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#The 60th Annual Golden Globe
denimbex1986 · 5 months
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'Doctor Who star David Tennant has been announced as the host of next month's Bafta Film Awards.
It will be the actor's first time hosting the prestigious ceremony, which is being held at the Royal Festival Hall in London's Southbank Centre.
He will be taking over from last year's host, Richard E Grant, who presented alongside Alison Hammond.
The 2024 ceremony will take place on 18 February and be broadcast on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.
Tennant, 52, who has appeared in TV series including Broadchurch and Good Omens, recently returned to Doctor Who for the show's 60th anniversary episodes, where he played the 14th Time Lord.
He said: "I am delighted to have been asked to host the EE Bafta Film Awards and help celebrate the very best of this year's films and the many brilliant people who bring them to life."
He starred in Doctor Who's 60th anniversary with Catherine Tate, who reprised her role as Donna Noble, a companion of the 10th Doctor, also played by Tennant.
Jane Millichip, the chief executive of Bafta, said the organisation was "over the moon" at Tennant's appointment.
She added: "He is deservedly beloved by British and international audiences alike.
"His warmth, charm and mischievous wit will make it a must-watch show."
The Bafta Film Awards longlists have been announced across 24 categories.
Greta Gerwig's Barbie, Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer and Martin Scorsese's Killers Of The Flower Moon feature in 15 categories.
All three are in the running for best film, director and screenplay awards.
Saltburn, Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget and Poor Things are among the 15 films which will advance in the Outstanding British film category.
Lily Gladstone makes an appearance in the leading actress category for her performance in Killers of the Flower Moon, while Bradley Cooper is among the stars listed for leading actor for his performance in Maestro.
The nominations for the 77th annual awards will be announced on 18 January by English actress Naomi Ackie and Barbie actor Kingsley Ben-Adir.
The nominations for the EE rising star award, the only Bafta where the winner is selected by the British public, will be announced on 10 January.
Last year Tennant appeared with Tate at the TV Baftas to present the best features award to Joe Lycett vs Beckham: Got Your Back At Xmas.
Tennant previously collected two best actor awards for his performances in both Doctor Who: Doomsday and The Escape Artist from Bafta Cymru and Bafta Scotland respectively.
The awards season kicks off with the Golden Globes on Sunday while the Oscars will be held on 10 March.'
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mermaidinthecity · 1 year
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60th Annual Golden Globe Awards - January 19, 2003
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blossomcricket · 3 years
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The 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards
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updateparishilton · 4 years
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Janvier 19, 2003 —   60th Golden Globe Awards - Miramax After-Party - Inside.
Nicky Hilton and Paris Hilton during The 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards - Miramax After-Party - Inside at Trader Vic's in Beverly Hills.
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tcm · 5 years
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The Short Lived Career of Kay Kendall by Susan King
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The 60th anniversary of the brilliant comic actress Kay Kendall’s death in September came and went very quietly. It saddened me. Kendall was a real breath of fresh air. A British version of Carole Lombard, Kendall was a beautiful, sophisticated and capable dramatic actress who turned into a slapstick goofball with the right material. And just like Lombard, who was 33 when she died in a plane crash in 1942, Kendall died young at just 32, after succumbing to myeloid leukemia.
“Miss Kendall was that stage and screen rarity, a beautiful clown,” the New York Times obit stated. “The talents of a superb comedienne are so seldom conjoined with statuesque, classic beauty that producers along with Miss Kendall’s hard road to the top tended to distrust her qualities as mutually exclusive.”
In fact, the self-deprecating, often insecure Kendall proclaimed after the release of her best film, 1957’s LES GIRLS, that she looked like a “female impersonator with these long skinny legs. I’m 5 feet [sic] 9. I eat like a horse and I couldn’t become a ballet dancer because I got too big. When I rose up on my toes, I was 10 feet 6 and my feet collapsed.”
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Kendall affected those whom she knew and worked with including Mitzi Gaynor, who starred with her in LES GIRLS. In 2018, I was doing a Q&A with Gaynor at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Hollywood for the 60th anniversary of SOUTH PACIFIC and asked her about Kendall. She started to gush about how great Kendall was, but started getting misty-eyed thinking about her, so I quickly went back to the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical.
And I recall one time during an interview, a rather prickly Stanley Donen became effusive when I brought up Kendall, whom he directed in her last film ONCE MORE, WITH FEELING! (’60).
Kendall, who appeared in revues and variety shows as a teenager, got her first big movie role in 1946’s lavish LONDON TOWN, which was one of the British film industry's most expensive flops of the time. She was told by a film executive that she was “ugly, you have no talent. You’re too tall and you photograph badly. Go marry some nice man, settle down and have a nice family.”
She finally got the perfect role in the classic award-winning comedy GENEVIEVE, which was released in England in 1953. The comedy revolved around two young couples who participate annually in a vintage car rally from London to Brighton. John Gregson and Dinah Sheridan were the main stars with Kenneth More and Kendall as the supporting players.
Kendall stole the whole film as Rosalind Peters, More’s high-fashioned overly coiffed model girlfriend who is accompanied by her St. Bernard named Susie. The inventiveness of Kendall's performance, especially when a drunk Rosalind plays a trumpet at a nightclub, is as fresh and funny it was 66 years ago.
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Her life changed forever when she made THE CONSTANT HUSBAND with Rex Harrison and released in 1955. And of course, there was a scandal. Though Harrison was married to Lili Palmer at the time, he had a notorious reputation as a womanizer (his affair with Carole Landis in the late 1940s lead to her committing suicide). But the two married in 1957 shortly after Harrison learned from Kendall’s doctor that she had two years to live. Harrison decided not to tell her she was dying, giving her the excuse that she had anemia. Kendall’s own prognosis was never revealed to her, as was common with patients of mortal illnesses in the 1950s. Harrison did tell some of her friends, however, but did not tell her family.
Kendall came to Hollywood to make the Cole Porter musical LES GIRLS, directed by George Cukor and starring Gene Kelly, Gaynor and Taina Elg. Kendall won a Golden Globe for her hysterical performance as the British performer who is being sued for libel by another chorus girl. Kendall and Harrison then starred together in a delightful bit of fluff, THE RELUCTANT DEBUTANTE (’58), directed by Vincente Minnelli. Though sometimes real-life couples have no chemistry together on screen, that wasn’t the case with Kendall and Harrison. Not only do they have chemistry to spare, Harrison even seems to take a back seat in the proceedings and let his wife shine.
In the biography, The Brief, Madcap Life of Kay Kendall by Eve Golden and Kim Kendall, Minnelli’s wife Lee remembered that Kendall and Harrison “were wonderful together. He adored her. You could see when he looked at her, his eyes lit up. They balanced each other perfectly – they played off of each together.” She also noted, “if [Kay] came into a room, she had all laughing in five minutes. Even if you felt a little down, you talked to Kay and by the time you left you were floating, you were up in the air.” 
According to the book, by 1958 Kendall was “finding it more difficult to play innocent about her physical condition…Kay was not a stupid woman, and no one can be that sick for that long without knowing something is seriously wrong.” She even told her good friend Dirk Bogarde, who knew she was ill. “Diggy, I think I am dying. I've some terrible disease and they won’t tell me. I think I’ve got cancer.” Bogarde kept his promise to Harrison and tried to laugh off her fears.
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By the time she filmed ONCE MORE, WITH FEELING! with Yul Brynner, she was frail. She eventually collapsed during filming and was hospitalized, with Harrison stating that she had a lung infection and anemia. After she sufficiently recovered, Kendall managed to finish the film. After going on a vacation with Harrison, she returned to London and entered a clinic where she died a week later. Even on her death bed, Harrison never told of the leukemia. According to to her biography, Kendall looked at Harrison and asked, “Mousey, you would tell me if I was dying?” To which he replied, “Don’t be stupid, of course I would. You’re not dying.” Shortly after, she sank into a coma. The press account of her last moments was highly romantic, with Kay sighing to Harrison, “’I love you very much, darling’ with her last breath.” ONCE MORE, WITH FEELING! opened in February 1960. And Bosley Crowther in the New York Times was disappointed Kendall’s swan song wasn’t better. “As for poor Miss Kendall (who has died since this picture was made), she works hard to be disagreeable, to virtually no avail. She screeches and fluffs up her feathers, throws things and breaks television sets, but only succeeds in being feverish. Lacking that obvious essential, she is merely fragile and sad. It is certainly too bad her last picture has to be as vapid as this.” But nearly 60 years after the film release, Kendall’s performance still has traces of manic brilliance and leaves you wondering what she would have done had she had lived.
