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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  Stunt Coordination  





1.21  Technical Direction  





1.22  Writing  





1.23  Nominations and wins by program  





1.24  Nominations and wins by network  







2 Ceremony order and presenters  





3 Ceremony information  



3.1  Category and rule changes  







4 Notes  





5 References  





6 External links  














72nd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards: Difference between revisions






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Rescuing 3 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0.9.5) (Hey man im josh - 19862
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==External links==

==External links==

* [http://www.emmys.com/awards/nominees-winners/2020 72nd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201126131522/https://www.emmys.com/awards/nominees-winners/2020/ |date=2020-11-26 }} at Emmys.com

* [http://www.emmys.com/awards/nominees-winners/2020 72nd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards] at Emmys.com

* {{IMDb event|0000223/2020}}

* {{IMDb event|0000223/2020}}

* [http://www.emmys.com Academy of Television Arts and Sciences website] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120212044411/http://www.emmys.com/ |date=2012-02-12 }}

* [http://www.emmys.com Academy of Television Arts and Sciences website]



{{EmmyAwardsbyYear}}

{{EmmyAwardsbyYear}}


Latest revision as of 01:00, 6 June 2024

72nd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards
DateSeptember 14–17 & 19, 2020
LocationVirtual
Presented byAcademy of Television Arts & Sciences
Hosted byNicole Byer
Most awards
  • Watchmen (7)
  • Most nominationsWatchmen (15)
    Television/radio coverage
    Network
    • Emmys.com / YouTube (Sept. 14–17)
  • FXX (Sept. 19)
  • Produced byBob Bain[1]
    Directed byRich Preuss[1]
    ← 71st · Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards · 73rd →

    The 72nd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards honored the best in artistic and technical achievement in American prime time television programming from June 1, 2019, until May 31, 2020, as chosen by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.[2][3] The awards were presented across five ceremonies; the first four were held on September 14 through 17, 2020, and were streamed online, while the fifth was held on September 19 and broadcast on FXX. They were presented in a virtual ceremony due to the COVID-19 pandemic; Nicole Byer hosted the event. A total of 106 Creative Arts Emmys were presented across 100 categories. The ceremonies preceded the 72nd Primetime Emmy Awards, held on September 20.

    The Mandalorian and Watchmen led all programs with seven wins each, followed by Saturday Night Live with six and RuPaul's Drag Race with five. Watchmen was also the most-nominated program with 15 nominations; The Mandalorian followed with 14, while The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel and Saturday Night Live each received 12. Overall program awards went to 22 shows, including The Apollo, Bad Education, The Cave, Cheer, Dave Chappelle: Sticks & Stones, Jim Henson's The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance, The Last Dance, Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath, Live in Front of a Studio Audience, Queer Eye, Rick and Morty, Saturday Night Live, and We Are the Dream, among others. Netflix led all networks with 124 nominations; it also tied with HBO for the most wins, as each received 19 awards.

    Winners and nominees[edit]

    Eddie Murphy in 2010
    Eddie Murphy, Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series winner
    Maya Rudolph in 2012
    Maya Rudolph, Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series and Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance winner
    Ron Cephas Jones in 2017
    Ron Cephas Jones, Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series winner
    Cherry Jones in 2009
    Cherry Jones, Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series winner
    Laurence Fishburne in 2017
    Laurence Fishburne, Outstanding Actor in a Short Form Comedy or Drama Series winner
    Jasmine Cephas Jones in 2021
    Jasmine Cephas Jones, Outstanding Actress in a Short Form Comedy or Drama Series winner
    David Attenborough in 2015
    David Attenborough, Outstanding Narrator winner
    RuPaul in 2019
    RuPaul, Outstanding Host for a Reality or Competition Program winner

    Winners are listed first, highlighted in boldface, and indicated with a double dagger (‡).[4][3][a] Sections are based upon the categories listed in the 2019–2020 Emmy rules and procedures.[2] 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.

    Programs[edit]

    Programs

    Outstanding Television Movie

    Outstanding Variety Sketch Series

    Outstanding Variety Special (Live)

    Outstanding Variety Special (Pre-Recorded)

    Outstanding Children's Program (Area)

    Outstanding Animated Program

    Outstanding Structured Reality Program

    Outstanding Unstructured Reality Program

    Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series (Area)

    Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special (Area)

    Outstanding Hosted Nonfiction Series or Special (Area)

    Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking (Juried)

    Outstanding Short Form Comedy or Drama Series

    Outstanding Short Form Variety Series

    Outstanding Short Form Nonfiction or Reality Series

    Outstanding Short Form Animated Program

    Outstanding Original Interactive Program

    • The Messy Truth VR Experience (Oculus)
      • Rebuilding Notre Dame (Oculus)
      • When We Stayed Home (Oculus)

    Outstanding Derivative Interactive Program

    Outstanding Interactive Extension of a Linear Program

    Outstanding Innovation in Interactive Programming (Juried)

    • Create Together (YouTube)
    • The Line (Oculus)

    Performing[edit]

    Performing

    Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series

    Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series

    Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series

    Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series

    Outstanding Actor in a Short Form Comedy or Drama Series

    Outstanding Actress in a Short Form Comedy or Drama Series

    Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance

    Outstanding Narrator

    Outstanding Host for a Reality or Competition Program

    Animation[edit]

    Animation

    Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation (Juried)

    Art Direction[edit]

    Art Direction

    Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Contemporary Program (One Hour or More) (Area)

