Houston Chronicle

Emmy chief has seen it all, from impostors to a trophy wound

- By Lynn Elber

LOS ANGELES — In 38 years of managing the Emmy Awards — more than half its 70-year history — John Leverence has faced everything from the demands of a changing TV industry to ticket nightmares to a statuette guilty of causing bodily harm.

As the TV academy’s senior vice president for awards, he’s seen the Emmy categories double from about 60 to 122, entries balloon from 1,500 to 9,000, and the ceremony outgrow 3,000- and 5,000-seat theaters and pack its current venue, the 7,100-seat Microsoft Theater.

Despite his long tenure, Leverence still frets over industry members unable to get a seat for TV’s annual celebratio­n of its best. Hulu’s “The Handmaid’s Tale,” HBO’s “Game of Thrones” and FX’s “Atlanta” are among the contenders for Monday’s awards (7 p.m. CDT, NBC) and illustrate why this has been dubbed TV’s second golden age.

The genial, professori­al Leverence admits to witnessing some lesser moments, one involving the elegant gold Emmy statuette of a figure with wings — really sharp-edged wings — triumphant­ly extended skyward.

“One guy was so excited, he was gesturing to his friend and ran the wings into his leg,” Leverence recalled of the backstage moment. The wounded winner returned to his seat, noticeably bloodied but intent on staying.

There was another encounter that took place when recipients were given prop trophies until one could be engraved and sent to them. (Current recipients keep the trophy and get an engraved plate added.)

A winner refused to surrender his, pushing back with a heartfelt performanc­e worthy of its own special category award.

“‘No, no! My mother is in the hospital. I know she’s going to die tonight and I have to get to the hospital with my Emmy to show her before she dies,“’ Leverence said, recounting his dramatic speech.

“Of course he was lying,” he said, drolly. “But what can you do with that kind of story?”

One red-faced moment for Leverence came in 1985, when he unwittingl­y OK’d a ticket for a man who turned out to be an awards gatecrashe­r. He popped up onstage to accept the Emmy for Betty Thomas of “Hill Street Blues” — and thanked sportscast­er Dick Schaap— before the actress could claim it.

“The only good thing about the whole evening was that as I went to apologize to my boss, the cops were trundling this guy through the lobby,” he said.

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