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Contents

  • (Top)
  • 1 Winners and nominees
    • 1.1 Programs
    • 1.2 Performing
    • 1.3 Animation
    • 1.4 Art Direction
    • 1.5 Casting
    • 1.6 Choreography
    • 1.7 Cinematography
    • 1.8 Commercial
    • 1.9 Costumes
    • 1.10 Directing
    • 1.11 Hairstyling
    • 1.12 Lighting Design / Lighting Direction
    • 1.13 Main Title and Motion Design
    • 1.14 Makeup
    • 1.15 Music
    • 1.16 Picture Editing
    • 1.17 Sound Editing
    • 1.18 Sound Mixing
    • 1.19 Special Visual Effects
    • 1.20 Stunts
    • 1.21 Technical Direction
    • 1.22 Writing
    • 1.23 Nominations and wins by program
    • 1.24 Nominations and wins by network
  • 2 Ceremony information
    • 2.1 Category changes
  • 3 Notes
  • 4 References
  • 5 External links

75th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2023 American television programming awards for creative arts
For the main ceremony, see 75th Primetime Emmy Awards.

75th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards
DateJanuary 6–7, 2024
Location
  • Peacock Theater
  • Los Angeles, California
Presented byAcademy of Television Arts & Sciences
Most awardsThe Last of Us (8)
Most nominationsThe Last of Us (19)
Television/radio coverage
NetworkFXX
← 74th · Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards · 76th →

The 75th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards honored the best in artistic and technical achievement in American prime time television programming from June 1, 2022, until May 31, 2023, as chosen by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.[1] The awards were presented on January 6 and 7, 2024, after being postponed from September 9 and 10, 2023, due to the 2023 Hollywood labor disputes.[2][3] Nominations were announced on July 12, 2023.[4][5]

FXX holds the U.S. rights to broadcast the Creative Arts Emmy Awards.[6]

Winners and nominees

[edit]

Winners are listed first, highlighted in boldface, and indicated with a double dagger (‡).[7][8][9][10][a] Sections are based upon the categories listed in the 2022–2023 Emmy rules and procedures.[1] Area awards and juried awards are denoted next to the category names as applicable.[b] For simplicity, producers who received nominations for program awards have been omitted.

At these Emmys Natalie Kingston became the first female cinematographer to win an Emmy award.[11]

Programs

[edit]
Programs
Outstanding Television Movie
  • Weird: The Al Yankovic Story (The Roku Channel)‡
    • Dolly Parton's Mountain Magic Christmas (NBC)
    • Fire Island (Hulu)
    • Hocus Pocus 2 (Disney+)
    • Prey (Hulu)
Outstanding Variety Special (Pre-Recorded)
  • Carol Burnett: 90 Years of Laughter + Love (NBC)‡
    • John Mulaney: Baby J (Netflix)
    • Lizzo: Live in Concert (Max)
    • Norman Lear: 100 Years of Music & Laughter (ABC)
    • Trevor Noah: I Wish You Would (Netflix)
    • Wanda Sykes: I'm an Entertainer (Netflix)
Outstanding Game Show
  • Jeopardy! (ABC / Syndicated)‡
    • Family Feud (ABC / Syndicated)
    • The Price Is Right (CBS)
    • That's My Jam (NBC)
    • Wheel of Fortune (Syndicated)
Outstanding Animated Program
  • The Simpsons: "Treehouse of Horror XXXIII" (Fox)‡
    • Bob's Burgers: "The Plight Before Christmas" (Fox)
    • Entergalactic (Netflix)
    • Genndy Tartakovsky's Primal: "Shadow of Fate" (Adult Swim)
    • Rick and Morty: "Night Family" (Adult Swim)
Outstanding Structured Reality Program
  • Queer Eye (Netflix)‡
    • Antiques Roadshow (PBS)
    • Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives (Food Network)
    • Love Is Blind (Netflix)
    • Shark Tank (ABC)
Outstanding Unstructured Reality Program
  • Welcome to Wrexham (FX)‡
    • Indian Matchmaking (Netflix)
    • RuPaul's Drag Race: Untucked (MTV)
    • Selling Sunset (Netflix)
    • Vanderpump Rules (Bravo)
Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series (Area)
  • The 1619 Project (Hulu)‡
    • Dear Mama (FX)
    • 100 Foot Wave (HBO)
    • Secrets of the Elephants (Nat Geo)
    • The U.S. and the Holocaust (PBS)
Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special (Area)
  • Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie (Apple TV+)‡
    • Being Mary Tyler Moore (HBO)
    • Judy Blume Forever (Prime Video)
    • My Transparent Life (Prime Video)
    • Pamela, a Love Story (Netflix)
Outstanding Hosted Nonfiction Series or Special (Area)
  • Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy (CNN)‡
    • The Light We Carry: Michelle Obama and Oprah Winfrey (Netflix)
    • My Next Guest with David Letterman and Volodymyr Zelenskyy (Netflix)
    • Taste the Nation with Padma Lakshmi (Hulu)
    • United Shades of America with W. Kamau Bell (CNN)
Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking (Juried)
  • The Territory (Nat Geo)‡
    • The Accused: Damned or Devoted? (PBS)
    • Aftershock (Hulu)
    • Last Flight Home (Paramount+)
Outstanding Short Form Comedy, Drama or Variety Series
  • I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson (Netflix)‡
    • Awkwafina is Hangin' with Grandma (Comedy Central)
    • Better Call Saul: Filmmaker Training (AMC)
    • Carpool Karaoke: The Series (Apple TV+)
    • Only Murders in the Building: One Killer Question (Hulu)
Outstanding Short Form Nonfiction or Reality Series
  • Succession: Controlling the Narrative (HBO)‡
    • House of the Dragon: Inside the Episode (HBO)
    • The Last of Us: Inside the Episode (HBO)
    • Saturday Night Live Presents: Behind the Sketch (NBC)
    • The White Lotus: Unpacking the Episode (HBO)
Outstanding Emerging Media Program
  • For All Mankind Season 3 Experience (Apple TV+)‡
    • Gorillaz Presents (Google)
    • MLK: Now Is the Time (Oculus)
    • The Notorious B.I.G Sky's the Limit: A VR Concert Experience (Facebook / Meta Horizon Worlds)
    • You Destroy. We Create | The War on Ukraine's Culture (Meta Quest TV)
Outstanding Innovation in Emerging Media Programming (Juried)
No award given[12]

Performing

[edit]
Performing
Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series
  • Sam Richardson – Ted Lasso: "International Break" as Edwin Akufo (Apple TV+)‡
    • Jon Bernthal – The Bear: "Braciole" as Michael "Mikey" Berzatto (FX)
    • Luke Kirby – The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: "Four Minutes" as Lenny Bruce (Prime Video)
    • Nathan Lane – Only Murders in the Building: "Here's Looking at You" as Teddy Dimas (Hulu)
    • Pedro Pascal – Saturday Night Live: "Host: Pedro Pascal" as host (NBC)
    • Oliver Platt – The Bear: "Dogs" as Jimmy "Cicero" Kalinowski (FX)
Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series
  • Judith Light – Poker Face: "Time of the Monkey" as Irene Smothers (Peacock)‡
    • Becky Ann Baker – Ted Lasso: "Mom City" as Dottie Lasso (Apple TV+)
    • Quinta Brunson – Saturday Night Live: "Host: Quinta Brunson" as host (NBC)
    • Taraji P. Henson – Abbott Elementary: "Mom" as Vanetta Teagues (ABC)
    • Sarah Niles – Ted Lasso: "Smells Like Mean Spirit" as Dr. Sharon M. Fieldstone (Apple TV+)
    • Harriet Walter – Ted Lasso: "So Long, Farewell" as Deborah (Apple TV+)
Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series
  • Nick Offerman – The Last of Us: "Long, Long Time" as Bill (HBO)‡
    • Murray Bartlett – The Last of Us: "Long, Long Time" as Frank (HBO)
    • James Cromwell – Succession: "Church and State" as Ewan Roy (HBO)
    • Lamar Johnson – The Last of Us: "Endure and Survive" as Henry (HBO)
    • Arian Moayed – Succession: "Honeymoon States" as Stewy Hosseini (HBO)
    • Keivonn Montreal Woodard – The Last of Us: "Endure and Survive" as Sam (HBO)
Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series
  • Storm Reid – The Last of Us: "Left Behind" as Riley Abel (HBO)‡
    • Hiam Abbass – Succession: "Honeymoon States" as Marcia (HBO)
    • Cherry Jones – Succession: "The Munsters" as Nan Pierce (HBO)
    • Melanie Lynskey – The Last of Us: "Endure and Survive" as Kathleen (HBO)
    • Anna Torv – The Last of Us: "Infected" as Theresa "Tess" Servopoulos (HBO)
    • Harriet Walter – Succession: "Church and State" as Lady Caroline Collingwood (HBO)
Outstanding Actor in a Short Form Comedy or Drama Series
  • Tim Robinson – I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson as various characters (Netflix)‡
    • Kevin Hart – Die Hart 2: Die Harter as Kevin Hart (The Roku Channel)
    • Ben Schwartz – Die Hart 2: Die Harter as Andre (The Roku Channel)
Outstanding Actress in a Short Form Comedy or Drama Series
  • Jasmine Guy – Chronicles of Jessica Wu as Barbara Baldwin (Prime Video)‡
    • Nathalie Emmanuel – Die Hart 2: Die Harter as Jordan King (The Roku Channel)
    • Paula Pell – Die Hart 2: Die Harter as Cynthia (The Roku Channel)
Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance
  • Maya Rudolph – Big Mouth: "Asexual Healing" as Connie the Hormone Monstress (Netflix)‡
    • Julie Andrews – Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story: "Honeymoon Bliss" as Lady Whistledown (Netflix)
    • Alex Borstein – Family Guy: "A Bottle Episode" as Lois Griffin (Fox)
    • Mel Brooks – History of the World, Part II: "VIII" as Narrator (Hulu)
    • Wanda Sykes – Crank Yankers: "Wanda Sykes, JB Smoove & Adam Carolla" as Gladys Murphy (Comedy Central)
    • Ali Wong – Tuca & Bertie: "Fledging Day" as Bertie (Adult Swim)
Outstanding Narrator
  • Barack Obama – Working: What We Do All Day: "The Middle" (Netflix)‡
    • Mahershala Ali – Chimp Empire: "Reckoning" (Netflix)
    • Angela Bassett – Good Night Oppy (Prime Video)
    • Morgan Freeman – Our Universe: "Chasing Starlight" (Netflix)
    • Pedro Pascal – Patagonia: Life on the Edge of the World: "Mountains" (CNN)
Outstanding Host for a Game Show
  • Keke Palmer – Password (NBC)‡
    • Mayim Bialik – Jeopardy! (ABC / Syndicated)
    • Steve Harvey – Family Feud (ABC / Syndicated)
    • Ken Jennings – Jeopardy! (ABC / Syndicated)
    • Pat Sajak – Wheel of Fortune (Syndicated)
Outstanding Host for a Reality or Competition Program
  • RuPaul – RuPaul's Drag Race (MTV)‡
    • Karamo Brown, Antoni Porowski, Tan France, Bobby Berk, and Jonathan Van Ness – Queer Eye (Netflix)
    • Nicole Byer – Nailed It! (Netflix)
    • Padma Lakshmi – Top Chef (Bravo)
    • Amy Poehler and Maya Rudolph – Baking It (Peacock)