    • The Handmaid's Tale: "Household" – Elisabeth Williams, Martha Sparrow, and Robert Hepburn (Hulu)
      • Big Little Lies: "What Have They Done?" / "The Bad Mother" / "I Want To Know" – John Paino, Austin Gorg, and Amy Wells (HBO)
      • Killing Eve: "Are You from Pinner?" – Laurence Dorman, Beckie Harvey, and Casey Williams (BBC America)
      • The Morning Show: "In the Dark Night of the Soul It's Always 3:30 in the Morning" – John Paino, James F. Truesdale, and Amy Wells (Apple TV+)
      • Ozark: "Wartime" – David Bomba, Sean Ryan Jennings, and Kim Leoleis (Netflix)
      • Succession: "This Is Not for Tears" – Stephen H. Carter, Carmen Cardenas, George DeTitta, and Ana Buljan (HBO)

    Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Period or Fantasy Program (One Hour or More) (Area)

    Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Program (Half-Hour) (Area)

    Outstanding Production Design for a Variety, Reality or Competition Series (Area)

    Outstanding Production Design for a Variety Special (Area)

    Casting[edit]

    Casting

    Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series

    Outstanding Casting for a Drama Series

    Outstanding Casting for a Limited Series, Movie or Special

    • Watchmen – Victoria Thomas and Meagan Lewis (HBO)
      • Mrs. America – Carmen Cuba and Robin D. Cook (FX)
      • Normal People – Louise Kiely (Hulu)
      • Unbelievable – Laura Rosenthal, Jodi Angstreich, Kate Caldwell, and Melissa Kostenbauder (Netflix)
      • Unorthodox – Esther King, Vicki Thomson, Maria Rölcke, and Cornelia Mareth (Netflix)

    Outstanding Casting for a Reality Program

    • RuPaul's Drag Race – Goloka Bolte and Ethan Petersen (VH1)
      • Born This Way – Sasha Alpert, Megan Sleeper, and Caitlyn Audet (A&E)
      • Love Is Blind – Donna Driscoll, Kelly Zack Castillo, and Megan Feldman (Netflix)
      • Queer Eye – Danielle Gervais, Beyhan Oguz, Pamela Vallarelli, Ally Capriotti Grant, and Hana Sakata (Netflix)
      • The Voice – Michelle McNulty, Holly Dale, and Courtney Burns (NBC)

    Choreography[edit]

    Choreography

    Outstanding Choreography for Variety or Reality Programming (Juried)

    • So You Think You Can Dance: "I'll Be Seeing You" / "Mambo Italiano" / "The Girl from Ipanema" – Al Blackstone (Fox)
      • The Oscars: "Come Alive (Opening Sequence)" – Jemel McWilliams (ABC)
      • Savage X Fenty Show: "Statues" / "Benches" / "Window" – Parris Goebel (Prime Video)
      • So You Think You Can Dance: "Enough Is Enough" / "Sign of the Times" – Travis Wall (Fox)
      • World of Dance: "Dos Jueyes" / "El Ray Timbal" – Jefferson Benjumea and Adrianita Avila (NBC)

    Outstanding Choreography for Scripted Programming (Juried)

    Cinematography[edit]

    Cinematography

    Outstanding Cinematography for a Multi-Camera Series

    Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series (Half-Hour)

    Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series (One Hour)

    Outstanding Cinematography for a Limited Series or Movie

    Outstanding Cinematography for a Nonfiction Program

    • The Cave – Muhammed Khair Al Shami, Ammar Suleiman, and Mohammed Eyad (National Geographic)

    Outstanding Cinematography for a Reality Program

    • Life Below Zero – Michael Cheeseman, Danny Day, Dwayne Fowler, John Griber, Simeon Houtman, and Ben Mullin (National Geographic)
      • Cheer: "Hit Zero" – Melissa Langer and Erynn Patrick (Netflix)
      • Queer Eye: "We're in Japan!: Japanese Holiday" – Garrett Rose (Netflix)
      • RuPaul's Drag Race – Michael Jacob Kerber, Jon Schneider, Jay Mack Arnette II, Mario Panagiotopoulos, Gregory Montes, Brett Smith, David McCoul, and Justin Umphenour (VH1)
      • Survivor – Peter Wery, Scott Duncan, Russ Fill, Tim Barker, Marc Bennett, James Boon, Paulo Castillo, Rodney Chauvin, Luke Cormack, Lee Doig, Ben Gamble, Kevin B. Garrison, Nixon George, Rick Higgs, Derek Hoffmann, Matthias Hoffmann, Toby Hogan, Derek Holt, Efrain "Mofi" Laguna, Ian Miller, Nico Nyoni, Ryan O'Donnell, Jeff Phillips, Louis Powell, Thomas Pretorius, Erick Sarmiento, Dirk Steyn, John Tattersall, Paulo Velozo, David Alan Arnold, Christopher Barker, Granger Scholtz, and Nicholas Van Der Westhuizen (CBS)

    Commercial[edit]

    Commercial

    Outstanding Commercial

    Costumes[edit]

    Costumes

    Outstanding Period Costumes (Area)

    • The Crown: "Cri de Coeur" – Amy Roberts, Sidonie Roberts, and Sarah Moore (Netflix)

    Outstanding Fantasy/Sci-Fi Costumes (Area)

    Outstanding Contemporary Costumes (Area)

    • Schitt's Creek: "Happy Ending" – Debra Hanson and Darci Cheyne (Pop TV)
      • Black-ish: "Hair Day" – Michelle R. Cole and Juliann DeVito (ABC)
      • Euphoria: "The Next Episode" – Heidi Bivens, Danielle Baker, and Katina Danabassis (HBO)
      • Grace and Frankie: "The Tank" – Allyson B. Fanger, Kristine Haag, and Lori DeLapp (Netflix)
      • Killing Eve: "Are You from Pinner?" – Sam Perry, Katie Broome, and Justin Selway (BBC America)
      • The Politician: "Pilot" – Lou Eyrich, Claire Parkinson, Lily Parkinson, and Nora Pedersen (Netflix)
      • Unorthodox: "Part 2" – Justine Seymour, Simone Kreska, and Barbara Schramm (Netflix)

