The last Emmys â â went reunion crazy on such a big birthday, with cast reunions of such classic series as âCheers,â âThe Sopranos,â âItâs Always Sunny in Philadelphiaâ and âAll in the Family.â The latest Emmys said: âHold my applause.â
âShogun,â âBaby Reindeerâ and âThe Bearâ all picked up trophies throughout the night that was peppered with and âHappy Days,â as well as themes, like TV dads and moms.
Here are some of the nightâs notable moments:
Gentle hosts
The father-and-son duo of , the winning stars of the aboard âSchittâs Creek,â hosted and they were warm, mocking themselves as they noted the TV telecast was honoring "movie stars on streaming services.â
Even when the Candians went after a show â like competing in the best comedy series category, even though it's not a traditional yukfest â it was gentle.
âNow, I love the show, I love the show, and I know some of you will be expecting us to make a joke about whether âThe Bearâ is really a comedy â but in the true spirit of âThe Bear,â we will not be making any jokes,â Eugene Levy said.
In one bit, the two found themselves in the audience but in different rows, mistaking stage left for house left. Awkwardness ensued. When they tried to push through, Eugene Levy wailed: âI can't see the prompter!â
The show goes to the dogs
John Oliver thanked a lot of people after his âLast Week Tonightâ won for outstanding scripted variety series, but things got weird when he ended up honoring his familyâs recently dead dog.
âWe have the most fantastic dog, and she was at our wedding and she got us through the pandemic. She was with us for two pregnanciesâŠ,â he said, before getting the leave-the-stage music swelled.
Oliver didnât take the hint: âWe had to say goodbye to her. I feel like Sarah McLaughlin right now. She was an amazing dog,â he said. He then shouted an expletive and tried to make it more than about his deceased canine.
âThis isnât just for her. This is for all dogs,â he continued as the auditorium roared. âAll dogs, you are all very good girls. You are very good boys. You all deserve a treat. Play me off now! Thanks so much.â
âThe West Wingâ reunited
âThe West Wingâ celebrated its 25th anniversary with castmembers Martin Sheen, DulĂ© Hill, Richard Schiff, Janel Moloney and Allison Janney gathering to help hand out the best drama trophy.
Created by Aaron Sorkin and first airing on NBC in the fall 1999, âThe West Wingâ offed an idealistic depiction of what politics can be. The castmembers gathered in a set mimicking the Oval Office. It ended in 2006.
âIt's hard to believe that just 25 years ago, Aaron and the writers actually had to use their imaginations to create interesting plot lines for âThe West Wing,ââ Janney said. Added Schiff: âUnlike today, where storylines can be plucked right off the news, storylines that writers would have deemed a bit far-fetched if not utterly ridiculous 25 years ago.â
Put me in, coach
Jane Lynch, who played vicious cheerleading coach Sue Sylvester on âGleeâ and Brendan Hunt, the quiet Coach Willis Beard on âTed Lasso,â teamed up to help hand out the award for best director of a drama series.
They appeared in a locker room set, with Lynch teasing Hunt that she was a head coach on TV and he was just an assistant coach. But the stage seemed a little too big for just these two TV coaches.
That changed when the stage revealed Paris Olympians Caeleb Dressel and alongside Paralympian Ezra Frech.
âSaturday Night Liveâ greats mock its creator
âSaturday Night Liveâ got a head start to its 50th anniversary next year with a mini-reunion, as Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Seth Meyers and Bowen Yang presented the award for best writing for a variety special.
Three of the four mocked in the audience, who they claimed was nominated and lost 85 times at the Emmys. Rudolph said he was ârobbed.â Yang said âit gets betterâ and âkeep winning.â Meyers corrected them all to say that, in fact, Michaels has actually won 21 Emmys. Yang then leaned into mispronouncing his boss' first name.
It may have been a taste for 2025, when the trailblazing sketch show will be celebrated, including a three-hour live primetime special in February. It has been the springboard for such stars as Eddie Murphy, Adam Sandler, Tina Fey, Will Ferrell and Mike Myers.
Bad guys and gals
Antony Starr of âThe Boys,â Giancarlo Esposito from âBreaking Badâ and Kathy Bates of âMiseryâ came out to represent an oddly key part of TV â the villains.
âWithout villains or antagonists, there wouldnât be much of a story,â Esposito said. But it takes its toll. âDo you know how hard it was to get a date after âMisery,'â Bates joked about her Stephen King role as a crazed kidnapper.
Esposito complained that drug dealers will interrupt his dinner to ask his advice about building their empires and Starr said so many 12-year-old critics have approached him to say his superhero is âbad.â He responds that the show has an R rating. âItâs sloppy, sloppy parenting,â he observed.
Moms and dads
Damon Wayans, who have all played memorable TV dads, gathered to recognize the lead actor in a comedy series. They walked into a mancave set and Lopez and Wayans said they wanted to thank their TV wives, but Ferguson balked, having starred with a TV husband instead on âModern Family.â âIâm so sorry, did you watch my show, or...?â he asked them. âYes, all 90 seasons,â Wayans responded.
Later, it was the momsâ turn. Meredith Baxter, who played the âFamily Tiesâ matriarch, Connie Britton of âFriday Night Lightsâ and Susan Kelechi Watson of âThis Is Usâ presented the award for best writing for a comedy series. âWe have come a long way,â said Baxter. âTV moms are no longer one-dimensional,â said Watson. âItâs OK to ask for as much as a TV dad.â
'Tuesday, Wednesday, happy days'
Director-producer Ron Howard and actor-author Henry Winkler reunited to celebrate the 50th anniversary of âHappy Days,â a romanticized take on teenage life in the 1950s that pivoted on adolescent humor about cars and dating.
Winkler, who played cool guy Fonzie with his signature âAaaayy!â with both thumbs up, and Howard, who played the goody-goody Richie Cunningham, became household names thanks to the sitcom, which ran from 1974â1980. Winkler went on to win an Emmy on HBOâs dark comedy âBarryâ and spread awareness about dyslexia as a best-selling author; Howard went on direct such Oscar-winners as âApollo 13â and âA Beautiful Mind.â
The two men met onstage in a set dressed like the diner the show was mostly set in. Winkler congratulated Howard for his Emmy-winning . But despite some prodding by Howard, Winkler wouldnât sing the theme song. âI'm out of practice,â he said. âAnd it takes schooling.â So Winkler nudged the jukebox with his elbow instead and the theme played.
Order & Law
The TV criminal justice system was represented Sunday by two separate but equal parts. There were the cops â Jimmy Smits of âNYPD Blue,â Niecy Nash-Betts of âReno 911!â and Don Johnson of âMiami Vice.â They appeared on a set with a New York City police car onstage. Smits noted that he died in episode one of âMiami Viceâ and later as a cast member of âNYPD Blue.â Nash-Betts said she never died: âIâm Black and I survived she joked.
And then there were the TV lawyers who took cases to court: Viola Davis of âHow to Get Away with Murder,â Gina Torres from âSuitsâ and Christine Baranski from âThe Good Wifeâ and âThe Good Fight.â (Though, to be honest, Smits was also a good lawyer in âL.A. Law.â)
âLawyers have seen every combination of the human condition,â Davis said. Added Torres: âIn so many ways, they try to better that human condition and uplift us.â
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Mark Kennedy, The Associated Press