49th Primetime Emmy Awards
49th Primetime Emmy Awards | |
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Date |
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Location | Pasadena Civic Auditorium, Pasadena, California |
Presented by | Academy of Television Arts and Sciences |
Hosted by | Bryant Gumbel |
Highlights | |
Most awards | NYPD Blue (4) |
Most nominations | ER (14) |
Outstanding Comedy Series | Frasier |
Outstanding Drama Series | Law & Order |
Outstanding Miniseries | Prime Suspect V: Errors of Judgement |
Outstanding Variety Series | Tracey Takes On... |
Television/radio coverage | |
Network | CBS |
Produced by | Darnette Herman Michael Seligman |
The 49th Primetime Emmy Awards were held at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium in Pasadena, California, in 1997. They were presented in two ceremonies hosted by Bryant Gumbel, one on Saturday, September 13 and another on Sunday, September 14. The September 14th ceremony was televised on CBS.
Frasier became the first series to win Outstanding Comedy Series four consecutive years, it joined Hill Street Blues which won Outstanding Drama Series four straight years a decade earlier. For the first time since 1979, James Burrows did not receive a Directing nomination, ending his run at 17 consecutive years. Beginning the following year, Burrows would begin a new streak that lasted another six years. In the drama field perennial nominee Law & Order won for its seventh season, the first time a show had won for this specific season. In winning Law & Order became the first drama series that did not have serialized story arcs[note 1] since Hill Street Blues perfected the formula. Law & Order remains the only non-serialized winner since 1981.
For the first time, not only did the Fox Network win the Lead Actress, Drama award, with Gillian Anderson, for The X-Files, but hers was also the network's first win in any of the Major Acting categories. (Laurence Fishburne and Peter Boyle won for Fox in only guest performances. The latter of which was for The X-Files just the year before.)
This ceremony marked the end of a 20-year residency for the Primetime Emmy Awards at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium dating back to the 29th Primetime Emmy Awards in 1977 ceremony.
This is the most recent year in which the Big Four Networks (ABC, CBS, FOX, and NBC) took home the top 14 Emmys (Comedy and Drama Series, Actor, Actress, Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress in Comedy and Drama, and Directing and Writing for Comedy and Drama).
The Larry Sanders Show had 16 nominations and zero wins, tying the record with Northern Exposure in 1993 and becoming the first (and only to date) comedy series to set the record. These records would later be broken by Mad Men in 2012 with 17 nominations and without a single win and The Handmaid's Tale in 2021 with 21 nominations and without a single win.
Winners and nominees
[edit]Programs
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Acting
[edit]Lead performances
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Supporting performances
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Directing
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Writing
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Most major nominations
[edit]Network | No. of Nominations |
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NBC | 50 |
HBO | 41 |
CBS | 21 |
ABC | 19 |
Program | Category | Network | No. of Nominations |
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ER | Drama | NBC | 14 |
The Larry Sanders Show | Comedy | HBO | 10 |
NYPD Blue | Drama | ABC | 8 |
Miss Evers' Boys | Movie | HBO | 6 |
Seinfeld | Comedy | NBC | |
The X-Files | Drama | Fox | 5 |
Chicago Hope | CBS | 4 | |
Frasier | Comedy | NBC | |
Gotti | Movie | HBO | |
In the Gloaming | |||
Tracey Takes On... | Variety | ||
3rd Rock from the Sun | Comedy | NBC | 3 |
The 69th Annual Academy Awards | Variety | ABC | |
Bastard Out of Carolina | Movie | Showtime | |
Bette Midler: Diva Las Vegas | Variety | HBO | |
Ellen | Comedy | ABC | |
The Last Don | Miniseries | CBS | |
Mad About You | Comedy | NBC | |
Politically Incorrect with Bill Maher | Variety | ABC | |
Chris Rock: Bring the Pain | HBO | 2 | |
Cybill | Comedy | CBS | |
Dennis Miller Live | Variety | HBO | |
George Carlin: 40 Years of Comedy | |||
Hidden in America | Movie | Showtime | |
Late Show with David Letterman | Variety | CBS | |
Law & Order | Drama | NBC | |
Mandela and de Klerk | Movie | Showtime | |
The Odyssey | Miniseries | NBC | |
Prime Suspect V: Errors of Judgement | PBS | ||
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno | Variety | NBC | |
Touched by an Angel | Drama | CBS |
Most major awards
[edit]Network | No. of Awards |
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NBC | 9 |
HBO | 8 |
ABC | 5 |
CBS | 2 |
PBS |
Program | Category | Network | No. of Awards |
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NYPD Blue | Drama | ABC | 4 |
3rd Rock from the Sun | Comedy | NBC | 2 |
Chris Rock: Bring the Pain | Variety | HBO | |
Frasier | Comedy | NBC | |
Miss Evers' Boys | Movie | HBO |
- Notes
- ^ Saying Law & Order had no serialized arcs is potentially misleading. It's true that Law & Order is at its core a procedural, with only very lightly-serialized elements as a general rule. However, in its Emmy-winning season, the show had a three-episode arc—"D-Girl", "Turnaround", and "Showtime"—concerning a high-profile murder case. In addition, the episode "Entrapment" was a sequel to season 3's "Conspiracy" .
- ^ a b "Major" constitutes the categories listed above: Program, Acting, Directing, and Writing. Does not include the technical categories.