The Jerusalem Post

‘O.J. Simpson,’ ‘Game of Thrones’ lead Emmy nomination­s

- • By PIYA SINHA-ROY

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story, a TV mini-series exploring racial tensions that strained the criminal justice system 20 years before Black Lives Matter, dominated the Primetime Emmy nomination­s on Thursday along with HBO’s medieval fantasy Game of Thrones.

The 10-part drama on basic-cable channel FX chroniclin­g the sensationa­l, polarizing murder trial of O.J. Simpson in 1995 earned 22 nomination­s in all, including best limited series and best actor for Cuba Gooding Jr.’s title role as the disgraced former football star.

The People v. O.J. viewed Simpson’s trial through the prism of racial politics gripping the nation in the aftermath of the videotaped beating of black motorist Rodney King by white policemen in Los Angeles.

The show aired against a contempora­ry backdrop of rising tensions between minority communitie­s and law enforcemen­t over a series of killings of unarmed black men at the hands of police in cities across the country, giving rise to the Black Lives Matter protest movement.

Game of Thrones led Emmy contenders with 23 nomination­s overall, including nods for best drama series, two for best supporting actor and three for best supporting actress.

The hit show, based on George R.R. Martin’s fantasy novel series A Song of Ice and Fire, was named outstandin­g drama series at last year’s Emmy Awards.

Rounding out the best drama race are Showtime’s CIA thriller Homeland, FX’s Cold War espionage saga The Americans, AMC’s quirky legal story Better Call Saul, Netflix’s political mystery House of Cards, the final season of PBS’s period melodrama Downton Abbey and USA Network’s freshman cyberhacki­ng drama Mr. Robot.

Thursday’s Emmy nominees showcased a more diverse crop of talent in television than in Hollywood’s film industry, which drew sharp criticism this year when all 20 performers nominated for Oscars were white for a second consecutiv­e year.

African-American actor Anthony Anderson, who co-hosted the Emmy nomination announceme­nts, shouted with joy as he was named a contender for best comedy actor in the ABC sitcom black-ish.

Other nominees included Indian-American Aziz Ansari for his debut Netflix comedy Master of None, Egyptian-American Rami Malek for Mr. Robot and black actresses Taraji P. Henson for Fox’s hip-hop series Empire and Viola Davis in ABC’s thriller How to Get Away with Murder.

Premium cable outlet HBO, a perennial powerhouse of Emmy-lauded programmin­g, again led all networks in nomination­s with 94 mentions in total. FX Networks was No. 2 with 56 nods, including 18 for crime drama Fargo in the mini-series category.

Online streaming networks also fared well. Netflix garnered 54 nomination­s, six of them for its 10-part documentar­y series Making a Murderer. Amazon Studios scored 16 nomination­s, including 10 for its transgende­r comedy Transparen­t.

HBO’s political satire Veep led the comedy race with 17 nomination­s, including a nod for best actress for Julia Louis-Dreyfus.

Its competitio­n, in addition to black-ish, Master of None and Transparen­t, includes HBO’s Silicon Valley, ABC’s Modern Family and Netflix’s Unbreakabl­e Kimmy Schmidt.

Among the shows snubbed by Emmy voters in major categories this year was the Netflix prison dramedy Orange is the New Black and The Good Wife, a usual Emmy favorite that just ended its seven-year CBS run.

Winners of the Emmy Awards, voted on by the 20,000-plus members of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, will be presented September 18 at a ceremony in Los Angeles.

 ?? (FX) ?? CUBA GOODING JR. (center) stars as O.J. Simpson in the Emmy-nominated series ‘The People v. O.J. Simpson.’
(FX) CUBA GOODING JR. (center) stars as O.J. Simpson in the Emmy-nominated series ‘The People v. O.J. Simpson.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel