Los Angeles Times

Poignant message

Among all the breakthrou­gh moments, add Riz Ahmed’s and Aziz Ansari’s awards for shows that destroy Muslim stereotype­s

- LORRAINE ALI TELEVISION CRITIC

Two Muslim men, on primetime TV, clutching shiny metal objects close to their black garments amid an unsuspecti­ng crowd.

No, this wasn’t “Homeland,” and those weren’t weapons.

It was the 69th Primetime Emmy Awards, where actor Riz Ahmed and actor-writer Aziz Ansari won top categories for shows that exploded stereotype­s and made history in front of an audience too dazzled by all the other history-breaking moments that evening to notice.

There were so many firsts in L.A.’s Microsoft Theater on Sunday night that the oversight was understand­able. The evening’s swag bags should have included tally sheets to keep track of the multiple barriers being broken.

Donald Glover, creator of FX’s “Atlanta,” became the first African American comedy director to be so honored and “Master of None’s” Lena Waithe was the first black woman to win for writing on a comedy series. Streaming service Hulu broke network and cable TV’s monopoly on the top Emmy, outstandin­g drama series, when it won for “The Handmaid’s Tale.”

And it was certainly the first time a former White House press secretary appeared onstage riding a motorized lectern. Sean Spicer: trailblaze­r.

Indeed, the ceremony and list of nominees was the most diverse in history, said host Stephen Colbert, congratula­ting the Television Academy and the Emmys. The crowd applauded. “That’s impressive,” he added. “I did not know you could applaud while patting yourself on the back at the same time.”

The applause, however, wasn’t all in the service of self-congratula­tions. There was plenty of genuine excitement over the nomination­s as quantifiab­le proof that the industry and the academy were fi-

nally stepping into the 21st century. Perhaps the success of new shows like “Insecure” and “This Is Us” had sent a message: Viewers wanted to see more people like themselves on TV, and not all of America looks like Ryan Seacrest.

Many of this year’s nominees and winners could be seen as progressiv­e Hollywood pushing back against the new president and his policies, which many consider hostile toward women, minorities, immigrants and the LGBTQ community.

If the wins were meant to send a message, then perhaps the most pointed, and poignant, was Ahmed and Ansari winning for shows that demystifie­d the scary “Islamist” talked about on the Trump campaign trail.

Ahmed won lead actor in a limited series for his role as Nasir Khan on HBO’s “The Night Of,” making him the first Muslim, and the first Asian, to win a lead acting Emmy (before Ahmed, the only other person of Asian descent to win an acting Emmy was Archie Panjabi in 2010 for her supporting role in “The Good Wife”).

The cable drama followed Muslim college student Nasir through the legal system, and later prison, after he was accused of killing a well-to-do white woman in Manhattan.

Nasir, the son of Pakistani immigrants who settled in Queens, was an immediate suspect. But was he guilty? Written by Steven Zaillian, “The Night Of” made viewers question their own preconcept­ions about race, religion and the justice system while trying to get to the bottom of the case.

That Nasir and his family were presented as multi-dimensiona­l people was a breakthrou­gh in the portrayal of Muslims on series television, arriving before Donald Trump took office and announced his first major action: the travel ban. Targeting citizens of eight Muslim-majority countries, it was eventually halted.

Ansari shared top honors with Waithe for writing on “Master of None,” the Netf lix series in which he also stars. When they took the stage, he ceded the mic to his writing partner, and Hollywood celebrated the breaking of a race barrier in the category.

But Ansari, who also won last year, was also a first in the category, and he’s responsibl­e for offering up what no other TV series ever has: the casual Muslim.

“Master of None” chronicles the not-so-remarkable life of Dev (played by Ansari), a thirtysome­thing lowlevel actor fumbling his way into adulthood. That means devoting entire episodes to dating apps, his obsession with Italian food and the dashed expectatio­ns of his immigrant parents (if only he’d been a doctor).

Dev Shah is Muslim, but he is not angry, obsessive, regretful or oppressed. And he’s not armed with an Uzi. He’s a mostly nice, occasional­ly irritating guy armed with a cellphone he checks obsessivel­y. He drinks at bars with friends, has onenight stands and attends masjid only on holidays. He has been known to eat pork.

How can he be a Muslim then? Simple. The same way others who choose to follow some practices of their faith and not others (much to the chagrin of their devout parents) still identify as Christians or Jews or Hindus.

And some Muslims also identify as actors and wind up at the Emmys. “It’s always strange reaping the rewards of a story that’s based on real-world suffering,” the British Ahmed said as he accepted his award. “But if this show has shone a light on some of the prejudice in our society, [such as] Islamophob­ia, some of the injustice in our justice system, maybe that’s something.”

And even among all the history-making bombshells of the 69th Primetime Emmy Awards, it really was.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? RIZ AHMED shows off his statuette for “The Night Of.” He is the first Muslim, and the first Asian, to win a lead acting Emmy.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times RIZ AHMED shows off his statuette for “The Night Of.” He is the first Muslim, and the first Asian, to win a lead acting Emmy.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ??
Al Seib Los Angeles Times
 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? AZIZ ANSARI shows off his Emmy for writing on a comedy series for his Netf lix show “Master of None.”
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times AZIZ ANSARI shows off his Emmy for writing on a comedy series for his Netf lix show “Master of None.”

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