    Outstanding Costumes for Variety, Nonfiction or Reality Programming (Area)

    Directing[edit]

    Directing

    Outstanding Directing for a Variety Series

    Outstanding Directing for a Variety Special

    Outstanding Directing for a Documentary/Nonfiction Program

    Outstanding Directing for a Reality Program

    Hairstyling[edit]

    Hairstyling

    Outstanding Contemporary Hairstyling

    • Black-ish: "Hair Day" – Araxi Lindsey, Robert C. Mathews III, and Enoch Williams (ABC)
      • Grace and Frankie: "The Laughing Stock" – Kelly Kline, Jonathan Hanousek, and Marlene Williams (Netflix)
      • The Handmaid's Tale: "Liars" – Paul Elliot and Ewa Latak-Cynk (Hulu)
      • The Politician: "Pilot" – Chris Clark, Natalie Driscoll, and Havana Prats (Netflix)
      • Schitt's Creek: "Happy Ending" – Annastasia Cucullo and Ana Sorys (Pop TV)
      • This Is Us: "Strangers: Part Two" – Michael Peter Reitz, Katherine Rees, Germicka Barclay, Renia Green-Edittorio, and Corey Hill (NBC)

    Outstanding Period and/or Character Hairstyling

    • Hollywood: "A Hollywood Ending" – Michelle Ceglia, Barry Lee Moe, George Guzman, Michele Arvizo, and Maria Elena Pantoja (Netflix)
      • The Crown: "Cri de Coeur" – Cate Hall, Louise Coles, Sarah Nuth, Suzanne David, and Catriona Johnstone (Netflix)
      • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: "A Jewish Girl Walks Into the Apollo..." – Kimberley Spiteri, Michael S. Ward, and Tijen Osman (Prime Video)
      • Pose: "Worth It" – Barry Lee Moe, Timothy Harvey, Sabana Majeed, Liliana Maggio, Lisa Thomas, Greg Bazemore, Jessie Mojica, and Charlene Belmond (FX)
      • Star Trek: Picard: "Stardust City Rag" – Maxine Morris, Maria Sandoval, Wendy Southard, Sallie Nicole Ciganovich, Ashleigh Childers, and Yesim Osman (CBS All Access)

    Outstanding Contemporary Hairstyling for a Variety, Nonfiction or Reality Program

    • RuPaul's Drag Race: "I'm That Bitch" – Curtis Foreman and Ryan Randall (VH1)
      • A Celebration of the Music from Coco – Jennifer Guerrero, Yvonne Kupka, Kimi Messina, Gail Ryan, Amber Maher, Yiotis Panayiotou, and Megg Massey (Disney+)
      • Dancing with the Stars: "Episode 2802" – Mary Guerrero, Kimi Messina, Gail Ryan, Cheryl Eckert, Jennifer Guerrero, Jani Kleinbard, Amber Maher, and Patricia Pineda (ABC)
      • The Oscars – Anthony Wilson, Barbara Cantu, Paula Ashby, Vickie Mynes, Yvonne Kupka, Gail Ryan, Iraina Crenshaw, and Luke O'Connor (ABC)
      • The Voice: "Top 10" – Jerilynn Stephens, Amber Maher, Regina Rodriguez, Renee Ferruggia, Darbie Wieczorek, Cory Rotenberg, Danilo Dixon, and Robert Ramos (NBC)

    Lighting Design / Lighting Direction[edit]

    Lighting Design / Lighting Direction

    Outstanding Lighting Design / Lighting Direction for a Variety Series

    • Saturday Night Live: "Host: John Mulaney" – Geoffrey Amoral, Richard McGuinness, William McGuinness, Tim Stasse, and Trevor Brown (NBC)
      • America's Got Talent: "Live Results Finale" – Noah Mitz, Michael Berger, William Gossett, Ryan Tanker, Matt Benson, Scott Chmielewski, and Patrick Brazil (NBC)
      • Jimmy Kimmel Live!:『Jimmy Kimmel Live in Brooklyn – Jason Alexander, Tracy Morgan, John Krasinski, Paul Shaffer, and Music from Kanye West』– Christian Hibbard, William Peets, Kille Knobel, and James Worman (ABC)
      • So You Think You Can Dance: "Finale" – Robert Barnhart, Matt Firestone, Madigan Stehly, Patrick Boozer, and Pete Radice (Fox)
      • The Voice: "Live Finale" – Oscar Dominguez, Daniel Boland, Craig Housenick, Samuel Barker, and Johnny Bradley (NBC)

    Outstanding Lighting Design / Lighting Direction for a Variety Special

    Main Title and Motion Design[edit]

    Main Title and Motion Design

    Outstanding Main Title Design

    • Godfather of Harlem – Mason Nicoll, Peter Pak, Giovana Pham, and Cisco Torres (Epix)
      • Abstract: The Art of Design – Allie Fisher, Anthony Zazzi, and Brian Oakes (Netflix)
      • Carnival Row – Lisa Bolan, Henry DeLeon, Mert Kizilay, Kaya Thomas, Yongsub Song, and Alex Silver (Prime Video)
      • The Morning ShowAngus Wall, Hazel Baird, Emanuele Marani, EJ Kang, Peter Murphy, and Erik Righetti (Apple TV+)
      • The Politician – Heidi Berg, Felix Soletic, Carlo Sa, Yongsub Song, Joe Paniagua, and Rachel Fowler (Netflix)
      • Watchmen – Paul Mitchell, Olga Midlenko, Maciek Sokalski, Gabe Perez, and Benjamin Woodlock (HBO)
      • Westworld – Patrick Clair, Pinar Yanadarg Delul, Raoul Marks, and Lance Slaton (HBO)

