Los Angeles Times

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Winners, fashion and a much anticipate­d IRL ceremony.

- By Stephen Battaglio

DRAMA SERIES

“The Crown”

COMEDY SERIES

“Ted Lasso”

LEAD ACTRESS, DRAMA

Olivia Colman, “The Crown”

LEAD ACTOR, DRAMA

Josh O’Connor, “The Crown”

Powered by multiple wins for “The Crown” and “The Queen’s Gambit,” streaming giant Netflix reclaimed the top spot among all TV platforms on the 73rd Emmy Awards presented Sunday.

The Los Gatos-based company swamped the competitio­n with a total of 44 trophies.

The fourth season of its royal family drama “The Crown” won 11 awards, including best drama series. “The Queen’s Gambit,” starring Anya Taylor-Joy as a young chessmaste­r with addiction issues in the 1960s, also won 11 awards, including best limited

or anthology series.

Netflix tied a record for most Emmy wins for a single platform set by CBS in 1974. The wins pushed Netflix well ahead of second-place HBO, which finished with 19 trophies, down from its platform-leading total of 30 in 2020.

The tally for the WarnerMedi­a-owned premium cable network included programs launched on its streaming service HBO Max. The HBO Max hit “Hacks” — about a baby boomer Vegas hotel comic who hires a millennial writer — earned wins for comedy writing and directing, while star Jean Smart walked off with a trophy for lead actress in a comedy series.

HBO also scored multiple wins with its limited series “Mare of Easttown,” including a lead actress trophy for Kate Winslet for her performanc­e as a grieving police detective. Supporting actors Evan Peters and Julianne Nicholson received honors for their roles.

The top awards were presented in a ceremony held at the Event Deck at L.A. Live in downtown Los Angeles and telecast on CBS. The Creative Arts Emmy Awards winners included in the totals were presented on Sept. 11 and 12.

Newer entrants to the streaming landscape made gains as well, as Apple TV+, the subscripti­on service operated by Cupertino-based tech behemoth Apple, saw its win total rise to 10, up from a single win in 2020, thanks to its breakout comedy hit “Ted Lasso.” The feel-good show about a relentless­ly optimistic American college football coach taking over a British soccer league team won seven awards after capturing 20 nomination­s.

Overall, online video platforms accounted for more than half of the awards presented this year, further solidifyin­g their status as the leading edge of creativity based on the voting by Television Academy members.

The Emmy Awards have helped build the stature of Netflix and others, as they have effectivel­y used the honors as a marketing tool to gain awareness and ultimately subscriber­s.

“Ted Lasso” was recognized as best comedy series, while Jason Sudeikis earned wins as lead actor in a comedy series and Hannah Waddingham and Brett Goldstein took the supporting actor categories.

Disney + also saw its win total rise to 14, up from eight in 2020. The Walt Disney Co. unit got a boost from its “Star Wars” franchise series “The Mandaloria­n” scoring a total of seven trophies and the Marvel Universe show “WandaVisio­n” capturing another three. The streamer’s presentati­on of the Broadway smash “Hamilton” won an Emmy for best prerecorde­d variety special.

Missing from the brigade of streaming winners were Amazon’s Prime Video and Disney’s Hulu, both of which were shut out.

Broadcast and cable networks, which have seen streaming competitor­s siphon off viewers of scripted programs in recent years, were once again an afterthoug­ht at the Emmy Awards.

NBC led the networks with eight trophies, all for its perennial multi-Emmy winner “Saturday Night Live.” The sketch variety show has won 81 Emmys over its 46-year run, the most of any program in history.

ABC had three wins, followed by Fox, which had two. CBS was shut out.

VH1, the ViacomCBS-owned channel, had the most wins of any ad-supported cable network with five wins, all for “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” which earned its fourth consecutiv­e win for reality competitio­n show.

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? HIGHLIGHTS: Cedric the Entertaine­r, clockwise from top left; Michaela Coel, writing for a limited series, “I May Destroy You”; Kate Winslet lead actress limited series, “Mare of Easttown”; John Oliver, writing for variety series, “Last Week Tonight.”
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times HIGHLIGHTS: Cedric the Entertaine­r, clockwise from top left; Michaela Coel, writing for a limited series, “I May Destroy You”; Kate Winslet lead actress limited series, “Mare of Easttown”; John Oliver, writing for variety series, “Last Week Tonight.”
 ?? CBS Photo Archive ?? EWAN McGREGOR from Netf lix’s “Halston” claims his Emmy for lead actor.
CBS Photo Archive EWAN McGREGOR from Netf lix’s “Halston” claims his Emmy for lead actor.
 ?? Phil McCarten Invision/Associated Press ??
Phil McCarten Invision/Associated Press
 ?? Cliff Lipson CBS via Getty Images ??
Cliff Lipson CBS via Getty Images
 ?? Cliff Lipson CBS via Getty Images ??
Cliff Lipson CBS via Getty Images
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? “HACKS” SHOWRUNNER Jen Statsky, left, actress Jean Smart, showrunner­s Lucia Aniello and Paul W. Downs with their Emmys. The Netf lix series won for lead actress (Smart), writing (Statsky, Downs, Aniello) and directing (Aniello) for a comedy series.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times “HACKS” SHOWRUNNER Jen Statsky, left, actress Jean Smart, showrunner­s Lucia Aniello and Paul W. Downs with their Emmys. The Netf lix series won for lead actress (Smart), writing (Statsky, Downs, Aniello) and directing (Aniello) for a comedy series.
 ?? Rich Fury Getty Images ?? EVAN PETERS and Julianne Nicholson of “Mare of Easttown” won Emmys for their work as supporting actor and actress.
Rich Fury Getty Images EVAN PETERS and Julianne Nicholson of “Mare of Easttown” won Emmys for their work as supporting actor and actress.
 ?? Television Academy ?? HANNAH WADDINGHAM accepts the award for supporting actress in a comedy series for AppleTV+’s “Ted Lasso.”
Television Academy HANNAH WADDINGHAM accepts the award for supporting actress in a comedy series for AppleTV+’s “Ted Lasso.”

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