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blackeyed-dog · 5 years
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The 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards After-Party
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aya-mery2 · 4 years
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//Especial TB Appearances 2003//
…Actress: Kristin Davis…
Event: 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards
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tunneybakerfan · 7 years
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Me too!Lovely pic of Simon! 💕💕 @Regrann from @addicted_to_simon_baker - I'm not able to resist his sweet smile... So charming! 😊😍😙❤ Simon Baker at the 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards on January 19, 2003 in Beverly Hills, CA ♡ #simonbaker #simonbakerfan #snappytoes #smileysimon #smiley #smile #sweetestsmile #cutie #handsome #bakermadness #youngsimon #goldenglobes #goldenglobeawards #aussie #australian #actor #hollywood #thementalist #mentalist #elmentalista #patrickjane - #regrann Thank you for posting it!😘💕
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jessicakehoe · 4 years
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50 of Naomi Campbell’s Best Looks from 1990-2020
Today is Naomi Campbell‘s 50th birthday. Having spent the past few hours scrolling through images of the supermodel we can confirm two things: one, the woman can pull off a naked dress like nobody else, and two, she doesn’t appear to have aged at all. From the late nineties to early noughties to now, Campbell has continued to turn heads with every appearance. In celebration of her milestone birthday, we’re taking a look back at 50 of her best looks from across the decades – from her iconic Vivienne Westwood plaid moment to every Met Gala red carpet she’s ever stepped foot on and everything in between, there’s been no shortage of major moments.
See 50 of the best looks worn by Naomi Campbell from 1990-2020 in the gallery below:
Photo by Rose Hartman/Getty Images
Photo by Jim Smeal/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images
Photo by ARNAL/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
Photo by Dave Benett/Getty Images
Photo by Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images
Photo by Vinnie Zuffante/Getty Images
Photograph courtesy of Getty Images.
Photo by Frank Trapper/Corbis via Getty Images
Photo by Rose Hartman/Getty Images
Photo by Dave Hogan/Getty Images
Photo by Lawrence Lucier/Getty Images
Photo by Bruno Vincent/Getty Images
Photo by Giulio Marcocchi/Getty Images
Photo by Alberto Tamargo/Getty Images
Photo by Evan Agostini/Getty Images
Photo by Jim Spellman/WireImage
Photo by Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images
Photo by Evan Agostini/Getty Images
Photo by Daniele Venturelli/WireImage
Photo by Fred Duval/FilmMagic
Photo by Mike Marsland/WireImage
Photo by Mike Marsland/WireImage
Photo by Larry Busacca/Getty Images
Photo by Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic
Photo by Karwai Tang/WireImage
Photo by Karwai Tang/WireImage
Photo by Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Tom Ford
Photo by Karwai Tang/WireImage
Photo by David M. Benett/Dave Benett / Getty Images for Burberry
Photo by Venturelli/Getty Images for LACMA
Photo by Karwai Tang/WireImage
Photo by Mike Marsland/WireImage
Photo by Gabriel Olsen/FilmMagic
Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images
Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images
Photo by Julien Hekimian/Getty Images for Amfar
Photo by Larry Busacca/Getty Images
Photo by Anthony Harvey/Getty Images
Photo by Kristina Nikishina/Epsilon/Getty Images
Photo by Venturelli/Getty Images
Photograph by Ulet Ifansasti/Getty Images
Photo by Jennifer Lourie/Getty Images
Photo by Venturelli/WireImage
Photo by Ricky Vigil M/GC Images
Photo by Mike Marsland/Mike Marsland/WireImage
Photo by Michael Kovac/Getty Images for LACMA
Photo by Daniele Venturelli/Daniele Venturelli/WireImage
Photo by Karwai Tang/WireImage
Photo by John Shearer/Getty Images for THR
Photo by Steve Granitz/WireImage
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1990
Campbell attended the 1990 Met Gala with photographer Francesco Scavullo wearing Versace.
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1991
Attending the 5th Annual California Fashion Industry Friends of Aids Project Los Angeles Benefit, Naomi chose to wear Versace in honour of her late friend, Gianni.
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1991
Naomi is pictured with designer Azzedine Alaïa wearing one of his designs in 1991.
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1991
Hand-in-hand with Kate Moss, Campbell wore head-to-toe Vivienne Westwood to attend the London Fashion Week Designer Of The Year Awards At The Museum Of Natural History in 1991.
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1995
One of the most referenced gowns in all of the Met Gala’s history, Campbell’s 1995 Versace column dress continues to live on as a fashion legacy.
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1997
Once again, Campbell opted for a sparkly mini from Versace for the 2007 MTV Video Music Awards.
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2000
Attending the 2000 CFDA Awards with Diddy, Naomi wore a bright yellow gown by Azzedine Alaïa.
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2000
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2000
For the 2000 Met Gala, Campbell chose this Dolce & Gabbana look which paid homage to Madonna.
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2001
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2002
At the 2002 GQ Men of the Year Awards, Campbell chose this lace-up look from Dolce & Gabbana.
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2003
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2004
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2004
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2004
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2004
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2005
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2006
For the 2006 Met Gala, Campbell chose a dress by Alexander McQueen.
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2007
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2007
21/50
2010
Attending the 63rd annual Cannes Film Festival, Campbell was radiant in sequinned Roberto Cavalli.
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2010
At the 2010 British Fashion Awards, Campbell was honoured with the Icon award and chose this elegant black Alexander McQueen dress for the occasion.
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2011
For the 2011 Met Gala, which was dedicated to the late Alexander McQueen, Naomi opted for a piece from the brand designed by Sarah Burton.
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2014
Campbell was a knockout in this leopard print Gucci number at the 2014 GLAAD Awards in LA.
25/50
2014
Naomi opted for this daring Roberto Cavalli gown for the 2014 Arqiva British Academy Television Awards.
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2014
Naomi attended the 2014 Glamour Women of the Year Awards in this fun look from the Alexander McQueen S/S14 collection.
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2015
Campbell wore this glittering Tom Ford gown to watch the designer’s A/W15 show in LA.
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2015
Campbell opted for this 2007 McQueen look to attend a private screening of “Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty” in 2015.
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2015
Campbell wore head-to-toe Burberry to watch the premiere of the brand’s holiday film in 2015.
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2015
This Givenchy gown turned heads at the LACMA 2015 Art+Film Gala.
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2015
Delivering yet another standout sequins moment, Campbell wowed in this gold Burberry number at the 60th London Evening Standard Theatre Awards in 2015.
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2015
Campbell chose Burberry for the 2015 British Fashion Awards.
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2015
Naomi accessorized her mauve Burberry gown with Bulgari jewellery for the 2015 FOX Golden Globes after-party.
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2016
The 2016 Met Gala theme was “Manus x Machina: Fashion In An Age Of Technology” and Campbell chose this Roberto Cavalli by Peter Dundas gown for the night.
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2016
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2016
Campbell chose this Versace dress for the 2016 amfAR dinner in Paris.
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2016
Naomi perfected the art of wearing the thigh-high slit at the 2016 MTV Music Awards in this Brandon Maxwell mini.
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2016
For the 2016 British Fashion Awards, Campbell opted for this daring Alexander McQueen gown.
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2017
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2017
For the 2017 Green Carpet Fashion Awards, Campbell opted for this Atelier Versace Spring ’17 couture gown.
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2017
Naomi looked heavenly in Ralph & Russo Couture at the 2017 amfAR Hong Kong Gala.
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2017
For FOX’s 2017 Golden Globes after-party, Campbell looked like a modern mermaid in this Versace gown.
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2018
Campbell was a vision in this jawdropping gown by Poiret at the BlacKkKlansman premiere at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival.
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2018
To accept the Fashion Icon of the Year Award at the 2018 GQ Men of the Year Awards, Campbell opted for this bright Versace mini.
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2018
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2019
For the 2019 LACMA Art + Film Gala, Campbell dazzled in this red Versace gown.
47/50
2019
It was another gorgeous Alexander McQueen gown for The Fashion Awards 2019.
48/50
2019
Campbell proved why she’s the OG supermodel in this Thierry Mugler gown at the Fashion for Relief event in 2019.
49/50
2019
Campbell shut down the 2019 Met Gala red carpet in this showstopping custom Valentino look from Pierpaolo Piccioli.
50/50
2020
For the Pre-Grammy Gala earlier this year, Campbell turned heads in this statement white gown by Stephane Rolland.
The post 50 of Naomi Campbell’s Best Looks from 1990-2020 appeared first on FASHION Magazine.