    Outstanding Motion Design (Juried)

    Makeup[edit]

    Makeup

    Outstanding Contemporary Makeup (Non-Prosthetic)

    • Euphoria: "And Salt the Earth Behind You" – Doniella Davy, Kirsten Sage Coleman, and Tara Lang Shah (HBO)
      • Big Little Lies: "She Knows" – Michelle Radow, Erin Rosenmann, Karen Rentrop, Molly R. Stern, Angela Levin, Simone Almekias-Siegl, Miho Suzuki, and Claudia Humburg (HBO)
      • The Handmaid's Tale: "Mayday" – Burton LeBlanc and Alastair Muir (Hulu)
      • Ozark: "In Case of Emergency" – Tracy Ewell, Jillian Erickson, Jack Lazzaro, and Susan Reilly Lehane (Netflix)
      • The Politician: "The Assassination of Payton Hobart" – Autumn Butler, Caitlin Martini Emery, Debra Schrey, and Emma Burton (Netflix)
      • Schitt's Creek: "Happy Ending" – Candice Ornstein and Lucky Bromhead (Pop TV)

    Outstanding Period and/or Character Makeup (Non-Prosthetic)

    • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: "It's Comedy or Cabbage" – Patricia Regan, Claus Lulla, Joseph A. Campayno, Margot Boccia, Michael Laudati, Tomasina Smith, Roberto Baez, and Alberto Machuca (Prime Video)
      • American Horror Story: 1984: "The Lady in White" – Carleigh Herbert, Abby Lyle Clawson, Mo Meinhart, and Lawrence Mercado (FX)
      • Hollywood: "Outlaws" – Eryn Krueger Mekash, Kim Ayers, Kerrin Jackson, and Ana Gabriela Quinonez Urreg (Netflix)
      • Pose: "Acting Up" – Sherri Berman Laurence, Nicky Pattison Illum, Chris Milone, Deja Smith, and Jessica Padilla (FX)
      • Star Trek: Picard: "Stardust City Rag" – Silvina Knight, Robin Beauchesne, David Williams, Peter De Oliveira, and Natalie Thimm (CBS All Access)

    Outstanding Contemporary Makeup for a Variety, Nonfiction or Reality Program (Non-Prosthetic)

    • RuPaul's Drag Race: "I'm That Bitch" – Natasha Marcelina, David Petruschin, Jen Fregozo, and Nicole Faulkner (VH1)
      • Dancing with the Stars: "Disney Night" – Zena Shteysel Green, Angela Moos, Patti Ramsey-Bortoli, Sarah Woolf, Julie Socash, Alison Gladieux, Donna Bard, and Nadege Schoenfeld (ABC)
      • The Little Mermaid Live! – Bruce Grayson, Angela Moos, Jennifer Aspinall, Julie Socash, Valerie Hunt, Tym Buacharen, Jennifer Nigh, and Robin Beauchesne (ABC)
      • The Oscars – Bruce Grayson, Angela Moos, Jill Cady, Peter De Oliveira, Zena Shteysel Green, Jennifer Aspinall, James MacKinnon, and Deborah Huss Humphries (ABC)
      • The Voice: "Top 10" – Darcy Diana Gilmore, Kathleen Karridene, Alexis Walker, Nikki Carbonetta, Erin Guth, Gregory Arlt, Michelle DeMilt, and Gloria Elias-Foeillet (NBC)

    Outstanding Prosthetic Makeup for a Series, Limited Series, Movie or Special (Area)

    Music[edit]

    Music

    Outstanding Music Composition for a Series (Original Dramatic Score)

    Outstanding Music Composition for a Limited Series, Movie or Special (Original Dramatic Score)

    Outstanding Music Composition for a Documentary Series or Special (Original Dramatic Score)

    Outstanding Music Direction

    Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics

    Outstanding Original Main Title Theme Music

    Outstanding Music Supervision

    Picture Editing[edit]

    Picture Editing

    Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Drama Series

    Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series

    Outstanding Multi-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series

    • One Day at a Time: "Boundaries" – Cheryl Campsmith (Pop TV)
      • The Conners: "Slappy Holidays" – Brian Schnuckel (ABC)
      • Will & Grace: "We Love Lucy" – Peter Beyt (NBC)
      • Will & Grace: "What a Dump" – Joseph Fulton (NBC)

    Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Limited Series or Movie

    Outstanding Picture Editing for Variety Programming (Area)

    Outstanding Picture Editing for a Nonfiction Program

    Outstanding Picture Editing for a Structured Reality or Competition Program

    • RuPaul's Drag Race: "I'm That Bitch" – Jamie Martin, Michael Roha, Paul Cross, Michael Lynn Deis, and Ryan Mallick (VH1)
      • LEGO Masters: "Mega City Block" – Samantha Diamond, Dan Hancox, Karl Kimbrough, Ian Kaufman, Kevin Benson, Josh Young, and Jon Bilicki (Fox)
      • Queer Eye: "Disabled but Not Really" – Ryan Taylor and Tony Zajkowski (Netflix)
      • Survivor: "It's Like a Survivor Economy" – Michael Greer, Chad Bertalotto, Evan Mediuch, James Ciccarello, and Jacob Teixeira (CBS)
      • Top Chef: "The Jonathan Gold Standard" – Matt Reynolds, David Chalfin, Mike Abitz, Eric Lambert, Jose Rodriguez, and Dan Williams (Bravo)

