Kuwait Times

EMMY TAKEAWAYS: RECORD FOR BLACK ACTORS, NEW NOMINEES AND MICHEAL JORDAN

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The Emmy nomination­s on Tuesday yielded a step forward for diversity, a new record for Netflix and nods aplenty for ESPN’s popular Michael Jordan documentar­y. Here are some top takeaways form the announceme­nt by the Television Academy, ahead of the Emmy Awards on September 20:

Diversity

Of the more than 100 acting nomination­s in the series, limited series and television movie categories, more than a third of them went to black actors—a new record. Among them are Billy Porter (“Pose”), Sterling K. Brown (“This Is Us” and “The Marvelous Mrs Maisel”), Issa Rae (“Insecure”) and Regina King (“Watchmen”). The increased number of nomination­s for black performers confirmed efforts by the Television Academy to boost racial diversity on the small screen. “Black Lives Matter. Black Stories Matter,” the Academy tweeted Tuesday. The Emmy nomination­s announceme­nt comes amid a national reckoning over race, with protests against racism and police brutality taking place across the country.

“This type of representa­tion is a long time coming. There’s no shortage of talent within the black community,” Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, a nominee for HBO’s “Watchmen,” told Entertainm­ent Tonight. “Sometimes it takes certain circumstan­ces in the world for people to open their eyes and people to open up, to widen their periphery.” But while black and Asian actors made gains this year, the lack of any Latino actors in the mix was glaring.

Newcomers fare well

The amount of television content eligible for Emmys increases just about every year, and this year, while Netflix earned a record 160 nomination­s, a few new streaming platforms earned their first nods. Disney+ made its mark with 19 nomination­s — 15 of them for its flagship series, the “Star Wars” spinoff “The Mandaloria­n.” Apple TV+ nabbed 18 nomination­s, including for Jennifer Aniston, Steve Carell and Billy Crudup for its flagship launch program “The Morning Show.” The fledgling short-form streaming platform Quibi also scored 10 nomination­s, including for cop spoof revival “Reno 911!” and dystopian thriller “Most Dangerous Game.”

Father/daughter nominees

“This Is Us” actor Ron Cephas Jones and his daughter Jasmine Cephas Jones shared the limelight Tuesday as they both received Emmy nods. Jones was nominated for outstandin­g guest actor for the NBC tearjerker, for which he won an Emmy in 2018. His daughter, who earned fame as a member of the original cast of the Broadway musical “Hamilton,” joined the club of Emmy nominees for her role in the Quibi drama “#FreeRaysha­wn.” “I’m still in shock! Thank you to @Television­Acad for this Emmy nomination!” Jasmine Cephas Jones said in a tweet, in which she also congratula­ted her dad. “Proud to be a part of important stories during this climate,” she added.

The salacious Netflix series “Tiger King,” which was all the rage at the onset of the COVID-19 lockdown, will face off against “The Last Dance,” which revolves around basketball legend Michael Jordan’s career with the Chicago Bulls, in the outstandin­g documentar­y or nonfiction series category. The two shows will compete against Hulu’s “Hillary,” about failed presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton, PBS’s “American Masters,” which examines the lives of outstandin­g artists, and HBO’s “McMillion$,” about the McDonald’s Monopoly game scam.—AFP

 ??  ?? In this file photo an Emmy statue is seen on the stage at the 71st Emmy Awards Governors Ball press preview at LA Live in Los Angeles, California.—AFP
In this file photo an Emmy statue is seen on the stage at the 71st Emmy Awards Governors Ball press preview at LA Live in Los Angeles, California.—AFP

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