Animation

[edit]
Animation
Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation (Juried)
  • Entergalactic – Meybis Ruiz Cruz (Netflix)‡
  • More Than I Want to Remember – Maya Edelman (Paramount+)‡
  • The Simpsons: "Lisa the Boy Scout" – Nik Ranieri (Fox)‡
  • Star Wars: Visions: "Screecher's Reach" – Almu Redondo (Disney+)‡

Art Direction

[edit]
Art Direction
Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Contemporary Program (One Hour or More) (Area)
  • Wednesday: "Wednesday's Child Is Full of Woe" – Mark Scruton, Adrian Curelea, and Robert Hepburn (Netflix)‡
    • The Last of Us: "Infected" – John Paino, Don Macaulay, and Paul Healy (HBO)
    • Poker Face: "The Orpheus Syndrome" – Judy Rhee, Martha Sparrow, and Cathy Marshall (Peacock)
    • Succession: "America Decides" – Stephen H. Carter, Molly Mikula, and George DeTitta Jr. (HBO)
    • Ted Lasso: "Sunflowers" – Paul Cripps, Iain White, and Kate Goodman (Apple TV+)
    • The White Lotus: "Ciao" – Cristina Onori, Gianpaolo Rifino, and Letizia Santucci (HBO)
Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Period or Fantasy Program (One Hour or More) (Area)
  • Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities – Tamara Deverell, Brandt Gordon, and Shane Vieau (Netflix)‡
    • Daisy Jones & the Six: "Track 10: Rock 'n' Roll Suicide" – Jessica Kender, Brian Grego, Lisa Clark, and Andi Brittan (Prime Video)
    • House of the Dragon: "The Heirs of the Dragon" – Jim Clay, Dominic Masters, and Claire Nia Richards (HBO)
    • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: "Susan" – Bill Groom, Neil Prince, and Ellen Christiansen (Prime Video)
    • Perry Mason: "Chapter Eleven" – Keith P. Cunningham, Ian Scroggins, and Halina Siwolop (HBO)
Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Program (Half-Hour) (Area)
  • Only Murders in the Building: "Sparring Partners" / "I Know Who Did It" – Patrick Howe, Jordan Jacobs, and Rich Murray (Hulu)‡
    • The Bear: "System" – Sam Lisenco, Eric Dean, and Emily Carter (FX)
    • How I Met Your Father: "The Reset Button" / "Ride or Die" / "Daddy" – Glenda Rovello, Conny Boettger-Marinos, and Amy Beth Feldman (Hulu)
    • Schmigadoon!: "Famous as Hell" – Jamie Walker McCall, Ryan Garton, Gregory Clarke, and Carol Lavallee (Apple TV+)
    • What We Do in the Shadows: "The Night Market" – Shayne Fox, Aaron Noël, and Kerri Wylie (FX)
Outstanding Production Design for a Variety, Reality or Competition Series (Area)
  • Saturday Night Live: "Host: Steve Martin & Martin Short" / "Host: Jenna Ortega" – Akira Yoshimura, Keith Ian Raywood, Andrea Purcigliotti, and Danielle Webb (NBC)‡
    • A Black Lady Sketch Show: "Peek-A-Boob, Your Titty's Out" – Cindy Chao, Michele Yu, and Lizzie Boyle (HBO)
    • Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: "Museums" – Eric Morrell and Sabrina Lederer (HBO)
    • Queer Eye: "Speedy for Life" – Thomas Rouse and Tyka Edwards (Netflix)
    • RuPaul's Drag Race: "Blame It on the Edit" – Gianna Costa and Brad Bailey (MTV)
Outstanding Production Design for a Variety Special (Area)
  • The Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show Starring Rihanna – Bruce Rodgers, Shelley Rodgers, Lindsey Breslauer, Maria Garcia, and Lily Rodgers (Fox)‡
    • Carol Burnett: 90 Years of Laughter + Love – Tamlyn Wright and Travis Deck (NBC)
    • Encanto at the Hollywood Bowl – Misty Buckley, Joe Celli, and Raquel Tarbet (Disney+)
    • The 65th Annual Grammy Awards – Julio Himede and Kristen Merlino (CBS)
    • The Oscars – Misty Buckley, Alana Billingsley, and John Zuiker (ABC)

Casting

[edit]
Casting
Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series
  • The Bear – Jeanie Bacharach, Jennifer Rudnicke, Mickie Paskal, and AJ Links (FX)‡
    • Abbott Elementary – Wendy O'Brien and Chris Gehrt (ABC)
    • Jury Duty – Susie Farris (Amazon Freevee)
    • Only Murders in the Building – Bernard Telsey, Tiffany Little Canfield, and Destiny Lilly (Hulu)
    • Ted Lasso – Theo Park (Apple TV+)
Outstanding Casting for a Drama Series
  • The White Lotus – Meredith Tucker, Francesco Vedovati, and Barbara Giordani (HBO)‡
    • Bad Sisters – Nina Gold and Lucy Amos (Apple TV+)
    • The Crown – Robert Sterne (Netflix)
    • The Last of Us – Victoria Thomas, Corinne Clark, and Jennifer Page (HBO)
    • Succession – Avy Kaufman (HBO)
    • Yellowjackets – Junie Lowry Johnson, Libby Goldstein, Corinne Clark, and Jennifer Page (Showtime)
Outstanding Casting for a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie
  • Beef – Charlene Lee and Claire Koonce (Netflix)‡
    • Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story – Robert J. Ulrich, Eric Dawson, and Carol Kritzer (Netflix)
    • Daisy Jones & the Six – Justine Arteta and Kim Davis-Wagner (Prime Video)
    • Fleishman Is in Trouble – Laura Rosenthal and Jodi Angstreich (FX)
    • Weird: The Al Yankovic Story – Wendy O'Brien (The Roku Channel)
Outstanding Casting for a Reality Program
  • The Traitors – Erin Tomasello, Jazzy Collins, Moira Paris, and Holly Osifat (Peacock)‡
    • Love Is Blind – Donna Driscoll, Stephanie Lewis, and Claire Loeb (Netflix)
    • Queer Eye – Quinn Fegan, Jessica Jorgensen, Keya Mason, and Lauren Levine (Netflix)
    • RuPaul's Drag Race – Goloka Bolte, Ethan Petersen, Adam Cook, and Michelle Redwine (MTV)
    • Top Chef – Ron Mare, Sena Rich, and Erinlee Skilton (Bravo)

Choreography

[edit]
Choreography
Outstanding Choreography for Variety or Reality Programming (Juried)
  • Dancing with the Stars: "Higher" – Derek Hough (Disney+)‡
    • Beauty and the Beast: A 30th Celebration: "Be Our Guest" – Jamal Sims, Phillip Chbeeb, and Makenzie Dustman (ABC)
    • Beauty and the Beast: A 30th Celebration: "Rose Petal Suite Pt. I" – Phillip Chbeeb and Makenzie Dustman (ABC)
    • Encanto at the Hollywood Bowl: "The Family Madrigal" / "Surface Pressure" – Jamal Sims (Disney+)
    • Savage X Fenty Show Vol. 4: "Chameleon" / "Pride Rock" – Parris Goebel (Prime Video)
Outstanding Choreography for Scripted Programming (Juried)
  • Blindspotting: "The History" / "San Quentin Blues" – Jon Boogz (Starz)‡
    • Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies: "New Cool" / "Hand Jive" / "The Boom" – Jamal Sims (Paramount+)
    • Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies: "Pulling Strings" / "Hit Me Again" / "High Rollin'" – Jeffrey Mortensen and Louise Hradsky (Paramount+)
    • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: "Trash Man" / "Dream Kitchen" – Marguerite Derricks (Prime Video)
    • Schmigadoon!: "Bells and Whistles" / "Good Enough to Eat" / "Bustin' Out" – Christopher Gattelli (Apple TV+)

