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unusual facts about Emmy awards



A Little Thing Called Murder

Davis was also nominated for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie in the Emmy Awards.

Beah Richards

She made numerous guest television appearances including recurrent roles on Beauty and the Beast, The Bill Cosby Show, Sanford and Son, Benson, Designing Women, The Practice, The Big Valley and ER (as Dr. Peter Benton's mother.) She was the winner of two Emmy Awards, one in 1988 for her appearance on the series Frank's Place, and another in 2000 for her appearance on The Practice.

Deb Adair

She won 3 Emmy Awards for Outstanding Film Sound Mixing and Outstanding Sound Mixing - Special Class for her work on Aladdin in 1995-1996 and Timon & Pumbaa in 1997.

God, That's Good

Zane Huett submitted this episode for consideration on his behalf in the category of “Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series” at the 2007 Emmy Awards.

Ja'net Dubois

Dubois won an CableACE Award for her work on the TV movie Other Women's Children based on the novel by Perri Klass, and she also two Emmy Awards for her voiceover work on the animated program The PJs.

John Abineri

He received an Emmy nomination for his performance as Chingachgook in the TV adaptation of Last Of The Mohicans (1971) and Hawkeye, The Pathfinder (1973).

Milenka Peña

She was the recipient of many important recognitions, among them, an EMMY AWARDS nomination for Outstanding Achievement for Individual Excellence in Camera as Best News Anchor, given by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and a First Place Silver Dome Award by the Illinois News Broadcasters Association.

New York State Theatre Institute

Among NYSTI's count of more than forty-five premiere productions are William Gibson's “Rag Dolly,” which toured to Moscow in 1986 (a later version opened on Broadway as Raggedy Ann) and Paul Shyre's “Hizzoner!,” starring Tony Lo Bianco, which won five Emmy awards in a WNET/13 co-production and later played on Broadway before touring to Moscow in 1989.

Raybert Productions

Unfortunately there was a falling-out between the two sides, with only Peter Tork showing up for the first day of filming, and by the time the completed movie was ready for release, the television series had been cancelled (after two seasons and two Emmy Awards), and the Monkees phenomenon appeared to be winding down.

Rocky Mountain Emmy Awards

The Litchfield Park, Arizona division was founded in 1980, and is responsible for granting the Rocky Mountain Emmy Awards, awarding scholarships, honouring industry veterans at the Silver Circle Celebration, conducting National Student Television Awards of Excellence, and operates a free research and a nationwide job bank.

Ruben Santiago-Hudson

He adapted it for a highly acclaimed, award-winning 2005 HBO film, in which the parts would be played by different people, that won him the Humanitas Prize and earned Emmy and Writers Guild of America Award nominations.

Tavalon Tea

The company works with various entities both in New York City & Seoul including the Grammy Awards, Emmy Awards, Montblanc, Quintessentially, Momentum Women, Bvlgari, Juicy Couture, People Magazine, and WebMD.

The Reluctant Astronaut

Comedian Knotts won several Emmy Awards as small-town comic sheriff's deputy Barney Fife in the 1960-1968 television sitcom The Andy Griffith Show but left the show as a regular at the end of its fifth season (1964–1965) to pursue a career in feature films with Universal Pictures.

Willie Reale

Mr. Reale has an Academy Award nomination in the best song category for his work as a lyricist on the movie Dreamgirls and has won 3 Emmy awards (in 2010, 2011) as one of the writer/producers behind the recent reinvention of 1970’s literacy classic, The Electric Company on PBS.


see also

1980 Emmy Awards

7th Daytime Emmy Awards, the 1980 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 1979–1980

32nd Primetime Emmy Awards, the 1980 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 1979–1980

1995 Emmy Awards

47th Primetime Emmy Awards, the 1995 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 1994–1995

22nd Daytime Emmy Awards, the 1995 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 1994–1995

1999 Emmy Awards

51st Primetime Emmy Awards, the 1999 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 1998–1999

26th Daytime Emmy Awards, the 1999 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 1998–1999

1st Primetime Emmy Awards

The 1st Annual Emmy Awards, retroactively known as the 1st Annual Primetime Emmy Awards after the debut of the Daytime Emmys, were presented at the Hollywood Athletic Club in Los Angeles, California on January 25, 1949.

2000 Emmy Awards

27th Daytime Emmy Awards, the 2000 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 1999–2000

52nd Primetime Emmy Awards, the 2000 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 1999–2000

2001 Emmy Awards

28th Daytime Emmy Awards, the 2001 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 2000–2001

53rd Primetime Emmy Awards, the 2001 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2000–2001

2002 Emmy Awards

54th Primetime Emmy Awards, the 2002 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2001–2002

29th Daytime Emmy Awards, the 2002 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 2001–2002

2003 Emmy Awards

30th Daytime Emmy Awards, the 2003 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 2002–2003

55th Primetime Emmy Awards, the 2003 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2002–2003

2004 Emmy Awards

56th Primetime Emmy Awards, the 2004 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2003–2004

31st Daytime Emmy Awards, the 2004 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 2003–2004

2005 Emmy Awards

32nd Daytime Emmy Awards, the 2005 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 2004–2005

