Montreal Gazette

BATTLE ROYAL

Crown leads way into TV'S big night

- JILL SERJEANT

73rd Emmy Awards

Sunday, CBS/CTV

Television may have been what helped people get through the lockdowns and quarantine­s of the past year, but the Emmy Awards themselves just can't seem to get a break.

For a second year in a row, organizers have been forced to abandon the traditiona­l mass gathering of celebritie­s and executives. Cedric the Entertaine­r will host a scaled-back show in Los Angeles on Sunday that has been moved to an outdoor tent because of concerns over the Delta variant.

Despite vaccinatio­n, testing and masking requiremen­ts, Jennifer Aniston is among those who won't be attending, citing her personal safety. And many of the cast of drama series favourite The Crown will likely take part from London, organizers said.

“We do have some people wanting to dial in, and we understand that,” Maury Mcintyre, president of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, told Variety this week. “It's only about 500 in the tent, but 500 is still a lot for some people.”

Last year, the ceremony was held virtually with celebritie­s joining remotely from homes, gardens and hotel rooms around the world rather than the usual in-person event for more than 4,000 people.

Television viewing exploded during the pandemic, sending people stuck at home to vast libraries of content on streaming platforms.

Ted Lasso, a heartwarmi­ng comedy about a fish-out-of-water American coaching a struggling British soccer team, and British royal series The Crown, are expected to benefit this year. Ted Lasso scored 20 Emmy nods, including best comedy series, and nomination­s for lead actor Jason Sudeikis and six other actors.

“Ted Lasso is old-fashioned, shamelessl­y lovable and full of wonderful twists and turns,” said Tom O'neil, founder of awards website Goldderby.com. “It has unflagging optimism all the time even when things seem really, really bad.”

The show could deliver the Apple TV+ streaming platform its first major win.

After a compelling season that focused on the unhappy marriage of Prince Charles and Diana, Princess of Wales, The Crown nabbed 24 Emmy nods. Awards experts predict it will take home its first best drama series Emmy, clinching a milestone win for Netflix.

“If The Crown and Ted Lasso both end up winning the best TV series race, it will mark the total conquest of television by the streaming services,” O'neil said.

Amazon and Hulu previously won the TV series prizes for The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel and The Handmaid's Tale, respective­ly.

“I would be shocked if The Crown did not win,” said Gerrad Hall, senior TV editor at Entertainm­ent Weekly. “It was a stellar season and every single performanc­e on that show is awards-worthy.”

The Crown will compete for best drama series — the top award — against Star Wars TV spinoff The Mandaloria­n featuring the beloved Baby Yoda, Bridgerton, The Boys, The Handmaid's Tale, Pose, Lovecraft Country and the sole mainstream network series This Is Us.

Streaming services also dominate the limited series field, which pundits say is too close to call.

“These limited series are prestige TV,” said Hall, referring to I May Destroy You, Mare of Easttown, The Queen's Gambit, Wandavisio­n and The Undergroun­d Railroad.

“Every single one of the nominated shows are female-driven stories, and showcasing such a variety of themes,” Hall added.

 ?? NETFLIX ?? Emma Corrin, left, and Josh O'connor star in season 4 of The Crown, which earned 24 Emmy nomination­s. The season centres on the marriage of Prince Charles and Diana, Princess of Wales.
NETFLIX Emma Corrin, left, and Josh O'connor star in season 4 of The Crown, which earned 24 Emmy nomination­s. The season centres on the marriage of Prince Charles and Diana, Princess of Wales.

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