Renowned crime drama wins big at Emmy Awards
Breaking Bad gets four statues at LA ceremony
Modern Family won a record-tying fifth best comedy series Emmy Award, and a dominant Breaking Bad captured the top drama award and a trio of acting honors in the ceremony.
Bryan Cranston was honored at the Monday-night ceremony as best actor in a drama for Breaking Bad, proving that True Detective nominee Matthew McConaughey's movie-star appeal couldn't conquer all.
Billy Crystal takes the stage to pay tribute to the late Robin Williams during the 66th Primetime Emmy Awards in Los Angeles on Monday. Mario Anzuoni / Reuters |
"I have gratitude for everything that has happened," Cranston said. His victory ties him with four-time best-drama-actor champ Dennis Franz. Cranston's co-stars Aaron Paul and Anna Gunn were honored in categories for best drama supporting acting.
"Thank you for this wonderful farewell to our show," said Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan of the series, about a teacher-turned-drug-kingpin that ended with a bang.
McConaughey was the object of too-handsome jokes by presenter Jimmy Kimmel and adoration by winner Gail Mancuso, honored as best director for an episode of Modern Family.
"If you don't mind, Matthew McConaughey, I'm gonna make eye contact with you right now," she said from the stage, making good by holding the actor's gaze for much of her speech.
Woody Harrelson and his True Detective co-star were given time to banter before announcing that British actor Benedict Cumberbatch of Sherlock: His Last Vow was the winner of the award for best miniseries actor.
"So you won Oscar, (People magazine's) Sexiest Man Alive and now you want an Emmy too. Isn't that a little bit greedy?" Harrelson teased his fellow nominee.
The ceremony honoring the best of TV wasn't shy about playing the movie-star card. "Six minutes to Woody Harrelson" flashed on screen during British director Colin Bucksey's acceptance speech for best miniseries direction for Fargo.
The Good Wife star Julianna Margulies won the Emmy for best lead actress in a drama series.
"What a wonderful time for women on television," Margulies said.
Fargo was named best miniseries, and the award for best-miniseries actress went to Jessica Lange of American Horror Story: Coven.
Buffering the miniseries awards was a parody routine about top nominees by "Weird Al" Yankovic. Musical numbers usually look out of place at the Emmys, and this one was no different. Other scripted banter fell flat, although host Seth Meyers kept soldiering on.
CBS' The Big Bang Theory star Jim Parsons was crowned as best comedy series actor, giving him his fourth Emmy and putting him in league with all-time sitcom winners Kelsey Grammer and Michael J. Fox.
ABC's Modern Family, which tied Frasier as the all-time sitcom champ with five statuettes, also captured a best comedy supporting-actor trophy for Ty Burrell. Allison Janney was honored as best supporting comedy actress for CBS' Mom, adding to the trophy she'd already picked up as guest actress on Masters of Sex.
Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who received her third consecutive best-comedy actress Emmy for the political comedy Veep, drew big laughs as she stopped to exchange faux heated kisses with Cranston, who earlier was her co-presenter. Cranston had a recurring role in the former TV sitcom Seinfeld, of which Louis-Dreyfus was a star.
Meyers kicked off the ceremony by tweaking his home network, NBC, and other broadcasters for being eclipsed in the awards by cable series and online newcomers like Orange Is the New Black.
Noting that the Emmys moved to Monday night to avoid a conflict with Sunday's MTV Video Music Awards, he said that MTV doesn't really specialize in videos anymore.
"That's like network TV holding an awards show and giving all the trophies to cable and Netflix. That would be crazy," Meyers joked.
(China Daily 08/27/2014 page10)