50 of Naomi Campbell’s Best Looks from 1990-2020 published first on https://borboletabags.tumblr.com/
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thegloober · 6 years
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Emmys 2018: Nearly 100 Winners Have Already Been Revealed!
The winners of only 26 categories will be announced live on television during the 2018 Emmy Awards, but there are nearly 100 more categories recognized by the Television Academy.
The Creative Arts Emmys are held one week in advance of the Emmys ceremony every year to honor all of the winners in the categories that are not aired on TV.
Among the big categories that were already announced were Best TV Movie and the four Guest Actor categories.
Game of Thrones and Saturday Night Live are both leading the pack this year with seven wins each at the Creative Arts Emmys.
History was made as all four of the winners in the Guest Actor categories were black actors, for the first time ever!
Click inside for the full winners list…
See the full list of winners below!
PROGRAMS
Best Interactive Program “The Daily Show with Trevor Noah” “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee” “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” – WINNER “The Late Late Show with James Corden” “Saturday Night Live”
Best Structured Reality Program “Antiques Roadshow” “Fixer Upper” “Lip Sync Battle” “Queer Eye” – WINNER “Shark Tank” “Who Do You Think You Are?”
Best Unstructured Reality Program “Born This Way” “Deadliest Catch” “Intervention” “Naked and Afraid” “RuPaul’s Drag Race: Untucked” “United Shades of America” – WINNER
Best Variety Special (Live) “75th Annual Golden Globe Awards” “60th Annual Grammy Awards” “Jesus Christ Superstar” – WINNER “Night of Too Many Stars: America Unites for Autism Programs” “The Oscars”
Best Variety Special (Recorded) “Carol Burnett Show 50th Anniversary Special” “Carpool Karaoke Primetime Special 2018” “Dave Chappelle: Equanimity” – WINNER “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee: The Great American Puerto Rico” “Steve Martin and Martin Short: An Evening You Will Forget for the Rest of Your Life”
Best Children’s Program “Alexa and Katie” “Fuller House” “The Magical Wand Chase: A Sesame Street Special” – WINNER “A Series of Unfortunate Events” “Star Wars Rebels”
Best Commercial “Alexa Loses Her Voice” (Amazon) “Earth: Shot on iPhone” (iPhone) “In Real Life” (Monica Lewinsky: Anti-Bullying) “It’s a Tide Ad” (Tide) “The Talk” (P&G) – WINNER
Best TV Movie “Fahrenheit 451” “Flint” “Paterno” “The Tale” “USS Callister (Black Mirror)” – WINNER
SHORT FORM
Best Short Form Nonfiction/Reality Series “The Americans: The Final Season” “Anthony Bourdain: Explore Parts Unknown” – WINNER “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: America’s Obsessions” “Jay Leno’s Garage” “Top Chef: Last Chance Kitchen”
Best Short Form Variety Series “Carpool Karaoke: The Series” – WINNER “Creating Saturday Night Live” “The Daily Show: Between the Scenes” “Gay of Thrones” “Honest Trailers” “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: Cover Room”
Best Short Form Animated Program “Adventure Time” — “Ring of Fire” “Robot Chicken” — “Freshly Baked: The Robot Chicken Santa Claus Pot Cookie Freakout Special” – WINNER “Steven Universe” — “Jungle Moon” “Teen Titans Go!” — “The Self-Indulgent 200th Episode Spectacular!” “We Bare Bears” — “Hurricane Hal”
Best Short Form Comedy or Drama Series “Broken” “Caught: The Series” “I Love Bekka and Lucy” “James Corden’s Next James Corden” – WINNER “The Eddie Murphy Role is Mine, Not Yours”
ACTING – GUEST
Best Comedy Guest Actor Katt Williams, “Atlanta” – WINNER Sterling K. Brown, “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” Lin-Manuel Miranda, “Curb Your Enthusiasm” Bryan Cranston, “Curb Your Enthusiasm” Bill Hader, “Saturday Night Live” Donald Glover, “Saturday Night Live”
Best Comedy Guest Actress Wanda Sykes, “Black-ish” Maya Rudolph, “The Good Place” Jane Lynch, “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” Tiffany Haddish, “Saturday Night Live” – WINNER Tina Fey, “Saturday Night Live” Molly Shannon, “Will and Grace”
Best Drama Guest Actor Matthew Goode, “The Crown” F. Murray Abraham, “Homeland” Cameron Britton, “Mindhunter” Gerald McRaney, “This is Us” Ron Cephas Jones, “This is Us” – WINNER Jimmi Simpson, “Westworld”
Best Drama Guest Actress Diana Rigg, “Game of Thrones” Samira Wiley, “The Handmaid’s Tale” – WINNER Cherry Jones, “The Handmaid’s Tale” Kelly Jenrette, “The Handmaid’s Tale” Cicely Tyson, “How to Get Away with Murder” Viola Davis, “Scandal”
ACTING – SHORT FORM
Best Short Form Actor Miles Tagtmeyer, “Broken” DeStorm Power, “Caught: The Series” Alexis Denisof, “I Love Bekka and Lucy” James Corden, “James Corden’s Next James Corden” – WINNER Melvin Jackson Jr., “The Eddie Murphy Role is Mine, Not Yours”
Best Short Form Actress Kelli O’Hara, “The Accidental Wolf” Diarra Kilpatrick, “American Koko” Christina Pickles, “Break a Hip” – WINNER Lee Garlington, “Broken” Naomi Grossman, “Ctrl Alt Delete” Megan Amram, “An Emmy for Megan”
HOST
Best Reality Host Ellen DeGeneres, “Ellen’s Game of Games” Jane Lynch, “Hollywood Game Night” Heidi Klum and Tim Gunn, “Project Runway” RuPaul Charles, “RuPaul’s Drag Race”– WINNER W. Kamau Bell, “United Shades of America”
ANIMATED
Best Character Voice-Over Performance Seth MacFarlane, “American Dad” Alex Borstein, “Family Guy” – WINNER Seth MacFarlane, “Family Guy” Russi Taylor, “The Scariest Story Ever: A Mickey Mouse Halloween Spooktacular” Dan Castellaneta, “The Simpsons”
Best Individual Achievement in Animation Lindsay Small-Butera, “Adventure Time” Stu Livingston, “Hey Arnold! The Jungle Movie” Jeff Scher, “The Number on Great-Grandpa’s Arm” Justin Martin, “The Scariest Story Ever Told: A Mickey Mouse Halloween Spooktacular” Caroline Cruikshank, “The Simpsons” Patrick Bryson, “Steven Universe”
Best Animated Program “Baymax Returns (Big Hero 6: The Series)” “Bob’s Burgers” — “V for Valentine-detta” “Rick and Morty” — “Pickle Rick” – WINNER “The Simpsons” — “Gone Boy” “South Park” — “Put it Down”
CASTING
Best Reality Casting “Born This Way” “Project Runway” “Queer Eye”– WINNER “RuPaul’s Drag Race” “The Voice”
Best Comedy Casting “Atlanta” “Barry” “GLOW” “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” – WINNER “Silicon Valley”
Best Drama Casting “The Crown” – WINNER “Game of Thrones” “The Handmaid’s Tale” “Stranger Things” “Westworld”
Best Movie/Mini Casting “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” – WINNER “Godless” “Jesus Christ Superstar” “The Looming Tower” “Patrick Melrose”
CHOREOGRAPHY
Best Choreography Chloe Arnold, “The Late Late Show with James Corden” — “Greatest Showman,” “Crossswalk the Musical on Broadway” Mandy Moore, “So You Think You Can Dance” — “Brand New,” “To Make You Feel My Love” – WINNER Travis Wall, “So You Think You Can Dance” — “Change is Everything,” “Strange Fruit” Al Blackstone, “So You Think You Can Dance” — “The Man That Got Away, “L-O-V-E” Christopher Scott, “So You Think You Can Dance” — “Prism,” “Say You Won’t Let Go”
CINEMATOGRAPHY
Best Cinematography (Nonfiction) “Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown” — “Lagos” “Blue Planet II” — “The Deep” “Blue Planet II” — “One Ocean” “Chef’s Table” — “Corrado Assenza” “Jane” – WINNER
Best Cinematography (Reality) “The Amazing Race” — “It’s Just a Million Dollars, No Pressure” “Born This Way” — “Homecoming” “Deadliest Catch” — “Battle Lines” “Life Below Zero” — Series Body of Work– WINNER “Queer Eye” — “To Gay or Not Too Gay” “RuPaul’s Drag Race” — “10s Across the Board”
Best Cinematography (Single-Camera Series, Half Hour) “Atlanta” — “Teddy Perkins” – WINNER “Barry” — “Chapter Eight: Know Your Truth” “The End of the F***ing World” — “Episode 3” “GLOW” — “Pilot” “Mozart in the Jungle” — “Ichi Go Ichi E”