    Outstanding Picture Editing for an Unstructured Reality Program

    • Cheer: "God Blessed Texas" – Arielle Kilker, David Nordstrom, Kate Hackett, Daniel McDonald, Mark Morgan, Sharon Weaver, and Ted Woerner (Netflix)
      • Deadliest Catch: "Cold War Rivals" – Rob Butler, Isaiah Camp, Ben Bulatao, Joe Mikan, Ralf Melville, and Alexandra Moore (Discovery Channel)
      • Life Below Zero: "The New World" – Matt Edwards, Jennifer Nelson, Tony Diaz, Matt Mercer, Eric Michael Schrader, and Michael Swingler (National Geographic)
      • RuPaul's Drag Race: Untucked: "The Ball Ball" – Kendra Pasker, Yali Sharon, and Kate Smith (VH1)

    Sound Editing[edit]

    Sound Editing

    Outstanding Sound Editing for a Comedy or Drama Series (One Hour)

    • Stranger Things: "Chapter Eight: The Battle of Starcourt" – Craig Henighan, William Files, Ryan Cole, Kerry Dean Williams, Angelo Palazzo, Katie Halliday, David Klotz, and Steve Baine (Netflix)
      • Better Call Saul: "Bagman" – Nick Forshager, Kathryn Madsen, Matt Temple, Todd Toon, Jeff Cranford, Jane Boegel-Koch, Jason Tregoe Newman, Gregg Barbanell, and Alex Ullrich (AMC)
      • The Boys: "The Name of the Game" – Wade Barnett, David Barbee, Mason Kopeikin, Brian Dunlop, Ryan Briley, Chris Newlin, Christopher Brooks, Joseph T. Sabella, and Jesi Ruppel (Prime Video)
      • The Crown: "Aberfan" – Lee Walpole, Andy Kennedy, Saoirse Christopherson, Juraj Mravec, Tom Williams, Steve Little, Tom Stewart, Anna Wright, Catherine Thomas, and Lindsay Wright (Netflix)
      • Star Trek: Picard: "Et in Arcadia Ego: Part 2" – Matthew E. Taylor, Tim Farrell, Harry Cohen, Michael Schapiro, Sean Heissinger, Clay Weber, Darrin Mann, Moira Marquis, Stan Jones, Alyson Dee Moore, and Chris Moriana (CBS All Access)
      • Westworld: "Parce Domine" – Sue Gamsaragan Cahill, Benjamin L. Cook, Shaughnessy Hare, Jane Boegel-Koch, Tim Tuchrello, Sara Bencivenga, Brendan Croxon, Adrian Medhurst, and Christopher Kaller (HBO)

    Outstanding Sound Editing for a Comedy or Drama Series (Half-Hour) and Animation

    • The Mandalorian: "Chapter 1: The Mandalorian" – David Acord, Matthew Wood, Bonnie Wild, James Spencer, Richard Quinn, Richard Gould, Stephanie McNally, Ryan Rubin, Ronni Brown, and Jana Vance (Disney+)
      • GLOW: "The Libertines" – Robb Navrides, Colette Dahanne, Jason Lezama, David Beadle, Jason Krane, Larry Hopkins, Emily Kwong, Lindsay Pepper, and Zane Bruce (Netflix)
      • Silicon Valley: "Exit Event" – Bobby Mackston, Sean Garnhart, Ryan Gierke, Joe Deveau, and Vincent Guisetti (HBO)
      • Space Force: "The Launch" – Bobby Mackston, Paul Hammond, Sean Garnhart, Vincent Guisetti, Jason Tregoe Newman, Tessa Phillips, Aran Tanchum, and Alfredo Douglas (Netflix)
      • What We Do in the Shadows: "The Return" – Steffan Falesitch, David Barbee, Angelina Faulkner, Steve Griffen, Sam C. Lewis, John Guentner, and Ellen Heuer (FX)

    Outstanding Sound Editing for a Limited Series, Movie or Special

    • Watchmen: "This Extraordinary Being" – Brad North, Harry Cohen, Jordan Wilby, Tiffany S. Griffith, Antony Zeller, AJ Shapiro, Sally Boldt, Zane Bruce, and Lindsay Pepper (HBO)
      • American Horror Story: 1984: "Camp Redwood" – Gary Megregian, Timothy A. Cleveland, Zheng Jia, Naaman Haynes, Patrick Hogan, Sam Munoz, David Klotz, and Noel Vought (FX)
      • Catherine the Great: "Episode Four" – Jim Goddard, Craig Butters, Duncan Price, Matthew Mewett, Andrew Glen, Anna Wright, Catherine Thomas, and Philip Clements (HBO)
      • Devs: "Episode 3" – Glenn Freemantle, Ben Barker, Gillian Dodders, James Wichall, Danny Freemantle, Robert Malone, Dayo James, Nicholas Freemantle, Lilly Blazewicz, Emilie O'Connor, Zoe Freed, and Peter Burgis (FX)
      • El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie – Nick Forshager, Todd Toon, Kathryn Madsen, Jane Boegel-Koch, Luke Gibleon, Jason Tregoe Newman, Bryant J. Fuhrmann, Jeff Cranford, Gregg Barbanell, and Alex Ullrich (Netflix)

    Outstanding Sound Editing for a Nonfiction or Reality Program (Single or Multi-Camera)

    Sound Mixing[edit]

    Sound Mixing

    Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy or Drama Series (One Hour)

    Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Limited Series or Movie

    Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy or Drama Series (Half-Hour) and Animation (Area)

    Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Variety Series or Special (Area)

    Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Nonfiction or Reality Program (Single or Multi-Camera) (Area)

    Special Visual Effects[edit]