Cinematography

[edit]
Cinematography
Outstanding Cinematography for a Series (Half-Hour)
  • Atlanta: "Andrew Wyeth. Alfred's World." – Christian Sprenger (FX)‡
    • Barry: "tricky legacies" – Carl Herse (HBO)
    • How I Met Your Father: "Daddy" – Gary Baum (Hulu)
    • The Mandalorian: "Chapter 20: The Foundling" – Dean Cundey (Disney+)
    • Only Murders in the Building: "I Know Who Did It" – Chris Teague (Hulu)
    • Schmigadoon!: "Something Real" – Jon Joffin (Apple TV+)
Outstanding Cinematography for a Series (One Hour)
  • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: "Four Minutes" – M. David Mullen (Prime Video)‡
    • Andor: "Rix Road" – Damián García (Disney+)
    • The Crown: "Mou Mou" – Adriano Goldman (Netflix)
    • House of the Dragon: "The Lord of the Tides" – Catherine Goldschmidt (HBO)
    • The Old Man: "I" – Sean Porter (FX)
    • Wednesday: "Woe What a Night" – David Lanzenberg (Netflix)
Outstanding Cinematography for a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie
  • Black Bird: "Hand to Mouth" – Natalie Kingston (Apple TV+)‡
    • Boston Strangler – Ben Kutchins (Hulu)
    • Dead Ringers: "One" – Jody Lee Lipes (Prime Video)
    • George & Tammy: "Stand by Your Man" – Igor Martinovic (Showtime)
    • Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities: "The Autopsy" – Anastas Michos (Netflix)
Outstanding Cinematography for a Nonfiction Program
  • 100 Foot Wave: "Chapter VI – Force Majeure" – Antoine Chicoye, Mikey Corker, Vincent Kardasik, Alexandre Lesbats, Chris Smith, Laurent Pujol, João Vidinha, and Michael Darrigade (HBO)‡
    • Secrets of the Elephants: "Desert" – Toby Strong, James Boon, and Bob Poole (Nat Geo)
    • The 1619 Project: "Justice" – Jerry Henry (Hulu)
    • Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy: "Calabria" – Andrew Muggleton (CNN)
    • Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie – C. Kim Miles, Clair Popkin, and Julia Liu (Apple TV+)
    • The Territory – Alex Pritz and Tangãi Uru-eu-wau-wa (Nat Geo)
Outstanding Cinematography for a Reality Program
  • Welcome to Wrexham: "Do or Die" – Alastair McKevitt, Craig Hastings, Leighton Cox, and Jason Bulley (FX)‡
    • The Amazing Race – Joshua Gitersonke, Bryan T. Adams, Kathryn Barrows, Josh Bartel, Kurt Carpenter, David D'Angelo, Matthew Di Girolamo, Adam Haisinger, Robert Howsam, Kevin R. Johnson, Jay Kaufman, Ian Kerr, Daniel Long, Lucas Kenna Mertes, Ryan Shaw, and Alan Weeks (CBS)
    • Deadliest Catch: "Call of a New Generation" – David Reichert, Charlie Beck, Bryan Miller, Todd Stanley, Shane Moore, Nathan Garofalos, and David Arnold (Discovery Channel)
    • Life Below Zero: "The Pursuit" – Danny Day, Simeon Houtman, Jason Hubbell, Ben Mullin, and Zach Vincent (Nat Geo)
    • Survivor – Peter Wery, Scott Duncan, Russ Fill, George Andrews, Tim Barker, Marc Bennett, Paulo Castillo, Rodney Chauvin, Chris Ellison, Nixon George, Matthias Hoffmann, Toby Hogan, Derek Holt, Efrain "Mofi" Laguna, Ian Miller, Nico Nyoni, Paul Peddinghaus, Jeff Phillips, Nejc Poberaj, Daniel Powell, Louis Powell, Jovan Sales, Erick Sarmiento, Dirk Steyn, John Tattersall, Holly Thompson, Paulo Velozo, Cullum Andrews, Christopher Barker, Granger Scholtz, Nic Van Der Westhuizen, and Dwight Winston (CBS)

Commercial

[edit]
Commercial
Outstanding Commercial
  • "The Greatest – Accessibility" – Somesuch and Apple (Apple)‡
    • "Call Me with Timothée Chalamet" – MJZ and Media Arts Lab (Apple TV+)
    • "Cost of Beauty" – Smuggler and Ogilvy (Dove)
    • "Forever" – Sanctuary (The Farmer's Dog)
    • "Quiet the Noise" – Iconoclast TV and Media Arts Lab (AirPods)
    • "R.I.P. Leon" – Biscuit Filmworks and Apple (Apple)
    • "The Singularity" – Smuggler and Squarespace (Squarespace)

Costumes

[edit]
Costumes
Outstanding Period Costumes for a Series (Area)
  • The Great: "Choose Your Weapon" – Sharon Long, Claire Tremlett, Basia Kuznar, and Anna Lau (Hulu)‡
    • The Crown: "Mou Mou" – Amy Roberts, Sidonie Roberts, and Christof Roche-Gordon (Netflix)
    • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: "Susan" – Donna Zakowska, Katie Hartsoe, Ben Philipp, Amanda Seymour, Claire Aquila, and Marie Seifts (Prime Video)
    • Perry Mason: "Chapter Ten" – Catherine Adair, David J. Matwijkow, and Nanrose Buchman (HBO)
    • Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story: "Crown Jewels" – Lyn Elizabeth Paolo, Laura Frecon, Jovana Gospavic, and Alex Locke (Netflix)
Outstanding Period Costumes for a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie (Area)
  • Daisy Jones & the Six: "Track 8: Looks Like We Made It" – Denise Wingate and Derek Sullivan (Prime Video)‡
    • Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story: "Please Don't Go" – Rudy Mance, Monica Chamberlain, Desmond Smith, and Suzy Freeman (Netflix)
    • George & Tammy: "We're Gonna Hold On" – Mitchell Travers, Mitchel Wolf, Laurel Rose, Aileen Abercrombie, Susan Russell, and Charles Carter (Showtime)
    • Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities: "Dreams in the Witch House" – Luis Sequeira, Ann Steel, and Heather Crepp (Netflix)
    • Welcome to Chippendales: "Leeches" – Peggy Schnitzer, Derek Bulger, and Julie Heath (Hulu)
Outstanding Fantasy/Sci-Fi Costumes (Area)
  • House of the Dragon: "The Heirs of the Dragon" – Jany Temime, Katherine Burchill, Paul Yeowell, Rachel George, and Joanna Lynch (HBO)‡
    • Hocus Pocus 2 – Salvador Perez, Elizabeth Shelton, and Gala Autumn (Disney+)
    • The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power: "A Shadow of the Past" – Kate Hawley, Libby Dempster, Lucy McLay, Jaindra Watson, Pip Lingard, and Jenny Rushton (Prime Video)
    • The Mandalorian: "Chapter 22: Guns for Hire" – Shawna Trpcic, Elissa Alcala, Julie Robar, and Julie Yang Silver (Disney+)
    • Obi-Wan Kenobi: "Part I" – Suttirat Anne Larlarb, Stacia Lang, and Lynda Foote (Disney+)
    • What We Do in the Shadows: "The Wedding" – Laura Montgomery, Barbara Cardoso, and Judy Laukkanen (FX)
Outstanding Contemporary Costumes for a Series (Area)
  • Wednesday: "Wednesday's Child Is Full of Woe" – Colleen Atwood, Mark Sutherland, Robin Soutar, Claudia Littlefield, and Adina Bucur (Netflix)‡
    • Emily in Paris: "What's It All About..." – Marylin Fitoussi, Herehau Ragonneau, Daniela Telle, and Marie Fremont (Netflix)
    • The Last of Us: "Endure and Survive" – Cynthia Ann Summers, Kelsey Chobotar, Rebecca Toon, and Michelle Carr (HBO)
    • Only Murders in the Building: "Framed" – Dana Covarrubias, Abby Geoghegan, and Kathleen Gerlach (Hulu)
    • Succession: "Church and State" – Michelle Matland, Jonathan Schwartz, and Mark Agnes (HBO)
    • The White Lotus: "That's Amore" – Alex Bovaird, Brian Sprouse, and Margherita Zanobetti (HBO)
Outstanding Contemporary Costumes for a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie (Area)
  • Beef: "The Birds Don't Sing, They Screech in Pain" – Helen Huang, Austin Wittick, YJ Hwang, and Mark Anthony Summers (Netflix)‡
    • Dolly Parton's Mountain Magic Christmas – Provi Fulp, Jose Ramos, and Steve Summers (NBC)
    • Fleishman Is in Trouble: "Me-Time" – Leah Katznelson, Angel Peart, Katie Novello, Deirdre Wegner, and Anne Newton-Harding (FX)
    • Swarm: "Honey" – Dominique Dawson, Brittny Chapman, and Mashal Khan (Prime Video)
    • The Watcher: "Welcome, Friends" – Lou Eyrich, Rudy Mance, Catherine Crabtree, and Zakiya Dennis (Netflix)
Outstanding Costumes for Variety, Nonfiction, or Reality Programming (Juried)
  • Beauty and the Beast: A 30th Celebration – Marina Toybina, Grainne O'Sullivan, Gabrielle Letamendi, Courtney Webster, Arleen Flores, and Danae McQueen (ABC)‡
  • We're Here: "St. George, Utah" – Diego Montoya, Marco Morante, Joshua "Domino" Schwartz, Blake Danford, Sharon Malka, and Ricky Reynoso (HBO)‡

Directing

[edit]
Directing
Outstanding Directing for a Variety Series
  • Saturday Night Live: "Co-Hosts: Steve Martin & Martin Short" – Liz Patrick (NBC)‡
    • Jimmy Kimmel Live!: "20th Anniversary Special" – Andy Fisher (ABC)
    • Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: "Afghanistan" – Paul Pennolino (HBO)
    • The Late Show with Stephen Colbert: "John Oliver; Broadway Cast of The Lion King" – Jim Hoskinson (CBS)
    • The Problem with Jon Stewart: "Chaos, Law, and Order" – André Allen (Apple TV+)
Outstanding Directing for a Variety Special
  • The Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show Starring Rihanna – Hamish Hamilton and Shawn Carter (Fox)‡
    • Carol Burnett: 90 Years of Laughter + Love – Paul Miller (NBC)
    • Chris Rock: Selective Outrage – Joel Gallen (Netflix)
    • The Oscars – Glenn Weiss (ABC)
    • Wanda Sykes: I'm an Entertainer – Linda Mendoza (Netflix)
Outstanding Directing for a Documentary/Nonfiction Program
  • Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie – Davis Guggenheim (Apple TV+)‡
    • Judy Blume Forever – Davina Pardo and Leah Wolchok (Prime Video)
    • Moonage Daydream – Brett Morgen (HBO)
    • Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields – Lana Wilson (Hulu)
    • The Territory – Alex Pritz (Nat Geo)
    • The U.S. and the Holocaust: "Episode 3: The Homeless, The Tempest-tossed (1942–)" – Ken Burns, Lynn Novick, and Sarah Botstein (PBS)
Outstanding Directing for a Reality Program
  • Welcome to Wrexham: "Wide World of Wales" – Bryan Rowland (FX)‡
    • The Amazing Race: "Patience, Is the New Me" – Bertram van Munster (CBS)
    • Queer Eye: "Speedy for Life" – Ali Moghadas (Netflix)
    • RuPaul's Drag Race: "Wigloose: The Rusical!" – Nick Murray (MTV)
    • Top Chef: "London Calling" – Ariel Boles (Bravo)

