Taranaki Daily News

Who shone at the Emmys

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Claire Foy of The Crown and Matthew Rhys of The Americans won top drama acting Emmys as yesterday’s ceremony spread its wealth around to streaming and cable but largely snubbed broadcasti­ng and, largely, diversity.

The Marvelous Mrs Maisel, Amazon’s freshman sitcom about a 1950s homemaker turned edgy stand-up comedian, took an early lead at the Emmy Awards, which gently mocked itself for its own lack of diverse winners.

Mrs Maisel star Rachel Brosnahan was honoured as best comedy actress, Alex Borstein earned the supporting actress trophy and the series creator, Amy Sherman-Palladino, nabbed writing and directing awards.

The field bested by Foy included last year’s winner Elisabeth Moss for The

Handmaid’s Tale and Sandra Oh of Killing Eve, who could have been the first actor of Asian descent to get a top drama award.

‘‘This wasn’t supposed to happen,’’ said Foy, honored for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth II in the Netflix series.

In a ceremony that started out congratula­ting TV academy voters for the most ethnically diverse field of nominees ever, the early awards all went to whites. ‘‘Let’s get it trending: (hash) Emmys So White,’’ presenter James Corden joked at the midway point, riffing off an earlier tribute to Betty White.

‘‘I want to say six awards, all white winners, and nobody has thanked Jesus yet,’’ co-host Michael Che said, referring back to his earlier joke that only African-American and Republican winners do.

Then Regina King broke the string, with a best actress trophy in a limited series or movie for Seven Seconds, which tracks the fallout from a white police officer’s traffic accident involving a black teenager.

She was followed by Darren Criss, who won the lead acting award for the miniseries The Assassinat­ion of Gianni

Versace and who is of Filipino descent. Thandie Newton won best supporting drama actress for Westworld, and Peter Dinklage added a third trophy to his collection for Game of Thrones.

The ceremony had a real-life drama moment when winning director Glenn Weiss, noting his mother had died two weeks ago, proposed to his girlfriend, Jan Svendsen.

‘‘You wonder why I don’t want to call you my girlfriend? It’s because I want to call you my wife,’’ Weiss said. She said yes, he put his mother’s ring on her finger and the crowd whooped and cheered.

Brosnahan used her acceptance speech to give a shout-out to her comedy’s celebratio­n of women power.

‘‘It’s about a woman who’s finding her voice anew, and it’s one of the things that’s happening all over the country now,’’ she said. She urged the audience to exercise that power by voting.

Bill Hader collected the best comedy actor award for Barry, a dark comedy about a hired killer who stumbles into a possible acting career.

Henry Winkler, aka ‘‘The Fonz,’’ won a supporting actor award — his first Emmy — for Barry, four decades after gaining fame for his role in Happy Days.

‘‘If you stay at the table long enough, the chips come to you. Tonight, I got to clear the table,’’ an ebullient Winkler said.

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 ?? AP ?? Claire Foy accepted the award for outstandin­g lead actress in a drama series for The Crown at the 70th Primetime Emmy Awards yesterday while Peter Dinklage scooped up the award for outstandin­g supporting actor in a drama series for Game of Thrones.
AP Claire Foy accepted the award for outstandin­g lead actress in a drama series for The Crown at the 70th Primetime Emmy Awards yesterday while Peter Dinklage scooped up the award for outstandin­g supporting actor in a drama series for Game of Thrones.
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