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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Andrew Dalton | Associated Press

HBO dominates 2023 Emmy nominations amid writers strike and actors’ threat to join

HBO Dominates Emmy Noms Amid Writers Strike; Actors May Join, Threatening Industry Shutdown. ‘Succession,’ ‘The White Lotus,’ and ‘The Last of Us’ Lead with 74 Nominations, but Cloud of Strikes Looms Over Awards Season. Academy Hopes for Swift Resolution as Two Hollywood Unions Stand on the Verge of Historic Joint Strike. (ROBYN BECK, Getty)

LOS ANGELES — HBO dominated Wednesday morning’s Emmy nominations, with the elite trio of “Succession,” “The White Lotus” and “The Last of Us” combining for a whopping 74, but the dominant theme darkening the scene is the ongoing writers strike and the looming possibility that actors may join them in as little as a day.

“Succession” and its deeply dysfunctional dynasty of one-percenters led all Emmy nominees in its fourth and final season with 27, including best drama, which it has won two of the past three years. It got three nominations for best actor in a drama, with Brian Cox, Jeremy Strong and Kieran Culkin all getting nods for playing men of the Roy clan, and Sarah Snook getting a best actress nomination. It also got four nominations for best supporting actor in a drama.

The cursed vacationers at a Sicilian resort from the second season of “The White Lotus” truly dominated the supporting categories, however, landing five nominations for best supporting actress in a drama — including nods for Jennifer Coolidge and Aubrey Plaza — and four more for best supporting actor.

Bella Ramsey and Pedro Pascal, the duo on a fungus-filled quest in “The Last of Us,” each got lead acting nominations. The show, based on a popular Playstation video game, was second behind “Succession” with 24 nominations. “The White Lotus” had 23.

“Ted Lasso” was tops among comedies with 21 nominations, including best comedy series and best actor for Jason Sudeikis. The Apple TV+ series won both awards for each of its first two seasons, and is probably the favorite to threepeat with its third and last.

“The Bear” stars Ayo Edebiri (left) and Jeremy Allen White are nominated for their performances in Season 1 of the Chicago-based series. (FX)

Also making a strong showing on the comedy side was “The Bear,” the culinary series set and shot in Chicago. Made by FX but shown on Hulu, it’s nominated in 12 categories including best comedy series, with stars Jeremy Allen White, Ayo Edebiri and Ebon Moss-Bachrach in the running for acting Emmys.

The awards’ eligibility calendar means “The Bear” got the nominations for its first season, even after many viewers have seen — and largely loved — its second, bringing buzz that probably helped it.

The nominations suggested that HBO — which got the most overall nominations by far with 127 — can still dominate even as streaming-only outlets have taken over so much of elite TV. The distinction is increasingly blurred, however, with a huge segment of viewers watching “Succession” and the cable channel’s other offerings on the streaming service now known as Max.

Cox, 77, got his best actor in a drama nod despite appearing in fewer than half of this season’s “Succession” episodes, though as the Roy family patriarch he loomed just as large over the episodes he didn’t appear in. A win would be his first for the role, though he won an Emmy for best supporting actor in a TV movie in 2001.

Sarah Snook (from left), Kieran Culkin and Jeremy Strong are up for Emmys for their “Succession” acting. (HBO)

Strong won in 2020 for playing “eldest boy” Kendall Roy. Culkin got his first nomination for best actor after two previous nominations in the supporting category.

Actors joining movie and television writers on strike would further shut down the industry and be the first time since 1960 that two Hollywood unions were simultaneously striking. While show and film releases will continue, work on upcoming projects will cease — as would actors’ interviews and appearances to promote the projects.

The possibility of an industry debilitated by strikes could dampen any joy for the new nominees, and could put the damper on the ceremony scheduled for Sept. 18 on the Fox network.

It was not a strong year for Emmy diversity, with the lead categories dominated by shows with largely white ensembles. Chilean-born Pascal was the only minority nominee in any of the drama series categories.

Representation was stronger in the comedy categories, where the Black actors of ABC’s “Abbott Elementary” were again a high point for Emmy diversity, and for the otherwise largely absent broadcast networks. Creator Quinta Brunson was nominated for best actress, while Sheryl Lee Ralph and Janelle James were nominated for best supporting actress.

The genre-defying “Jury Duty” rode its cult status to four nominations for streamer Amazon Freevee. A faux reality show for most of its cast and a reality show for one man, it was nominated for best comedy series and best supporting actor in a comedy for James Marsden.

Netflix led streamers with 103 nominations, but its showing was meager in many of the top categories. “The Crown” received its nearly annual deference for best drama, and Jenna Ortega received a best actress in a comedy nomination for “Wednesday.” Christina Applegate was nominated for the third and final season of Netflix’s “Dead to Me” in the same category. Applegate, who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2021, has said the role may be her last.

Netflix fared better in the limited series category, where “Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story” and “Beef” managed 13 nominations apiece.

The “Star Wars” galaxy made a surprisingly forceful showing for Disney+, with three television adaptations — “Andor,” “The Mandalorian” and “Obi-Wan Kenobi” — earning a combined 22 nominations. “The Mandalorian” received the most recognition with nine nominations in craft categories like stunt performance and costumes, but the series based on Jedi Knight Obi-Wan Kenobi’s exile years will compete for best limited series and “Andor” is among the drama series nominees.

The most famous “Star Wars” alum was among those snubbed, however, as Harrison Ford failed to get his first Emmy nomination. Some had expected his name to be called for his acting on the “Yellowstone” prequel “1923” or the Apple TV+ comedy “Shrinking.”

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