Hairstyling

[edit]
Hairstyling
Outstanding Contemporary Hairstyling
  • The White Lotus: "Abductions" – Miia Kovero, Elena Gregorini, and Italo Di Pinto (HBO)‡
    • Abbott Elementary: "Festival" – Moira Frazier, Dustin Osborne, and Christina Joseph (ABC)
    • Emily in Paris: "Coo D'état" – Carole Nicolas, Mike Désir, Frédéric Souquet, Miharu Oshima, Jessie Durimel, and Julien Parizet (Netflix)
    • The Last of Us: "Long, Long Time" – Chris Glimsdale, Penny Thompson, and Courtney Ullrich (HBO)
    • Only Murders in the Building: "I Know Who Did It" – Betsy Reyes, Tonia Ciccone, Fabian Garcia, and Kerrie Smith (Hulu)
    • P-Valley: "Snow" – Arlene Martin, Latoya Kelley Howard, Kasi York, LeVura Geuka, and Jason Yancey (Starz)
    • Ted Lasso: "So Long, Farewell" – Nicky Austin, Nikki Springall, Sophie Roberts, and Nicola Pope (Apple TV+)
Outstanding Period and/or Character Hairstyling (Area)
  • Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story: "Crown Jewels" – Nic Collins and Giorgio Galliero (Netflix)‡
    • The Crown: "Mou Mou" – Cate Hall and Emilie Yong Mills (Netflix)
    • Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story: "Lionel" – Shay Sanford-Fong, Maggie Hayes Jackson, Michael S. Ward, and Havanna Pratt (Netflix)
    • The Mandalorian: "Chapter 19: The Convert" – Maria Sandoval, Ashleigh Childers, and Sallie Ciganovich (Disney+)
    • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: "A House Full of Extremely Lame Horses" – Kimberley Spiteri, Keleen Snowgren, Diana Sikes, Valerie Gladstone, Emily Rosko, and Matthew Armentrout (Prime Video)
Outstanding Hairstyling for a Variety, Nonfiction or Reality Program (Juried)
  • We're Here: "St. George, Utah" – Abdiel "Gloria" Urcullu and Tyler Funicelli (HBO)‡

Lighting Design / Lighting Direction

[edit]
Lighting Design and Lighting Direction
Outstanding Lighting Design / Lighting Direction for a Variety Series (Area)
  • Dancing with the Stars: "Semi Finals" – Noah Mitz, Michael Berger, Patrick Brazil, Andrew Law, Matt Benson, Matt McAdam, and Luke Chantrell (Disney+)‡
    • America's Got Talent: "Episode 1717" – Noah Mitz, Will Gossett, Ryan Tanker, Patrick Brazil, Jay Koch, Matt Benson, Scott Chmielewski, and Kevin Faust (NBC)
    • American Idol: "Top 20" – Tom Sutherland, Bobby Grey, Nathan Files, James Coldicott, Hunter Selby, Scott Chmielewski, Luke Chantrell, and Ed Moore (ABC)
    • So You Think You Can Dance: "Starry Starry Night" – Robert Barnhart, Matt Firestone, Pete Radice, Patrick Boozer, Jeff Behm, and Christopher Gray (Fox)
    • The Voice: "Live Finale, Part 2" – Oscar Dominguez, Ronald Wirsgalla, Erin Anderson, Andrew Munie, Jeff Shood, Daniel Boland, and Terrance Ho (NBC)
Outstanding Lighting Design / Lighting Direction for a Variety Special (Area)
  • 2022 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony – Allen Branton, Darren Langer, Felix Peralta, Kevin Lawson, Alex Flores, Bianca Moncada, Chuck Reilly, and Guy Jones (HBO)‡
    • Encanto at the Hollywood Bowl – Al Gurdon, Harry Forster, Bobby Grey, Darien Koop, James Coldicott, Chris Hill, and Ed Moore (Disney+)
    • The 65th Annual Grammy Awards – Noah Mitz, Andy O'Reilly, Patrick Boozer, Ryan Tanker, Madigan Stehly, Bryan Klunder, Erin Anderson, Will Gossett, Matthew Cotter, Terrance Ho, and Guy Jones (CBS)
    • 75th Annual Tony Awards – Robert Dickinson, Noah Mitz, Harry Sangmeister, Tyler Ericson, Richard Beck, Jason Rudolph, JM Hurley, and Ka Lai Wong (CBS)
    • The Weeknd: Live at SoFi Stadium – Jason Baeri, Joe Bay, Kille Knoble, Mark Butts, and Loren Barton (HBO)

Main Title and Motion Design

[edit]
Main Title and Motion Design
Outstanding Main Title Design
  • The Last of Us – Andy Hall, Nadia Tzuo, Gryun Kim, Min Shi, Jun Kim, and Xiaolin (Mike) Zeng (HBO)‡
    • Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities – Mike Schaeffer, Chet Hirsch, David Rowley, and Akshay Tiwari (Netflix)
    • Hello Tomorrow! – Ronnie Koff, Lexi Gunvaldson, Christoph Gabathuler, Juan Monasterio, Lindsey Mayer-Beug, and Fernando Lazzari (Apple TV+)
    • The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power – Katrina Crawford, Mark Bashore, Anthony Vitagliano, and Fernando Domínguez Cózar (Prime Video)
    • Wednesday – Aaron Becker, Joseph Ahn, James Ramirez, Lee Nelson, Eric Keller, and Hsien Lun Su (Netflix)
    • The White Lotus – Katrina Crawford, Mark Bashore, Lezio Lopes, and Cian McKenna (HBO)
Outstanding Motion Design (Juried)
  • Ms. Marvel – Ian Spendloff, David Lochhead, Daniella Marsh, David Stumpf, Philip Robinson, and Matthew Thomas (Disney+)‡

Makeup

[edit]
Makeup
Outstanding Contemporary Makeup (Non-Prosthetic)
  • Wednesday: "Woe What a Night" – Tara McDonald, Freda Ellis, Nirvana Jalalvand, Tamara Meade, and Bianca Boeroiu (Netflix)‡
    • American Horror Stories: "Bloody Mary" – Tyson Fountaine, Ron Pipes, Gage Hubbard, Heather Cummings, Natasha Marcelina, and Michael Johnston (FX)
    • Emily in Paris: "What's It All About..." – Aurélie Payen, Corinne Maillard, Joséphine Bouchereau, Sarah Damen, and Ivana Carboni (Netflix)
    • The Last of Us: "Long, Long Time" – Connie Parker and Joanna Mireau (HBO)
    • Star Trek: Picard: "Võx" – Silvina Knight, Tanya Cookingham, Allyson Carey, Peter De Oliveira, Hanny Eisen, and Kim Ayers (Paramount+)
    • The White Lotus: "That's Amore" – Rebecca Hickey, Federica Emidi, Francesca Antonetti, and Rosa Saba (HBO)
Outstanding Period and/or Character Makeup (Non-Prosthetic) (Area)
  • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: "Susan" – Patricia Regan, Claus Lulla, Joseph A. Campayno, Michael Laudati, Tomasina Smith, and Roberto Baez (Prime Video)‡
    • Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story: "Bad Meat" – Gigi Williams and Michelle Audrina Kim (Netflix)
    • Daisy Jones & the Six: "Track 10: Rock 'n' Roll Suicide" – Rebecca Wachtel, Sherri Simmons, RJ McCasland, Kim Perrodin, and Darla Edin (Prime Video)
    • House of the Dragon: "We Light the Way" – Amanda Knight, Hannah Eccleston, Heather McMullen, Kashiya Hinds, Harriet Thompson, Natalie Wickens, and Bonny Monger (HBO)
    • The Mandalorian: "Chapter 22: Guns for Hire" – Cristina Waltz, Ana Gabriela Quinonez Urrego, Alex Perrone, and Crystal Gomez (Disney+)
    • Stranger Things: "Chapter Nine: The Piggyback" – Amy L. Forsythe, Devin Morales, Erin Keith, Nataleigh Verrengia, Benji Dove, Jan Rooney, Lisa Poe, and Rocco Gaglioti, Jr. (Netflix)
Outstanding Makeup for a Variety, Nonfiction or Reality Program (Juried)
  • Beauty and the Beast: A 30th Celebration – Bruce Grayson, James MacKinnon, Sam Fine, Julie Socash, Melanie Hughes-Weaver, Neicy Small, Alexei Dmitriew, and Tyson Fountaine (ABC)‡
Outstanding Prosthetic Makeup (Area)
  • The Last of Us: "Infected" – Barrie Gower, Sarah Gower, Paul Spateri, Nelly Guimaras Sanjuan, Johnny Murphy, Joel Hall, and Lucy Pittard (HBO)‡
    • Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities: "Dreams in the Witch House" – Sean Sansom, Shane Zander, Kyle Glencross, Mike Hill, and Megan Many (Netflix)
    • House of the Dragon: "The Lord of the Tides" – Barrie Gower, Sarah Gower, Emma Faulkes, Duncan Jarman, and Paula Eden (HBO)
    • The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power: "Adar" – Jason Docherty, Dan Perry, Mark Knight, and Simon Rose (Prime Video)
    • Star Trek: Picard: "The Last Generation" – James Mackinnon, Hugo Villasenor, Bianca Appice, Kevin Wasner, Afton Storton, Kevin Haney, Neville Page, and Vincent Van Dyke (Paramount+)

