork coffee bar strategically placed on the way out, to give the guests a boost and keep the nightâs parties going.
Sterling K. Brownâs Emmys speech was cut off but Nicole Kidmanâs wasnât. Viewers noticed
Just like the âThis is Usâ star himself, folks in the audience were annoyed that Sterling K. Brown was played off during his acceptance speech for lead actor in a drama at Sunday nightâs Emmy Awards. âNobody got that loud music,â he said from the stage as he got the wrap-up sign and the crowd in the Microsoft Theater began booing when his microphone was cut.
The moment felt extra galling given that when Nicole Kidman gave her speech for lead actress in a limited series for âBig Little Lies,â the orchestra never began playing and she talked for far longer, 2:46 vs Brownâs 1:57.
Later, in the press room, Brown reclaimed his time to share more thanks to his real and TV families. (For another 1:25.)
And of âThis is Usâ creator Dan Fogelman he said, âIn his own little, small, special way, heâs not trying to make America great again, heâs trying to make America the best itâs ever been.â
See his heartfelt remarks above.
The biggest Trump burns from the 2017 Emmy Awards
Hollywood came for President Trump at the 2017 Emmy Awards. Many nominees, presenters and winners took aim at the president from the Microfost Theater stage. Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin even pulled out old quotes from their 1980 classic â9 to 5â call
The stars of Sundayâs Emmy Awards had plenty to say about Donald Trump during a night when it seemed as if everyone from host Stephen Colbert to the winners took a shot at the president.
âAt long last, Mr. President, here is your Emmy,â said Alec Baldwin upon winning the Emmy for supporting actor in a comedy series for his work on âSaturday Night Live.â
Week after week during the 2016-17 television season, Baldwin took to the âSNLâ stage with his now famous Trump impression.
Baldwinâs dig took aim at the fact that Trump, though nominated, never won an Emmy for âCelebrity Apprentice,â which even Colbert mentioned earlier in the show.
But the night was just beginning. â9 to 5â stars Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin -- with a no-comment Dolly Parton in the middle of them -- referenced the premise of their own movie to call Trump a âsexist egotistical lying hypocritical bigot.â
âAtlantaâsâ Donald Glover used his winnerâs speech to thank âTrump, for making black people No. 1 on the most oppressed list.â
âVeepâsâ Julia Louis-Dreyfus even mentioned an abandoned story line involving impeachment.
Watch some of the harshest Trump burns from the 2017 Emmys in the clip above.
Hereâs what Hillary Clinton thought about Kate McKinnonâs Emmy-winning âSNLâ tribute
Former First Lady and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was among the memorable figures frequently spoofed by two-time Emmy Award winner Kate McKinnon on âSaturday Night Live.â
During Sundayâs Primetime Emmy Awards, McKinnon picked up her second trophy for supporting actress in a comedy and during an emotional acceptance speech thanked the former presidential hopeful for her âgrace and grit.â
It was an interesting choice of words, given that Clintonâs recently released memoir, âWhat Happened,â touched upon McKinnonâs take on the candidate following her loss to Donald Trump in the November election. The chapter was titled âGrit and Gratitude.â ABC Newsâ Chris Donovan tweeted a picture of the excerpt about McKinnon on Sunday night.
âOn the Saturday after the election, I turned on âSaturday Night Liveâ and watched Kate McKinnon open the show with her impression of me one more time. She sat at a grand piano and played âHallelujahâ.... As she sang, it seemed like she was fighting back tears. Listening, so was I,â Clinton wrote.
âAt the end, Kate-as-Hillary turned to the camera and said, âIâm not giving up and neither should you.ââ
Watch the clip below.
See Stephen Colbert take aim at President Trump, Bill Maher and more in his Emmys monologue
Stephen Colbert came locked and loaded for his monologue at last nightâs Emmy Awards ceremony, and had plenty of targets in his sights.
The host of âThe Late Showâ was nothing if not consistent, mocking President Trump throughout his opening remarks, just as he typically does nightly on his show.
But the joke may have ultimately been on Colbert himself, with his introduction of Sean Spicer in a painfully unfunny gag about crowd size that left a bad taste in the mouths of many.
To see Colbertâs remarks in full â including a sick burn on Bill Maher â check out the video above. Read all about the highlights of Colbertâs Emmys opening salvo here.
Kate McKinnon steps out with girlfriend Jackie Abbott at the Emmys
âSaturday Night Liveâ star Kate McKinnon stepped out with her girlfriend on Sunday when she picked up her second trophy for supporting actress in a comedy series at the 69th Primetime Emmy Awards.
The âRough Nightâ and âOffice Christmas Partyâ actress, who memorably played presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton on the long-running NBC sketch comedy, was accompanied by Jackie Abbott, whom McKinnon hugged when Gina Rodriguez and Shemar Moore announced that she had won.
It was McKinnonâs first public appearance with Abbott, a New York-based actress, photographer and artist, according to People. The comedic actress was last spotted out with Abbott in April 2016 backstage at a performance of Broadwayâs âFun/Home,â People said.
âBeing part of this season of âSaturday Night Liveâ was the most meaningful thing that I will ever do. So I should probably stop now,â the emotional McKinnon said during her acceptance speech.
ALSO
Riding high on Trump, âSNLâ wins big at the Emmys
The complete list of 2017 Emmy winners and nominees
This yearâs Emmys didnât even pretend not to be political
Issa Rae, RuPaul, Milo Ventimiglia and more on the last show they had an emotional response to
At the 2017 Emmy Awards we asked the people responsible for making âPeak TVâ: âWhat is the last show you had a strong, emotional response to?â
The answers ran the gamut of the recent Emmy nomination list, with many, many nominees and presenters picking eventual drama series winner âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ as the show that elicited strong feelings.
John Turturro from âThe Night Ofâ name-checked the Margaret Atwood adaptation (because âunfortunately, it seems very relevantâ) as did Emmy winner RuPaul Charles and âFeudâsâ Jackie Hoffman.
Meanwhile, Milo Ventimiglia from âThis Is Usâ offered a variety of titles including limited series winner âBig Little Lies,â âStranger Thingsâ and this surprising reveal: âAt times even âBig Bang Theoryâ gets me.â
âThe Night Ofâ star Michael Kenneth Williams picked the last season of âShameless,â and guest actor in a drama series winner Gerald McRaney of âThis is Usâ reached back to extol his affection for previous Emmy favorite âDownton Abbey.â
Of Carson, Bates, Edith and the gang, the former star of âMajor Dadâ said, âI loved those people.â
Jackie Hoffman had the best reaction when she lost the Emmy to Laura Dern (#soreloser)
If thereâs one thing new Hollywood could learn from old Hollywood, itâs the value of a celebrity feud. Luckily, actress Jackie Hoffman is bringing vendettas back to the forefront â even in jest.
Hoffman, who portrayed Mamacita on FXâs âFeud: Bette and Joan,â which detailed the complicated rivalry between Bette Davis and Joan Crawford, looked to start a competition of her own after losing the Emmy for supporting actress in a limited series or movie to Laura Dern.
Hoffman delivered an outsized reaction to the announcement of the winner Sunday night, yelling âdamn it!â and hitting the seat in front of her in what appeared to be a delicious moment of reality among the facade of smiles and polite clapping.
She then turned to Twitter to share some salacious rumors she had heard about six-time nominee Dern, including tales of exploitation and art looting.
Hoffmanâs outlandish tweets harkened to the catty backstabbing depicted in âFeud,â where Crawford and Davis actively worked to undermine the otherâs chance at an Oscar for âWhat Ever Happened to Baby Jane?â
Still, Hoffman didnât let the ruse go on too long, tweeting later in the ceremony, âI hear the media actually taking my reaction seriously? Are you kidding me?â
Inside the Governors Ball with Elisabeth Moss, Donald Glover and more stars of the 2017 Emmy Awards
As the last of the winners wrap up their remarks, the Emmy Awards telecast comes to an end. But that does not mean the night is completely over.
For some, including âThe Handmaidâs Taleâsâ Elisabeth Moss, âAtlantaâsâ Donald Glover and âMaster of Noneâsâ Lena Waithe, the celebration continues at the glitzy after-party held just across the street.
The theme of this yearâs Governors Ball was âGolden Grandeur.â The ceiling at the Los Angeles Convention Center was decorated with more than 5,000 gold-colored, paper tubes to set the mood.
Hereâs a peek inside the official 2017 Emmys after-party.
Creators of Emmy-winning âVeepâ on the differences between their showâs insane politics and the real world
Sunday was a good night for HBOâs âVeep.â The political satire, a two-time Emmy-winning comedy series about the first female POTUS, not only received 17 Emmy nominations in all but took home the Emmy for best comedy series.
With a mix of cast and series creators behind them, Julia Louis-Dreyfus and executive producer David Mandel addressed the crowd.
âIn our show, when Selina does something horrible or lies, she gets caught and actually pays a price for it,â Mandel said, alluding to President Trump.
On whether the eveningâs wins for women indicate a permanent shift in Hollywood, Louis-Dreyfus jumped in: âGod, I hope so; letâs hope this is the beginning of something even better in our country -- and in the world -- because I think the world would be a better place if more women were in charge,â she said.
Then she turned to Mandel: âRight, David?!â
âYou ARE in charge,â Mandel replied. âYouâre my boss!â
Aziz Ansari and Lena Waithe asked to step aside for the cast of âBig Little Liesâ
There was an awkward moment in the press room when Lena Waithe and Aziz Ansari of âMaster of Noneâ were asked to step aside at the Emmys on Sunday night to make way for the cast and crew of âBig Little Lies,â fresh off their win for limited series.
Although it had been announced that the group from âBig Little Liesâ was coming up next, Waithe and Ansari walked in holding their Emmys. Waithe had just made history as the first black woman to win for comedy writing and the two stood by awkwardly while the âBig Little Liesâ cast failed to emerge.
Instead of being ushered to the podium to take questions since they were there, Waithe and Ansari were escorted to the side where they waited patiently through a long question-and-answer session once the âBig Little Liesâ team arrived. (The situation wouldâve been uncomfortable regardless of which shows were involved, but the optics werenât great.)
After a while, Ansari took Waitheâs picture at the side of the podium. They later gamely took to the stage after being introduced, not by their names as many winners were, but simply as the winners of writing in a comedy series.
âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ cast celebrates a night of wins with dystopian-themed cocktails
It was just before 10 p.m., and the cast of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ hadnât yet arrived at Huluâs Emmy party at downtown L.A.âs Otium â the curse of being winners and making the media rounds at the Microsoft Theater. Their presence was felt in other ways, though â like with specialty cocktails: âBlessed be the Fruit,â âPraise Beâ and âUnder His Eye.â
By 11 p.m., the cast began making their way into the Hulu party.
Samira Wiley was among the first to arrive.
How are she and her fellow handmaidens processing their big showing at the Emmys?
âWeâre all freaking out, are you kidding me?â Wiley said as she walked into the party. âWe just keep looking at each other screaming. This has been an amazing night.â
When âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ author Margaret Atwood walked in, party attendees cheered. âNo one thought it was just a show,â Atwood said of the series adapted from her 1985 novel. âWhen people woke up on Nov. 9, no one felt it was just a show.â
Star Elisabeth Moss appeared shortly after, holding two Emmys, one for her win as actress in a drama and one as a producer on the series.
âThis is a pretty great workout,â Moss said, curling the trophies like hand weights. âIâm going to be sore tomorrow.â
Writer-producer Bruce Miller, who also took home a pair of Emmys for the series, said, âIâm feeling a little overwhelmed right now. But Iâm so happy and proud of everybody. They all deserve it so much and they work so hard.â
It wasnât just Sean Spicer: How Donald Glover, Lena Waithe and, yes, Julia Louis-Dreyfus made Emmys history
This yearâs Emmys were memorable for a number of reasons, and not just for Anna Chlumskyâs shocked reaction when Sean Spicer rolled that lectern onstage.
Donald Glover, the multi-hyphenate behind FXâs groundbreaking comedy âAtlanta,â became the first black director to win an Emmy for comedy direction. Glover won for âB.A.N.,â an experimental stand-alone episode set in âAtlantaâsâ alternate-universe Black Entertainment Television. It was one of the first-year seriesâ best episodes, blistering in its honest and funny look at race, outrage culture and black masculinity.
Glover also won the Emmy for lead actor in a comedy, becoming just the second black man to take that award. Robert Guillaume won for âBensonâ in 1985.
