49th Primetime Emmy Awards
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. In winning Law & Order became the first drama series that did not have serialized story arcs since Hill Street Blues perfected the formula. Law & Order remains the only non-serialized winner since 1981.
Ratings champion ER also made Emmy history on the night, but not in the way it had hoped. ER came into the ceremony with 17 major nominations, the most on the night and, at that point, second most ever for a comedy or drama series. Unfortunately, the series never heard its name called, going 0/17 in major categories, smashing the record for largest shutout in major categories set by Northern Exposure in 1993, which went 0/11. Fortunately for ER, it did win 3 Creative Arts awards to bring its total output to 3/21, this meant that Northern Exposure still held the title for worst total shutout with an 0/16 tally.
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.
Winners and nominees
[1]
Programs
Acting
Lead performances
Supporting performances
Guest performances
Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series |
Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series |
- Mel Brooks as Uncle Phil on Mad About You (Episode: "The Penis"), (NBC)
- Sid Caesar as Harold on Mad About You (Episode: "Citizen Buchman"), (NBC)
- David Duchovny as Himself on The Larry Sanders Show (Episode: "Everybody Loves Larry"), (HBO)
- James Earl Jones as Norman on Frasier (Episode: "Roz's Krantz and Gouldenstein are Dead"), (NBC)
- Jerry Stiller as Frank Costanza on Seinfeld, (NBC)
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- Carol Burnett as Teresa on Mad About You (Episode: "Outbreak"), (NBC)
- Ellen DeGeneres as Herself on The Larry Sanders Show (Episode: "Ellen, Or Isn't She?"), (HBO)
- Laura Dern as Susan Richmond on Ellen (Episode: "The Puppy Episode"), (ABC)
- Marsha Mason as Sherry on Frasier (Episode: "Dad Loves Sherry, The Boys Just Whine"), (NBC)
- Betty White as Midge Haber on Suddenly Susan (Episode: "Golden Girl Friday"), (NBC)
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Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series |
Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series |
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Directing
Writing
Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series |
Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series |
- Ellen DeGeneres, Mark Driscoll, Dava Savel, Tracy Newman, Jonathan Stark for Ellen (Episode: "The Puppy Episode"), (ABC)
- Judd Apatow, John Markus, Garry Shandling for The Larry Sanders Show (Episode: "Ellen, or Isn't She?"), (HBO)
- Peter Mehlman, Jill Franklyn for Seinfeld (Episode: "The Yada Yada"), (NBC)
- Peter Tolan for The Larry Sanders Show (Episode: "My Name is Asher Kingsley"), (HBO)
- Jon Vitti for The Larry Sanders Show (Episode: "Everybody Loves Larry"), (HBO)
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Outstanding Writing for a Variety or Music Program |
Outstanding Writing for a Miniseries or a Special |
- Chris Rock: Bring the Pain, (HBO)
- Dennis Miller Live, (HBO)
- Late Night with Conan O'Brien (Episode: "3rd Anniversary Special"), (NBC)
- Late Show with David Letterman, (CBS)
- Politically Incorrect, (Comedy Central)
- Tracey Takes On... (Episode: "Vegas"), (HBO)
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Most major nominations
- By network [note 1]
- NBC – 50
- HBO – 41
- CBS – 21
- ABC – 19
- By program
- ER (NBC) – 17
- The Larry Sanders Show (HBO) – 12
- NYPD Blue (ABC) – 8
- Seinfeld (NBC) – 7
- Chicago Hope (CBS) / Frasier (NBC) / Mad About You (NBC) / Miss Evers' Boys (HBO) – 6
Most major awards
- By network [note 1]
- NBC – 11
- HBO – 7
- ABC – 6
- CBS – 2
- PBS – 2
- By program
- NYPD Blue (ABC) – 4
- Mad About You (NBC) – 3
- Notes
- 1 2 "Major" constitutes the categories listed above: Program, Acting, Directing, and Writing. Does not include the technical categories.
References
External links