The highs and lows of the Emmy races: The most interesting categories
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With more than 100 Emmy races, itâs difficult to know which contests will be the most exciting and which ones can be skipped for a bathroom break during the awards telecast. But from the way things are shaping up, hereâs a cheat sheet to what promise to be the five most interesting races:
Lead actor, comedy: Itâs a good thing Steve Carell has a sense of humor. Even though âThe Officeâ proved to be an Emmy darling at the start (best comedy series, 2006), Carell has lost the lead actor race five times, including once to the chap who created the original British series: Ricky Gervais (âExtrasâ). Now can Carell finally get the last laugh upon leaving the Yankee version? Sarah Jessica Parker was overdue for an Emmy when she ultimately prevailed for her last season on âSex and the City.â
Drama series: Can âMad Menâ go four in a row for top drama series? Only three programs have won that trophy as many times: âHill Street Bluesâ (1981-1984), âL.A. Lawâ (1987, 1989, 1990, 1991) and âThe West Wingâ (2000-2003). Its toughest rival may be âBoardwalk Empire,â which won the drama award at the Golden Globes and best ensemble at the SAG Awards. Both shows are old news, though, airing in late 2010. The usurper could be âThe Good Wife.â Itâs currently airing, Emmy voters love legal dramas and itâs on CBS. Most members of the academy work for broadcast networks â but a show airing on one of the Big Four hasnât triumphed here since 2006, when â24â took it.
Lead actor, drama: It may seem crazy that âMad Menâ could claim the drama award three times while its star, Jon Hamm, has yet to win. Thatâs because these races are decided by different groups of voters who view sample episodes. For the last three years, Bryan Cranstonâs segments of âBreaking Badâ were impossible to beat as he portrayed a desperate cancer patient who cooks up crystal meth. This year, Cranston isnât eligible and Hamm has an ace episode called âThe Suitcaseâ packed with drunken antics and crying scenes. But he faces tough new competition: Steve Buscemi (âBoardwalk Empireâ), William H. Macy (âShamelessâ) and Jeremy Irons (âThe Borgiasâ). Reality competition: Finally, the reality-competition contest is getting competitive. Last year, it looked like âThe Amazing Raceâ would zoom past all rivals for an eighth consecutive win, but âTop Chefâ had the winning recipe. Can âAmazingâ reclaim this Emmy race? Or can TVâs top-rated reality show, âAmerican Idol,â finally prevail? Or will âDancing With the Starsâ waltz off with the prize while basking in the glow of two-time Emmy champ Kirstie Alley?
Supporting actor, comedy: Will an Emmy curse continue to plague Ed OâNeill? The talented comic actor was never nominated for âMarried ⌠With Children,â which is one of the longest-running TV series (11 seasons) never to win a single Emmy, not even in the crafts categories. His newest show, âModern Family,â won the comedy award last year, but he was the only main male cast member not to be nominated. It may have been his own fault. Displaying admirable humility, OâNeill agreed to drop down from the lead category to join his costars in supporting, but the strategy backfired. Heâs doing it again this year.
Check back later for the five races that are the easiest to call right now.
-- Tom OâNeil