Lena Waithe, the first black woman ever nominated for comedy writing, took that Emmy for the âMaster of Noneâ episode âThanksgiving,â which she co-wrote with series creator Aziz Ansari. The episodeâs story, inspired by Waitheâs own life, followed her character, Denise, discovering her sexuality over the course of her life and finally revealing it to her mother.
âI had survived that thing that I was so afraid of,â Waithe told The Times of her coming-out experience.
Watch Stephen Colbert wake up naked in a âWestworldâ diagnostic facility
It turns out Stephen Colbert may be more than the typical Emmy âhost.â
Or so viewers were led to believe during a skit that transported the Emmy emcee to the world of âWestworld.â
When Colbert started spouting gibberish on stage, two people clad in hazmat suits appeared to drag him away. When Colbert came to, he was face to face with Jeffrey Wright, a.k.a. Bernard from HBOâs âWestworld.â
In âWestworld,â the androids that populate the immersive theme park are known as âhosts.â What follows is Wright running a diagnostic on Colbert.
âHave you ever questioned the nature of your reality?â asks Wright.
âEvery day since November 8th,â answers Colbert.
Watch the full segment above.
Margaret Atwood talks about her Emmy win: âYou can say the handmaids have escapedâ
With âGame of Thronesâ debuting too late to be eligible for this yearâs Emmys, plenty of fresh names were in the running for best drama series. But ultimately, Huluâs âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ â based on Margaret Atwoodâs 1985 novel about a futuristic, totalitarian patriarchal theocracy that prizes fertile women above all else â scored the top honor.
Creator Bruce Miller had no trouble answering what he hopes audiences will take away from the show: âa desire to watch the second season,â he replied quickly. âNo, if weâve done our job well, itâll be different for everyone who watches it.â
On Hulu being the first streaming service to win one of the Emmyâs top two prizes,â Miller added: âThe way Hulu handled our show, they were bold and behind us and committed to making something different. If streaming services continue to do that, I donât see a limit to what they [can do].â
The entire evening, said Elisabeth Moss â who won the Emmy for lead actress for her role as Offred â was a âroller coaster of emotions.â
Perhaps thatâs what prompted the F-bombs during her acceptance speech.
âThat was the best version you could have gotten of that â that was the clean version,â she joked. âYou do have an out-of-body experience [accepting the award]. Itâs a surprise. It should be a surprise; otherwise, youâre an A-hole.â
On a more serious note, Moss added that the many wins for women Sunday night â and for such strong roles â could be considered a positive turn for Hollywood: âWeâve made incredible progress, but thereâs still a lot of work to be done,â she said. âBut obviously incredible progress is being made. Itâs not just women in front of the camera but behind the camera. ... we need to see more of that.â
âAs a young actor, you donât pay attention to the limitations placed upon you,â said Ann Dowd, who won the Emmy for supporting actress. âNow there are so many more opportunities. Itâs a beautiful thing.
âThereâs a war going on every day, a battle for womenâs rights,â producer Warren Littlefield added. âAnd the fact that we can remind people that the resistance is alive â there are days in America that feels like itâs a prequel to [the showâs fictitious Republic of] Gilead, so maybe we can help with the fight.â
Atwood finally stepped forward to offer what she hopes people will take away from the book and the TV series.
âWell, one take-away would be ânever believe it can never happen here,ââ she said. âWhich was one of the premises I used for the book. Nothing went into the book that people hadnât done at some point in time, in some place.â
Then she mentioned several pop cultural offshoots of âHandmaidâs Taleâ that the showâs popularity has sparked. Thereâs a graphic novel, she said, and a manâs version of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ on YouTube, apparently. And she receives fan pictures of viewersâ pets â dogs, cats â dressed in Handmaidsâ garb.
âIn a way, you can say the handmaids have escaped,â Atwood said. âTheyâre out there, and theyâre coming to you again in Season 2!â
Emmy-winning TV movie âSan Juniperoâ from âBlack Mirrorâ originally starred a hetero couple
The âBlack Mirrorâ episode âSan Juniperoâ won big at the Emmys Sunday night. Creator Charlie Brooker won writing for a limited series or movie, and later the episode picked up a second win for TV movie.
In a backstage reveal at the Emmys, Brooker explained that the episode â starring Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Mackenzie Davis â about technologically star-crossed lovers, was originally written for a heterosexual couple. It wasnât until Brooker decided to make them a queer couple that things started to fall into place.
âIt became more fun, more interesting,â he said. âIt was sort of easiest to write in a way. We felt we captured something special, and the reaction has been quite overwhelming â the way people have taken it to heart. Iâm genuinely a cynic, as you can tell from the series, so the fact that this happened blows up my worldview.â
He also addressed the fact that the winning episode is markedly different from most of the âBlack Mirrorâ offerings in that it presents a world of hope rather than the usual ultra-dark fare the series offers.
âIt was out of place deliberately. It was the first episode I wrote for this season because I wanted to blow up my preconceptions for the show,â Brooker said.
That subversion of tone became particularly resonant this year, a point the âBlack Mirrorâ showrunner underlined in his acceptance speech.
âIâve heard 2017 described as being trapped â like being trapped in one long, unending âBlack Mirrorâ episode,â Brooker said, âBut I like to think if I had written it, it wouldnât be quite so on the nose with all the sort of Nazis and hate.â
The 2017 Emmy Awards was a big win for the LGBTQ community
Among the biggest winners at the 2017 Emmy Awards: LGBTQ stories and storytellers.
Kate McKinnon was one of the early winners of the evening Sunday, beating a field that included some of her âSaturday Night Liveâ colleagues to take home the award for supporting actress in a comedy series. The first openly lesbian cast member of the sketch comedy show, McKinnon made her mark this season with portrayals of Hillary Clinton, Jeff Sessions, Kellyanne Conway, Betsy DeVos and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
Lena Waithe of âMaster of Noneâ made history as the first black woman to win the Emmy for writing in a comedy series. Waithe, who also plays Denise on the Netflix series, co-wrote the âThanksgivingâ episode with the showâs co-creator, Aziz Ansari. The intensely personal story was based on Waitheâs own coming out story.
In her speech Sunday, Waithe gave a shout-out to fellow members of the LGBTQ community, calling them superheroes and saying that âthe world would not be as beautiful as it is if you werenât in it.â
âBlack Mirrorâ won for its âSan Juniperoâ episode, which tells the story of two women falling in love at a beach resort town (which â spoiler alert â is actually a simulated reality). The show won for best TV movie and writing for a limited series, movie or dramatic special.
During the telecast, host Stephen Colbert sat down for an interview with the Emmy statue herself, a golden-winged woman played by RuPaul, TVâs most famous drag queen.
RuPaul was a winner this year too, nabbing the award for host of a reality or reality-competition series for the second consecutive year at the Creative Arts Emmys last weekend.
And no fewer than three gay icons came together during the ceremonyâs â9 to 5â reunion. The Emmys brought Dolly Parton, Lily Tomlin and Jane Fonda onstage to present the award for supporting actor in a limited series or TV movie (won by Alexander Skarsgard for âBig Little Liesâ).
Add a big night for âThe Handmaidâs Tale,â which had its own lesbian story line, and thatâs a lot of love for LGBTQ television -- even in a year when âTransparentâ went winless.
Emmys 2017: A view from the treacherous march from the Emmys to the Governors Ball
Governors Ball 2017 Emmy Awards performance
Making it from the Emmys broadcast home at the Microsoft Theater to the convention center across the street, where the Governors Ball is held, is no easy feat for those in heels. But even with screaming toes and ankles betraying our age, the select few with ball tickets make the trek.
âWeâre all teetering at this point of the night,â actress Yvette Nicole Brown said. âBut Iâm not above taking these off... I donât care if itâs downtown. They can talk.â
Her friend, actress Anika Noni Rose, laughed and mused about what could make the walk easier in the future.
âGolf carts. Moving walkways. Iâve thought about all of this,â she said.
Walking up to the Governors Ball, guests were met with a red carpet lined with bottles of water and pre-poured white wine. A string version of Michael Jacksonâs âBadâ -- played by an all-female quartet on the inside -- was in the air.
Once inside, the convention center was transformed into a faux starry night sky. Gold pipes hung from the ceiling in waves.
Then the quartet kicked into a rendition of Journeyâs âDonât Stop Believing.â And no one who made that long walk did.
Why Stephen Colbert was the right Emmys host in the year of Trump
For its 69th festival of self-benediction, broadcast Sunday on CBS, the Television Academy brought on Stephen Colbert as its master of ceremonies. Already on the CBS payroll, already schooled in hosting â it is two years almost to the day that, having abandoned his ironic âColbert Reportâ persona, he took over âThe Late Showâ â he was an obvious choice for this job. It was a choice made even easier, to be sure, as his numbers improved and the narrative surrounding âThe Late Showâ turned from disappointment to delight.
As a comedian, itâs Colbertâs job to take things apart, but he is temperamentally a thoughtful, philosophical, gracious, happy sort of humorist. Like âThe Late Show,â where Colbert shows himself more interested in philosophy than celebrity self-promotion, Colbertâs Emmys show was, not surprisingly, genial, pointed, exuberant, just a little bit outrageous and marked by a kind of bemused patience with the vanities of Hollywood that did not exempt the host. When he led the audience in âthe traditional Hollywood prayer: Lord, thank you for giving us talent and beauty and the gaping hole inside of each of us that craves love and will never be filled,â that was not meant just in fun. . . .
. . .The monologue began as a mix of good and bad jokes, like any late-night monologue, mostly on lightweight topics. There was the usual engaging with selected stars in the front row seats. But it was the Donald Trump jokes â the current administration being the source of much of âThe Late Showâsâ invigorated focus â that one awaited.
Why didnât you give him an Emmy? If he had won an Emmy, I bet he wouldnât have run for president. This is all your fault.
— Stephen Colbert
âIf weâre honest with ourselves,â Colbert said finally, âwe know that the biggest TV star of the last year is Donald Trump,â whom he grouped with televisionâs other âmorally compromised anti-heroesâ as âWalter Much-Whiter.â He read, in Trumpâs voice, an old Trump tweet about Seth Meyers hosting the Emmys: âHe is very awkward, with almost no talent. Marbles in his mouth.â Meyers, in the audience, opened his mouth, and marbles poured out.
âUnlike the presidency,â said Colbert, âEmmys go to the winner of the popular vote.â And then an aside, âWhere do I find the courage to tell that joke in this room?â . . .
. . .What did shock the room came next, as Colbert, noting Trumpâs obsession with ratings, and wondering whether there were a way to know how well the broadcast was doing at that moment, brought former White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer on to say, âThis will be the largest audience to witness any Emmys, period, both in person and around the world.â
Just a big olâ gallery of Emmy winners kissing their trophies
Here it is, the obligatory roundup of Emmy favs kissing on their Atom lady. But what sparks this trophy love between recipient and award? Is this genuine joy from an ecstatic winner, or was it prompted by the red carpet photographers angling for a quality photo-op?
Truly this is the chicken and the egg conundrum of award season. We may never know the answer, but also who cares Lena Waithe looks great holding gold.
Riz Ahmed talks about diversity onscreen after his Emmy win for âThe Night Ofâ
Riz Ahmed, Emmy winner for best actor in a limited series for playing the role of âNazâ in the bleak HBO drama âThe Night Ofâ fielded questions about the importance of diversity onscreen.
âI donât know if any one personâs win of an award, or one personâs snagging one role, or one person doing really well, changes anything when it comes to a systemic lack of inclusion,â he said. âI think what weâre starting to see is more awareness around how beneficial it can be to tell a diverse range of stories in a way that is authentic.â
Still, he was very pleased to be standing right where he was.
âWhen I heard my name announced, I thought, âWhose idea is that?â I just felt really lucky to be mentioned bedside those actors,â he said of winning in a category that included Robert DeNiro, Geoffrey Rush and his âNight Ofâ co-star John Turturro. âI learned so much from John in particular, I feel like I share this with him.â
Emmy-winning âBig Little Liesâ on those Season 2 possibilities: âI donât think you should trust anything we sayâ
When âBig Little Liesâ director Jean-Marc Vallee and the star-studded cast of HBOâs âBig Little Liesâ appeared backstage after winning the Emmy for best limited series, everyone wanted to know one thing: Just how âlimitedâ did the showâs creators intend to keep it? Would there be a Season 2?