Music

[edit]
Music
Outstanding Music Composition for a Series (Original Dramatic Score)
  • The White Lotus: "In the Sandbox" – Cristobal Tapia de Veer (HBO)‡
    • Andor: "Rix Road" – Nicholas Britell (Disney+)
    • The Last of Us: "Long, Long Time" – Gustavo Santaolalla (HBO)
    • Succession: "Connor's Wedding" – Nicholas Britell (HBO)
    • Wednesday: "Woe Is the Loneliest Number" – Danny Elfman and Chris Bacon (Netflix)
Outstanding Music Composition for a Limited or Anthology Series, Movie or Special (Original Dramatic Score)
  • Weird: The Al Yankovic Story – Leo Birenberg and Zach Robinson (The Roku Channel)‡
    • Hocus Pocus 2 – John Debney (Disney+)
    • Ms. Marvel: "Time and Again" – Laura Karpman (Disney+)
    • Prey – Sarah Schachner (Hulu)
    • A Small Light: "What Can Be Saved" – Ariel Marx (Nat Geo)
Outstanding Music Composition for a Documentary Series or Special (Original Dramatic Score)
  • Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie – John Powell (Apple TV+)‡
    • Eva Longoria: Searching for Mexico: "Veracruz" – Tony Morales (CNN)
    • Light & Magic: "Gang of Outsiders" – James Newton Howard (Disney+)
    • Pamela, a Love Story – Blake Neely (Netflix)
    • Prehistoric Planet: "Badlands" – Hans Zimmer, Anže Rozman, and Kara Talve (Apple TV+)
Outstanding Music Direction
  • Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song: Joni Mitchell – Greg Phillinganes (PBS)‡
    • The Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show Starring Rihanna – Adam Blackstone and Omar Edwards (Fox)
    • The Oscars – Rickey Minor (ABC)
    • 2022 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony – Adam Blackstone (HBO)
    • Saturday Night Live: "Host: Austin Butler" – Lenny Pickett, Leon Pendarvis, and Eli Brueggemann (NBC)
Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics
  • Ted Lasso: "So Long, Farewell" – "A Beautiful Game" by Ed Sheeran, Foy Vance, and Max Martin (Apple TV+)‡
    • Ginny & Georgia: "Hark! Darkness Descends!" – "Marriage Is a Dungeon" by Lili Haydn and Ben Bromfield (Netflix)
    • The L Word: Generation Q: "Questions for the Universe" – "All About Me" by Heather McIntosh, Taura Stinson, and Allyson Newman (Showtime)
    • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: "Susan" – "Your Personal Trash Man Can" by Curtis Moore and Thomas Mizer (Prime Video)
    • Ted Lasso: "Mom City" – "Fought & Lost" by Tom Howe, Jamie Hartman, and Sam Ryder (Apple TV+)
    • Weird: The Al Yankovic Story – "Now You Know" by Al Yankovic (The Roku Channel)
Outstanding Original Main Title Theme Music
  • Wednesday – Danny Elfman (Netflix)‡
    • Andor – Nicholas Britell (Disney+)
    • Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities – Holly Amber Church (Netflix)
    • The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power – Howard Shore (Prime Video)
    • Ms. Marvel – Laura Karpman (Disney+)
Outstanding Music Supervision
  • The White Lotus: "Bull Elephants" – Gabe Hilfer (HBO)‡
    • Daisy Jones & the Six: "Track 8: Looks Like We Made It" – Frankie Pine (Prime Video)
    • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: "Four Minutes" – Robin Urdang (Prime Video)
    • Stranger Things: "Chapter Nine: The Piggyback" – Nora Felder (Netflix)
    • Ted Lasso: "So Long, Farewell" – Tony Von Pervieux and Christa Miller (Apple TV+)

Picture Editing

[edit]
Picture Editing
Outstanding Picture Editing for a Drama Series
  • The Last of Us: "Endure and Survive" – Timothy A. Good and Emily Mendez (HBO)‡
    • Better Call Saul: "Saul Gone" – Skip Macdonald (AMC)
    • Succession: "America Decides" – Jane Rizzo (HBO)
    • Succession: "Connor's Wedding" – Bill Henry (HBO)
    • Succession: "With Open Eyes" – Ken Eluto (HBO)
    • The White Lotus: "Abductions" – Heather Persons (HBO)
    • The White Lotus: "Arrivederci" – John M. Valerio (HBO)
Outstanding Picture Editing for a Multi-Camera Comedy Series
  • Night Court: "Pilot" – Kirk Benson and Chris Poulos (NBC)‡
    • Call Me Kat: "Call Me Consciously Uncoupled" – Pamela Marshall (Fox)
    • How I Met Your Father: "Daddy" – Russell Griffin (Hulu)
    • The Upshaws: "Duct Up" – Russell Griffin and Angel Gamboa Bryant (Netflix)
    • The Upshaws: "Off Beat" – Angel Gamboa Bryant (Netflix)
Outstanding Picture Editing for a Single-Camera Comedy Series
  • The Bear: "System" – Joanna Naugle (FX)‡
    • Barry: "wow" – Franky Guttman and Ali Greer (HBO)
    • Only Murders in the Building: "The Last Day of Bunny Folger" – Peggy Tachdjian (Hulu)
    • Ted Lasso: "Mom City" – A.J. Catoline and Alex Szabo (Apple TV+)
    • Ted Lasso: "So Long, Farewell" – Melissa McCoy and Francesca Castro (Apple TV+)
    • What We Do in the Shadows: "Go Flip Yourself" – Yana Gorskaya and Dane McMaster (FX)
Outstanding Picture Editing for a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie
  • Beef: "Figures of Light" – Nat Fuller and Laura Zempel (Netflix)‡
    • Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story: "The Good Boy Box" – Stephanie Filo (Netflix)
    • Ms. Marvel: "Generation Why" – Nona Khodai and Sabrina Plisco (Disney+)
    • Obi-Wan Kenobi: "Part VI" – Kelley Dixon and Josh Earl (Disney+)
    • Prey – Angela M. Catanzaro and Claudia Castello (Hulu)
    • Weird: The Al Yankovic Story – Jamie Kennedy (The Roku Channel)
Outstanding Picture Editing for Variety Programming (Area)
  • A Black Lady Sketch Show: "My Love Language Is Words of Defamation" – Stephanie Filo, Malinda Zehner Guerra, and Taylor Joy Mason (HBO)‡
    • Carol Burnett: 90 Years of Laughter + Love – Mike Polito and Timothy Schultz (NBC)
    • The Daily Show with Trevor Noah: "Jordan Klepper Shows Trump Supporters January 6th Hearing Clips" – Storm Choi, Eric Davies, Tom Favilla, Lauren Beckett Jackson, Nikolai Johnson, Ryan Middleton, Mark Paone, Erin Shannon, Catherine Trasborg, and Einar Westerlund (Comedy Central)
    • History of the World, Part II: "III" – Angel Gamboa Bryant, Stephanie Filo, Daniel Flesher, and George Mandl (Hulu)
    • Saturday Night Live: "HBO Mario Kart Trailer" (Segment) – Ryan Spears and Christopher Salerno (NBC)
Outstanding Picture Editing for a Nonfiction Program
  • Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie – Michael Harte (Apple TV+)‡
    • Moonage Daydream – Brett Morgen (HBO)
    • 100 Foot Wave: "Chapter III – Jaws" – Alex Bayer, Alex Keipper, and Quin O'Brien (HBO)
    • Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields – David Teague, Sara Newens, and Anne Yao (Hulu)
    • The 1619 Project: "Justice" – Ephraim Kirkwood, Jesse Allain-Marcus, and Adriana Pacheco (Hulu)
    • Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy: "Calabria" – Liz Roe (CNN)
Outstanding Picture Editing for a Structured Reality or Competition Program
  • RuPaul's Drag Race: "Wigloose: The Rusical!" – Jamie Martin, Paul Cross, Ryan Mallick, and Michael Roha (MTV)‡
    • The Amazing Race – Eric Beetner, Kevin Blum, Trevor Campbell, Kellen Cruden, Jay Gammill, Katherine Griffin, Jason Groothuis, Darrick Lazo, Ryan Leamy, Josh Lowry, Paul Nielsen, and Steve Mellon (CBS)
    • Queer Eye: "Speedy for Life" – Toni Ann Carabello, Nova Taylor, Jason Szabo, Widgie Nikia Figaro, Sean Gill, and Kimberly Pellnat (Netflix)
    • Survivor: "Telenovela" – Bill Bowden, Evan Mediuch, Francisco Santa Maria, Plowden Schumacher, Andrew Bolhuis, Jacob Teixeira, and James Ciccarello (CBS)
    • Top Chef – Steve Lichtenstein, Ericka Concha, Blanka Kovacs, Eric Lambert, Matt Reynolds, Jay M. Rogers, Brian Freundlich, Brian Giberson, Malia Jurick, Brian Kane, Daniel Ruiz, Anthony J. Rivard, Annie Tighe, and Tony West (Bravo)
Outstanding Picture Editing for an Unstructured Reality Program
  • Welcome to Wrexham: "Do or Die" – Mohamed El Manasterly, Curtis McConnell, Michael Brown, Charles Little, and Bryan Rowland (FX)‡
    • Deadliest Catch: "Call of a New Generation" – Rob Butler, Isaiah Camp, Alexandra Moore, Alexander Rubinow, Ian Olsen, Hugh Elliott, and Joe Mikan (Discovery Channel)
    • Life Below Zero: "A Storm to Remember" – Michael Swingler, Tony Diaz, Matt Edwards, Jennifer Nelson, and Tanner Roth (Nat Geo)
    • RuPaul's Drag Race: Untucked: "The Daytona Wind 2" – Matthew D. Miller and Kellen Cruden (MTV)
    • Vanderpump Rules: "Lady and the Glamp" – Jesse Friedman, Tom McCudden, Ramin Mortazavi, Christian Le Guilloux, Paul Peltekian, Sax Eno, and Robert Garry (Bravo)