Best Cinematography (Single-Camera Series, Hour) “The Crown” — “Beryl” – WINNER “The Handmaid’s Tale” — “June” “Legion” — “Chapter 9” “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” — “Pilot” “Ozark” — “The Toll” “Stranger Things” — “Chapter One: MADMAX” “Westworld” — “The Riddle of the Sphinx”
Best Cinematography (Multi-Camera Series) “The Ranch” — “Do What You Gotta Do” “Superior Donuts” — “Grades of Wrath” “Will and Grace” — “A Gaye Olde Christmas” – WINNER
Best Cinematography (Movie/Mini) “The Alienist” — “The Boy on the Bridge” “Fahrenheit 451” “Genius: Picasso” — “Chapter One” – WINNER “Godless” — “An Incident at Creede” “USS Callister (Black Mirror)”
COSTUMES
Best Costumes (Variety/Nonfiction/Reality) “Dancing with the Stars” — “Disney Night” “Jesus Christ Superstar” “RuPaul’s Drag Race” — “10s Across the Board” – WINNER “Saturday Night Live” — “Host: Natalie Portman” “Tracey Ullman’s Show” — “Episode 1”
Best Contemporary Costumes “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” — “The Man Who Would Be Vogue” – WINNER “Black-ish” — “Juneteenth” “Empire” — “Slave to Memory” “Grace and Frankie” — “The Expiration Date” “This is Us” — “The Wedding”
Best Fantasy/Sci-Fi Costumes “Fahrenheit 451” “Game of Thrones” — “Beyond the Wall” – WINNER “The Handmaid’s Tale” — “Seeds” “A Series of Unfortunate Events” — “The Vile Village: Part 1” “Westworld” — “Akane No Mai”
Best Period Costumes “The Alienist” — “A Fruitful Partnership” “The Crown” — “Dear Mrs. Kennedy” – WINNER “Genius: Picasso” — “Chapter One” “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” — “The Disappointment of the Dionne Quintuplets” “Outlander” — “Freedom and Whisky”
DIRECTING
Best Directing (Documentary/Nonfiction) “Icarus” “Jane” – WINNER “The Vietnam War” — “Episode 8: The History of the World” “Wild Wild Country” — “Part 3” “The Zen Diaries of Garry Shandling”
Best Directing (Reality) “The Amazing Race” — “It’s Just a Million Dollars, No Pressure” “American Ninja Warrior” — “Daytona Beach Qualifiers” “RuPaul’s Drag Race” — “10s Across the Board”– WINNER “Shark Tank” — “Episode 903” “The Voice” — “Live Top 11 Performance”
Best Directing (Variety Series) “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee” — “Episode 2061” “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” — “Episode 421” “The Late Late Show with James Corden” — “Episode 0416” “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” — “Episode 438” “Portlandia” — “Riot Spray” “Saturday Night Live” — “Host: Donald Glover” – WINNER
DOCUMENTARY/INFORMATIONAL
Best Documentary/Nonfiction Series “American Masters” “Blue Planet II” “The Defiant Ones” “The Fourth Estate” “Wild Wild Country” – WINNER
Best Documentary/Nonfiction Special “Icarus” “Jim and Andy: The Great Beyond” “Mister Rogers: It’s You I Like” “Spielberg” “The Zen Diaries of Garry Shandling” – WINNER
Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking “City of Ghosts” “Jane” “Strong Island” – WINNER “What Haunts Us”
Best Informational Program “Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown” – WINNER “Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath” “My Next Guest Needs No Introduction with David Letterman” “Star Talk with Neil deGrasse Tyson” “Vice”
HAIRSTYLING
Best Hairstyling (Multi-Camera) “Dancing with the Stars” — “Night at the Movies” “Jesus Christ Superstar” “RuPaul’s Drag Race” — “10s Across the Board” – WINNER “Saturday Night Live” — “Host: Tiffany Haddish” “The Voice” — “Live Finale, Part 1”
Best Hairstyling (Single-Camera Series) “The Crown” — “Dear Mrs. Kennedy” “Game of Thrones” — “The Dragon and the Wolf” “GLOW” — “Pilot” “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” — “Pilot” “Westworld” — “Akane No Mai” – WINNER
Best Hairstyling (Movie/Mini) “American Horror Story: Cult” “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” – WINNER “Genius: Picasso” “Godless” “The Last Tycoon” — “Oscar, Oscar, Oscar” “Twin Peaks”
INTERACTIVE MEDIA
Best Creative Achievement in Interactive Media Within Unscripted Program “Conan Without Borders” – WINNER “The Oscars” — “All Access” “RuPaul’s Drag Race” — “Season 10 RuVeal” “Watch What Happens Live! With Andy Cohen”
Best Creative Achievement in Interactive Media Within Scripted Program “Mr. Robot” — “Ecoin” “Rick and Morty’ — “Virtual Rick-ality” “Silicon Valley” — “Interactive World: Not Hotdog, VR and Twitter-Powered Pizza Drones” “13 Reasons Why” — “Talk to the Reasons” “Westworld” — “Chaos Takes Control Interactive Experience” – WINNER
Best Original Interactive Program “Back to the Moon” “Blade Runner 2049: Memory Lab” “Coco VR” “NASA JPL: Cassini’s Grand Finale” – WINNER “Spider-Man Homecoming VR Experience”
LIGHTING DESIGN
Best Lighting Design/Direction (Variety Series) “America’s Got Talent” — “The Finals” “Dancing with the Stars” — “Halloween Night” “Saturday Night Live” — “Host: Kevin Hart” – WINNER “So You Think You Can Dance” — “Finale” “The Voice” — “Live Finale, Part 1”
Best Lighting Design/Direction (Variety Special) “60th Annual Grammy Awards” “Jesus Christ Superstar” – WINNER “The Oscars” “Super Bowl LII Halftime Show Starring Justin Timberlake” “71st Annual Tony Awards”
MAIN TITLE DESIGN
Best Main Title Design “The Alienist” “Altered Carbon” “Counterpart” – WINNER “GLOW” “Westworld”
MAKEUP
Best Makeup (Non-Prosthetic, Mulit-Camera) “Dancing with the Stars” — “Halloween Night” “Jesus Christ Superstar” “RuPaul’s Drag Race” — “10s Across the Board” “Saturday Night Live” — “Host: Tina Fey” – WINNER “The Voice” — “Live Finale, Part 1”
Best Makeup (Single-Camera Series, Non-Prosthetic) “Game of Thrones” — “The Dragon and the Wolf” “GLOW” — “Money’s in the Chase” “The Handmaid’s Tale” — “Unwomen” “This is Us” — “Number Three” “Vikings” — “Homeland” “Westworld” — “Akane No Mai” – WINNER
Best Makeup (Movie/Mini, Non-Prosthetic) “American Horror Story: Cult” “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” – WINNER “Genius: Picasso” “The Last Tycoon” — “Oscar, Oscar, Oscar” “Twin Peaks”
Best Prosthetic Makeup “American Horror Story: Cult” “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” “Game of Thrones” — “The Dragon and the Wolf” – WINNER “Star Trek: Discovery” — “Will You Take My Hand?” “Westworld” — “The Riddle of the Sphinx”
MOTION DESIGN
Best Motion Design “Broad City” — “Mushrooms” “Wasted! The Story of Food Waste”
MUSIC
Best Music and Lyrics “Big Mouth” — “Totally Gay” “A Christmas Story Live” — “In the Market for a Miracle” “The Good Fight” — “High Crimes and Misdemeanors” “If You’re Not in the Obit, Eat Breakfast” — “Just Getting Started” “Saturday Night Live” — “Come Back Barack” – WINNER “Steve Martin and Martin Short: An Evening You Will Forget for the Rest of Your Life” — “The Buddy Song”
Best Music Direction “Bruno Mars: 24K Magic Live at the Apollo” “Elton John: I’m Still Standing – A Grammy Salute” “The Oscars” “Super Bowl LII Halftime Show Starring Justin Timberlake” “Tony Bennett: The Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song” – WINNER
Best Main Title Theme Music “The Defenders” “Godless” – WINNER “The Last Tycoon” “The Putin Interviews” “Somebody Feed Phil” “The Tick”
Best Music Supervision “Atlanta” — “Alligator Man” “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” — “Pilot” – WINNER “Stranger Things” — “Trick or Treat, Freak” “This is Us” — “That’ll Be the Day” “Westworld” — “Akane No Mai”
Best Music Composition (Movie/Mini) “Alias Grace” — “Part 1” “The Commuter (Electric Dreams)” “Crazy Diamond (Electric Dreams)” “Godless” — “Homecoming” “March of the Penguins 2: The Next Step” – WINNER “USS Callister (Black Mirror)”
Best Music Composition (Series) “Game of Thrones” — “The Dragon and the Wolf” – WINNER “Jessica Jones” — “AKA Playland” “Once Upon a Time” — “Leaving Storybrooke” “SEAL Team” — “Pattern of Life” “Star Wars Rebels” — “Family Reunion – And Farewell” “Westworld” — “Akane No Mai”
NARRATOR
Best Narrator David Attenborough, “Blue Planet II” — “One Ocean” – WINNER Carl Reiner, “If You’re Not in the Obit, Eat Breakfast” Morgan Freeman, “March of the Penguins 2: The Next Step” Charles Dance, “Savage Kingdom” — “Uprising: First Blood” Liev Schreiber, “24/7” — “Canelo-Golovkin”