âIâm just like the audience, and like these girls and everyone else,â Vallee said, gesturing to two of his leading ladies, Reese Witherspoon and Nicole Kidman, who stood smiling beside him. âIt would be great to reunite the team. Are we gonna be able to do it? I wish. Weâll see what the future holds.â
Witherspoon giddily interjected, âYou already know weâre liars, I donât think you should trust anything we say.â
Kidman also fanned the flames of fan hope for the popular show, which was based on the best-selling novel by Liane Moriarty.
âWe loved playing these roles. The story lines are so interesting, and it would be fantastic if we could continue.â
However, the only person who really has the authority to decide the future was Moriarty, who said coyly, âIâm thinking about it, itâs a beautiful possibility.â
The show, Witherspoon said, stands on its own whether a Season 2 comes to pass, thanks to its thoughtful treatment of its Emmy-nominated female leads.
âIf you talk about changing things in society, about the way you see women in film and women at the center of a story ... this is a real watershed moment for me,â she said. âAll of these women are the heroes of their own stories, and they are complicated. They arenât good or bad. The performances are very diverse.â
Hollywood was not having Sean Spicerâs Emmy cameo
Sean Spicerâs cameo during the Emmy Awards generated a mixture of emotions.
There was surprise, of course, when Spicer made an appearance during Stephen Colbertâs opening monologue. But inside the Microsoft Theater on Sunday evening there also appeared to be a bit of consternation. Cameras, for instance, caught Melissa McCarthy, who impersonated the embattled former White House press secretary on âSaturday Night Live,â appearing less than amused.
Colbert wheeled out Spicer at the end of his monologue for a gag that recalled Spicerâs presser about President Trumpâs inauguration attendance.
âThis will be the largest audience to witness the Emmys, period. Both in person and around the world,â said Spicer, whoâs been making several public appearances since his departure from the White House in July.
But the former communications directorâs reception on Twitter was far more scathing. In this divisive political era, critics berated the Emmys for making light of Spicerâs behavior. As press secretary, Spicer was known for his combative behavior, as he often reprimanded reporters, and he came to symbolize the administrationâs use of so-called âalternative facts.â
Hereâs a sampling:
Sterling K. Brown finishes his acceptance speech backstage at the Emmys
NBCâs âThis Is Us,â which follows the story of a family at different stages in their lives, is nothing if not a tearjerker. So it was appropriate that when Sterling K. Brown took the podium in the press room on Sunday, his eyes were seemingly bloodshot, as if he had been crying.
When asked if he had more to say after his acceptance speech was cut off, he quickly brightened.
âI wouldnât mind finishing, thank you for the invitation. I want to thank our writers,â said Brown, who won the Emmy for lead actor in a drama series. âYou guys are our life supply.â He then went on to thank the showâs producers and directors and his family members.
âI want to represent; I donât want to be a flash in the pan,â Brown said. âI love what I do so much. I feel like I have 1,000 people living inside of me, and Iâm just looking for an opportunity to let them all out. It feels big.â
âThis Is Us,â he said, has resonance, even internationally, because âitâs about real people dealing with real life and trying to figure out whatâs next. Everyone can relate to that.â
Itâs still not safe to exhale: Full skirts, nipped waists make a run for popularity at the Emmys
If you took a tally, body-conscious evening gowns still outnumbered any other silhouette on the Emmys red carpet, insuring the continued profitability of the Spanx brand.
Yet the women who chose differently proved that thereâs something so lavish, exuberant and freeing about an evening gown with a vast, full skirt. (A big plus: No figure-control garments required.)
The standouts? Emmy winner Nicole Kidmanâs lipstick-red gown from Calvin Klein by Appointment; Elisabeth Moss in structured baby pink satin by Prabal Gurung; Emmy Rossum in Zac Posen; and Millie Bobby Brown in a ballet-inspired Calvin Klein that makes us want to dance -- and breathe a sigh of relief.
Our picks for best- and worst-dressed on the 2017 Emmy Awards red carpet Âť
Julia Louis-Dreyfus on her Emmy wins: âI think the world would be a better place if more women were in chargeâ
Sunday was a good night for HBOâs âVeep.â The political satire and two-time Emmy-winning comedy series about the first female POTUS not only received 17 Emmy nominations, but took home one of the eveningâs top prizes, the Emmy for best comedy series.
With a mix of cast and show creatives behind them, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who won the Emmy for lead actress in a comedy series, and executive producer David Mandel addressed the crowd.
âIn our show, when Selina does something horrible or lies, she gets caught and actually pays a price for it,â Mandel said right off the bat, alluding, with a verbal wink, to President Trump.
On whether the eveningâs many wins for women indicate a permanent shift in Hollywood, Louis-Dreyfus jumped in.
âGod, I hope so,â she said. âLetâs hope this is the beginning of something even better in our country -- and in the world -- because I think the world would be a better place if more women were in charge.â
Then she turned to Mandel: âRight, David?!â
âYou ARE in charge,â Mandel said to her. âYouâre my boss!â
Hereâs what got bleeped out from Elisabeth Mossâ acceptance speech
The 2017 Emmy Awards did not use its tape-delay much but it definitely had a moment during Elisabeth Mossâ acceptance speech for lead actress in a drama series.
After going through a laundry list of people who have supported her over her years in the industry â Moss has been acting since she was 8 â she made a point to single out her mother.
âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ actress then credited her mother with teaching her that, âYou can be kind and a [F-word] badass.â
Though audiences at home didnât hear the message due to censors, itâs a sentiment worth sharing.
âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ wins Emmy for drama series
Huluâs âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ wins the Emmy Award for drama series.
The other nominees were:
âBetter Call Saulâ
âThe Crownâ
âHouse of Cardsâ
âStranger Thingsâ
âThis Is Usâ
âWestworldâ
Elisabeth Moss wins Emmy for lead actress in a drama
Elisabeth Moss of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ wins the Emmy Award for lead actress in a drama.
The other nominees were:
Viola Davis, âHow to Get Away With Murderâ
Claire Foy, âThe Crownâ
Keri Russell, âThe Americansâ
Evan Rachel Wood, âWestworldâ
Robin Wright, âHouse of Cardsâ
Emmys fashion bests: How the âStranger Thingsâ kids won the Emmys red carpet, plus mermaid tails and dripping silver
Silver seemed to be the precious metal of choice for those seeking Emmy gold at the 69th Primetime Emmy Awards on Sunday night. Among the most head-turning takes on the metallic trend were Sarah Paulsonâs fresh off the New York Fashion Week runway Carolina Herrera dress for spring and summer 2018 and Tracee Ellis Rossâ Chanel haute couture number that was a sea of silver crystals up top and white feathers down below.
Other notable silver stunners included Laverne Cox in Naeem Khan, Regina King in a fall 2017 Galia Lahav haute couture gown and Anna Chlumsky in a form-fitting liquid silver gown custom made for her by Sachin & Babi.
âI asked them for something in the precious-metal-that-could-be-mined-from-the-earth vein,â she said on the red carpet, and the label delivered to great effect.
Perennial best-dressed lister Priyanka Chopra wore a curve-hugging white Balmain gown with silver embroidered embellishments and a mermaid-tail hem, making her a trend two-fer because that dress silhouette seemed to be having a moment. Of course, Sofia Vergara âwearing Mark Zunino â hardly hits a red carpet in anything but a mermaid hem. But others in the swim this year included Felicity Huffman, Padma Lakshmi, Ruby Modine and Samantha Bee in a custom emerald Rubin Singer gown with a plunging neckline....
The other was the serious style being rocked by the younger attendees. It was almost a given that âStranger Thingsââ Millie Bobby Brown would hit a red-carpet home run in Calvin Klein â she was seen front row at the labelâs recent New York Fashion Week show. She wore an ivory silk crepe and tulle dress with ivory bandanna tie that made her look every inch a princess.
But it was her co-stars who really rose to the occasion. Finn Wolfhard, Noah Schnapp, Gaten Matarazzo and Caleb McLaughlin hit the red carpet as a fashion tour de force: Wolfhard in a black Prada tuxedo; Schnapp in a blue velvet double-breasted shawl collar tuxedo jacket with gold braid detail; Matarazzo in a three-piece suit, purple tie and pocket-square flair; and McLaughlin in a purple floral jacquard shawl collar tuxedo jacket. Of course, this made the kids of âStranger Thingsâ some of our favorite fashionable things from this yearâs Emmy Awards red carpet.
Seven-time Emmy winner Don Roy King on a big year for âSNLâ: âThis year it felt differentâ
Don Roy King took a single, salient question in the press room after winning the Emmy for directing in a variety series for his work on âSaturday Night Live,â his seventh win since 2010.
Why is comedy so important in the current fraught political climate? (This, by the way, is perhaps the single most-asked question of the entire night at the Emmys thus far.)
In response, King said, âI have been proud of the show ⌠which I think is designed to make people laugh. But this year it felt different, more important, like we were holding people accountable, doing some healing.
âIt felt like we were soothing some frayed nerves, and for that reason it felt even more important ⌠more cutting-edge and valuable.â
Sterling K. Brown wins Emmy for lead actor in a drama
Sterling K. Brown of NBCâs âThis Is Usâ wins the Emmy Award for lead actor in a drama series.
The other nominees were:
Anthony Hopkins, âWestworldâ
Bob Odenkirk, âBetter Call Saulâ
Matthew Rhys, âThe Americansâ
Liev Schreiber, âRay Donovanâ
Kevin Spacey, âHouse of Cardsâ
Milo Ventimiglia, âThis Is Usâ
Kate McKinnon sidesteps politics in the Emmys press room
On a night when the Primetime Emmys and the stars in attendance relentlessly skewered President Trump and his administration, Kate McKinnon, who nabbed the Emmy for supporting actress in a comedy series for her work on âSaturday Night Live,â was notably subdued in the press room after her win.
She never spoke more than a sentence or two at a time and shied away from saying anything overtly political, other than repeating the fact that she was a fan of Hillary Clinton, whom she famously portrayed during the run-up to the 2016 presidential election.
What did she think of Sean Spicer appearing onstage that night?
âI enjoyed seeing him again,â she said, not tipping her hand.
Did she have a favorite skit or episode from this season?
âI canât pick a favorite. Every week had this special electricity running through it,â she said. âIt was a banner year to be part of the show. I was so proud to be a fly on the wall for this particular season.â
What are her feelings about Clinton?
âIâm certainly a great admirer of hers, and I hope that itâs mutual. I think that it is.â
How does she feel about playing the former first lady, and the first ever woman to be the frontrunner for president?
âItâs just been the greatest honor of my life, and the greatest role Iâve gotten to play. Again, Iâm just a huge admirer of hers.â
What was it like having dinner with Clinton?
âIt was very surreal and wonderful, and she was warm and gracious as always, and I ate too much.â
Why does humor matter so much in this day and age?
âI could write a book. Satire is so important whenever there is anything floating around in the national consciousness, and the salience of our show this year just proves that.â
Was it a nonstop battle to keep up with the constantly shifting political landscape when it came to writing the show each week?
âThere were a few times when we had to rewrite some major stuff the night before. It was kind of like a sport sometimes, racing to the finish line. It was wild, I loved it.â
The president has tweeted his displeasure with McKinnonâs âSNLâ co-star, Alec Baldwin. Has McKinnon heard anything from Trump?
âI have not heard from the president.â
If he were to write to her, what does she think he would say?
âI do not know.â
Pause, pause. And then she left the stage, leaving her interlocutors wishing for a joke.
âBig Little Liesâ wins Emmy for limited series
âBig Little Liesâ wins the Emmy Award for limited series.
The other nominees were:
âFargoâ
âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
âGeniusâ
âThe Night Ofâ
âBlack Mirror: San Juniperoâ wins Emmy for TV movie
âBlack Mirror: San Juniperoâ wins the Emmy Award for TV movie.
The other nominees were:
âDolly Partonâs Christmas of Many Colors: Circle of Loveâ
âThe Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacksâ
âSherlock: The Lying Detectiveâ
âThe Wizard of Liesâ
Men in not-so-much black: Menswear gets colorful for televisionâs biggest night
Black is safe. Black is classy. And the black tuxedo for men is more than a century old. Yet some fashion-forward men gave the look a welcome update.
Emmy host Stephen Colbert wore a midnight blue two-button shawl collar wool and cashmere tuxedo as well as a classic black tux from Giorgio Armani, while nominees such as Bob Odenkirk and Geoffrey Rush wore midnight blue tuxedoes also from Giorgio Armani.
