The Province

Terrific Tale takes home Emmy trophies

TELEVISION: Annual awards show filled with Trump talk

- LYNN ELBER

LOS ANGELES — The Canadian-made dystopian series The Handmaid’s Tale was crowned best TV drama Sunday at the Emmy Awards, also winning best drama writing and directing and earning Elizabeth Moss a best actress statuette and Ann Dowd a best drama supporting actress award.

The series is based on Margaret Atwood’s 1985 novel, and the celebrated Canadian author received a standing ovation when she joined the cast and producers on stage as they accepted the Emmy.

Veep and Saturday Night Live were also big winners.

Sterling K. Brown won his second consecutiv­e Emmy for his role in the series This Is Us and in his speech honoured Andre Braugher, who was the last black man to claim top drama performanc­e honours, for Homicide: Life on the Street in 1998.

“It does feel different but for different reasons. I’m the first African-American in 16 years nominated. That kind of blows my mind,” he said.

Moss won her first Emmy and thanked her mother in a speech peppered with expletives.

Donald Glover won the best comedy actor for Atlanta, which he created and which carries his distinctiv­e voice, while Julia Louis-Dreyfus was honoured for a sixth time for her role as a self-absorbed politician in the comedy Veep, named best comedy for the third time.

“I want to thank Trump for making black people No. 1 on the most oppressed list. He’s the reason I’m probably up here,” Glover said, acknowledg­ing the entertainm­ent industry’s and the Emmys’ tilt toward the non-stop political under President Donald Trump.

Combined with Emmys Louis-Dreyfus won for Seinfeld and New Adventures of Old Christine, her latest trophy tied her with Cloris Leachman as the most-winning Emmy performer ever.

Saturday Night Live triumphed early for a season of skewering Trump, while the ceremony and host Stephen Colbert did likewise.

“I remember the first time we won this award,” creator Lorne Michaels said in accepting the show’s trophy for best variety sketch series. “It was after the first season in 1976. I remember thinking ... this was the high point,” and there would never be “another season as crazy, as unpredicta­ble, as frightenin­g, as exhausting or as exhilarati­ng. Turns out I was wrong.”

The trophies for best supporting comedy acting went to Kate McKinnon, who played Hillary Clinton on SNL, and Alec Baldwin for his Trump portrayal on the NBC show.

McKinnon thanked Clinton for her “grace and grit.” Baldwin spoke directly to Trump, who has complained in the past that he was cheated out of a trophy for hosting Celebrity Apprentice: “I suppose I should say, ‘At long last, Mr. President, here is your Emmy.’ ”

Melissa McCarthy was honoured at last weekend’s creative arts Emmys as best guest actress for her SNL work, including portraying Sean Spicer. The former White House press secretary made a surprise Emmys appearance, wheeling in his own podium.

“This will be the largest audience to witness an Emmys, period. Both in person and around the world,” Spicer shouted with authority, echoing his claim that Trump’s inaugurati­on crowd was the biggest ever and evoking McCarthy’s manic portrayal of him.

Colbert’s song-and-dance opening — with help from Chance the Rapper — included the song Everything Is Better on TV, which repeatedly slammed Trump, mentioning his ties to Russia and including the lyric “even treason is better on TV.”

John Lithgow received the best supporting drama actor for his role as British leader Winston Churchill in The Crown.

The HBO series Big Little Lies won the limited series award, with Montreal director Jean-Marc Vallee landing a directing Emmy, Nicole Kidman taking the lead actress award and supporting honours going to her castmates Alexander Skarsgard and Laura Dern.

Riz Ahmed was honoured as best limited series actor for The Night Of. Black Mirror: San Junipero was named best TV movie.

Lena Waithe became the first African-American woman to win an Emmy for comedy series writing, for Master of None, sharing the award with series co-creator Aziz Ansari, who is of Indian heritage.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? The cast and crew of The Handmaid’s Tale, along with author Margaret Atwood, second from right, whose novel the show is based on, accepted the Emmy for outstandin­g drama series.
— GETTY IMAGES The cast and crew of The Handmaid’s Tale, along with author Margaret Atwood, second from right, whose novel the show is based on, accepted the Emmy for outstandin­g drama series.
 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kate McKinnon won the best supporting actress in a comedy series for her work on Saturday Night Live.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kate McKinnon won the best supporting actress in a comedy series for her work on Saturday Night Live.

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