The 58th Primetime Emmy Awards were held on Sunday, August 27, 2006, at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, California on NBC at 8:00 p.m. ET (00:00 UTC) with Conan O'Brien hosting the show. The ceremony attracted 16.2 million viewers, 2.5 million fewer than the previous year's ceremony, but still the ratings winner for the week.[1] The Discovery Channel received its first major nomination this year.
58th Primetime Emmy Awards | |
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Date |
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Location | Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles, California |
Presented by | Academy of Television Arts and Sciences |
Hosted by | Conan O'Brien |
Highlights | |
Most awards |
|
Most nominations | Mrs. Harris (7) |
Outstanding Comedy Series | The Office |
Outstanding Drama Series | 24 |
Outstanding Miniseries | Elizabeth I |
Outstanding Reality-Competition Program | The Amazing Race |
Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series | The Daily Show with Jon Stewart |
Website | http://www.emmys.com/ |
Television/radio coverage | |
Network | NBC |
Produced by | Ken Ehrlich |
Directed by | Louis J. Horvitz |
This awards show was the first in fourteen years to be held in August because of NBC's request; because of NBC Sunday Night Football, the ceremony moved to accommodate NFL Kickoff Weekend.
A new voting system determined nominees in particular categories (mostly lead acting and outstanding series categories) by a "blue ribbon" panel of judges, which resulted in the exclusion of popular shows such as Desperate Housewives and Lost, and actors like James Gandolfini and Edie Falco from The Sopranos and Hugh Laurie from House. Lost's exclusion was mocked during the opening sequence (see below), when O'Brien, accompanied by Hugo "Hurley" Reyes, heads down a hatch to get to the Emmys. O'Brien asked Reyes if he wanted to come; Reyes says coyly, "Well, we weren't exactly invited", to which O'Brien replies "But you won last year!"
For its second season, The Office won Outstanding Comedy Series; this was its only major award. No comedy series won more than two major awards this year. In the drama field, 24 won Outstanding Drama Series for its fifth season, after being nominated and losing the previous four years. It was also the first time the Fox Network won this award. Its three major awards topped all drama series. Its Outstanding Lead Actor, Drama award (for Kiefer Sutherland) was also the first time Fox had won this award.
Ellen Burstyn was nominated for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or Movie for her role in Mrs. Harris, even though she was onscreen for only fourteen seconds, which caused controversy.
The show that received the most major nominations was Mrs. Harris, with seven. The top-nominated show had not received so few nominations since 1970, when Marcus Welby, M.D. received six. However, there were far fewer nominations back then, with most categories having three slots making this ceremony unique.
The pilot episode of My Name Is Earl joined a select group of TV episodes to win for both directing and writing.
Winners and nominees
editWinners are listed first and highlighted in bold:[2]
Programs
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Acting
editLead performances
editSupporting performances
editDirecting
editWriting
editMost major nominations
editNetwork | No. of Nominations |
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HBO | 48 |
NBC | 27 |
CBS | 22 |
ABC | 15 |
Fox | 10 |
Program | Category | Network | No. of Nominations |
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Mrs. Harris | Movie | HBO | 7 |
Bleak House | Miniseries | PBS | 6 |
Elizabeth I | HBO | ||
24 | Drama | Fox | 5 |
Grey's Anatomy | ABC | ||
The Sopranos | HBO | ||
The West Wing | NBC | ||
The Colbert Report | Variety | Comedy Central | 4 |
Curb Your Enthusiasm | Comedy | HBO | |
Entourage | |||
The Girl in the Café | Movie | ||
Six Feet Under | Drama | ||
Arrested Development | Comedy | Fox | 3 |
The Daily Show with Jon Stewart | Variety | Comedy Central | |
Flight 93 | Movie | A&E | |
Late Show with David Letterman | Variety | CBS | |
My Name Is Earl | Comedy | NBC | |
The Office | |||
Two and a Half Men | CBS | ||
Will & Grace | NBC | ||
American Idol | Competition | Fox | 2 |
Boston Legal | Drama | ABC | |
The Comeback | Comedy | HBO | |
Huff | Drama | Showtime | |
Human Trafficking | Miniseries | Lifetime | |
Late Night with Conan O'Brien | Variety | NBC | |
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit | Drama | ||
Lost | ABC | ||
Malcolm in the Middle | Comedy | Fox | |
Real Time with Bill Maher | Variety | HBO | |
Thief | Miniseries | FX | |
Weeds | Comedy | Showtime |
Most major awards
editNetwork | No. of Awards |
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HBO | 9 |
NBC | 6 |
Fox | 3 |
CBS | 2 |
Comedy Central |
Program | Category | Network | No. of Awards |
---|---|---|---|
Elizabeth I | Miniseries | HBO | 4 |
24 | Drama | Fox | 3 |
The Girl in the Café | Movie | HBO | |
The Daily Show with Jon Stewart | Variety | Comedy Central | 2 |
My Name Is Earl | Comedy | NBC |
- Notes
- ^ a b "Major" constitutes the categories listed above: Program, Acting, Directing, and Writing. Does not include the technical categories.