Chris Sullivan of âThis Is Usâ stepped out in a top hat and blue plaid dinner jacket from Brooks Brothers. Donald Glover made his amethyst jacket and trousers look like a modern classic.
In a shimmering, lemonade-yellow dinner jacket Tituss Burgess of âUnbreakable Kimmy Schmidtâ borrowed the signature color from the seriesâ title character -- and perhaps gave a nod to BeyoncĂŠ.
Nicole Kidman wins Emmy for lead actress in a limited series/TV movie
Nicole Kidman of âBig Little Liesâ wins the Emmy Award for lead actress in a limited series or TV movie.
The other nominees were:
Carrie Coon, âFargoâ
Felicity Huffman, âAmerican Crimeâ
Jessica Lange, âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
Susan Sarandon, âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
Reese Witherspoon, âBig Little Liesâ
Riz Ahmed of âThe Night Ofâ wins Emmy for lead actor in a limited series or TV movie
Riz Ahmed of âThe Night Ofâ wins the Emmy Award for lead actor in a limited series or TV movie.
The other nominees were:
Benedict Cumberbatch, âSherlock: The Lying Detectiveâ
Robert De Niro, âThe Wizard of Liesâ
Ewan McGregor, âFargoâ
Geoffrey Rush, âGeniusâ
John Turturro, âThe Night Ofâ
Olivia de Havillandâs feud with âFeudâ
Ryan Murphyâs deliciously catty FX series âFeud: Bette and Joanâ earned 15 nominations and two wins at the Creative Arts Emmys.
However, the limited series, which chronicles the storied rivalry between actresses Joan Crawford (portrayed by Jessica Lange) and Bette Davis (Susan Sarandon), has embroiled Murphy and FX in a legal battle with two-time Oscar winner Olivia de Havilland, the still-living actress played by Catherine Zeta-Jones in the anthology series.
In June, a day before her 101st birthday, De Havilland sued Murphy and FX, alleging that her depiction in the eight-episode drama was unauthorized. The âGone With the Windâ star makes four major legal claims in her lawsuit, saying the series violated her common law and statutory rights of publicity, her right to privacy and unjust enrichment. She took particular issue with Zeta-Jonesâ gossipy narrative in the episode about the 1963 Oscars.
The trial has been expedited due to De Havillandâs unusually advanced age and will begin on Nov. 29, assuming FX and Murphyâs anti-SLAPP motion to strike the lawsuit in its entirety is denied at a Sept. 29 hearing.
On Friday, De Havilland filed an opposition to the defendantsâ motion to dismiss the lawsuit, arguing that FX and Murphyâs production company Pacific 2.1 âknowingly violated standards in the industry in producing âFeudââ without her consent.
When is a necklace not a necklace?
You had to look hard to find a single necklace on the Emmy red carpet, with one dazzling exception.
Ever the rebel, Jane Fonda wore a necklace, but draped it down her back, making it a glittering, $1.75 million counterpoint to her swingy ponytail.
According to jeweler Gismondi, the bold piece was made of more than 152 carats of emeralds and diamonds, and paired with a coordinating 10-carat emerald ring and chandelier earrings containing 40-plus carats of diamonds and emeralds.
Full gallery of the hits and misses from the 2017 Emmy Awardsâ red carpet >>
âVeepâ wins Emmy for comedy series
âVeepâ wins the Emmy Award for comedy series.
The other nominees were:
âAtlantaâ
âblack-ishâ
âMaster of Noneâ
âModern Familyâ
âSilicon Valleyâ
âUnbreakable Kimmy Schmidtâ
SEE THE FULL LIST OF 2017 EMMY WINNERS HERE>>
What Alec Baldwin says he has in common with Sean Spicer: disreputable jobs
Accepting his Emmy on Sunday night, Alec Baldwin was no less amusing than he has been on âSaturday Night Liveâ skewering President Trump.
âAt long last Mr. President, here is your Emmy,â he joked onstage. After remarking that he and his wife hadnât had a baby this year, he said of his âSNLâ costume, âYou put on that orange wig, itâs birth control.â
But backstage after his win, Baldwin was far more subdued, even as he was applauded by the press as he took the stage.
When asked how enjoyable his âSNLâ role was â and whether he felt he was performing an important societal role in executing it â he said: âI wouldnât go as far as to say âimportant in society,â but I do think people are overwhelmed [with the current political situation].â
âI find myself a conduit for them,â he added.
About Sean Spicerâs appearance at the Emmys, Baldwin said, âI think people in the business are grateful for him to have a sense of humor.â
The actor noted one similarity between him and the former press secretary.
âIâve done some jobs you shouldnât respect or admire me for â he and I have that in common,â Baldwin said.
And then he sauntered off, Emmy in hand.
Julia Louis-Dreyfus wins Emmy for lead actress in a comedy
Julia Louis-Dreyfus of âVeepâ wins the Emmy Award for lead actress in a comedy.
The other nominees were:
Pamela Adlon, âBetter Thingsâ
Allison Janney, âMomâ
Jane Fonda, âGrace and Frankieâ
Ellie Kemper, âUnbreakable Kimmy Schmidtâ
Tracee Ellis Ross, âblack-ishâ
Lily Tomlin, âGrace and Frankieâ
Emmy winner Laura Dern on a changing Hollywood: âThank God weâre seeing more and more womenâ
For Laura Dern, the sixth time was the charm. Dern has been nominated for an Emmy five times previously; on Sunday, she finally won for her role as Renata Klein in âBig Little Lies,â HBOâs murder mystery and social satire set among the rich mamas of Monterey, Calif.
Taking the stage, Dern was all smiles. And all about female empowerment.
On Hollywood becoming more gender balanced, she said: âThank God weâre seeing more and more women. When I started, even my makeup artist was a man. Itâs changing dramatically.â
âItâs a beautiful time to be female and to be raising a 12-year-old girl,â she added.
Does she have any words of wisdom for young women? For this, she nodded to the creators of âBig Little Lies.â
The show was âdelicious to watch,â she said, but also, âit spoke to [having a] voice and standing up for yourself. I feel very proud [being part of] of a group of women getting to tell that story right now.â
SEE THE FULL LIST OF 2017 EMMY WINNERS HERE>>
Donald Glover wins Emmy for lead actor in a comedy
Donald Glover of âAtlantaâ wins the Emmy Award for lead actor in a comedy.
The other nominees were:
Anthony Anderson, âblack-ishâ
Aziz Ansari, âMaster of Noneâ
Zach Galifianakis, âBasketsâ
William H. Macy, âShamelessâ
Jeffrey Tambor, âTransparentâ
Lena Waithe celebrates her âLGBQTIA familyâ in her winnerâs speech
Lena Waithe and Aziz Ansari won the writing for a comedy series Emmy for their work on the âThanksgivingâ episode of âMaster of None.â
An intensely personal episode inspired by her own coming out story, among those Waithe thanked in her speech were her mother, her girlfriend, her chosen family and the LGBTQ community.
Last, but certainly not least, my LGBQTIA family. I see each and every one of you. The things that make us different, those are superpowers. Everyday when you walk out the door put on your imaginary cape and go out there and conquer the world. Because the world would not be as beautiful as it is if you werenât in it.Â
— Lena Waithe
âLast Week Tonight With John Oliverâ wins Emmy for variety talk series
âLast Week Tonight With John Oliverâ wins the Emmy Award for variety talk series.
The other nominees were:
âFull Frontal With Samantha Beeâ
âJimmy Kimmel Live!â
âThe Late Show With Stephen Colbertâ
âThe Late Late Show With James Cordenâ
âReal Time With Bill Maherâ
Don Roy King of âSaturday Night Liveâ wins Emmy for directing a variety series
Don Roy King of âSaturday Night Liveâ wins the Emmy Award for directing a variety series.
The other nominees were:
Derek Waters & Jeremy Konner, âDrunk Historyâ
Andy Fisher, âJimmy Kimmel Live!â
Paul Pennolino, âLast Week Tonight with John Oliverâ
Jim Hoskinson, âThe Late Show with Stephen Colbertâ
Every color under the sun: ZoĂŤ Kravitzâs multicolored gown stands out in the Emmy crowd
While solid-color gowns in standard shades of black, red and metallics dominated the Emmy red carpet, âBig Little Liesâ star ZoĂŤ Kravitz wore every color from sunrise to sunset.
Topped with a black bodice, her feathered Dior gownâs full-length skirt blazed in a mĂŠlange that flowed from red, yellow and orange to daytime hues of yellow, green and blue. Thatâs the Hollywood definition of day-to-night dressing.
Charlie Brooker of âBlack Mirror: San Juniperoâ wins Emmy for writing for a limited series movie or dramatic special
Charlie Brooker of âBlack Mirror: San Juniperoâ wins the Emmy Award for writing for a limited series movie or dramatic special.
The other nominees were:
David E. Kelley, âBig Little Liesâ
Noah Hawley, âFargoâ
Ryan Murphy, âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
Jaffe Cohen, Michael Zam & Ryan Murphy, âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
Richard Price & Steven Zaillian, âThe Night Ofâ
Shailene Woodley drops the single most tone-deaf quote of the Emmys
Picture the single most out-of-sync anecdote a person could drop on the red carpet for televisionâs biggest night. Got it?
You donât. What Shailene Woodley said was worse.
The nominee for supporting actress in a limited series stumbled into an epic faux pas when taking part of Eâs âLive From the Red Carpet,â when she admitted she really doesnât have time to watch television.
All my friends watch TV. I just ask them when they have time to. When do people have time to? Iâm a reader. So I always read a book instead of turning on my TV.
— Shailene Woodley, âBig Little Liesâ
Sure. I mean, youâre literally at an event celebrating the medium, but itâs cool you donât really bother keeping up with.
Moreover, Woodley clarified, she doesnât even own a television.
âI actually havenât had a TV since I moved out of my parentsâ house at 18,â Woodley said.
Well. Bully for you, Shailene.
Meet the people behind the scenes of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
Huluâs âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ garnered critical praise and cultural relevance with its April debut and was roundly recognized by the Emmy Awards with 13 nominations for its efforts.
The series nabbed a handful of nominations for its sterling performances as well as Huluâs first nomination for drama series, but the bulk of the showâs accolades came for work done behind the scenes.
At last weekâs Creative Arts Emmys, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ took home awards for cinematography and production design, while the show has also earned nominations for costumes, writing and direction.
Learn more about the team behind the scenes of one of this yearâs Emmy darlings below.
Reed Morano of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ wins Emmy for directing a drama
Reed Morano of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ wins the Emmy Award for directing a drama series.
The other nominees were:
Vince Gilligan, âBetter Call Saulâ
Stephen Daldry, âThe Crownâ
Kate Dennis, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
Lesli Linka Glatter, âHomelandâ
The Duffer Brothers, âStranger Thingsâ
Jonathan Nolan, âWestworldâ
How Emmy winner Lena Waitheâs coming-out story inspired the âMaster of Noneâ Thanksgiving episode
It was a moment Lena Waithe had little interest in sharing. Sure, as a writer, Waithe wanted to tell queer narratives. But a âcoming outâ story? Well, she wasnât eager to revisit that chapter of her life. And she also felt like it had become a trope for every LGBTQ character.
But then she had a meeting with âMaster of Noneâ co-creators Aziz Ansari and Alan Yang as they were beginning to think about Season 2 of the Netflix comedy, in which she plays Denise, a friend of Ansariâs character, Dev. A discussion about her current relationship led to questions about how Waithe had come out to her family.
âIt became clear we had a lot of material for an episode,â Ansari recalls in an email. âIt was all interesting, hilarious and not quite like anything Iâd seen on TV/film before.â
The result is the Emmy-winning âThanksgivingâ episode, which tells the story of Denise discovering her sexuality and revealing it to her friends and family over the course of five Thanksgivings spread over 22 years. Veteran actress Angela Bassett guest starred as Deniseâs conservative single mother.
Emmy winner Bruce Miller on âHandmaidâs Taleâ in 2017: âIt all comes from the bookâ
Bruce Miller, writer and showrunner for Huluâs apocalyptic drama âThe Handmaidâs Tale,â took home the Emmy for writer in a drama series.
Backstage in the press room, he faced the inevitable barrage of questions about the showâs current resonance, which he both embraced and played down in equal measures.