Sound Editing

[edit]
Sound Editing
Outstanding Sound Editing for a Comedy or Drama Series (One Hour)
  • The Last of Us: "When You're Lost in the Darkness" – Michael J. Benavente, Joe Schiff, Christopher Battaglia, Chris Terhune, Mitchell Lestner, Jacob Flack, Matt Yocum, Maarten Hofmeijer, Randy Wilson, Justin Helle, David Aquino, Stefan Fraticelli, Jason Charbonneau, and William Kellerman (HBO)‡
    • Andor: "The Eye" – David Acord, Margit Pfeiffer, Richard Quinn, Jonathan Greber, J.R. Grubbs, John Finklea, Shaun Farley, Shelley Roden, and John Roesch (Disney+)
    • The Boys: "The Instant White-Hot Wild" – Wade Barnett, Chris Kahwaty, Ryan Briley, Jeffrey A. Pitts, Pete Nichols, Christopher Brooks, and James Howe (Prime Video)
    • House of the Dragon: "The Black Queen" – Al Sirkett, Tim Hands, Adele Fletcher, Paula Fairfield, David Klotz, Timeri Duplat, Mathias Schuster, Barnaby Smyth, and Paula Boram (HBO)
    • The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power: "Udûn" – Robert Stambler, Damian Del Borrello, Ailene Roberts, Stefanie Ng, Paula Fairfield, Chris Terhune, James Miller, Michael Baber, Jason Smith, Amy Barber, and Jonathan Bruce (Prime Video)
    • Stranger Things: "Chapter Nine: The Piggyback" – Craig Henighan, William Files, Jill Purdy, Lee Gilmore, Ryan Cole, Korey Pereira, Angelo Palazzo, Katie Halliday, David Klotz, Lena Glikson-Nezhelskaya, Ken McGill, and Steve Baine (Netflix)
Outstanding Sound Editing for a Comedy or Drama Series (Half-Hour) and Animation
  • The Bear: "Review" – Steve "Major" Giammaria, Evan Benjamin, Jonathan Fuhrer, Annie Taylor, Chris White, Leslie Bloome, and Shaun Brennan (FX)‡
    • Barry: "wow" – Sean Heissinger, Matthew E. Taylor, John Creed, Rickley W. Dumm, Deron Street, Clay Weber, Michael Brake, Darrin Mann, Alyson Dee Moore, and Chris Moriana (HBO)
    • The Mandalorian: "Chapter 24: The Return" – Matthew Wood, Trey Turner, Brad Semenoff, David W. Collins, Luis Galdames, Stephanie McNally, Nicholas Fitzgerald, Joel Raabe, and Shelley Roden (Disney+)
    • Reservation Dogs: "This is Where the Plot Thickens" – Patrick Hogan, David Beadle, Sonya Lindsay, Michael Sana, Daniel Salas, Amber Funk, and Lena Krigen (FX)
    • What We Do in the Shadows: "The Night Market" – Steffan Falesitch, Chris Kahwaty, David Barbee, Steve Griffen, John Guentner, Sam Lewis, and Ellen Heuer (FX)
Outstanding Sound Editing for a Limited or Anthology Series, Movie or Special
  • Prey – Chris Terhune, William Files, Jessie Anne Spence, James Miller, Diego Perez, Lee Gilmore, Christopher Bonis, Daniel DiPrima, Stephen Perone, Leslie Bloome, and Shaun Brennan (Hulu)‡
    • Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story: "God of Forgiveness, God of Vengeance" – Gary Megregian, Borja Sau, Bruce Tanis, David Klotz, Sam Munoz, and Noel Vought (Netflix)
    • Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities: "The Autopsy" – Nelson Ferreira, Jill Purdy, Paul Davies, Bernard O'Reilly, Paul Germann, Tom Jenkins, Robert Hegedus, Rose Gregoris, and Goro Koyama (Netflix)
    • Mrs. Davis: "Mother of Mercy: The Call of the Horse" – Bryan Parker, Kristen Hirlinger, Nathan Efstation, Roland Thai, Matt Decker, Sam Lewis, Sam Munoz, Ellen Heuer, and Nancy Parker (Peacock)
    • Obi-Wan Kenobi: "Part VI" – Matthew Wood, Trey Turner, Angela Ang, Ryan Cota, Jon Borland, Tim Farrell, Michael Levine, Ramiro Belgardt, Nicholas Fitzgerald, Thom Brennan, Ronni Brown, and Sean England (Disney+)
Outstanding Sound Editing for a Nonfiction or Reality Program (Single or Multi-Camera)
  • Moonage Daydream – John Warhurst, Nina Hartstone, Jens Rosenlund Petersen, Samir Foco, James Shirley, Elliott Koretz, Amy Felton, Louise Burton, and Brett Morgen (HBO)‡
    • Love, Lizzo – Vanessa Flores and Jessie Brewer (Max)
    • 100 Foot Wave: "Chapter V – Lost at Sea" – Max Holland, Eric Di Stefano, and Kevin Senzaki (HBO)
    • Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie – Michael Feuser, Rich Bologna, Wyatt Sprague, Heather Gross, and Bill Bernstein (Apple TV+)
    • Welcome to Wrexham: "Do or Die" – Will Harp, Jon Schell, and Shaun Cromwell (FX)

Sound Mixing

[edit]
Sound Mixing
Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy or Drama Series (One Hour)
  • The Last of Us: "When You're Lost in the Darkness" – Marc Fishman, Kevin Roache, and Michael Playfair (HBO)‡
    • Better Call Saul: "Saul Gone" – Larry Benjamin, Kevin Valentine, and Phillip W. Palmer (AMC)
    • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: "The Testi-Roastial" – Ron Bochar, Mathew Price, Stewart Lerman, and George A. Lara (Prime Video)
    • Stranger Things: "Chapter Nine: The Piggyback" – Craig Henighan, William Files, Mark Paterson, and Michael P. Clark (Netflix)
    • Succession: "Connor's Wedding" – Andy Kris, Nicholas Renbeck, Ken Ishii, and Tommy Vicari (HBO)
    • The White Lotus: "Arrivederci" – Christian Minkler, Ryan Collins, and Vincenzo Urselli (HBO)
Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie
  • Daisy Jones & the Six: "Track 10: Rock 'n' Roll Suicide" – Lindsey Alvarez, Mathew Waters, Chris Welcker, and Mike Poole (Prime Video)‡
    • Beef: "The Great Fabricator" – Penny Harold, Andrew Garrett Lange, and Sean O'Malley (Netflix)
    • Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story: "Lionel" – Laura Wiest, Jamie Hardt, Joe Barnett, and Amanda Beggs (Netflix)
    • Obi-Wan Kenobi: "Part VI" – Danielle Dupre, Scott Lewis, Bonnie Wild, and Julian Howarth (Disney+)
    • Weird: The Al Yankovic Story – Tony Solis, Richard Bullock, Brian Magrum, and Phil McGowan (The Roku Channel)
Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy or Drama Series (Half-Hour) and Animation (Area)
  • The Bear: "Review" – Steve "Major" Giammaria and Scott D. Smith (FX)‡
    • Barry: "wow" – Elmo Ponsdomenech, Teddy Salas, Scott Harber, and Aaron Hasson (HBO)
    • The Mandalorian: "Chapter 24: The Return" – Scott R. Lewis, Tony Villaflor, Shawn Holden, and Chris Fogel (Disney+)
    • Only Murders in the Building: "The Tell" – Penny Harold, Andrew Lange, Joseph White Jr., and Alan DeMoss (Hulu)
Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Variety Series or Special (Area)
  • Elton John Live: Farewell from Dodger Stadium – Michael Abbott, Eric Schilling, Matt Herr, and Alan Richardson (Disney+)‡
    • Bono & The Edge: A Sort of Homecoming with Dave Letterman – Phil DeTolve, Brian Riordan, and Alastair McMillan (Disney+)
    • The 65th Annual Grammy Awards – Thomas Holmes, John Harris, Eric Schilling, Jeffery Peterson, Ron Reaves, Mike Parker, Andres Arango, Eric Johnston, Christian Schrader, Kristian Pedregon, Juan Pablo Velasco, and Aaron Wall (CBS)
    • Saturday Night Live: "Co-Hosts: Steve Martin & Martin Short" – Robert Palladino, Ezra Matychak, Frank Duca Jr, Caroline Sanchez, Josiah Gluck, Jay Vicari, Tyler McDiarmid, Christopher Costello, Teng Chen, William Taylor, Geoff Countryman, and Devin Emke (NBC)
    • Taylor Hawkins Tribute Concert – Bob Clearmountain, Ollie Nesham, Darrell Thorp, Chris Kalcov, Steve Massey, Eduardo Puhl, Will Langdale, Antony King, and Ian Beveridge (Paramount+)
Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Nonfiction Program (Single or Multi-Camera) (Area)
  • Moonage Daydream – Paul Massey and David Giammarco (HBO)‡
    • 100 Foot Wave: "Chapter V – Lost at Sea" – Keith Hodne (HBO)
    • The Sound of 007 – Richard Davey, Jonny Horne, Simon Norman, and Francesco Corazzi (Prime Video)
    • Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy: "Calabria" – Matt Skilton and Christopher Syner (CNN)
    • Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie – Skip Lievsay, Benjamin Berger, Martin Kittappa, and Lily van Leeuwen (Apple TV+)
Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Reality Program (Single or Multi-Camera) (Area)
  • Welcome to Wrexham: "Do or Die" – Mark Jensen (FX)‡
    • The Amazing Race: "The Only Leg That Matters" – Jim Ursulak, Troy Smith, and the Production Mixing Team (CBS)
    • Deadliest Catch: "Call of a New Generation" – Jared Robbins (Discovery Channel)
    • RuPaul's Drag Race: "Wigloose: The Rusical!" – Erik Valenzuela, Sal Ojeda, David Nolte, and Gabe Lopez (MTV)
    • The Voice: "Live Top 10" – Michael Abbott, Randy Faustino, and Tim Hatayama (NBC)