    Special Visual Effects

    Outstanding Special Visual Effects

    • The Mandalorian: "Chapter 2: The Child" – Richard Bluff, Jason Porter, Abbigail Keller, Hayden Jones, Hal Hickel, Roy Cancino, John Rosengrant, Enrico Damm, and Landis Fields (Disney+)
      • Lost in Space: "Ninety-Seven" – Jabbar Raisani, Terron Pratt, Marion Spates, Niklas Jacobson, Andrew Walker, Juri Stanossek, Dirk Valk, Blaine Lougheed, and Paul Benjamin (Netflix)
      • Stranger Things: "Chapter Eight: The Battle of Starcourt" – Paul Graff, Gayle Busby, Tom Ford, Michael Maher Jr., Martin Pelletier, Berter Orpak, Yvon Jardel, Nathan Arbuckle, and Caius Man (Netflix)
      • Watchmen: "See How They Fly" – Erik Henry, Matt Robken, Ashley J. Ward, David Fletcher, Mathieu Raynault, Bobo Skipper, Ahmed Gharraph, Emanuel Fuchs, and Francois Lambert (HBO)
      • Westworld: "Crisis Theory" – Jay Worth, Martin Hernblad, Jeremy Fernsler, Nhat Phong Tran, Joe Wehmeyer, Mark Byers, Bruce Branit, Octevia Robertson, and Jacqueline VandenBussche (HBO)

    Outstanding Special Visual Effects in a Supporting Role

    • Vikings: "The Best Laid Plans" – Dominic Remane, Bill Halliday, Becca Donohue, Leann Harvey, Tom Morrison, Ovidiu Cinazan, Jim Maxwell, Ezra Waddell, and Warren Lawtey (History)
      • Devs: "Episode 8" – Andrew Whitehurst, Sarah Tulloch, Anne Akande, Samantha Townend, Giacomo Mineo, Tom Hales, George Kyparissous, Stafford Lawrence, and Jon Uriarte
      • The Handmaid's Tale: "Household" – Stephen Lebed, Brendan Taylor, Leo Bovell, Rob Greb, Gwen Zhang, Marlis Coto, Stephen Wagner, Josh Clark, and James Minett (Hulu)
      • Tales from the Loop: "Loop" – Andrea Knoll, Ashley Bernes, Eduardo Anton, Julien Hery, Laurent Pancaccini, Andrew Kowbell, Alan Scott, David Piombino, and Rajesh Kaushik (Prime Video)
      • Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan: "Strongman" – Erik Henry, Juliette Yager, Peter Crosman, Pau Costa Moeller, Paige Prokop, Deak Ferrand, Francois Lambert, Jesper Kjolsrud, and Richard Vosper-Carey (Prime Video)

    Stunt Coordination[edit]

    Stunt Coordination

    Outstanding Stunt Coordination for a Comedy Series or Variety Program

    Outstanding Stunt Coordination for a Drama Series, Limited Series or Movie

    Technical Direction[edit]

    Technical Direction

    Outstanding Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video Control for a Series (Area)

    • Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: "Episode 629" – Dave Saretsky, Augie Yuson, Dante Pagano, John Harrison, Rob Balton, Tim Quigley, Phil Salanto, Rich Freedman, Joe Debonis, Michael Hauer, Lucas Owen, Scotty Buckler, and Russell Swanson (HBO)
      • Curb Your Enthusiasm: "The Spite Store" – Jon Purdy, Patrik Thelander, Parker Tolifson, and Ric Griffith (HBO)
      • Jimmy Kimmel Live!:『Jimmy Kimmel Live in Brooklyn – Jon Stewart, Benedict Cumberbatch, Kelly Ripa, and Music from David Byrne』– Ervin D. Hurd Jr., Guy Jones, Parker Bartlett, Greg Grouwinkel, Garrett Hurt, Kris Wilson, Mark Gonzales, Nick Gomez, Bernd Reinhardt, Damien Tuffereau, and Steve Garrett (ABC)
      • Saturday Night Live: "Host: Woody Harrelson" – Steven Cimino, Frank Grisanti, Ted Natoli, John Pinto, Paul Cangialosi, Len Wechsler, Dave Driscoll, Eric A. Eisenstein, Dante Pagano (NBC)
      • The Voice: "Live Finale" – Allan Wells, Terrance Ho, Diane Biederbeck, Danny Bonilla, Mano Bonilla III, Robert Burnette, Suzanne Ebner, Guido Frenzel, Alex Hernandez, Cory Hunter, Marc Hunter, Scott Hylton, Kathrine Iacofano, Scott Kaye, Steve Martyniuk, Jofre Rosero, and Steve Simmons (NBC)

    Outstanding Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video Control for a Special

    • Live in Front of a Studio Audience: "All in the Family" and "Good Times" – Eric Becker, Kevin Faust, Ron Hirshman, Ed Horton, Helena Jackson, Jon Purdy, Jimmy Velarde, Allen Merriweather, Greg Grouwinkel, Randy Gomez Sr., and Andrew Ansnick (ABC)
      • 2019 American Music Awards – Eric Becker, John Pritchett, Guy Jones, Wes Steinberg, Joe Bohman, Ralph Bolton, Danny Bonilla, David Carline, Suzanne Ebner, Garrett Hurt, Brian Lataille, David Levisohn, Tore Livia, Steve Martyniuk, Allen Merriweather, EJ "Sketch" Pasinski, Rob Pittman, David Plakos, John Pry, Steve Thiel, Rob Vuona, Dan Webb, and Easter Xua (ABC)
      • Dave Chappelle: Sticks & Stones – Jon Pretnar, Ruben Avendano, Daniel Balton, Mano Bonilla, Eli Clarke, Helene Haviland, Ed Horton, Lyn Noland, JR Reid, and Ronald N. Travisano (Netflix)
      • The Little Mermaid Live! – Iqbal Hans, Rod Wardell, Emelie Scaminaci, Michael Maiatico, Damien Tuffereau, Nathanial Havholm, Freddy Frederick, Tore Livia, Jofre Rosero, Easter Xua, David Plakos, Patrick Gleason, Keyan Safyari, and David Eastwood (ABC)
      • The Oscars – Eric Becker, John Pritchett, Kenneth Shapiro, Terrance Ho, Mark Sanford, Guy Jones, Robert Del Russo, David Eastwood, David Carline, Suzanne Ebner, Jay Kulick, Dan Webb, Shaun Harkins, Garrett Hurt, Tore Livia, Allen Merriweather, Lyn Noland, Freddy Fredericks, George Prince, Ralph Bolton, Rob Palmer, David Plakos, Easter Xua, Rob Balton, and Danny Bonilla (ABC)