PICTURE EDITING
Best Picture Editing (Nonfiction) “Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown” — “Lagos” – WINNER “The Defiant Ones” — “Episode 3” “Jane” “Wild Wild Country” — “Part 3” “The Zen Diaries of Garry Shandling”
Best Picture Editing (Structured or Competition Reality) “The Amazing Race” — “It’s Just a Million Dollars, No Pressure” “American Ninja Warrior” — “Daytona Beach Qualifiers” “Queer Eye” — Series Body of Work – WINNER “RuPaul’s Drag Race” — “10s Across the Board” “The Voice” — Series Body of Work
Best Picture Editing (Unstructured Reality) “Born This Way” — Series Body of Work “Deadliest Catch” — “Battle Lines” “Life Below Zero” — “The 11th Hour” “RuPaul’s Drag Race: Untucked” — “Untucked – 10s Across the Board” “United Shades of America” — “Sikhs in America” – WINNER
Best Picture Editing (Variety) “Carpool Karaoke Primetime Special 2018” “Dave Chappelle: Equanimity” “Drunk History” — “Heroines” “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee: The Great American Puerto Rico” “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” — “Wax President Harding (Segment)” “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” — “Border Patrol (Segment)” – WINNER
Best Picture Editing (Multi-Camera Series) “The Big Bang Theory” — “The Bow Tie Asymmetry” “Mom” — “Crazy Snakes and a Clog to the Head” “One Day at a Time” — “Not Yet” “Roseanne” — “Darlene v. David” “Will and Grace” — “Grandpa Jack” – WINNER
Best Picture Editing (Single Camera Comedy) “Atlanta” — “Alligator Man” “Atlanta” — “Teddy Perkins” “Barry” — “Chapter Seven: Loud, Fast and Keep Going” “Barry” — “Chapter Eight: Know Your Truth” “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” — “Pilot” – WINNER
Best Picture Editing (Single Camera Drama) “Game of Thrones” — “Beyond the Wall” “Game of Thrones” — “The Dragon and the Wolf” “Game of Thrones” — “The Spoils of War” “The Handmaid’s Tale” — “June” – WINNER “Stranger Things” — “Chapter Nine: The Gate”
Best Picture Editing (Single Camera Movie/Mini) “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” — “Alone” “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” — “House by the Lake” “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” — “Manhunt” “Twin Peaks” — “Part 8” “USS Callister (Black Mirror)” – WINNER
PRODUCTION DESIGN
Best Production Design (Variety/Reality Series) “Bill Nye Saves the World” — “Extinction: Why all Our Friends Are Dying” “Dancing with the Stars” — “Night at the Movies” “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” — “Episode 418” “Saturday Night Live” — “Host: Bill Hader” – WINNER “The Voice” — “The Blind Auditions Season Premiere”
Best Production Design (Variety Special) “Carol Burnett Show 50th Anniversary Special” “75th Annual Golden Globe Awards” “60th Annual Grammy Awards” “Jesus Christ Superstar” – WINNER “The Oscars”
Best Production Design (Narrative, Half-Hour or Less) “Atlanta” — “Teddy Perkins” “Barry” — “Chapter Seven: Loud, Fast and Keep Going” “GLOW” — “The Dusty Spur” – WINNER “Grace and Frankie” — “The Tappys” “Silicon Valley” — “Tech Evangelist” “Will and Grace” — “A Gaye Olde Christmas”
Best Production Design (Narrative, Period/Fantasy) “The Alienist” — “The Boy on the Bridge” “The Crown” — “Beryl” “Game of Thrones” — “Dragonstone” – WINNER “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” — “Ya Shivu v Bolshom Dome Na Kholme” “Westworld” — “Akane No Mai”
Best Production Design (Narrative, Contemporary) “American Horror Story: Cult” “The Handmaid’s Tale” — “June” – WINNER “The Handmaid’s Tale” — “Seeds” “Ozark” — “My Dripping Sleep” “Twin Peaks”
SOUND EDITING
Best Sound Editing (Nonfiction) “Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown” — “Seattle” – WINNER “Blue Planet II” — “Coral Reefs” “The Defiant Ones” — “Episode 1” “Jane” “The Vietnam War” — “Episode 6: Things Fall Apart” “Wild Wild Country” — “Part 1”
Best Sound Editing (Half Hour Series) “Atlanta” — “Teddy Perkins” “Ballers” — “Bull Rush” “Barry” — “Chapter Seven: Loud, Fast and Keep Going” – WINNER “Star Wars Rebels” — “A World Between Worlds” “Vice Principals” — “The Union of the Wizard and the Warrior”
Best Sound Editing (One Hour Series) “Game of Thrones” — “The Spoils of War” “Homeland” — “All In” “Star Trek: Discovery” — “What’s Past is Prologue” “Stranger Things” — “Chapter Eight: The Mind Flayer” – WINNER “Westworld” — “Akane No Mai”
Best Sound Editing (Movie/Mini) “American Horror Story: Cult” — “Great Again” “Fahrenheit 451” “Godless” — “Homecoming” “Twin Peaks” — “Part 8” “USS Callister (Black Mirror)” – WINNER “Waco” — “Operation Showtime”
SOUND MIXING
Best Sound Mixing (Nonfiction) “Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown” — “Lagos” – WINNER “The Defiant Ones” — “Episode 1” “Jane” “The Vietnam War” — “Episode 6: Things Fall Apart” “Wild Wild Country” — “Part 1”
Best Sound Mixing (Variety) “60th Annual Grammy Awards” “Jesus Christ Superstar” – WINNER “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” — “Episode 421” “The Oscars” “The Voice” — “Live Finale, Part 2”
Best Sound Mixing (Half Hour Series) “Barry” — “Chapter Seven: Loud, Fast and Keep Going” – WINNER “Family Guy” — “Three Directors” “Modern Family” — “Lake Life” “Mozart in the Jungle” — “Domo Arigato” “Silicon Valley” — “Fifty-One Percent”
Best Sound Mixing (One Hour Series) “Game of Thrones” — “Beyond the Wall” – WINNER “The Handmaid’s Tale” — “June” “Mr. Robot” — “eps3.4_runtime-error.r00” “Stranger Things” — “Chapter Eight: The Mind Flayer” “Westworld” — “Akane No Mai”
Best Sound Mixing (Movie/Mini) “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” — “The Man Who Would Be Vogue” “Fahrenheit 451” “Genius: Picasso” — “Chapter One” – WINNER “Twin Peaks” — “Part 8” “Waco” — “Operation Showtime”
SPECIAL AND VISUAL EFFECTS
Best Special Visual Effects “Altered Carbon” — “Out of the Past” “Game of Thrones” — “Beyond the Wall” – WINNER “Lost in Space” — “Danger, Will Robinson” “Stranger Things” — “Chapter Nine: The Gate” “Westworld” — “The Passenger”
Best Supporting Visual Effects “The Alienist” — “The Boy on the Bridge” – WINNER “The Crown” — “Misadventure” “Gotham” — “That’s Entertainment” “The Handmaid’s Tale” — “June” “Mr. Robot” — “eps3.4_runtime-err0r.r00”
STUNT COORDINATION
Best Stunt Coordination (Comedy/Variety) “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” “Cobra Kai” “GLOW” – WINNER “Saturday Night Live” “Shameless”
Best Stunt Coordination (Drama/Movie/Mini) “The Blacklist” “Blindspot” “Game of Thrones” – WINNER “The Punisher” “Westworld”
TECHNICAL DIRECTION
Best Technical Direction (Movie/Mini/Special) “Carpool Karaoke Primetime Special 2018” “Jesus Christ Superstar” – WINNER “The Oscars” “2018 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony” “Super Bowl LII Halftime Show Starring Justin Timberlake”
Best Technical Direction (Series) “The Big Bang Theory” — “The Bow Tie Asymmetry” “Dancing with the Stars” — “Finale” “Jimmy Kimmel Live” — “Live in Brooklyn: Billy Joel and Tracy Morgan” “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” — “Episode 421” “Saturday Night Live” — “Host: Donald Glover” – WINNER “The Voice” — “Live Finale, Part 2”
WRITING
Best Writing (Nonfiction) “Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown” — “Southern Italy” – WINNER “The Defiant Ones” — “Episode 1” “Icarus” “Jane” “Mister Rogers: It’s You I Like” “The Vietnam War” — “Episode 8: The History of the World”
Best Writing (Variety Series) “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee” “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” – WINNER “Late Night with Seth Meyers” “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” “Saturday Night Live”
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updateparishilton · 4 years
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Janvier 19, 2003 —   60th Golden Globe Awards - Miramax After-Party - Arrivals.