57th Primetime Emmy Awards, the 2005 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2004–2005

2006 Emmy Awards

58th Primetime Emmy Awards, the 2006 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2005–2006

33rd Daytime Emmy Awards, the 2006 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 2005–2006

2007 Emmy Awards

59th Primetime Emmy Awards, the 2007 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2006–2007

34th Daytime Emmy Awards, the 2007 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 2006–2007

28th Sports Emmy Awards, the 2007 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2006

2008 Emmy Awards

60th Primetime Emmy Awards, the 2008 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2007–2008

29th Sports Emmy Awards, the 2008 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring sports programming during 2007

35th Daytime Emmy Awards, the 2008 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 2007–2008

2009 Emmy Awards

36th Daytime Emmy Awards, the 2009 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2008–2009

30th Sports Emmy Awards, the 2009 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2008

61st Primetime Emmy Awards, the 2009 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2008–2009

2010 Emmy Awards

62nd Primetime Emmy Awards, the 2010 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring primetime programming during 2009–2010

37th Daytime Emmy Awards, the 2010 Emmy Awards ceremony honoring daytime programming during 2009–2010

2011 Emmy Awards

38th Daytime Emmy Awards, the 2011 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored daytime programming during 2010–2011

63rd Primetime Emmy Awards, the 2011 Emmy Awards ceremony that honored primetime programming during 2010–2011

23rd Midsouth Emmy Awards

The winners the 23rd Midsouth Emmy Awards were announced on January 24, 2009 in Tennessee, and was hosted by Country recording star, Hal Ketchum.

Ann Elder

She won Emmy awards also for comedy writing, (co-shared for Lily Tomlin's 1974 CBS special among others).

Bo Brady and Hope Williams

The pairing won the "America's Favorite Supercouple" award at the 2002 Emmy Awards, and are the face of Avon's Blue Rush perfume advertising campaign.

Cecilia Bolocco

Then, she became a full fledged member of the Telemundo family where she hosted the afternoon lifestyles program La Buena Vida ("The Good Life"), The show was merged with another newsmagazine titled Ocurrió así ("It Happened This Way") and Esta noche con Cecilia Bolocco ("Tonight With Cecilia Bolocco") followed for which she won two Emmy awards.

Dana Wolfe

Wolfe holds five Emmy Awards earned over a decade as a producer for Ted Koppel’s Nightline on ABC News.

David Loxton

Emmy Awards – The Police Tapes (1977), Paul Jacobs and the Nuclear Gang (1979), Third Avenue: Only the Strong Survive (1980)

Franklin J. Schaffner

Schaffner earned two more Emmy awards for his work on the 1955 TV adaptation of the Broadway play, The Caine Mutiny Court Martial, shown on the anthology series Ford Star Jubilee.

Jeffrey Alan Schechter

Jeffrey Alan Schechter (usually credited as Jeff Schechter) is a screenwriter whose work has been nominated for two Emmy awards, a Writers Guild of America award, and a Writers Guild of Canada award.

John Kent Harrison

Other projects include The Lois Wilson Story (2010) which received a SAG nomination for Winona Ryder, William Faulkner's Old Man (1997), one of the most critically acclaimed Hallmark presentations, which won two Emmy Awards, the Humanities Prize, the Christopher Medal and a Golden Reel.

Phil Abraham

He won the 2008 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography for a One Hour Series for his work on the pilot of Mad Men and has been nominated for three other Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series for his work on The Sopranos.

Rachel Reynolds

In addition to her role on The Price Is Right, she has made appearances on The Bold and the Beautiful, How I Met Your Mother, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, Let's Make a Deal, and multiple Emmy Awards broadcasts.

Sanford Sylvan

Sylvan received Grammy and Emmy awards for the role of Chou En-Lai in Nixon in China by John Adams and received five additional Grammy nominations: Fussell's Wilde (2009); Adams's The Wound-Dresser (1990), which was written for Sylvan; Fauré's L'horizon chimérique (1999); Beloved That Pilgrimage (1992); and the soundtrack for the Penny Woolcock Film of Adams' opera, The Death of Klinghoffer (2003).

Sports Emmy Award

The ninth annual Sports Emmy Awards, hosted by actors Alan Thicke and Joan Van Ark and held on July 13, 1988, became the first Sports Emmys ceremony to be televised; the live telecast was syndicated nationwide by Raycom Sports.

Terri Conn

In June 2010, Conn and her former As the World Turns co-star, Austin Peck officially came out as a couple at the 37th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards.

The Scarlett O'Hara War

At the 1980 Emmy Awards, The Scarlett O'Hara War won two awards for make-up by Richard Blair and costume design by Travilla.

Tom Fleischman

In addition to his work in feature films he has also done work in television, winning four Emmy Awards in 1986 for ABC Afterschool Specials: Can A Guy Say No, in 2006 for Martin Scorsese's No Direction Home: Bob Dylan, in 2013 for History of the Eagles, Boardwalk Empire: The Milkmaid's Lot and also garnered Emmy nominations for Scorsese's George Harrison: Living in the Material World, and the HBO television series Boardwalk Empire.