    Writing[edit]

    Writing

    Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series

    Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special

    Outstanding Writing for a Nonfiction Program

    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
    15 Watchmen HBO
    14 The Mandalorian Disney+
    12 The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Prime Video
    Saturday Night Live NBC
    9 The Oscars ABC
    Ozark Netflix
    RuPaul's Drag Race VH1
    Westworld HBO
    8 Hollywood Netflix
    Last Week Tonight with John Oliver HBO
    Succession HBO
    7 The Crown Netflix
    The Handmaid's Tale Hulu
    Queer Eye Netflix
    Schitt's Creek Pop TV
    Stranger Things Netflix
    6 Cheer Netflix
    Dave Chappelle: Sticks & Stones Netflix
    Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness Netflix
    5 Apollo 11 CNN
    Beastie Boys Story Apple TV+
    Euphoria HBO
    Insecure HBO
    McMillion$ HBO
    The Politician Netflix
    Star Trek: Picard CBS All Access
    The Voice NBC
    4 American Horror Story: 1984 FX
    Becoming Netflix
    The Cave National Geographic
    The Daily Show with Trevor Noah Comedy Central
    Devs FX
    El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie Netflix
    62nd Grammy Awards CBS
    Killing Eve BBC America
    Live in Front of a Studio Audience: "All in the Family" and "Good Times" ABC
    Mrs. America FX
    Pose FX
    Space Force Netflix
    Super Bowl LIV Halftime Show Starring Jennifer Lopez and Shakira Fox
    This Is Us NBC
    Unorthodox Netflix
    What We Do in the Shadows FX
    Will & Grace NBC
    3 American Factory Netflix
    Better Call Saul AMC
    Big Little Lies HBO
    A Black Lady Sketch Show HBO
    Carnival Row Prime Video
    Curb Your Enthusiasm HBO
    Dancing with the Stars ABC
    Drunk History Comedy Central
    #FreeRayshawn Quibi
    Genndy Tartakovsky's Primal Adult Swim
    The Last Dance ESPN
    Laurel Canyon: A Place in Time Epix
    The Little Mermaid Live! ABC
    The Morning Show Apple TV+
    The Simpsons Fox
    So You Think You Can Dance Fox
    73rd Annual Tony Awards CBS
    Top Chef Bravo
    2 Big Mouth Netflix
    Black-ish ABC
    Dave Chappelle: The Kennedy Center Mark Twain Prize for American Humor PBS
    Defending Jacob Apple TV+
    GLOW Netflix
    77th Annual Golden Globe Awards NBC
    Grace and Frankie Netflix
    Hannah Gadsby: Douglas Netflix
    Jimmy Kimmel Live! ABC
    John Mulaney & the Sack Lunch Bunch Netflix
    The Kennedy Center Honors CBS
    The Late Show with Stephen Colbert CBS
    LEGO Masters Fox
    Life Below Zero National Geographic
    Little Fires Everywhere Hulu
    Love Is Blind Netflix
    Modern Family ABC
    Most Dangerous Game Quibi
    The Ranch Netflix
    Reno 911! Quibi
    RuPaul's Drag Race: Untucked VH1
    Serengeti Discovery Channel
    Shark Tank ABC
    Survivor CBS
    Tales from the Loop Prime Video
    Why We Hate Discovery Channel

    Nominations and wins by network[edit]

    Networks with multiple Creative Arts nominations
    Nominations Network
    124 Netflix
    74 HBO
    36 NBC
    31 ABC
    23 Prime Video
    22 CBS/CBS All Access
    FX/FX on Hulu
    18 Disney+
    14 Fox
    13 Apple TV+
    12 Hulu
    VH1
    10 Quibi
    9 Comedy Central
    National Geographic
    8 Pop TV
    6 BBC America
    5 Adult Swim
    CNN
    Discovery Channel
    PBS
    4 AMC
    Epix
    Oculus
    YouTube
    3 Bravo
    ESPN
    TBS
    2 A&E
    History
    Showtime
    Networks with multiple Creative Arts wins
    Wins Network
    19 HBO
    Netflix
    8 Disney+
    NBC
    5 ABC
    National Geographic
    VH1
    4 Adult Swim
    Prime Video
    3 CNN
    Fox
    Pop TV
    2 CBS/CBS All Access
    Quibi

    Ceremony order and presenters[edit]

    The following categories were presented at each ceremony:[5][6]

    Saturday, September 19[11]
    Category Presenter
    Outstanding Animated Program Wanda Sykes
    Outstanding Casting for a Limited Series, Movie or Special Monica Raymund
    Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series Laverne Cox
    Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking Daryl Mitchell
    Outstanding Host for a Reality or Competition Program Erin Moriarty
    Outstanding Sound Editing for a Limited Series, Movie or Special
  • Tracy Tutor
  • Outstanding Contemporary Makeup (Non-Prosthetic)
  • Jeffrey Dean Morgan
  • Outstanding Contemporary Costumes Brandee Evans
    Outstanding Period and/or Character Hairstyling Sofia Hublitz
    Outstanding Variety Special (Pre-Recorded)
  • The Kid Mero
  • Outstanding Music Composition for a Series (Original Dramatic Score) J. B. Smoove
    Outstanding Choreography for Variety or Reality Programming Cheryl Burke
    Outstanding Main Title Design Jeremy Pope
    Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series Leslie Odom Jr.
    Outstanding Unstructured Reality Program Dylan McDermott
    Outstanding Children's Program Giancarlo Esposito
    Outstanding Commercial Chris Hardwick
    Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series (One Hour) Rob Riggle
    Outstanding Directing for a Variety Special Thomas Lennon
    Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series Justin H. Min
    Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series
  • Bobby Cannavale
  • Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special Issa Rae
    Outstanding Lighting Design / Lighting Direction for a Variety Series John Hodgman
    Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Period or Fantasy Program (One Hour or More) Drew Scott
    Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy or Drama Series (One Hour)
  • Jeannie Gaffigan
  • Outstanding Stunt Coordination for a Drama Series, Limited Series or Movie Gina Carano
    Outstanding Television Movie Lamorne Morris
    Outstanding Interactive Extension of a Linear Program Gabriel Iglesias
    Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series Jeff Bridges
    Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series RuPaul