âI think it all comes from the book, which had the same following,â he said of Margaret Atwoodâs 1985 novel. âThe same fascination holds. The story has been magnetic. Nowadays, people worry they are living in a society where big things are happening and you look at a character like Offred [played by Elisabeth Moss] living under such horrible oppression who still finds ways to rebel, and to live.â
As to whether or not he and the other writers used todayâs fraught political climate as fodder for the show, Miller gave another slightly oblique answer: âAs an influence, itâs on an unconscious level. We donât look at the politics of the day and try to bend the story, but weâre a very plugged-in group of writers. I donât think you can help having it affect you,â he said, adding, âwhen Margaret wrote the novel, everything that happens in that world, has happened somewhere against women.â
That was the reason that the show was set in the present, despite that the novel was written based on events from more than three decades ago.
âIt didnât make sense to have a show like that take place as period piece,â Miller said. âAnything real and tangible just makes it scarier, and that comes from it being as relatable as possible.â
Lena Waithe is the first black woman to win the Emmy for writing in a comedy series
âMaster of Noneâsâ Lena Waithe made history at the 69th Emmy Awards on Sunday, becoming the first black woman ever to win in the category of writing for a comedy series.
Waithe, who plays Denise in the Netflix series, co-wrote the âThanksgivingâ episode with âMaster of Noneâ co-creator Aziz Ansari. Her nomination also marked the first time a black woman was nominated for a comedy writing Emmy.
In fact, the only other woman of color ever nominated in the category is Mindy Kaling. Kaling was nominated in 2010 along with co-writer Greg Daniels for their work on âThe Officeâ episode âNiagaraâ (and the award that year went to the writers of the âModern Familyâ pilot).
The Emmy-winning âThanksgivingâ episode follows Denise as she discovers her sexuality and comes out to her friends and family over the course of five Thanksgivings spanning 22 years. While Waithe was hesitant about telling a âcoming-out storyâ in 2017, Ansari and Alan Yang convinced her it was a story best told by her.
âItâs very black. Itâs very female. Itâs really gay,â said Waithe of the story at a GLAAD panel in August. â[And] the cool thing about that is so many people loved it.â
âWhen a straight, white guy is, like, â âThanksgivingâ was my favorite episode,â thatâs when art is doing its job, when he can look at my character and go, âI can see myself in her,ââ said Waithe.
âThe Voiceâ wins Emmy for reality competition
âThe Voiceâ wins the Emmy Award for reality competition program.
The other nominees were:
âRuPaulâs Drag Raceâ
âThe Amazing Raceâ
âTop Chefâ
âAmerican Ninja Warriorâ
âProject Runwayâ
Aziz Ansari and Lena Waithe win Emmy for writing for a comedy series
Aziz Ansari and Lena Waithe of âMaster of Noneâ win the Emmy Award for writing for a comedy series.
The other nominees were:
Donald Glover, âAtlantaâ
Stephen Glover, âAtlantaâ
Alec Berg, âSilicon Valleyâ
Billy Kimball, âVeepâ
David Mandel, âVeepâ
Women still a dramatic minority in Emmysâ writing and directing categories
With separate categories for actors and actresses, male and female performers are equally represented among 2017âs Emmy nominees, but take a short hop over to the directing and writing categories and the awards are primarily a boys club.
Among the 114 writers nominated this year for drama series, comedy series, variety series and limited series, movie or dramatic special, only 21 are women. Thatâs a hair over 18%.
Women are best represented when theyâre writing for a variety series: Of the 90 people named from the staffs of âFull Frontal With Samantha Bee,â âLast Week Tonight With John Oliver,â âLate Night With Seth Meyers,â âThe Late Show With Stephen Colbertâ and âSaturday Night Live,â 21 writers â 23.3% â are female.
The four directing categories to be honored Sunday night are even less encouraging for women: There are only three women among the 25 directors nominated for drama series, comedy series, variety series, and limited series, movie, or dramatic special
Adding to that, all three female directors â five-time nominee Leslie Linka Glatter (âHomelandâ) and Emmy newbies Kate Dennis and Reed Morano (both up for âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ) â are competing in the same category, directing for a drama series.
Morano was the lone woman nominated for cinematography for a single-camera series (half-hour), for âDivorceâ; that award went to David Miller for âVeep.â
Ann Dowd of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ wins supporting actress in a drama
Ann Dowd of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ wins the Emmy Award for supporting actress in a drama series.
The other nominees were:
Uzo Aduba, âOrange Is the New Blackâ
Millie Bobby Brown, âStranger Thingsâ
Chrissy Metz, âThis Is Usâ
Thandie Newton, âWestworldâ
Samira Wiley, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
One person who probably wasnât excited about Sean Spicerâs Emmys cameo: Melissa McCarthy
Sean Spicer made a surprise appearance during Stephen Colbertâs opening monologue at the 2017 Emmy Awards much to the disbelief of those in attendance at the ceremony.
As the camera cut to various celebritiesâ shocked faces, as the former White House press secretary took the stage, perhaps the most surprised person in the room was Melissa McCarthy.
McCarthy, who won the Emmy for guest actress in a comedy series, made a lasting mark this year for her Spicer impersonation on âSaturday Night Live.â
Spicerâs appearance flies in the face of McCarthyâs insistence that the former White House press secretary does not get to be a part of the jokes.
Thatâs not your joke to make.
— Melissa McCarthy on Sean Spicer
In a previous interview McCarthy told The Times that she did not appreciate Spicer referencing her âSNLâ sketches by using a moving podium during actual press conferences.
âThatâs the part I didnât like,â McCarthy said. âI was like, âNo! Itâs not usâ [gesturing to two people] making that joke, itâs weâre making that joke.
âI had a moment of fear about that when he was like, âDonât make me move the podium.â I thought, âNo, thatâs not your joke to make,ââ she explained.
âLast Week Tonight With John Oliverâ wins Emmy for writing for a variety series
âLast Week Tonight With John Oliverâ wins the Emmy Award for writing for a variety series.
The other nominees were:
âFull Frontal With Samantha Beeâ
âLate Night With Seth Meyersâ
âThe Late Show With Stephen Colbertâ
âSaturday Night Liveâ
Popcorn and wine at an Emmysâ commercial break, just like at home
Itâs the kind of sight that would please Olivia Pope of âScandalâ: Stars munching on popcorn and sipping wine.
When the Emmys broadcast cuts to a commercial break, the concession area inside the Microsoft Theater is overrun with people â like âThe Crownâsâ Matt Smith â buying popcorn, pretzels, hot dogs and a variety of libations.
Why was Chance the Rapper at the Emmys?
The politically active Chicago MC made a surprise appearance during Stephen Colbertâs opening number, dropping a verse about how he hopes television can be more than a âpleasant distraction.â
But how did one of musicâs biggest young stars end up on TVâs biggest night? Because he was a nominee.
Chance was up for the Emmy for original music and lyrics for âLast Christmas,â from a âSaturday Night Liveâ sketch paying tribute to Run-DMCâs holiday classic âChristmas in Hollis.â (The award went to Commonâs song âLetter to the Free,â from Ava DuVernayâs â13th.â)
Alexander Skarsgürd wins Emmy for supporting actor in a limited series or movie
Alexander SkarsgĂĽrd of âBig Little Liesâ wins the Emmy Award for supporting actor in a limited series or movie.
The other nominees were:
David Thewlis, âFargoâ
Alfred Molina, âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
Stanley Tucci,âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
Bill Camp, âThe Night Ofâ
Michael Kenneth Williams, âThe Night Ofâ
Jean-Marc VallĂŠe of âBig Little Liesâ wins Emmy for directing a limited series, movie or dramatic special
Jean-Marc VallĂŠe of âBig Little Liesâ wins the Emmy Award for directing a limited series, movie or dramatic special.
The other nominees were:
Noah Hawley, âFargoâ
Ryan Murphy, âFeud: Bette & Joanâ
Ron Howard, âGeniusâ
James Marsh, âThe Night Ofâ
Steve Zaillian, âThe Night Ofâ
Alec Baldwin gives a shout-out to President Trump in his Emmys acceptance speech
At long last, Mr. President, here is your Emmy.
— Alec Baldwin, accepting his Emmy for supporting actor in a comedy for his portrayal of Donald Trump on âSaturday Night Liveâ
Whoâs that announcing the presenters and winners? Itâs Jermaine Fowler of âSuperior Donutsâ
Jermaine Fowler of CBSâ âSuperior Donutsâ is grabbing some of the Emmys spotlight with his announcing. His voice-over is more improvisational than awards show viewers usually hear.
Deadline reported Saturday that that was part of the plan: âIt was Fowlerâs extensive experience performing in front of a live audience as a standup comedian (in addition to being one of CBSâ leading men) that made him the networkâs choice for the job.â
On Twitter, reviews were mixed.
Fowler plays Franco Wicks on âSuperior Donuts,â whose second season begins next month. He has also worked on âBojack Horseman,â âFamily Guyâ and âRobot Chicken.â
Alec Baldwin wins Emmy for supporting actor in a comedy
Alec Baldwin of âSaturday Night Liveâ wins the Emmy Award for supporting actor in a comedy.
The other nominees were:
Louie Anderson, âBasketsâ
Ty Burrell, âModern Familyâ
Tituss Burgess, âUnbreakable Kimmy Schmidtâ
Tony Hale, âVeepâ
Matt Walsh, âVeepâ
The five funniest bits from Stephen Colbertâs Emmy opener
Stephen Colbert kicked off the 69th Primetime Emmys with a Billy Crystal-esque opening number paying homage to some of the top nominees â singing and dancing with casts from âThis Is Usâ and âThe Americansâ â and then followed up with a politically charged monologue that could only have come from the host of âThe Late Show.â
On Donald Trumpâs much-stated desire to win an Emmy:
âBut he never did. Unlike the presidency, Emmys go to the winner of the popular vote.â (And as a follow-up: âWhere do I find the courage to tell that joke in this room?â)
Responding to Sean Spicerâs surprise appearance to assure him about the size of the crowd:
Spicer told Colbert that this was the âlargest audience to view the Emmys in person and around the world.â
âI can see why you would want one of these guys around,â said Colbert. âMelissa McCarthy, everybody. Give it up!â
On the diversity of the awards:
After listing many of the African American nominees, Colbert added, âAnd, of course, Bill Maher. I assume heâs black since heâs so comfortable using the N-word.â
On the infiltration of streaming services:
âEveryone loves streaming video, just ask Ted Cruz.... But knock first, you donât want to walk in.â
On the relevance of certain nominated shows:
In the opening song, surrounded by women dressed in costumes from âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ: âLook on the bright side, handmaids; at least your healthcareâs free.â
Donald Glover just made history as the first black person to win an Emmy for directing for a comedy
Donald Glover is also the first director to win for a show he acted in since Alan Alda won for âMASHâ in 1977. Glover is also up for three other Emmys tonight -- lead actor in a comedy, comedy writing and as a producer of âAtlanta.â
Bruce Miller of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ wins Emmy for writing for a drama series
Bruce Miller of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ wins the Emmy Award for writing for a drama series.
The other nominees were:
Joe Weisberg & Joel Fields, âThe Americansâ
Gordon Smith, âBetter Call Saulâ
Peter Morgan, âThe Crownâ
The Duffer Brothers, âStranger Thingsâ
Lisa Joy & Jonathan Nolan, âWestworldâ
Watch President Trump sing âGreen Acresâ at the 2006 Emmy Awards
President Trump joined âWill & Graceâsâ Megan Mullally at the 2006 Emmy Awards to sing the âGreen Acresâ theme. For those unaware of the CBS sitcom that ran from 1965 to 1971, the series starred Eddie Albert and Eva Gabor as a wealthy to-do couple who moved from New York City to the country looking for a new life.
So.. that happened!
âSaturday Night Liveâ wins the Emmy for variety sketch series
âSaturday Night Liveâ wins the Emmy Award for variety sketch series.
The other nominees were:
âBilly on the Streetâ
âDocumentary Now!â
âDrunk Historyâ
âPortlandiaâ
âTracey Ullmanâs Showâ
The new look in Emmys hairdos harkens back to Old Hollywood glam
In a nod to golden age Hollywood glamour, women strutting the Emmys red carpet embraced lightly controlled, wavy hair with a modern update.
Nearly universally, women tucked one side of their flowing locks behind an ear, a seductive look that just happened to reveal of-the-moment dangling earrings.
Sarah Hyland made it casually youthful; Elisabeth Moss wore it sleek; and Jessica Biel let it flow long across a shoulder.
Donald Glover wins Emmy for directing a comedy series
Donald Glover of âAtlantaâ wins the Emmy Award for directing a comedy series.