Nicky Hilton and Paris Hilton during The 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards - Miramax After-Party - Inside at Trader Vic's in Beverly Hills.
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thecomedybureau · 6 years
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Here Are Your 2018 Primetime Emmys Comedy Nominees
The Primetime Emmy nominees were, as you probably heard, announced yesterday. The Emmys are one of the few awards shows that actually gives comedy a fair shake and, as such, here are a few things worth noting about this year’s nominees.
-Atlanta tallied 16 nominations -Alec Berg got nominated for writing and best series on both Barry and Silicon Valley -Barry got 13 nominations in its first season, five of which went to Bill Hader -Megan Amram’s Emmy campaign web series is, in fact, nominated for an Emmy -delightfully weird craft/sketch show At Home with Amy Sedaris on TruTV got nominated -Laurie Metcalf got nominated for Roseanne, which is the only nomination for the series that has been transformed into The Conners -the live comedy specials that were nominated this year were from Dave Chappelle, Steve Martin & Martin Short, Carol Burnett, and Night of Too Many Stars -Sarah Silverman’s atypical talk show I Love You, America got nominated as a variety sketch series
We could drag on and on about snubs, but that’s just a never ending rabbit hole that we’d rather avoid considering the amount of great TV that’s out there.
Here are the full list of comedy nominees for this year’s Primetime Emmys
Comedy Series
Atlanta Barry Black-ish Curb Your Enthusiasm GLOW The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Silicon Valley Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt
Lead Actor in a Comedy Series
Anthony Anderson, Black-ish Ted Danson, The Good Place Larry David, Curb Your Enthusiasm Donald Glover, Atlanta Bill Hader, Barry William H. Macy, Shameless
Lead Actress in a Comedy Series
Pamela Adlon, Better Things Rachel Brosnahan, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Allison Janney, Mom Issa Rae, Insecure Tracee Ellis Ross, Black-ish Lily Tomlin, Grace and Frankie
Variety Sketch Series
At Home With Amy Sedaris Drunk History I Love You, America Portlandia Saturday Night Live Tracey Ullman’s Show
Variety Talk Series
Full Frontal With Samantha Bee Jimmy Kimmel Live! Last Week Tonight The Daily Show With Trevor Noah The Late Late Show With James Corden The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series
Louie Anderson, Baskets Alec Baldwin, Saturday Night Live Tituss Burgess, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt Brian Tyree Henry, Atlanta Tony Shalhoub, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Kenan Thompson, Saturday Night Live Henry Winkler, Barry
Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series
Zazie Beetz, Atlanta Alex Borstein, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Aidy Bryant, Saturday Night Live Betty Gilpin, GLOW Leslie Jones, Saturday Night Live Kate McKinnon, Saturday Night Live Laurie Metcalf, Roseanne Megan Mullally, Will & Grace
Documentary or Non-Fiction Special
Icarus Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond — Featuring a Very Special, Contractually Obligated Mention of Tony Clifton Mister Rogers: It’s You I Like Spielberg The Zen Diaries of Garry Shandling
Variety Special (Live)
The 75th Annual Golden Globes The 60th Annual Grammy Awards Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert Night of Too Many Stars The Oscars
Variety Special (Pre-Recorded)
Carol Burnett Show 50th Anniversary Special Carpool Karaoke Primetime Special 2018 Dave Chappelle: Equanimity Full Frontal With Samantha Bee Presents: The Great American Puerto Rico (It’s Complicated) Steve Martin & Martin Short: An Evening You Will Forget for the Rest of Your Life
Informational Series or Special
Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath My Next Guest Needs No Introduction With David Letterman StarTalk With Neil deGrasse Tyson Vice
Guest Actor in a Comedy Series
Sterling K. Brown, Brooklyn Nine-Nine Bryan Cranston, Curb Your Enthusiasm Will Ferrell, Saturday Night Live Donald Glover, Saturday Night Live Bill Hader, Saturday Night Live Lin-Manuel Miranda, Curb Your Enthusiasm Katt Williams, Atlanta
Guest Actress in a Comedy Series
Tina Fey, Saturday Night Live Tiffany Haddish, Saturday Night Live Jane Lynch, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Maya Rudolph, The Good Place Molly Shannon, Will & Grace Wanda Sykes, Black-ish
Writing for a Comedy Serires
"Alligator Man," Atlanta, Written by Donald Glover "Barbershop," Atlanta, Written by Stefani Robinson "Chapter One: Make Your Mark," Barry, Written by Alec Berg and Bill Hader "Chapter Seven: Loud, Fast and Keep Going," Barry, Written by Liz Sarnoff "Pilot," The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Written by Amy Sherman-Palladino "Fifty-One Percent," Silicon Valley, Written by Alec Berg
Writing for a Variety Series
Full Frontal With Samantha Bee Head Writer Melinda Taub Written by Samantha Bee, Pat Cassels, Mike Drucker, Eric Drysdale, Mathan Erhardt, Travon Free, Miles Kahn, Nicole Silverberg Writing Supervised by Ashley Nicole Black, Joe Grossman
Last Week Tonight With John Oliver Written by John Oliver, Tim Carvell, Raquel D'Apice, Josh Gondelman, Dan Gurewitch, Geoff Haggerty, Jeff Maurer, Brian Parise, Scott Sherman, Ben Silva, Will Tracy, Jill Twiss, Seena Vali, Juli Weiner
Late Night With Seth Meyers Written by Jermain Affonso, Alex Baze, Bryan Donaldson, Sal Gentile, Matt Goldich, Dina Gusovky, Jenny Hagel, Allison Hord, Mike Karnell, John Lutz, Seth Meyers, Ian Morgan, Seth Reiss, Amber Ruffin, Mike Scollins, Mike Shoemaker, Ben Warheit
The Late Show With Stephen Colbert Head Writer Jay Katsir, Opus Moreschi Written by Michael Brumm, Nate Charny, Aaron Cohen, Stephen Colbert, Cullen Crawford, Paul Dinello, Ariel Dumas, Glenn Eichler, Django Gold, Gabe Gronli, Barry Julien, Daniel Kibblesmith, Matt Lappin, Michael Pielocik, Tom Purcell, Kate Sidley, Jen Spyra, Brian Stack, John Thibodeaux
Saturday Night Live Head Writer Michael Che, Colin Jost, Kent Sublette, Bryan Tucker Written by James Anderson, Steven Castillo, Andrew Dismukes, Megan Callahan, Anna Drezen, Claire Friedman, Steve Higgins, Sam Jay, Erik Kenward, Michael Koman, Dave McCary, Dennis McNicholas, Lorne Michaels, Namesh Patel, Josh Patten, Katie Rich, Gary Richardson, Pete Schultz, Will Stephen, Julio Torres, Stephen Glover, Jamal Olori, Tim Kalpakis, Erik Marino, Fran Gillespie Writing Supervised by Sudi Green and Streeter Seidell
Directing for a Comedy Series
Atlanta, "FUBU", Directed by Donald Glover Atlanta, "Teddy Perkins", Directed by Hiro Murai Barry, "Chapter One: Make Your Mark", Directed by Bill Hader The Big Bang Theory, "The Bow Tie Symmetry", Directed by Mark Cendrowski  GLOW, "Pilot", Directed by Jesse Peretz The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, "Pilot", Directed by Amy Sherman-Palladino, Silicon Valley, "Initial Coin Offering", Directed by Mike Judge
Directing for a Variety Series
Full Frontal With Samantha Bee, "Episode 2061", Directed by Andre Allen Last Week Tonight With John Oliver, "Episode 421", Directed by Paul Pennolino The Late Late Show With James Corden, "Episode 0416", Directed by Tim Mancinelli The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, "Episode 438", Directed by Jim Hoskinson Portlandia, "Riot Spray", Directed by Carrie Brownstein Saturday Night Live, "Host: Donald Glover", Directed by Don Roy King
Shortform Comedy or Drama Series
Aka Wyatt Cenac An Emmy for Megan Grey's Anatomy: B Team James Corden's Next James Corden The Walking Dead: Red Machete
Actor in a Shortform Comedy or Drama Series
Miles Tagtmeyer, Broken DeStorm Power, Caught The Series Alexis Denisof, I Love Bekka & Lucy James Corden, James Corden's Next James Corden Melvin Jackson Jr., This Eddie Murphy Role Is Mine, Not Yours
Actress in a Shortform Comedy or Drama Series
Diarra Kilpatrick, American Koko Megan Amram, An Emmy for Megan Christina Pickles, Break a Hip Lee Garlington, Broken Naomi Grossman, Ctrl Alt Delete Kelli O'Hara, The Accidental Wolf
Shortform Nonfiction or Reality Series
Anthony Bourdain: Explore Parts Unknown Jay Leno's Garage The Americans: The Final Season The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story — America's Obsessions Top Chef: Last Chance Kitchen
Shortform Variety Series
Between The Scenes — The Daily Show Carpool Karaoke: The Series Creating Saturday Night Live Gay of Thrones Honest Trailers The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon — Cover Room
Here’s the full list of nominees (and the nominees for short form)
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egooksconnolly · 6 years
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20 inspiring women at the 2018 Grammys
The 60th annual Grammy Awards commenced on Sunday, Jan. 28, 2018. Eye-catching performances—both bold and brave—were broadcast live from Madison Square Garden in New York City.