Special Visual Effects

[edit]
Special Visual Effects
Outstanding Special Visual Effects in a Season or a Movie
  • The Last of Us – Alex Wang, Sean Nowlan, Joel Whist, Stephen James, Nick Marshall, Simon Jung, Dennis Yoo, Espen Nordahl, and Jonathan Mitchell (HBO)‡
    • Andor – Mohen Leo, TJ Falls, Richard Van Den Bergh, Neal Scanlan, Liyana Mansor, Scott Pritchard, Joseph Kasparian, Jelmer Boskma, and Jean-Clément Soret (Disney+)
    • House of the Dragon – Angus Bickerton, Nikeah Forde, Thomas Horton, Sven Martin, Mark Spindler, Mark Dauth, Sebastian Meszmann, Mike Bell, and Tobias Graa Winblad (HBO)
    • The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power – Ron Ames, Jason Smith, Nigel Sumner, Ara Khanikian, Dean Clarke, Ken McGaugh, Tom Proctor, Greg Butler, and Joe Henderson (Prime Video)
    • The Mandalorian – Grady Cofer, Abbigail Keller, Paul Kavanagh, Cameron Neilson, Scott Fisher, Hal Hickel, J. Alan Scott, Victor Schutz IV, and Bobo Skipper (Disney+)
Outstanding Special Visual Effects in a Single Episode (Area)
  • Five Days at Memorial: "Day Two" – Eric Durst, Matthew Whelan, Danny McNair, Goran Pavles, Rafael Solórzano, John MacGillivray, Viktor Muller, Manuel Tausch, and Gonzalo Escudero (Apple TV+)‡
    • The Nevers: "It's a Good Day" – Johnny Han, Jack Geist, Damon Fecht, Alexandre Prod'homme, Emanuel Fuchs, Gaia Bussolati, Ed Bruce, Brian Ali Harding, and Takashi Takeoka (Tubi)
    • Shadow and Bone: "Rusalye" – Ante Dekovic, Helen Jen, Richard Macks, Gergely Galisz, Juri Stanossek, Adam Balentine, Jane Byrne, Håvard Munkejord, and Angel Rico (Netflix)
    • Ted Lasso: "Mom City" – James MacLachlan, Bill Parker, Lenny Wilson, Gretchen Bangs, Brian Hobert, Shiying Li, Kenneth Armstrong, Ying Lin, and Neil Taylor (Apple TV+)
    • The Umbrella Academy: "Marigold" – Everett Burrell, Phillip Hoffman, Dave Axford, Maria Sartzetaki, Sophie Vertigan, Jeff Campbell, Laurent Spillemaecker, Chris White, and Ryan Freer (Netflix)
    • Wednesday: "A Murder of Woes" – Tom Turnbull, Kent Johnson, Jesse Kawzenuk, Oana Bardan, Craig Calvert, Ed Englander, John Coldrick, Brodie McNeill, and Jason Troughton (Netflix)

Stunts

[edit]
Stunt Coordination
Outstanding Stunt Coordination for a Comedy Series or Variety Program
  • Barry – Wade Allen (HBO)‡
    • Cobra Kai – Ken Barefield (Netflix)
    • Poker Face – Tom Place (Peacock)
    • Tulsa King – Freddie Poole (Paramount+)
    • Wednesday – Brett Chan and Jason Ng (Netflix)
Outstanding Stunt Coordination for a Drama Series, Limited or Anthology Series or Movie
  • The Boys – John Koyama (Prime Video)‡
    • FBI: Most Wanted – Declan Mulvey (CBS)
    • The Mandalorian – JJ Dashnaw (Disney+)
    • The Rookie – David Scott Rowden Sr. (ABC)
    • S.W.A.T. – Austen Brewer and Lance Gilbert (CBS)
Outstanding Stunt Performance
  • The Mandalorian: "Chapter 24: The Return" – Lateef Crowder, Paul Darnell, JJ Dashnaw, and Ryan Ryusaki (Disney+)‡
    • FBI: Most Wanted: "Black Mirror" – Chad Hessler (CBS)
    • Stranger Things: "Chapter Nine: The Piggyback" – Courtney Schwartz and Michelle Andrea Adams (Netflix)
    • Stranger Things: "Chapter Nine: The Piggyback" – Jahnel Curfman, Niko Dalman, and Shannon Beshears (Netflix)

Technical Direction

[edit]
Technical Direction
Outstanding Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video Control for a Series (Area)
  • Dancing with the Stars: "Finale" – Charles Ciup, David Bernstein, Bert Atkinson, Terry Clark, Kary D'Alessandro, James Garcia, Nathanial Havholm, Mark Koonce, Tim Lee, Ron Lehman, Bettina Levesque, Dave Levisohn, Adam Margolis, Derek Pratt, Brian Reason, Philo Solomon, Daryl Studebaker, Marc Stumpo, Damien Tuffereau, and Cary Symmons (Disney+)‡
    • American Idol: "Season Finale" – Charles Ciup, David Bernstein, Bert Atkinson, Danny Bonilla, Mike Carr, Kary D'Alessandro, Keith Dicker, Curtis Eastwood, Jimmy Garcia, Bruce Green, Nathanial Havolm, Ron Lehman, Bettina Levesque, Adam Margolis, Rob Palmer, Brian Reason, Daryl Studebaker, Damien Tuffereau, and Easter Xua (ABC)
    • The Masked Singer: "New York Night" – Christine Salomon, Cary Symmons, Bert Atkinson, Brett Crutcher, Kary D'Allesandro, Jimmy Garcia, John Goforth, Sean Flannery, Bettina Levesque, Adam Margolis, Mark Koonce, Daryl Studebaker, James Sullivan, and Rob Palmer (Fox)
    • The Problem with Jon Stewart: "Trump Indicted" – Dave Saretsky, Marc Bloomgarden, Franco Coello, Nick Fayo, Kevin Murphy, John Pry, Tim Quigley, and Rich York (Apple TV+)
    • The Voice: "Live Top 10 Performances" – Allan Wells, Danny Bonilla, Mano Bonilla, Martin J. Brown Jr., Robert Burnette, Suzanne Ebner, Guido Frenzel, Alex Hernandez, Scott Hylton, Kathrine Iacofano, Scott Kaye, Steve Martynuk, Jofre Rosero, Nick Tramontano, and Dann Webb (NBC)
Outstanding Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video Control for a Special (Area)
  • Elton John Live: Farewell from Dodger Stadium – Emmett Loughran, Robert Del Russo, Mark Britt, David Driscoll, Tim Farmer, Pete Forest, Andrew Georgopoulos, Pat Gleason, Bruce Green, Shaun Harkins, Jay Kulick, Kevin Murphy, Lyn Noland, Jimmy O'Donnell, Rob Palmer, Jesse Placky, David Plakos, George Prince, Mark Renaudin, David Rudd, Austin Rock, Keyan Safyari, Ed Staebler, Rob Vuona, Mark Whitman, Rich York, Jeff Lee, Michael Taylor, Brian Lataille, Loic Maheas, and Chris Schuster (Disney+)‡
    • The Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show Starring Rihanna – Eric Becker, David Alfano, Rod Wardell, Rob Balton, Danny Bonilla, Kary D'Alessandro, Keith Dicker, Sean Flannery, Kevin French, Shaun Harkins, Helena Jackson, Tayler Knight, Toré Livia, Allen Merriweather, Eann Potter, Jofre Rosero, Keyan Safyari, Casey Roche, and Christopher Rybitski (Fox)
    • Encanto at the Hollywood Bowl – Christine Salomon, Shanele Alvarez, Dominic Bendijo, Bonnie Blake, Danny Bonilla, Kary D'Alessandro, Sean Flannery, Shaun Harkins, Charlie Henry, Cory Hunter, George Reasner, Jofre Rosero, David Rudd, Ryan Schultz, and Aymae Sulick (Disney+)
    • 2022 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony – Toby Santos, Danny Bonilla, Kary D'Alessandro, Keith Dicker, Dave Eastwood, Guido Frenzel, Andrew Georgopoulos, Jeff Johnson, Zac Jones, Brian Lataille, Dave Levisohn, Sean Mark Mckelvey, Steve Martyniuk, Rob Palmer, Dave Plakos, Dave Rudd, Dylan Sanford, Matt Trujillo, Roy Walker, Andrew Waruszewski, and Easter Xua (HBO)
    • The Weeknd: Live at SoFi Stadium – Toby Santos, Brandon Smith, Scott Acosta, Dominic Bendijo, Manny Bonilla, Mano Bonilla, Justin Danzansky, Austin Ellsworth, Chris Ferguson, Jeremy Freeman, Andrew Georgopoulos, Randy Gomez, Jonny Harkins, Shaun Harkins, Travis Hays, Coy Hunter, Oliver Lanzenberg, Ron Lehman, Andrew McMillan, Dee Nichols, Connor O'Brien, Josh Perry, Rob Pittman, Keyan Safyari, Daniel Schade, Austin Straub, Josh Turner, Justin Umphenour, Joe Victoria, Vince Warburton, and Drew Welker (HBO)

Writing

[edit]
Writing
Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special
  • John Mulaney: Baby J – John Mulaney (Netflix)‡
    • Carol Burnett: 90 Years of Laughter + Love – Jon Macks and Carol Leifer (NBC)
    • Chris Rock: Selective Outrage – Chris Rock (Netflix)
    • Wanda Sykes: I'm an Entertainer – Wanda Sykes (Netflix)
    • Would It Kill You to Laugh? Starring Kate Berlant & John Early – Kate Berlant, Andrew DeYoung, and John Early (Peacock)
Outstanding Writing for a Nonfiction Program
  • The U.S. and the Holocaust: "Episode 2: Yearning to Breathe Free (1938–1942)" – Geoffrey C. Ward (PBS)‡
    • Dear Mama: "Panther Power" – Allen Hughes and Lasse Järvi (FX)
    • Moonage Daydream – Brett Morgen (HBO)
    • 100 Foot Wave: "Chapter V – Lost at Sea" – Zach Rothfeld (HBO)
    • Selena Gomez: My Mind & Me – Alek Keshishian and Paul Marchand (Apple TV+)

Nominations and wins by program

[edit]

For the purposes of the lists below, any wins in juried categories are assumed to have a prior nomination.