The other nominees were:
Jamie Babbit, âSilicon Valleyâ
Mike Judge, âSilicon Valleyâ
Morgan Sackett, âVeepâ
David Mandel, âVeepâ
Dale Stern, âVeepâ
Watch âSaturday Night Liveâsâ Emmy-nominated sketches
The 2016-17 season was a strong one for âSaturday Night Live,â which saw a surge in ratings and has already won five Emmys going into Sundayâs Primetime Emmy Awards show.
The presidential campaign, election and its aftermath provided the variety sketch show plenty of material to incorporate into the season, but it wasnât only the political sketches that were memorable this year. Hereâs a look at some highlights from âSNLâsâ Emmy-nominated episodes.
Nominees Alec Baldwin and Kate McKinnon kicked off âSNLâsâ 42nd season re-enacting Donald Trump and Hillary Clintonâs first presidential debate. Baldwin, of course, played the eventual president throughout the season, while McKinnonâs political impersonations expanded to include Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions, Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos and counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway.
The musical âKellyanne Conwayâ sketch featuring McKinnon was even nominated for picture editing for variety programming (although it lost to a segment from âLast Week Tonight With John Oliverâ).
Guest actress and guest actor in a comedy series winners Melissa McCarthy and Dave Chappelle both won for their turns hosting âSNL.â McCarthy reprised her performance as then White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer in her episode, while one of the most memorable and poignant moments of Chappelleâs episode was the âElection Nightâ sketch (though it would be remiss to overlook Chappelleâs âWalking Deadâ parody, which you can watch here. Beware of adult language).
This yearâs Emmy-winning âSNLâ episodes also include the one hosted by Jimmy Fallon (which won for technical direction, camerawork, video control for a series) and the one hosted by Alec Baldwin (which won for makeup for a multi-camera series or special [non prosthetic] and production design for variety, non-fiction, reality or reality competition programming).
In the Baldwin episode, fans learned that there was in fact another person vying to play the president on âSNLâ: supporting actress in a comedy series nominee Leslie Jones.
Of course, not all of âSNLâsâ memorable moments this season were tied to presidential politics.
Totinoâs pizza rolls were the foundation of a passionate affair in a sketch that featured supporting actress in a comedy series nominee Vanessa Bayer and Kristen Stewart (and people will probably never look at the frozen pizza snack the same ever again).
Additionally, guest actor in a comedy series nominee Lin-Manuel Miranda took a turn as one of the âStranger Thingsâ kids and guest actress in a comedy series Kristin Wiig played Furonica in a sketch that revisited the pet rescue efforts of Whiskers R We.
Plus, who could forget guest actor in a comedy series nominee Tom Hanks debuting David S. Pumpkins and his dance moves?
Any questions?
Laura Dern wins Emmy for supporting actress in a limited series or movie
Laura Dern of âBig Little Liesâ wins the Emmy Award for supporting actress in a limited series or movie.
The other nominees were:
Regina King, âAmerican Crimeâ
Shailene Woodley, âBig Little Liesâ
Judy Davis, âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
Jackie Hoffman, âFeud: Bette and Joanâ
Michelle Pfeiffer, âThe Wizard of Liesâ
Kate McKinnon wins Emmy for supporting actress in a comedy
Kate McKinnon of âSaturday Night Liveâ wins her second consecutive Emmy Award for supporting actress in a comedy series.
The other nominees were:
Vanessa Bayer, âSaturday Night Liveâ
Leslie Jones, âSaturday Night Liveâ
Kathryn Hahn, âTransparentâ
Judith Light, âTransparentâ
Anna Chlumsky, âVeepâ
Tweets from inside the Emmys
Los Angeles Times entertainment reporters Yvonne Villarreal and Treâvell Anderson are inside the Microsoft Theater during the 69th Emmy Awards tonight. Follow them on Twitter @villarrealy and @TrevellAnderson for a peek at what goes on behind the scenes.
John Lithgow wins Emmy for supporting actor in a drama
John Lithgow of âThe Crownâ wins the Emmy award for supporting actor in a drama.
The other nominees were:
Jonathan Banks, âBetter Call Saulâ
Mandy Patinkin, âHomelandâ
Michael Kelly, âHouse of Cardsâ
David Harbour, âStranger Thingsâ
Ron Cephas Jones, âThis Is Usâ
Jeffrey Wright, âWestworldâ
TV Academy president Hayma Washington is âreally confidentâ Emmys wonât repeat Oscarsâ gaffe
Television Academy President Hayma Washington was confident there wouldnât be a âMoonlightâ/âLa La Landâ moment at the 69th Primetime Emmy Awards.
âOur accounting firm is Ernst & Young,â he said on the red carpet Sunday. âWeâve reviewed our policies and procedures. Really confident that itâs something that we wonât have happen.â
At the Oscars earlier this year, of course, âLa La Landâ was mistakenly announced as best picture â âMoonlightâ was the actual winner â after accountants from PwC handed off the wrong envelope to the presenters and didnât act on the error in time.
Washington wasnât gloating about the gaffe though. Not by a long shot.
âI feel for the producers of that show. Theyâre all professionals,â he said. âThat had to be something very hard for them to swallow. They handled it very professionally.â
âInsecureâs Issa Rae tells us the last show that moved her: âBoJack Horsemanâ
Issa Rae from âInsecure,â who was snubbed for a nomination this year, talked to The Times on the Emmys red carpet Sunday afternoon.
Interview has been edited and condensed.
Q: Last show that prompted an emotional response from you?
A: Watching âBoJack Horseman,â and itâs supposed to be a cartoon, but it draws you in. Itâs dark and so good.
Q: Best advice?
A: Boss up. Stop being soft.
Q: Best female character on TV?
A: Elaine from âSeinfeld.â Tie between her and Selina Meyer from âVeep.â
Q: What shows does your character watch?
A: She watches âLove & Hip Hop,â âReal Housewives of Atlanta,â âArrested Development,â trashy shows.
Best and worst looks from the Emmys red carpet
The best and worst looks from the Emmy Awards red carpet includes Anna Chlumsky as âmost improvedâ from last yearâs look in a silver dress, a dapper Chris Sullivan and a look we didnât love from Rachel Bloom.
Keep checking on our gallery. Weâre not done with fashion analysis.
Blue ribbons meet red carpet as stars support ACLU
Hollywood has never shied away from politics and the 2017 Emmy Awards red carpet is no exception.
Celebrities of all kinds sported blue ribbons in support of the American Civil Liberties Union tonight, a move to pressure Congress to pass a clean Dream Act, to allow individuals who immigrated to the United States as children to have a clear path forward toward citizenship.
The ACLU is a nonpartisan nonprofit organization with a mission statement aiming âto defend and preserve the individual rights and liberties guaranteed to every person in this country by the Constitution and laws of the United States.â
Remember when Jeb Bush threw Jimmy Kimmel out of his limo?
For the 68th Primetime Emmy Awards, Jimmy Kimmel kicked off the evening with a skit that culminated with the stranded host making his way to the Microsoft Theater by way of dragon, hitching a ride with Daenerys Targaryen (Emilia Clarke). But Jeb Bush was the surprise cameo.
The ex-2016 presidential hopeful poked fun at himself and took a jab at American voters when he appeared as an Uber driver in Kimmelâs opening number.
Explaining that he was âin between jobs,â Bush invited Kimmel into the front seat of the limo he was driving. Thus began a seemingly friendly exchange where Bush learned that Kimmel was headed to the Emmy Awards.
âAre you nominated?â asked Bush. âWhatâs that like?â
After Kimmel brushed off his chances at winning, Bush countered with some words of wisdom.
âHereâs what I know,â said Bush. âIf you run a positive campaign, the voters ultimately will make the right choice.â
Ouch.
Bush learned the hard way that thatâs not necessarily true. The former Florida governor suspended his campaign seeking the Republican presidential nomination in February of that year.
Watch the full segment above.
Glitz goes to the lobes at the Emmys: Dangly, drop earrings are a red-carpet must
Those big expanses of dĂŠcolletage revealed by low-cut gowns are going largely undecorated on the 2017 Emmy red carpet, which could be bad news for some jewelry designers.
Those diamond dealers know that any major bit of bling thatâs photographed on a celebrity can instantly jump in value and start big trends.
Yet, where cleavage goes bare, ear lobes do not. Large drop earrings added the essential sparkle. Sporting the look: Tracee Ellis Ross, Laverne Cox, Ellie Kemper, Leslie Jones and Sofia Vergara.
Rachel Bloom has officially made it: She paid for her Gucci gown
You may not need to wait for the knockoff version of âCrazy Ex-Girlfriendâ star Rachel Bloomâs sexy black Gucci dress if she makes good on a promise to sell the real thing.
Giving a plug to the designer consignment site TheRealReal.com, Bloom said sheâd consign the low-cut, black lace gown after strutting it along the Emmysâ red carpet.
After all, she doesnât have to return it to a designer showroom. In a move rare for Hollywood, she bought it. âIâm in the place where I can afford it,â she said on the red carpet.
Is this the Emmys or the Oscars? See which Emmy nominees already have Academy Awards
For those who arenât annually immersed in the exhaustive awards cycle that dominates much of the entertainment industry, hereâs a helpful SAT-style analogy:
Oscars: film :: Emmys: television
(Grammys are for music and Tonys are for theater and donât even get us started on the Golden Globes, which are a veritable âall of the aboveâ awards show.)
But things can get a bit confusing when TVâs main event is peppered with a generous pinch of Oscar winners and even more Oscar-nominated talent. Especially when those Oscar winners are nominated for Emmys for playing other Oscar winners. (Weâre looking at you, Lange and Sarandon). For years, the premium cable networks and streaming services have attracted big-screen stars to the once-lowly ranks of the small screen, which further blurred the fading line between cinema and television.
Hereâs a rundown of some of the familiar faces -- several of whom are no strangers to the Emmys -- who already have Oscar gold on their mantels.
Common The rapper won a Creative Arts Emmy last weekend for his song âLetter to the Freeâ from Ava DuVernayâs â13th.â He won the Academy Award for original song for another DuVernay collaboration film, 2014âs âSelma.â
Viola Davis Davis is again nominated for a lead actress Emmy for âHow to Get Away With Murder.â (She won for her role as law professor Annalise Keating back in 2015). Davis notched her Oscar earlier this year for her supporting role in âFences.â
Robert De Niro The film veteran is up for his first Emmy this year for playing Ponzi-schemer Bernie Madoff in HBOâs âThe Wizard of Lies,â which he also executive produced. He famously won a supporting actor Oscar for 1974âs âThe Godfather: Part IIâ and a lead actor Oscar for 1980âs âRaging Bull.â
Jane Fonda The two-time Oscar winner is again up for lead actress in a comedy with Netflixâs âGrace and Frankie.â She already won Emmy gold for the 1984 TV movie âThe Dollmaker.â Fonda won her first lead actress Oscar for 1971âs âKluteâ and the second for 1978âs âComing Home.â
Anthony Hopkins The âWestworldâ star has two Primetime Emmys to his name: one for 1976âs âThe Lindbergh Kidnapping Caseâ and another for 1981âs âThe Bunker.â His Oscar accompanied his iconic lead role in 1991âs âSilence of the Lambs.â
Ron Howard The âHappy Daysâ alum-turned-filmmaker is up for three awards this year: producing and directing NatGeoâs Einstein docudrama âGeniusâ and producing Huluâs Beatles documentary âEight Days a Week - The Touring Years.â (He lost to â13thâ in the doc category). Howardâs executive producer credits on âFrom Earth to the Moonâ and âArrested Developmentâ have earned him two Primetime Emmys, and heâs won two Oscars for directing and producing the 2001 drama âA Beautiful Mind.â
Tom Hanks The beloved actor was up for guest actor in a comedy this year for his hosting duties on âSaturday Night Live,â but he lost to Dave Chappelle at last weekâs Creative Arts Emmys. He has previously won seven Primetime Emmy awards as a producer on various HBO projects including âBand of Brothersâ and âJohn Adams.â The two-time Oscar winner was celebrated by the film academy for his work in the â90s films âPhiladelphiaâ and âForrest Gump.â
Nicole Kidman The âBig Little Liesâ co-producer and lead actress is up for two Emmys this year. She won a lead actress Oscar for 2002âs âThe Hours.â
Jessica Lange A frequent collaborator with producer Ryan Murphy, Lange has won two Emmys while working on his âAmerican Horror Storyâ anthology. She also won a lead actress Emmy for 2009âs âGrey Gardens.â This year sheâs up for a lead actress award for her role as film star Joan Crawford in Murphyâs limited series âFeud: Bette and Joan.â Lange won a supporting actress Oscar for 1982âs âTootsieâ and lead actress Oscar for 1994âs âBlue Sky.â
Geoffrey Rush The British actorâs portrayal of famed scientist Albert Einstein in âGeniusâ earned him a nod this year. But heâs already earned an Emmy for his take on the Pink Panther in the 2004 TV movie âThe Life and Death of Peter Sellers.â If those two biopics werenât enough, his 1996 film âShineâ notched a lead actor Oscar.