[RELATED1]
Similar to the sea of black at this year's Golden Globes, stars showed their solidarity in the #TimesUp movement against sexual harassment by wearing white roses.
Click through for photos of some of the empowering women who attended and performed.
Hot girls
Article source here:Men’s Fitness
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aya-mery2 · 5 years
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//Especial TB Appearances 2003//
…Actress: Kate Hudson…
Event: 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards
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spoiledsplendid · 6 years
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2018 Grammy Awards Fashion Critique
The 60th Annual Grammy Awards tonight in New York gave us a lot to discuss. Following the Golden Globe's fashion black-out, color was certainly in full force tonight. Let's take a look at who rocked and who should have rolled up and went back home. 
Best
Ashanti - I thought Ashanti looked like a stunning golden statue in this Yas Couture dress. Designed by Elie Madi and paired with Giuseppe Zanotti sandals, this outfit showcased Ashanti perfectly. Her hair and makeup were perfection. Now a lot of haters were tweeting about how the flashes from the photographers made the dress sheer, but if you got it, flaunt it. Best dressed female of the night. 
Ne-Yo - Men's fashion often gets overlooked, however, the gentlemen certainly worked the red carpet this year. Ne-Yo's mustard yellow velvet smoking jacket demanded respect. He completed the look with a crisp white tuxedo shirt and a flat-brimmed hat. And of course, I love his suede Louboutins. His look was styled by Greyscale Goods - be sure to check them out. Best dressed man of the night. 
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Lady Gaga - Gaga stunned in a nude lace and sequined body suit with ballgown bottom. The skirt had a high front slit and a 10 foot train. This imaginative Armani Privé look could have been the best look of the night if it wasn't ruined by her boots. Her hair and makeup matched the drama of her dress perfectly. 
Cyndi Lauper - Cyndi looked brilliant in this cherub-print Moschino suit. The fit was bang-on. It was glamorous and cool enough to work on the red carpet. And I even loved how Cyndi streaked her hair to match. Loved it. 
Zayn Malik - Zayn proved he was the main attraction in this Richard James rose-colored suit. The suit was tailored perfectly. The simple white dress shirt was fine but I would have paired it with a white v-neck shirt. He finished the look with camo-patterned socks and black loafers. 
Anna Kendrick - In a sea of gowns, Anna stole focus in her checkered Balmain suit. The double-breasted jacket with oversized gold buttons was a clear throwback to the 80s. Paired with a sexy lace bodice from La Perla and powder pink pumps, this look could have easily failed and looked laughable. However, Anna made this look her own. Well done. 
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Cardi B - Tonight was a huge night for Cardi B's career and she made the most of her moment on the red carpet. She looked angelic in this gown from Ashi Studios. The gauzy dress looked whimsical and light with a short front and long train. The jewelry and bling added to the look instead of distracting. And what better way to walk down the carpet than in Louboutins? Beyond all that, her makeup was fresh and she looked happy. 
Rita Ora - Rita brought Hollywood glam to the streets of NYC in this Ralph & Russo Couture gown. While the dress's structure lent a futuristic feel, the black velvet trimmed in diamonds certainly made Rita look like a silent film star. Her gorgeous hair and dark red lip completed the look brilliantly.
Miley Cyrus - Miley doesn't always make it onto the upper half of this list but she looked elegant in this Jean Paul Gauthier velvet jumpsuit and matching capelet. It had just enough detail to be interesting while letting her hair and makeup steal the show. She looked pretty, happy and sweet. Conservative but badass.
Worst
Lana Del Rey - While LDR rarely impresses me with her fashion, I appreciate that she is now working with high-end fashion houses. However, even Gucci couldn't save her this time. This dress is ill-fitting and the color is too close to her skin tone. It totally washed her out - and there is no excuse for this since it was custom-made for her. I did enjoy the celestial headpiece though. Sorry Lana. 
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Kelly Clarkson - I love Kelly and always hope she looks like the superstar she is. But lately, she has made some bad choices. First the dress fit her well. But the style of the dress would be better suited for someone twice her age. Kelly is nominated for Best Pop Song and not the Lifetime Achievement Award. It looked like it has a shawl wrapped around her. While Kelly is loyal to Christian Siriano, she might need to shake things up because this dress did her no favors. Her hair was messy and the new color washed her out. The makeup was too soft and gave her no definition. Kelly, call me and I'll hook you up with a few outfits.
Hailee Steinfeld - So close but not quite enough. Hailee wore a white strapless column dress and holographic purple boots - both by Alexandre Vauthier. The dress was boring but ok. The knee-high boots were laughable. And then to mix us up more, she wore a green/blue eyeshadow. Disappointing as Hailee usually makes us remember her for the right reasons on the red carpet. 
Nick Jonas - Sometimes when you're hot, you can wear anything and look good. However, it doesn't mean that anything is appropriate. Nick Jonas was clad in a John Varvatos tweed overcoat and t-shirt. Nick has great style but this was just calling-it-in. Lazy.
Pink - Sometimes bad dresses happen to good people. This look from Armani Privé failed to hit the high notes. It made Pink look like a muppet. Purple, pink and blue feathers - oh my. The belt failed to accentuate her tiny waist because it was swallowed up by plumage. The ruffled top looked poorly constructed. And then she only appeared to be wearing one large black hoop earring??? On the positive side, her hair and makeup looked beautiful. 
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Heidi Klum - Oops She Did It Again. Heidi came to yet another red carpet in just her bra and panties. But I have to give her the benefit of the doubt. It was held in NYC and it looks like she is still wearing a crinoline, so perhaps someone stole her dress, and this is what is left. If that wasn't bad enough, the earrings were monstrous. At the time of publishing, no designer was willing to take credit for this outfit. Worst look of the night. 
Janelle Monae - I love Janelle and I love that she takes risks with fashion. I even loved this Dolce & Gabanna outfit...from the waist up. Janelle has a beautiful figure but the wide-legged trousers completely consume her bottom half. Even with all the embroidery and the ruffled shirt and the bling, I couldn't see past the excess fabric where her shoes should have been. Had the trousers been tapered in and cropped above the ankle, this would have been a WOW outfit. As always, her hair and makeup are among the best. 
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mystlnewsonline · 6 years
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New Post has been published on https://www.stl.news/the-latest-grammy-winner-lisa-loeb-talks-metoo-movement/76278/
The Latest: Grammy winner Lisa Loeb talks #MeToo movement
NEW YORK /January 28, 2018(AP)(STL.News)—The Latest on the 60th annual Grammy Awards being presented Sunday night in New York (all times local):
6:30 p.m.
The former ’90s star turned children’s music maker Lisa Loeb was among those who sported a white rose in solidarity with the #MeToo movement at the Grammy Awards. But she also had one defense of the music industry.
