SCHITT'S KIND OF A BIG DEAL
Beloved Canadian series needs just one hour to sweep Sunday night's virtual Emmy Awards
LOS ANGELES Schitt's Creek wasn't just a big winner during the first hour of Sunday's Emmy Awards — it was the only winner.
The quirky feel-good Canadian show — along with limited series Watchmen — swept the Emmy Awards on Sunday in a live show where the coronavirus pandemic meant most celebrities took part from their sofas and backyards dressed in a variety of gowns, hoodies and sleepwear.
“Hello, and welcome to the PandEmmys!” said Jimmy Kimmel, opening the show, which had several skits and jokes about life under lockdown.
CBC's Schitt's Creek — also a hit on the U.S. network Pop TV — about a wealthy family that is forced to live in a rundown motel, won a grand total of nine Emmys, including acting awards for Canadian stars Catherine O'Hara, Eugene Levy, Daniel Levy and Annie Murphy and a historic win for outstanding comedy series — marking the first time a Canadian TV show has won an Emmy in the outstanding comedy or drama category.
It was the first time in the Emmy Awards' 72 years that a comedy won all seven categories in the same year, organizers said. The show's nine wins breaks a record previously set by The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, which was the most awarded comedy in a year with eight wins in 2019.
Levy thanked his son Daniel, who won for writing, directing and as a supporting actor, for transforming the show “into a celebration of inclusivity, a castigation of homophobia and a declaration of the power of love.”
The Schitt's Creek winners got their trophies delivered to a restaurant in Ontario, where they had gathered to celebrate, by a person dressed in a custom blackand-white hazmat suit, designed to look like a tuxedo.
Meanwhile, on the dramatic side, Netflix hit Succession claimed the night's big prize for best drama series, and its star Jeremy Strong took the top actor's prize. At 24, Zendaya picked up the best actress trophy for her role in Euphoria. Ozark's Julia Garner won for best supporting actress, while Billy Crudup took the best supporting actor in a drama series honours.
The coronavirus pandemic meant no red carpet and no physical audience for the show, which was broadcast live on ABC. Instead, producers sent camera kits and microphones to all the nominees, scattered in 125 places around the world, who chose how and where they wanted to be seen.
“It seems frivolous and unnecessary to do this during a global pandemic,” Kimmel said.
“What's happening tonight is not important. It's not going to stop COVID. It's not going to put out the fires, but it's fun. And right now we need fun. ... This has been a miserable year. It's been a year of division, injustice (and) disease,” he added.
Not everyone was appearing remotely. Actresses Jennifer Aniston and Tracee Ellis Ross were among presenters who made it to the Emmys studio set in Los Angeles,
keeping a safe distance.
HBO's alternative reality show Watchmen, infused with racial themes, won for best limited series, while actress Regina King won for her performance as the show's kick-ass police detective and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II took best supporting actor. Watchmen, which went into Sunday's ceremony with a leading 26 nods, also won for writing.
Creator Damon Lindeloff dedicated the Emmy to the victims and survivors of a 1921 massacre of the Black community in Tulsa, Oklahoma, which partly inspired the series.
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver was named best variety talk series for the fifth successive year, and the British comedian accepted wearing a red sweatshirt.