Shows with multiple Creative Arts nominations
Nominations Show Network
19 The Last of Us HBO
13 Succession
Ted Lasso Apple TV+
11 The White Lotus HBO
10 The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Prime Video
9 The Mandalorian Disney+
8 Only Murders in the Building Hulu
7 The Bear FX
Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story Netflix
Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities
Saturday Night Live NBC
Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie Apple TV+
6 Daisy Jones & the Six Prime Video
House of the Dragon HBO
The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power Prime Video
100 Foot Wave HBO
Queer Eye Netflix
RuPaul's Drag Race MTV
Stranger Things Netflix
Wednesday
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story The Roku Channel
Welcome to Wrexham FX
5 Andor Disney+
Barry HBO
Carol Burnett: 90 Years of Laughter + Love NBC
Moonage Daydream HBO
4 The Amazing Race CBS
The Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show Starring Rihanna Fox
Beauty and the Beast: A 30th Celebration ABC
Beef Netflix
The Crown
Die Hart 2: Die Harter The Roku Channel
Encanto at the Hollywood Bowl Disney+
Ms. Marvel
Obi-Wan Kenobi
Prey Hulu
Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy CNN
Top Chef Bravo
What We Do in the Shadows FX
3 Abbott Elementary ABC
Dancing with the Stars Disney+
Deadliest Catch Discovery Channel
Emily in Paris Netflix
The 65th Annual Grammy Awards CBS
Hocus Pocus 2 Disney+
How I Met Your Father Hulu
Jeopardy! ABC / Syndicated
The Oscars ABC
Poker Face Peacock
Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story Netflix
2022 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony HBO
Schmigadoon! Apple TV+
The 1619 Project Hulu
The Territory Nat Geo
The U.S. and the Holocaust PBS
The Voice NBC
Wanda Sykes: I'm an Entertainer Netflix
2 A Black Lady Sketch Show HBO
American Idol ABC
Better Call Saul AMC
The Boys Prime Video
Chris Rock: Selective Outrage Netflix
Dear Mama FX
Dolly Parton's Mountain Magic Christmas NBC
Elton John Live: Farewell from Dodger Stadium Disney+
Entergalactic Netflix
Family Feud ABC / Syndicated
FBI: Most Wanted CBS
Fleishman Is in Trouble FX
George & Tammy Showtime
Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies Paramount+
History of the World, Part II Hulu
I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson Netflix
John Mulaney: Baby J
Judy Blume Forever Prime Video
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver HBO
Life Below Zero Nat Geo
Love Is Blind Netflix
Pamela, a Love Story
Perry Mason HBO
Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields Hulu
The Problem with Jon Stewart Apple TV+
RuPaul's Drag Race: Untucked MTV
Secrets of the Elephants Nat Geo
The Simpsons Fox
Star Trek: Picard Paramount+
Survivor CBS
The Upshaws Netflix
Vanderpump Rules Bravo
The Weeknd: Live at SoFi Stadium HBO
We're Here
Wheel of Fortune Syndicated
Shows with multiple Creative Arts wins
Wins Show Network
8 The Last of Us HBO
5 Welcome to Wrexham FX
4 The Bear
Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie Apple TV+
Wednesday Netflix
The White Lotus HBO
3 Beef Netflix
Dancing with the Stars Disney+
2 The Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show Starring Rihanna Fox
Beauty and the Beast: A 30th Celebration ABC
Daisy Jones & the Six Prime Video
Elton John Live: Farewell from Dodger Stadium Disney+
I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson Netflix
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Prime Video
Moonage Daydream HBO
RuPaul's Drag Race MTV
Saturday Night Live NBC
The Simpsons Fox
Ted Lasso Apple TV+
We're Here HBO
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story The Roku Channel

Nominations and wins by network

[edit]
Networks with multiple Creative Arts nominations
Nominations Network
84 HBO
81 Netflix
37 Disney+
34 Apple TV+
33 Prime Video
29 Hulu
25 FX
22 NBC
21 ABC
15 CBS
11 Fox
10 The Roku Channel
8 MTV
Nat Geo
Paramount+
7 CNN
Peacock
Syndicated
6 Bravo
PBS
4 Showtime
3 Adult Swim
Comedy Central
AMC
Discovery Channel
2 Apple
Max
Networks with multiple Creative Arts wins
Wins Network
22 HBO
16 Netflix
10 FX
9 Apple TV+
8 Disney+
6 Prime Video
5 NBC
4 Fox
Hulu
3 ABC
2 MTV
PBS
Peacock
The Roku Channel

Ceremony information

[edit]

In February 2023, the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences announced that the 75th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards would be held on September 9 and 10, leading into the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards on September 18. However, the ceremonies were postponed to January 6 and 7, 2024 due to the 2023 Hollywood labor disputes. Nominations were announced on July 12, 2023.[4]

Category changes

[edit]

Changes for the Creative Arts categories this year included:[13][14][15]

  • The categories for Single-Camera and Multi-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series were combined into Outstanding Picture Editing for a Comedy Series. Likewise, Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series (Half-Hour) and Multi-Camera Series were combined into Outstanding Cinematography for a Series (Half-Hour). However, categories with tracks for different types of programming, such as the two new categories, could be split if there were at least 20 nominees for each track.
  • Line producers became eligible for the categories of Outstanding Talk Series, Outstanding Scripted Variety Series, Outstanding Variety Special (Live) and Outstanding Variety Special (Pre-Recorded).
  • Two categories were created to recognize emerging media programming:
    • Outstanding Innovation in Emerging Media Programming, a juried award, recognizes the "producer(s), company(s), and/or individual(s) responsible for the creation of groundbreaking emerging media programming that demonstrates technical or storytelling innovation, significantly elevating the audience's viewing experience beyond traditional linear TV programming".
    • Outstanding Emerging Media Program recognizes the "producer(s), company(s), and/or individual(s) responsible for the creation of emerging media programming related to an existing linear television program or series or one that is entirely original".
  • Documentary programs that were submitted to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences viewing platform but received no Academy Award nominations were eligible for Emmy consideration.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The outlets listed for each program are the U.S. broadcasters or streaming services identified in the nominations, which for some international productions are different than the broadcaster(s) that originally commissioned the program. Programs broadcast by HBO or Max were listed as "HBO Max" in the nominations list; only the original broadcaster is listed below.
  2. ^
    • Area awards are non-competitive; any nominee with at least 90% approval receives an Emmy. If no nominee receives 90% approval, the nominee with the highest approval receives an Emmy; for area awards in picture editing and sound mixing, there is an additional requirement that the highest-rated nominee must have at least 50% approval.[1]
    • Juried awards generally do not have nominations; instead, all entrants are screened before members of the appropriate peer group, and one, more than one, or no entry is awarded an Emmy based on the jury's vote.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d "75th Primetime Emmy Awards – 2022–2023 Rules and Procedures" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. May 25, 2023. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 27, 2023. Retrieved May 27, 2023.
  2. ^ Schneider, Michael (July 11, 2023). "Emmys Delay: Fox Pushing for January, TV Academy Lobbying for November Amid Strike Concerns (Exclusive)". Variety. Archived from the original on July 12, 2023. Retrieved July 13, 2023.
  3. ^ Bastidas, Jose Alejandro (July 11, 2023). "Fox on Standby to Move Emmys Pending SAG-AFTRA Strike Decision, Say Insiders". TheWrap. Archived from the original on July 13, 2023. Retrieved July 13, 2023.
  4. ^ a b Grein, Paul (February 9, 2023). "Here's the Date of the 2023 Primetime Emmy Awards". Billboard. Archived from the original on February 12, 2023. Retrieved February 13, 2023.
  5. ^ "75th Emmy Awards Complete Nominations List" (PDF). National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 4, 2024. Retrieved July 13, 2023.
  6. ^ Schneider, Michael (February 9, 2023). "TV Academy and Fox Reveal Emmy Date, Key Art for 2023 Telecast". Variety. Archived from the original on February 12, 2023. Retrieved February 13, 2023.
  7. ^ "First Group of 75th Creative Arts Emmy Winners Announced" (PDF). Television Academy. January 6, 2024. Retrieved January 6, 2024.
  8. ^ "Final Group of 75th Creative Arts Emmy Winners Announced" (PDF). Television Academy. January 7, 2024. Retrieved January 7, 2024.
  9. ^ Giardina, Carolyn; Lewis, Hilary; Dresden, Hilton (January 7, 2024). "Creative Arts Emmys: Complete Winners List". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on March 18, 2024. Retrieved March 18, 2024.
  10. ^ RT Staff (January 15, 2024). "2023 Emmy Winners: 75th Primetime & Creative Arts Emmy Winners (Updating Live)". Rotten Tomatoes. Archived from the original on March 18, 2024. Retrieved March 18, 2024.
  11. ^ "Breaking ground in Hollywood: Local Natalie Kingston is the first female Cinematographer to win Emmy". January 20, 2024.
  12. ^ "Television Academy Announces Juried Winners for 75th Emmy Awards" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. December 6, 2023. Retrieved December 6, 2023.
  13. ^ "Emmy Awards Rules Changes for 2023". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Archived from the original on December 27, 2022. Retrieved February 13, 2023.
  14. ^ Schneider, Michael (December 20, 2022). "Television Academy Reveals Emmy Rule Changes for 2023, Including New Replacements for Variety Talk and Sketch Categories". Variety. Archived from the original on December 27, 2022. Retrieved February 13, 2023.
  15. ^ Rice, Lynette (February 14, 2023). "TV Academy Adds New Emmy Category & Juried Award For Emerging Media Programming; Revises Submission Rules For Docs". Deadline. Archived from the original on May 27, 2023. Retrieved May 25, 2023.

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