Edmonton Journal

TV’s big night ripe for upsets

- JILL SERJEANT edmontonjo­urnal. com Check out edmontonjo­urnal. com for full coverage of the Emmy Awards: the winners, the upsets, the showstoppe­rs and red carpet galleries with our choices for Best and Worst Dressed. During the show, join the live discuss

LOS ANGELES – A night of upsets could be on the menu at the Primetime Emmy Awards Sunday, with the countesses and kitchen maids of Britain’s Downton Abbey bidding to end the reign of television’s Mad Men, while post-9/11 psychologi­cal thriller Homeland lurks close by.

With a tight race for the best-drama-series top prize and a great year for comedy actresses, the television industry’s biggest night could pack as much drama this year as the plot twists and turns dreamed up by TV writers on screen.

“What makes this year’s Emmys filled with such anticipati­on is that there are no easy prediction­s and that makes the show exciting,” said Todd Gold, executive editor of Xfinity TV.

“There was a period in the 1990s when the Emmys seemed so predictabl­e. This is a year that really reflects the strength and depth of TV across the board,” Gold said.

Mad Men, the 1960s-era advertisin­g show on AMC beloved by critics, is hoping to score a fifth consecutiv­e best drama series win from 17 Emmy nomination­s. But Downton Abbey, the upstairs-downstairs period drama set in an aristocrat­ic English house, is nipping at its heels with 16 nods in one of PBS’s best years at the Emmys.

British imports often do well at U.S. award shows. “Hollywood, like the rest of America, has a secret inferiorit­y complex about all things British. Downton Abbey did much better in the nomination­s than anyone thought. It could really do this,” said Tom O’Neil of awards website Goldderby. com.

Mad Men emerged emptyhande­d from last weekend’s Creative Arts portion of the Emmys — which honours costumes, hair styling and other mainly technical categories — in what O’Neil said “may be an early omen of what’s to come.”

Dark drug drama Breaking Bad, in its fifth and final season on AMC, 1930s-era gangster show Boardwalk Empire on HBO, Game of Thrones, and Showtime newcomer Homeland round out the best-drama-series choices for the 15,000 voters of the Television Academy.

Claire Danes, who plays a bipolar CIA agent in Homeland tracking down a returning U.S. Iraq war hero who has been turned by Muslim extremists, is seen as a sure bet for taking home the best-drama-actress Emmy on Sunday.

Homeland, with nine nomination­s and gushing reviews for its mix of cliffhange­rs, moral complexity and post-9/11 suspicion, and Downton Abbey have “the most buzz for any shows that I can recall,” Gold said.

The contest for best comedy actress on TV is also too close to call, according to TV pundits.

“It was a fantastic year for comedienne­s. Julia LouisDreyf­us is in the race with a hot new HBO series (Veep) that happens to be about the vicepresid­ential race in the middle of a presidenti­al election. How perfect is that?” said O’Neil. “And Lena Dunham (Girls HBO) is this year’s Tina Fey. She does it all — writing, directing, acting, producing.”

O’Neil said Fey, creator and star of 30 Rock, also had her best chance in recent years to win. But New Girl star Zooey Deschanel on Fox, could clinch an Emmy on her first try.

In the best comedy series, ABC’s reigning champion, Modern Family, appears to have little serious competitio­n, and its stars are also expected to take home some of the supporting acting Emmys.

But there may be a chink in Jon Stewart’s stronghold in the variety series slot with his satirical The Daily Show.

“I think Jimmy Kimmel is going to put a stop to the nineyear juggernaut of The Daily Show this year,” O’Neil said. “I think Jon Stewart has met his match.”

In other key races, Bryan Cranston is favoured to win a fourth Emmy as best actor in a dramatic series for his role as a chemistry teacher-turned- drug kingpin in Breaking Bad, while History channel’s Hatfields & McCoys, with 16 nomination­s, is a strong contender for best miniseries.

 ?? RONEN AKERMAN/SHOWTIME ?? Claire Danes, who plays bipolar CIA agent Carrie Anderson in Homeland, is seen as a sure bet for best dramatic actress.
RONEN AKERMAN/SHOWTIME Claire Danes, who plays bipolar CIA agent Carrie Anderson in Homeland, is seen as a sure bet for best dramatic actress.

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