Emmys 2024: the winners, the losers, the speeches – live! | Emmys

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Adrian Horton

Adrian Horton

Awards predictions are a fool’s errand, but nevertheless I persisted in attempting to guess who will win (and shouting out who should). TL,DR: it’s going to be a big night for Shōgun and likely another comedy sweep for The Bear.

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Adrian Horton

Adrian Horton

Hiroyuki Sanada as Yoshii Toranaga, in a scene from Shōgun. Photograph: Katie Yu/AP

The show hasn’t even started, and already Shōgun is the big winner – it broke the record for most Emmys for a single season of TV last week with 14 wins at the Creative Arts Emmys, besting John Adams (13 in 2008) and Game of Thrones (12 in 2015, 2016 and 2019).

Suffice to say, FX’s adaptation of the James Clavell novel is the favorite for best drama, which would make it the first non-English language show to win the night’s biggest award (and the second ever nominated, after Squid Game in 2022). And its nominated stars Hiroyuki Sanada and Anna Sawai are the first Japanese nominees in their category; only Heroes’ Masi Oka, nominated for best supporting actor in 2007, has received a nod from the Television Academy.

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Benjamin Lee

Benjamin Lee

Taking place just weeks before a rather important election, one might expect some speeches that may nod toward it but producers have confirmed that nothing in their control will be political tonight.

“We are celebrating television, and we are inundated every single day with everything going on around the election and the different opinions. We really want this to be a celebratory night,” executive producer Jeannae Rouzan-Clay said to Deadline. “We’re hoping that everyone will just do the right thing, but we don’t know what people are going to say in their speeches. This is a really important election year that could determine all of our futures. So I wouldn’t be surprised if it came up.”

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Adrian Horton

Adrian Horton

More arrivals on the red carpet, with just less than an hour before showtime:

Ripley’s Dakota Fanning. Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters
Quinta Brunson. Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters
Fellow Travelers co-stars Jonathan Bailey and Matt Bomer. Photograph: Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP
Devery Jacobs. Photograph: Jae C Hong/Invision/AP
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Benjamin Lee

Benjamin Lee

Producers are promising more of the “energy of nostalgia” that we saw in January’s ceremony tonight with some big reunions and a host of cameos. Tonight we’ll see surviving cast members from Happy Days, The West Wing and Saturday Night Live, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary tonight.

For understandable reasons, a Friends reunion has been confirmed not to be part of the evening despite its 30th anniversary while there will also be groups of TV characters on stage such as iconic mums, lawyers, villains and cops.

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Adrian Horton

Adrian Horton

Selena Gomez. Photograph: Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP

Selena Gomez is here! The Only Murders in the Building star is riding high with her first solo acting nom for the show’s third season, fresh off a best actress award at Cannes (shared with co-stars Zoe Saldana and Karla Sofía Gascón) for Emilia Pérez.

Only Murders’ nominations tonight also make Gomez, an executive producer, the most-nominated Latina producer for a comedy in Emmy history.

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Benjamin Lee

Benjamin Lee

Is The Bear a comedy? According to the TV academy yes, yes it is. According to the Guardian’s Stuart Heritage (and most of Twitter) no, no it really isn’t:

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Adrian Horton

Adrian Horton

Trust the queens of RuPaul’s Drag Race to serve something interesting on the red carpet – Nymphia Wind sees Princess Poppy’s Green Goblin last year and raises it a cunty banana.

Nymphia Wind. Photograph: Allison Dinner/EPA
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Benjamin Lee

Benjamin Lee

John Oliver is set to win his gazillionth Emmy tonight for his late night show (deserved) and has been talking the other E-word on the red carpet:

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Benjamin Lee

Benjamin Lee

Jamie Lee Curtis poses with her Emmy for outstanding guest actress in a comedy series for The Bear on night two of the Creative Arts Emmy awards, in Los Angeles on 8 September 2024. Photograph: Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP

As usual, the Emmys splits awards over two ceremonies (a real blessing for those of us tuning in) which means that last weekend at the Creative Arts Emmys, we started to get an idea of which shows the academy seems to be favouring this year.

It was a momentous night for Shōgun, taking home 14 awards, breaking the record for most wins at the pre-Emmys Emmys while there were also acting wins for stars such as Michaela Coel and Jamie Lee Curtis. Here are some of the highlights:

Outstanding guest actor in a comedy series: Jon Bernthal (The Bear)

Outstanding guest actress in a drama series: Michaela Coel (Mr & Mrs Smith)

Outstanding TV movie: Quiz Lady

Outstanding host for a reality or reality competition program: Alan Cumming (The Traitors)

Outstanding guest actress in a comedy series: Jamie Lee Curtis (The Bear)

Outstanding narrator: Angela Bassett (Queens)

Outstanding guest actor in a drama series: Néstor Carbonell (Shōgun)

Outstanding cinematography for a drama series (one hour): Shōgun

Outstanding visual effects in a season or movie: Shōgun

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Adrian Horton

Adrian Horton

And the red carpet is underway! Here are some of the celeb arrivals so far:

Andrew Scott. Photograph: Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP
Walton Goggins and Nadia Conners. Photograph: Jae C Hong/Invision/AP
Fallout’s Ella Purnell. Photograph: Jae C Hong/Invision/AP
Padma Lakshmi. Photograph: Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP
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Benjamin Lee

Benjamin Lee

Tonight’s ceremony will be hosted by Eugene and Dan Levy, the father-son duo whose comedy Schitt’s Creek finally saw some TV academy love for its final season, when it won nine Emmys. Like that show, we can expect a fuzziness from the pair, who have said they will be going for nice over nasty.

In a Los Angeles Times profile, Eugene Levy said: “It’s always hit me in a funny way when jokes are done at the expense of people who are nominated – they’ve put in the work, and it’s their night, really, and you have to have enough respect for the awards show itself. Otherwise, why are we here?”

Dan Levy added: “People, from what I’ve been told, are kind of excited that we’re not hard-edged comics, that there will be a kind of warmth to the room.”

So look forward to three hours of this:

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Welcome (back) to the Emmys

Adrian Horton

Adrian Horton

Eita Okuno, Anna Sawai and Hiromoto Ida in FX’s Shōgun. Photograph: Katie Yu/AP

No, you’re not hallucinating – the Emmys are back! A mere nine months after the 2023 ceremony, which was held in January, the Emmys return to its usual September slot to celebrate the 2023-2024 season, with a (mostly) new slate of nominees.

The end of Emmys juggernaut Succession (RIP) opens the door for a new drama heavyweight – Shōgun, FX’s ambitious historical epic set in 1600s Japan, enters the night with 25 nominations, the most of any show. With 14 Creative Arts Emmys already, Shōgun competes with The Morning Show, Mr and Mrs Smith, Slow Horses, 3 Body Problem, The Gilded Age, Fallout and former Emmys favorite The Crown.

Another FX production, The Bear, nearly swept the comedy awards in January and leads the category with 23 nominations, despite its dubious record as a comedy. It faces stiff competition in fellow Emmys darling Abbott Elementary, Hacks, Only Murders in the Building, Palm Royale, Reservation Dogs, What We Do in the Shadows and the final season of Curb Your Enthusiasm. On the limited series side, HBO’s True Detective: Night Country leads the way with 19 nominations, though buzz is in favor of Netflix’s breakout hit Baby Reindeer.

The night promises plenty of heartfelt speeches and another round of TV nostalgia – stick with us for all the highlights!

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