Loeb says she’s aware that some are saying the music industry took too long to catch up to the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements, but she says that’s because there are so fewer music awards shows this time of year. She says, “In the music industry, we’re in recording studios. We’re holed up in rooms writing songs and we’re on the road and we’re on stage. We’re all over the place, like stars. We aren’t together a lot.”
She says a lot of artists try to spread their messages through their music and performances.
Loeb, who had the 1994 hit “Stay (I Missed You)” won Sunday best children’s album for “Feel What U Feel.”
— Jake Coyle (@jakecoyleAP) backstage at the Grammy Awards. ___
5:30 p.m.
Chuck Berry’s son heartily endorsed the guitarist Gary Clark Jr. honoring his late father at the Grammys.
Clark along with musician Jon Batiste will pay tribute to the late rock pioneers Berry and Fats Domino.
Charles Berry Jr. says Clark is outstanding. He says, “I’m sure he’s going to knock it out of the park. No question”
The elder Berry’s last record included “Wonderful Woman” with help from his son, his grandson, Charles III, and Clark. Berry died in March at 90.
Clark says Berry’s influence looms large in his career, from the guitars he plays to the style he employs. He says, “I don’t think there’s a guitarist on the planet who hasn’t stolen or interpreted something from Chuck Berry.”
— Mark Kennedy (@KennedyTwits) on the Grammys red carpet. ___
4:55 p.m.
If the phone rings during the Grammys, Lady Antebellum might have welcomed some more ladies.
Dave Haywood and bandmate Charles Kelley are at Sunday’s Grammys without their third member, Hillary Scott, who stayed home as she awaits the birth of twin girls. The guys wore white roses in her honor.
Haywood says, “Our leading lady is not here.” He says they have always considered Scott an amazing and strong woman, and they wanted to support her.
Kelley says “If the phone rings and we have to leave the show, you know what it’s about.”
He says Scott is due any day now, and they are excited to meet her daughters.
Lady Antebellum has won five Grammys and this year is up for two: Best country group or duo performance for “You Look Good” and best country album for “Heart Break.”
— Mark Kennedy (@KennedyTwits) on the Grammys red carpet. ___
4:35 p.m.
“La La Land” is still winning awards.
The film won twice at Sunday’s Grammy Awards, which, like the Oscars, honored the song craft behind Damien Chazelle’s blockbuster musical. Thankfully for “La La Land,” there were no envelope flubs nearly a year after the Academy Awards.
Composer Justin Hurwitz won for best composition soundtrack and best score soundtrack for visual media. He shared the former with Marius de Vries.
Hurwitz won two Oscars last February for the “La La Land” score and the song “City of Stars.” The Grammys run on a different calendar than the Oscars, drawing from October 2016 to September 2017 releases.
Backstage at the Grammys, Hurwitz was asked about those infamous final moments at the Oscars. He says “It was a blur. I’ve watched it on YouTube a few times.”
— Jake Coyle (@jakecoyleAP) backstage at the Grammy Awards. ___
4:15 p.m.
Jay-Z’s producer says he doesn’t want to enflame tensions between Donald Trump and Jay-Z.
No. I.D., who produced Jay-Z’s Grammy-nominated “4:44,” says he hopes the rap legend and Trump are able to talk about their differences after Jay-Z criticized the president and Trump fired back.
The producer says the back-and-forth is “a conversation that needs to occur.”
Trump tweeted Sunday that he wanted Jay-Z to know at “because of my policies,” unemployment among black Americans is at the “LOWEST RATE EVER RECORDED!” That appeared to be in response to a CNN interview in which the rapper said the president’s vulgar comments about African countries and Haiti were “disappointing” and “hurtful.”
Guitarist Robert Randolph just learned about the president’s tweet Sunday afternoon but wasn’t sure calling out Jay-Z or his wife, Beyonce, was the wisest decision. He jokes, “Now it’s a rap battle!”
— Mark Kennedy (@KennedyTwits) on the Grammys red carpet. ___
4:10 p.m.
The late engineer Tom Coyne has won a posthumous Grammy Award for his work on Bruno Mars’ “24K Magic.”
It’s the seventh Grammy for Coyne, who died in April from cancer. Coyne, the master engineer on the album, shared in the award for best engineered album, non-classical, with engineers Serban Ghenea, John Hanes and Charles Moniz.
Coyne worked on hit recordings for Adele, Beyonce, Metallica and Taylor Swift in his decades-long career. He won last year for Adele’s Record of the Year winner “Hello.” Coyne earned 37 nominations in total before his death.
Ghenea and Hanes, who accepted the Grammy, dedicate the award to Coyne.
“I know this would have been really special for him,” Ghenea said backstage. “He’s won many Grammys before but never the best engineered album. This would have meant a lot to him.”
— Jake Coyle (@jakecoyleAP) backstage at the Grammy Awards.
___
4:05 p.m.
Carrie Fisher has won a posthumous Grammy Award for her “The Princess Diarist.”
Fisher died in December 2016 at age 60. The Grammy is awarded for her audio recording of her memoir based on diaries she kept around the time she starred in the first “Star Wars” film in 1977.
The announcement was greeted with loud cheers in the theater where dozens of early Grammy Awards are being announced Sunday. ___
3:50 p.m.
Tom Petty is on the minds of many entering the Grammy Awards.
Singer-songwriter Lisa Loeb calls Petty’s music “the soundtrack of my life.” She says she was at his final concert at the Hollywood Bowl in late September.
Petty died in October at age 66 from an accidental drug overdose. She called his final performance an amazing concert, and says he is such a loss.
Petty is one of several high-profile artists who died over the past year, including Chris Cornell, Gregg Allman, Chester Bennington and, most recently, Dolores O’Riordan of The Cranberries.
Songwriter Diane Warren called the loss of Petty a shame, adding “There are so many great artists who didn’t have to go.”
Country superstar Reba McEntire called Petty a great mentor, a cool dude and a sweet person. She says what she loved about Petty was that “he knew what he wanted and he wasn’t going to take any route left or right.”
— Mark Kennedy (@KennedyTwits) on the Grammys red carpet. ___
3:30 p.m.
The 60th annual Grammy Awards are underway with the first awards being handed out in the dance and electronic music categories.
LCD Soundsystem won the first awarded handed out Sunday during the Grammys pre-telecast ceremony that hands out dozens of honors in various genres.
The festivities are being led by musician Paul Shaffer, who laid out the ground rules: including telling winners to stand up and announce themselves when they win.
LCD Soundsystem won for best dance recording for its song “Tonight.”
No one from band was on hand to accept the honor, which led Shaffer to call over a young woman who was on stage to assist winners and by calling her “darling” and handing her the Grammy.
Shaffer told the woman, “When I say darling, I mean it with the utmost, #MeToo kind of respect.” ___
2:45 p.m.
The sea of black at the Golden Globes has given way to a small forest of flowers at the Grammys.
Plenty of musicians and artists took to the red carpet Sunday sporting white roses to show their solidarity with the Time’s Up organization, which hopes to support women with legal and financial help who raise sexual misconduct complaints.
Allen Hughes is the director of the “The Defiant Ones” and wore two small roses on his lapel. He says he believes every voice should be heard and that’s why he wore the roses. Plus, he says, “I’m a feminist.”
Most stars wore black and a Time’s Up pin in support of the movement at the Golden Globes earlier this month. Fewer wore roses at the Grammys, but some were just being rock stars.
Songwriter Diane Warren skipped the rose but wore two white gloves — one with the word “girl” and one with “power.” She’s a nominee for the 15th time.
She says, “I didn’t want to wear the rose. I’m a rebel.”
— Mark Kennedy (@KennedyTwits) on the Grammys red carpet. ___
10 a.m.
Though Adele’s win for album of the year at last year’s Grammys wasn’t a complete surprise, it marked another loss for Beyonce in the show’s major category.
The Recording Academy was heavily criticized for not rewarding “Lemonade,” an album that moved the needle and dominated pop culture in different ways than Adele’s colossal sales.
Critics felt the Academy failed to recognize the artistic elements of an R&B-based album, in the same ways they have passed over albums by Kanye West, Eminem and Mariah Carey for projects by rock, country and jazz artists.
But Sunday’s Grammys are almost guaranteeing this year is different. Most of the album, song and record of the year nominees are rap, R&B and Latino artists, including Jay-Z, Kendrick Lamar, Bruno Mars, Luis Fonsi and Childish Gambino.
By Associated Press, published on STL.NEWS by St. Louis Media, LLC (US)
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