Susan Sarandon Like her âFeudâ costar, Sarandon is up for two Emmys this year: the first for her portrayal of actress Bette Davis, the second for serving as an executive producer on the series. Sheâs been nominated four other times, but weâre pretty sure her Oscar for 1995âs âDead Man Walkingâ has made up for those losses.
Kevin Spacey The 12-time Emmy Award nominee has no wins yet, but the âHouse of Cardsâ star and executive producer does have two Oscars: One for 1995âs âThe Usual Suspectsâ and another for 1999âs âAmerican Beauty.â
Reese Witherspoon The first-time Emmy nominee, who produced âBig Little Liesâ and played alliteration-friendly stay-at-home mom Madeline Martha Mackenzie, is up for two awards this year. She won a lead actress Oscar for playing the no-nonsense June Carter in 2005âs âWalk the Line.â
Steven Zaillian The Oscar winner for best adapted screenplay for âSchindlerâs Listâ is up for three Emmys this year for writing, directing and producing HBOâs crime drama âThe Night Of.â
Tituss Burgess is channeling BeyoncĂŠ on the red carpet
One look at Tituss Burgessâ Emmys outfit and just one thing comes to mind. The color is very much a la BeyoncĂŠ in âLemonade.â (Did you see his âUnbreakable Kimmy Schmidtâ characterâs ode?)
âI canât even pretend,â he said with a laugh from the red carpet Sunday afternoon. But perhaps his stylist did, he noted.
âModern Familyâsâ Jeremy Maguire has already won the red carpet
Go home, everybody. Jeremy Maguire from âModern Familyâ has already won the 2017 Emmys.
Maguire, who plays young Joe Pritchett on the ABC sitcom, flaunted a bright blue cape as he made his way down the red carpet Sunday. Talk about red carpet ready.
The young actor joined the âModern Familyâ cast in 2015, taking over the role from Pierce Wallace, who played Joe during the showâs fifth and sixth seasons.
Your move, âStranger Thingsâ kids.
See more photos from the 2017 Emmys red carpet here.
Winter is canceled: Why âGame of Thronesâ is absent from this yearâs Emmys
Fans and dragons are bound to be pretty disappointed no matter what ends up being the big winner at Sunday nightâs Emmy ceremony.
âGame of Thronesâ was not nominated for any trophies at the 2017 awards shows for one simple reason: It wasnât eligible.
To qualify for the 2017 Emmys, a program had to air episodes between June 1, 2016, and May 31, 2017. Even though the HBO fantasy behemoth did air four episodes of Season 6, it was already eligible for the 2016 Emmys.
In fact, the show had quite a haul at last yearâs festivities, taking home 12 awards from 23 nominations.
The lack of âGame of Thronesâ eligibility means that a different series will take home the Emmy for drama series, a category the George R.R. Martin adaptation had dominated for two years running.
On Emmys red carpet GLAAD president urges more inclusion, excited for return of âWill & Graceâ
For Sarah Kate Ellis, LGBTQ representation on television is very important. After all, sheâs the president of GLAAD.
Ahead of the Emmy Awards, where shows featuring LGBTQ characters such as âTransparentâ and âMaster of Noneâ are nominated, she highlighted a show sheâs looking forward to.
âIâm really excited about âWill & Graceâ coming back,â she said, noting the rebooted NBC comedy has mentioned its interest in more diverse storylines and casting.
But while such an increase in nuanced representation is great, the real goal should be full-on inclusion.
âMy dream is that itâs integrated into all shows (not just LGBTQ-centered ones),â she said. âWe need TV and film right now especially.â
Sterling K. Brown, Julianne Hough and more on the 2017 Emmy red carpet
Itâs less than 90 minutes until the ceremony begins, and the 2017 Emmys red carpet is heating up. Check out Sterling K. Brown, Julianne Hough and Rico Rodriguez below, and stick around for more red carpet pics to come.
Flashback: Remember when âGrease: Liveâ drank BeyoncĂŠâs âLemonadeâ?
Awards shows are notorious for not recognizing greatness in its midst, which is why HBOâs âThe Wireâ has no Emmys and âCitizen Kaneâ didnât win the best picture Oscar.
So itâs not a complete surprise that the 2016 Emmy Awards featured an upset that makes sense on the outside, but may prove ridiculous in years to come.
In April 2016, BeyoncĂŠ released the visual album âLemonadeâ with an accompanying 60-minute film that aired on HBO. The film was greeted with a wave of think pieces and accolades and would nab four Emmy nominations, including a nomination for directing.
But âLemonadeâ wouldnât win any Emmys and BeyoncĂŠ â herself nominated for direction of the film, along with Kahlil Joseph â would ultimately be defeated by a far more populist choice.
In January 2016, Fox aired âGrease: Live,â a peppy remake of the 1978 musical that drew more than 12 million viewers and favorable reviews, compared with the 787,000 people who watched âLemonadeâ on HBO.
Itâs possible Emmy voters wanted to reward âGrease: Liveâ for its widespread appeal. Itâs possible that they saw the live directorial efforts of Thomas Kail and Alex Rudzinski as a superior feat. Itâs possible they just liked âGreaseâ better than âLemonade.â
But for all those possibilities it seems likely that history will not look kindly upon the Emmys denying Queen Bey an Emmy and neglecting to recognize one of the landmark displays of creative expression of the decade.
Statement jackets are the new statement necklaces
They may be young, but the confident stars of âStranger Thingsâ put personality into their ensembles, bringing the statement jacket to the Emmyâs red carpet.
Caleb McLaughlin (Lucas) steps out in a purple brocade jacket, while co-star Noah Schapp (Will) goes for baroque gold bullion along his jacketâs lapels and cuffs. Gaten Matarazzo (Dustin) looks every bit the budding businessman in a three-piece suit and berry tie. Finn Wolfhard (Mike) kept to classic evening wear.
Not to be outdone? Celebrity stylist and host Brad Goreski in a silver lame jacket that canât be missed in the crowd.
Major Dad finally has an Emmy
It took a soft touch for a tough guy to finally win an Emmy.
Veteran actor Gerald McRaney took home the award for guest actor in a drama series at the Creative Arts Emmy Awards for his portrayal of Dr. Nathan Katowski on NBCâs family drama âThis Is Us.â
The series gives audiences a look at a softer side of McRaney, whose storied career included multiple roles as military men, such as Marine Corps veteran Rick Simon on âSimon & Simonâ and Major John D. MacGillis on âMajor Dad,â as well as a downright terrifying turn as George Hearst on HBOâs âDeadwood.â
Hear more about McRaneyâs stint on âThis Is Usâ in his interview with The Times here.
âModern Familyâ and âHouse of Cardsâ â the shows the Emmys canât quit
The nominations for the 69th Emmys have plenty of fresh blood in marquee categories, including FXâs âAtlanta,â Huluâs buzz-worthy âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ and Netflixâs âThe Crown.â
But the new class will have plenty of old-school company as it competes against what might be called the unkillables â the awards-show equivalent of Godzilla and âFriday the 13thâsâ Jason Voorhees. âModern Family,â âHouse of Cards,â âVeepâ and âReal Time With Bill Maherâ have demonstrated again that they can count on love from Emmy voters despite their age and familiarity.
Some had predicted that this year might mark the end of the line for âModern Familyâ and âHouse of Cards.â Even though the drama and comedy series categories list seven nominees, the tsunami of new shows, particularly on streaming services and cable, indicated these two veterans might be squeezed out.
So much for that line of thinking.
Watch Tracee Ellis Ross sing her Emmy prep song; shaving has never sounded so glamorous
Tracee Ellis Ross can make even the most mundane tasks seem fabulous. Inspired by Tituss Burgessâ similar Instagram song (which we, unfortunately, canât embed here due to a few NSFW words at the end but, trust us, itâs hilarious.) Ross used her lovely pipes to keep fans updated on her Emmy road like some sort of wonderful animated Disney princess.
Fingers crossed these two spark a pampering trend. See how other celebs got ready for the big night including the one and only Oprah.
See how the celebrities are getting ready for the 2017 Emmy Awards here. >>>
Guess tonightâs winners with our interactive play-at-home ballot
Will your favorites go home Emmy winners? Make your picks here for 2017 Emmy winners, then save and share on Facebook and Twitter. Once the winners are announced, check back and see how you did.
âFull Frontalâs Emmy-nominated showrunner Jo Miller on why Trump isnât good for comedy
Jo Miller, showrunner and executive producer of âFull Frontal With Samantha Bee,â is nominated for four Emmys (and has already won one for the talk showâs âNot the White House Correspondentsâ Dinnerâ special).
The Ph.D. candidate in medieval Jewish history, who studied at Yale and Cambridge and who switched careers after landing a writing gig âThe Daily Showâ with Jon Stewart, has covered just about everything.
However during the white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Va.,âFull Frontalâ was off the air.
Was it hard to be off the air the week of Charlottesville?
My whole life had been leading up to this point. I spent I donât know how many decades studying anti-Semitism and I had my own show where I can say whatever I want and a Nazi rally happens, and itâs off that week? I nearly died. These weekend Tiki warriors, inherently ridiculous with their khakis. You could tell these guys were venturing out of their cave for the first time. They were taking this tentative glee in being able to utter the racial epithets theyâd been typing for so long.
Do you buy into the idea that Trump is a gift to comedians?
No, thatâs ... ridiculous. Chaos and meaninglessness are not good for comedy. Comedy shines an off-angle light at a thing to make it comprehensible and to make you see the absurdity of it. You shine an off-angle light at pure chaos and meaninglessness, itâs just another angle of meaninglessness. Satire is really at a loss to deal with madness.
Man, to think back when we were making fun of Ted Cruz. That was fun.
Who is Hollywood pulling for? Stars make their Emmy predictions at nominees party
A long list of Hollywood A-listers hightailed it over to Gracias Madre in West Hollywood to bestow kisses and well wishes on Emmy contenders during the Variety and Women in Film party honoring this yearâs nominees.
Those who turned up for this festive annual cocktail bash included Claire Foy and Matt Smith of âThe Crown,â Viola Davis and Cicely Tyson of âHow to Get Away with Murder,â Sterling K. Brown and Ryan Michelle BathĂŠ of âThis Is Us,â Judith Light and Kathryn Hahn of âTransparent,â Angela Sarafyan and Leonardo Nam of âWestworld,â Tracee Ellis Ross of âblack-ish,â Felicity Huffman of âAmerican Crime,â Alexander SkarsgĂĽrd of âBig Little Lies,â Sarah Hyland of âModern Familyâ and Yvonne Strahovski of âThe Handmaidâs Tale.â
And despite all the star power blazing inside this vegan-friendly Mexican restaurant, all eyes turned to Dolly Parton the second the country superstar stepped onto the patio.
A steady stream of admirers stopped by Partonâs banquette to extend congratulations for her Emmy-nominated holiday special, âDolly Partonâs Christmas of Many Colors: Circle of Love.â
The bash, sponsored by Mercedes-Benz, offered an abundance for anyone with a sweet tooth: a buffet of chocolates, gummy bears and other sweet treats next to an ice cream bar from event presenter Halo Top Creamery replete with red velvet, peanut butter cup and birthday cake flavors.
