Andrew Scott in running for Emmy as Shōgun set to reign

admin admin | 09-15 16:15

Andrew Scott is in the running to win a best actor Emmy award this Sunday night, while the historical epic Shōgun is tipped to make history as the first non-English-language winner for best drama.

The Dublin star has been nominated for his mesmerisingly unsettling performance as Tom Ripley in the Netflix miniseries Ripley, making him the solo Irish actor to be in the running for an Emmy this year.

The moodily shot black-and-white series, which was created, written and directed by Steven Zaillian and was based on Patricia Highsmith's 1955 novel The Talented Mr. Ripley, is also nominated in the Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series category.

Read more: Streaming of you: Irish influence in on-demand world

Although his performance has been widely acclaimed, Scott is up against some tough competition in the Best Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or a TV Movie category.

Andrew Scott faces tough competition to win an Emmy for his role in Ripley

He will compete against Jon Hamm, one of the favourites to win for his commanding role in Fargo, Richard Gadd (Baby Reindeer), Matt Bomer (Fellow Travelers) and Tom Hollander (Feud: Capote vs The Swans).

Meanwhile, Shōgun is tipped to become the first ever non-English-language winner of the Emmy for best drama.

The epic series about feuding dynasties in the intricate and deadly royal courts of 17th-century Japan is expected to make history with wins for its cast, including veteran leading man Hiroyuki Sanada, at the gala in downtown Los Angeles.

Shōgun hit the ground running at the Creative Arts Emmys this past weekend, notching a record-breaking 14 wins in technical and smaller categories, which are handed out ahead of the gala.

Sunday's other big winners could include The Bear, a dark comedy set in the Chicago restaurant scene that returned for an experimental second season, and Netflix's controversial limited series Baby Reindeer.

Father-and-son acting duo Eugene and Daniel Levy will host the ceremony, from 5:00 pm (0400 GMT Monday).

Here are four things to look out for:

Shōgun to reign?

Based on James Clavell's historical fiction novel, Shōgun led the nominations with 25 overall.

Though produced by Disney-owned FX, and shot in Canada, it features Japanese cast and subtitled dialogue, making it only the second non-English-language show to earn a best drama nomination, after South Korea's Squid Game two years ago.

In addition to the night's biggest prize, for best drama series, wins are predicted for stars Sanada and Anna Sawai. And supporting actor Tadanobu Asano could ride the Shōgun wave to victory for his villainous turn as the brutal Kashigi Yabushige.

With its wins in the minor categories, Shōgun has already eclipsed the previous record of 12 set by Game of Thrones for number of Emmys for a drama in a single season. It is nearly certain to tack on a few more on Sunday.

Its biggest rival this year is former drama winner The Crown. The final season of Netflix's British royal saga drew a lukewarm response from critics, but Elizabeth Debicki is tipped for best supporting actress as princess Diana.

Comedy? Yes, chef

In the comedy sections, The Bear and its foodie chefs played by Jeremy Allen White and Ebon Moss-Bachrach look primed for more Emmys glory.

The show's intense debut season dominated the last Emmys, and its even more acclaimed and ambitious second season is eligible this time around.

It scooped up seven prizes in minor categories, including a best guest actress award for Oscar winner Jamie Lee Curtis.

If there is any suspense, it may be over whether the show should even be considered a comedy. Jokes are few and far between in a series dealing with hard-hitting issues from death and mourning to betrayal and emotional abuse.

HBO's Hacks is expected to limit The Bear rampage, with Jean Smart and Hannah Einbinder looking like frontrunners for their roles as a diva comedienne and her dysfunctional millennial assistant.

'True story'?

Based on a relatively unknown Scottish comedian's harrowing one-man show about sexual abuse, Baby Reindeer became a huge word-of-mouth hit for Netflix this year.

Part of the attention stemmed from the show's claim to be "a true story" - an insistence that earned the streamer a $170 million lawsuit from a British woman who claims she was the inspiration for its obsessive and violent stalker.

But controversy aside, pundits predict Emmy voters will choose Baby Reindeer as best limited series, and its creator Richard Gadd goes head-to-head with Andrew Scott (Ripley) and Jon Hamm (Fargo) for best actor.

The limited series section, for shows that end in a single season, always draws A-list Hollywood stars, and this year is no exception.

Jodie Foster is a best actress favorite for her turn as an Alaskan cop in True Detective: Night Country, up against fellow Oscar winner Brie Larson, as a pioneering female chemist in Lessons in Chemistry.

Strike silver lining?

Unusually, the 76th Emmy Awards will be the second Emmys gala held this year, after the previous edition was shunted to January due to last summer's Hollywood strikes.

That months-long walkout by actors and writers also crimped the pipeline of new shows that could be released in time for this edition, meaning submissions dropped by a third year-on-year.

With several bigger series skipping this year - and others such as Succession having ended their runs - could this be an opportunity for new titles like Fallout and Mr and Mrs Smith to shine?

Potentially. But even Shōgun is a remake of sorts. A previous miniseries based on the same novel, which aired way back in 1980, won three Emmys.

The Primetime Emmy Awards take place in Los Angeles on Sunday 15 September.

Source: AFP

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