Presenters and performers
editPresenters
editThe awards were presented by the following people:[3]
Performers
editName(s) | Performed |
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Barry Manilow | "Bandstand Boogie" |
Opening sequence and subsequent controversy
editThe plane crash Lost parody
editThe opening sequence of the 58th Primetime Emmy Awards show depicted host Conan O'Brien wearing a tuxedo, sitting in luxury on a plane, sipping champagne and mentioning to the flight attendant that this would be the second Emmy's ceremony that he would be hosting. O'Brien then rhetorically asked the flight attendant, "What could possibly go wrong?" Immediately after that, the plane began to experience turbulence and then was portrayed as having crashed on (or near) an island. O'Brien is then seen walking ashore on the beach and onto the island still wearing his (now drenched) tuxedo. Hurley appears and then follows O'Brien to a hatch. When O'Brien asks if he wants to come along, Hurley says that they "weren't exactly invited". O'Brien enters the hatch and arrives on the set of The Office.
The intention of this opening sequence was to parody the premise of the ABC series Lost. However, the sequence reportedly disturbed some viewers because of the Comair Flight 5191 disaster that had occurred earlier in the day. Cincinnati NBC affiliate WLWT-TV had the unfortunate coincidence of running a "Breaking News" scroll about the crash at the same time as the scene was airing.[4]
Entertainment industry critics, such as LA Weekly columnist Nikki Finke, lambasted NBC's decision to not pull the plane crash portion of the opening sequence, in light of the aforementioned crash earlier that day. Finke stated that she believed NBC could have—with relative ease—instructed their writers to come up with a different sketch at the last minute, which could have been used as a substitute.
Other parodies
editThe skit also parodied shows such as The Office, 24, House, South Park, and Dateline NBC (specifically, the "To Catch a Predator" segments). An animated Tom Cruise from the South Park episode "Trapped in the Closet" appears in a skit where an animated O'Brien hides in Stan Marsh's closet, only to run away when he discovers Cruise has already occupied the closet.
Tributes
editThe show featured tributes to two TV legends: Dick Clark ("America's Oldest Teenager"), and Aaron Spelling, producer of such classic TV shows as Dynasty and Beverly Hills, 90210. The former tribute was presented by Simon Cowell, American Idol judge, with a performance by Barry Manilow, who won a Primetime Emmy Award later that evening. Joan Collins, Heather Locklear, and Stephen Collins, along with the original three Charlie's Angels, gave the tribute for Spelling.
In Memoriam
edit- Dennis Weaver
- Barnard Hughes
- Mrs. Philo T. Farnsworth
- Don Adams
- Dan Curtis
- Lew Anderson
- Ralph Edwards
- Curt Gowdy
- Robert Sterling
- Michael Piller
- Red Buttons
- Mike Douglas
- Scott Brazil
- Anthony Franciosa
- Phyllis Huffman
- Darren McGavin
- Gloria Monty
- Jan Murray
- Pat Morita
- Al Lewis
- Maureen Stapleton
- Buck Owens
- Jack Warden
- Don Knotts
- Robert Wise
- John Spencer
- Louis Nye
- Shelley Winters
- Richard Pryor
References
edit- ^ "Entertainment – Los Angeles Times". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ Emmys.com list of 2006 Nominees & Winners
- ^ "Eva Longoria Added To Emmy Presenter List". Access. August 8, 2006. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
- ^ Recording of 2006 Emmy Award opening with a "Breaking News" scroll of a real life plane crash (Youtube). August 27, 2006. Archived from the original on 2021-12-17. Retrieved May 25, 2020.