Hereâs what a few stars had to say about hopes and predictions for the 69th Primetime Emmys:
TRACEE ELLIS ROSS
âA win is always nice, but [the awards show] is just a really fun situation overall â whether you take home a statue or not,â said Ellis Ross, whoâs nominated for lead actress in a comedy series. âWho do you root for? Iâm in a category of such heavy hitters that I canât even believe Iâm in there with those women.â
LEA MICHELE
âItâs so hard to predict, but I loved âBig Little Lies.â I loved âHandmaidâs Tale,ââ said Lea Michele, who is now gearing up for her new show, âThe Mayor.â âIâm super-excited this year because Iâm presenting â and Iâm presenting with Kumail Nanjiani of âThe Big Sickâ and âSilicon Valley.ââ
ABIGAIL SPENCER
âElisabeth Moss deserves all the awards â and not just for âThe Handmaidâs Tale,ââ said Abigail Spencer of âTimeless.â âShe has such a deep body of work, and everything she does is so pointed.â
Get a peek inside the Emmysâ lavish after-party, the Governors Ball
More than 5,000 gold-colored, paper tubes (ranging in length from 2 to 20 feet) have been suspended from the ceiling at the Los Angeles Convention Center to channel the look of âGolden Grandeur.â
That is the theme the creators of the annual post-Emmy Awards extravaganza the Governors Ball are hoping to evoke as they host guests of the show, nominees, presenters and plenty of winners posing for pictures of themselves planting a kiss on their trophy.
Last yearâs Governors Ball transformed the space into a magical forest wonderland (with the occasional sponsored car parked between the whimsical branches). This year itâs all about the gold.
Event producer Cheryl Cecchetto explained to The Times that the âepic lookâ of the venue âis going to make everyone feel so important.â
Fifty bartenders, 250 cooks, 27 executive restaurant chefs and 600 servers will converge to offer the celebrants heirloom tomatoes, filet mignon and brownie bars.
However, the splendor has a green bent: All the decor elements from the party is either recyclable, repurposed or biodegradable.
Take a look inside the 2017 Emmy Awards Governors Ball here. >>>
Yes, the âStranger Thingsâ kids were at the EW pre-Emmy party, plus âThis Is Usâ cast and countless stars
So many stars popped into the pre-Emmy party thrown by Entertainment Weekly at the Sunset Tower Hotel in West Hollywood that they had to stand in line if they wished to walk the red carpet.
Inside the party space on Friday, guests carved out a spot to dance, while others spent every moment mingling with past and present Emmy nominees, industry insiders and all the other VIPs present.
This shindig, which was sponsored by LâOreal Paris, featured â in addition to cheeseburgers, fries and a chance to catch up with TV stars â servers carrying trays of mascara.
Just beside the patio, Seth Meyers, host of âLate Night with Seth Meyers,â and his brother, actor Josh Meyers, chatted with friends.
Did the talk show host have any predictions for the Emmys? âI predicted Hillary was going to win,â he said. âSo, what do I know?â
Sharon Lawrence of âMe, Myself and Iâ didnât offer predictions either but said she was already happy with the 69th Primetime Emmys. Thatâs because last week, as the first awards were handed out at the Creative Arts Emmys, Gerald McRaney â also known as Dr. Nathan Katowski on âThis Is Usâ â took home an Emmy for guest actor in a drama series.
âSaturday Night Liveâ and âWestworldâ are tied with the most nods. Who will come out on top?
NBCâs long-running sketch comedy âSaturday Night Liveâ and HBOâs futuristic robot drama âWestworldâ started the Emmy race tied as the nominations leaders with 22 apiece.
At last weekendâs Creative Arts Emmys, where many of the technical awards and guest acting prizes were handed out -- categories in which both triumphed -- the shows remained tied in the lead with five each.
At the outset, âWestworldâ had better odds simply because âSNLâ has multiple actors in the same categories, e.g. Leslie Jones, Vanessa Bayer and Kate McKinnon all vying for supporting actress in a comedy.
But, even with the intra-show competition factor, and âWestworldâ boasting an edge mathematically with a larger number of categories left to win, it could still be a horse race.
âSaturday Night Liveâ can win five trophies on Sunday: supporting actress and actor in a comedy (Alec Baldwin), directing and writing for a variety series and variety sketch series. If they sweep those -- which is possible given the surge this season experienced -- the showâs total haul will be 10. (Donât get us started on why, if the show competes in the variety sketch categories, the actors are nominated in the comedy categories.)
By contrast, if âWestworldâ were to sweep the remaining seven categories in which it is competing -- drama series, actor and actress, supporting actor and actress, writing and directing -- it would end up with 12. Yet, if smart money is elsewhere in several of those races, the shows could end up tying, yet again, as the nightâs overall winners.
Given how Baldwin, McKinnon and guest actress winner Melissa McCarthy enlivened the show -- and interests in -- with their impressions of President Trump, Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions (among others) and former White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer, respectively, weâre guessing âSNLâ emerges victorious in the head-to-head battle.
The 2016 Emmy Awards was a celebration of nerd TV
Remember when the Emmys recognized clones, a hacktivist with an âimaginary friendâ and Sherlock all in the same year? 2016 was a big year for geekdom at the Emmy Awards, with many of the top prizes going to fan-favorite genre TV shows.
Tatiana Maslany was finally recognized for her performances in âOrphan Black,â winning lead actress in a drama series for tackling not one, but several roles as clones Sarah, Alison, Cosima, Helena, Rachel, M.K. and Krystal. Each woman is a distinct character with a unique personality and history, all sharing the same face, and sometimes even the same space. The Clone Club was unable to contain its excitement and exploded with memes to celebrate the occasion.
Meanwhile, lead actor in a drama went to Rami Malek of âMr. Robotâ for his portrayal of Elliot Alderson, a cybersecurity engineer who moonlights as a cybervigilante. What separates Elliot from your average hacktivist working to eliminate income inequality is that the man responsible for recruiting him into the underground organization (spoiler alert!) turned out to be a figment of his imagination.
And of course, we canât forget that âGame of Thronesâ made history during these 68th Emmy Awards when it won best drama series for the second straight year. Combined with the showâs wins for writing and directing that night, the total Emmy haul for âGame of Thronesâ was pushed to 38 awards, more than any other drama or comedy series ever. (Alas, the series will not be adding to its overall total in 2017).
In addition to these nods in the drama categories, âSherlock: The Abominable Brideâ was crowned the best TV movie, Kate McKinnon won for supporting actress in a comedy series (though for her work on âSaturday Night Liveâ rather than âGhostbustersâ) and âKey & Peele,â with its numerous genre spoofs, won in the variety sketch show category.
Predicting the 2017 Emmy Award wins: âThis Is Usâ versus âStranger Thingsâ -- can the kids beat your tears?
âGame of Thronesâ â latest season debuted too late for the show to be eligible for this yearâs Emmys. Good news, right? Because if âThronesâ had won a third consecutive drama series Emmy for that disappointing run of episodes, it would have made my face scrunch up in a look of disapproval rivaling anything Maggie Smith ever threw down on âDownton Abbey.â
âThronesâ shouldnât even be nominated next year, much less win.
But Iâll worry about that when the time comes. Meanwhile, weâve got a drama series category dominated by first-year shows â âStranger Things,â âThe Handmaidâs Tale,â âThe Crown,â âWestworldâ and âThis Is Usâ â making it one of the most competitive races in years.
So, yes, weâve got a big night ahead of us, and the producers have promised to shake things up. Forget about the prizes being given out in groupings of genre. First-time producers Glenn Weiss and Ricky Kirshner say theyâre going to save the closest races and biggest stars until the end of the show, meaning weâre going to have to wait a while to see if Nicole Kidman wins her first Emmy.
Who else will be hoisting those enormous gold trophies? And how many GIFs will Winona Ryder launch if âStranger Thingsâ wins? Hereâs my final forecast for the main categories.
Drama Series
Winner: âStranger Thingsâ
Spoiler: âThis Is Usâ
I know, I know. âHandmaidâs Taleâ has the political currency. âThe Crownâ possesses all the prestige trappings. What does âStranger Thingsâ have going for it? Popularity. Netflixâs ode to â80s fantasy and horror has already won honors from the Producers and Screen Actors guilds, and last weekend it took five honors at the Creative Arts Emmys, including the bellwether casting award. Itâs no sure thing. This might be the eveningâs most competitive category. But it has a bit of history on its side.
Drama lead actor
Winner: Sterling K. Brown, âThis Is Usâ
Spoiler: Bob Odenkirk, âBetter Call Saulâ
Brown won an Emmy last year for playing prosecutor Christopher Darden in âThe People v. O.J. Simpson,â and heâs just as good as the dorky, generous Randall in âThis Is Us.â Votersâ love for the character â and the show â gives him the edge.
Emmy awards by the numbers: Which series won the most trophies in its first season? (Itâs not âGame of Thronesâ)
With so many nominees in so many categories over 69 years, Emmys statistics can be sliced any number of ways. Here, for those who might need a quick factoid to toss out during a commercial break, are nine that might come in handy.
27: Categories to be recognized during Sunday nightâs show.
111: Nominations for HBO, the network that got the most.
22: Nominations each for âSaturday Night Liveâ and âWestworld,â the shows leading the pack.
6: Episodes submitted by each show for consideration in the drama series and comedy series categories.
41: Categories recognized during last weekendâs Creative Arts Emmys.
44: Emmys won by CBS in 1974, a number that stands as the most for a single network in a single year.
5: Wins each for âSNL,â âWestworldâ and âStranger Thingsâ at the 69th Creative Arts Emmy Awards last weekend.
38: Emmys won over the years by âGame of Thrones,â which has the most of any series ever (but wonât be adding any tonight).
9: Emmys given in 2000 to âThe West Wing,â which holds the record for most trophies won by a series in its first season.
Women are the real standouts of the 2017 Emmy nominees
Many already are calling the 2017 Emmys the Year of the Woman. But Year of the Women might be more like it.
This yearâs Emmy nominations, announced July 13, were dominated by âBig Little Lies,â âThe Crown,â âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ and âFeud: Bette and Joanâ â shows that not only highlight strong female performances but also put womenâs stories at the center of the action.
The range of these stories â and the women who helped bring them to life â is a reminder that the Golden Age of TV, ushered in by male antiheroes, is increasingly casting a spotlight on the collective female experience.
With âGame of Thronesâ out of contention, the drama series category welcomed two newcomers that, in wildly different ways, saw women pitted against one another. In Netflixâs âThe Crown,â the young Queen Elizabeth II (Claire Foy) reluctantly squelches her sisterâs romance with a divorced man. Huluâs âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ imagines a theocratic dystopia in which fertile women are enslaved as surrogates to the wives of the ruling class. Each series received 13 nominations.
Likewise, the limited-series category was led by two stories of women with complex relationships: âFeud,â which dramatized the legendary rivalry between Joan Crawford and Bette Davis, and âBig Little Lies,â a murder mystery set among well-heeled Monterey mothers.
Emmy host Stephen Colbert is clearly in the bag for âStranger Thingsâ
Emmy emcee Stephen Colbert may be new to the awards-show-hosting game, but he rolled out the red carpet like a professional on Tuesday morning as part of the run-up to the 69th Emmy Awards.
After revealing his own personal TV binge list, which included âGilmore Girlsâ and âThe Crown,â he showed a bit more Netflix bias:
âI looooved âStranger Things,ââ said Colbert. âI was late to the party, but I absolutely love it. That is my childhood. I was those kids playing Dungeons & Dragons. Iâm first-generation D&D, baby. I went to Gen Con, I met [D&D inventor] Gary Gygax, man. I played with [early D&D writer] Len Lakofka. Yeah, deep cut.â
âThe design of [âStranger Thingsâ] was so incredible. The sheets that the kids have on the bed? Those were my sheets. My mom bought those sheets for me in 1978. Did they win? They should win.â
The complete list of Emmy nominations
In the run-up to Sunday nightâs Emmy Awards, âWestworldâ and âSaturday Night Liveâ lead the nominations with 22 nods apiece. Itâs the most nominations the long-running NBC late-night sketch show has received in a single season. âSNLâ also broke its own record for the most nominations for any program with 231 total.
The Creative Arts Emmys ceremonies held in Los Angeles last the weekend revealed the winners in several categories that donât make it to air on the prime-time Emmy awards, with HBOâs âWestworld,â NBCâs âSNLâ and Netflixâs âStranger Thingsâ each taking home five awards.
The remaining winners will be revealed at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT Sunday on CBS.
Hereâs the complete list of nominees >>
What time are the Emmy Awards?
TVâs biggest night is nearly here and we know youâve got a few questions.
The 69th Primetime Emmy Awards will air live on CBS at 5 p.m. Pacific time until about 8 p.m.
âThe Late Showâ host Stephen Colbert will run point during the ceremony as this yearâs host while the Television Academy doles out awards for best drama, comedy, limited series and TV movie, in addition to awarding the top talent from said categories.
While many of the gilded statuettes were handed out during last weekendâs Creative Arts Emmys, there are still quite a few to be had on Sunday. For more details about Sundayâs show, click here.