    Ceremony information[edit]

    Nicole Byer in 2012
    Nicole Byer served as host for the five-night event.

    The 72nd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards were originally scheduled for September 12 and 13, 2020, falling a week before the main ceremony and spreading the awards across two nights as had been done in previous years.[12][13] However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the ceremonies were moved in June to several unspecified nights in a virtual format,[14] with a five-night plan being outlined in early August. The new format divided the ceremonies by genre as follows:[15]

    The first four ceremonies were streamed on Emmys.com via a YouTube livestream, with the fifth night airing on FXX.[16] All of the virtual ceremonies were produced by Bob Bain Productions,[15] and Nicole Byer served as the host for the event from the Television Academy's headquarters in North Hollywood.[17][18] While events during the ceremony were called live and winners were not known until being revealed to the director, all footage was pre-taped; each nominee was asked to submit an acceptance speech in advance, with only the winners' speeches being broadcast.[19] While the ceremony mostly proceeded without a hitch, one notable error occurred when Jason Bateman was read as the winner for Guest Actor in a Drama Series, while Ron Cephas Jones – the actual winner – was listed on screen.[20] Other glitches included the screen listing "Need Names" instead of recognizing the hairstyling team from Hollywood and an incorrect graphics card for Maya Rudolph's win for Guest Actress in a Comedy Series.[16]

    Category and rule changes[edit]

    Changes that affected Creative Arts categories included:[21][22][23]

    Four categories were also moved to the Creative Arts ceremony from the main ceremony: Outstanding Directing for a Variety Series, Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series, Outstanding Variety Sketch Series, and Outstanding Television Movie.[13]

    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.
  • ^

    • Area awards are non-competitive and nominees are considered on their own terms. Any nominee with at least 90% approval (or two-thirds approval for Children's Program) received an Emmy. If no nominee received 90% approval, the nominee with the highest approval received an Emmy; for area awards in picture editing and sound mixing, there was an additional requirement that the highest-rated nominee must have at least 50% approval to receive an Emmy.[2]
  • Juried awards generally do not have nominations; instead, all entrants were screened before members of the appropriate peer group, and one, more than one, or no entry was awarded an Emmy based on the jury's vote.[2]
  • References[edit]

    1. ^ a b "72nd Emmys Program" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 3, 2021. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  • ^ a b c d "72nd Primetime Emmy Awards – 2019–2020 Rules and Procedures" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. July 27, 2020. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 20, 2022. Retrieved March 19, 2022.
  • ^ a b
  • "Second Night of 2020 Creative Arts Emmy Winners Announced" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. September 15, 2020. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 20, 2022. Retrieved March 19, 2022.
  • "Third Night of 2020 Creative Arts Emmy Winners Announced" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. September 16, 2020. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 20, 2022. Retrieved March 19, 2022.
  • "Fourth Night of 2020 Creative Arts Emmy Winners Announced" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. September 17, 2020. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 3, 2021. Retrieved March 19, 2022.
  • "Final Night of 2020 Creative Arts Emmy Winners Announced" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. September 19, 2020. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 13, 2022. Retrieved March 19, 2022.
  • ^ "2020 Primetime Emmy Awards – Nomination Press Release" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Archived (PDF) from the original on November 1, 2020. Retrieved March 19, 2022.
  • ^ "More Creative Arts Emmys Presenters Announced". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. September 9, 2020. Archived from the original on September 20, 2020. Retrieved September 23, 2020.
  • ^ Nordyke, Kimberly; Lewis, Hilary (September 14, 2020). "Creative Arts Emmys: Complete Winners List". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on April 9, 2022. Retrieved April 8, 2022.
  • ^ "2020 Creative Arts Emmy Awards Monday". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. September 14, 2020. Archived from the original on April 9, 2022. Retrieved April 8, 2022 – via YouTube.
  • ^ "2020 Creative Arts Emmy Awards Tuesday". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. September 15, 2020. Archived from the original on April 15, 2022. Retrieved April 14, 2022 – via YouTube.
  • ^ "2020 Creative Arts Emmy Awards Wednesday". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. September 16, 2020. Archived from the original on April 15, 2022. Retrieved April 14, 2022 – via YouTube.
  • ^ "2020 Creative Arts Emmy Awards Thursday". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. September 17, 2020. Archived from the original on April 16, 2022. Retrieved April 16, 2022 – via YouTube.
  • ^ "2020 Creative Arts Emmy Awards on FXX". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. September 21, 2020. Archived from the original on December 23, 2021. Retrieved April 16, 2022.
  • ^ Hipes, Patrick (January 8, 2020). "Primetime Emmy Awards Sets 2020 Date On ABC". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on January 8, 2020. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  • ^ a b Hammond, Pete (August 6, 2020). "Emmys: Television Academy Spreads 72nd Awards Presentations Over Six Nights In September, Reduces Number Of Primetime Categories". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on January 30, 2021. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  • ^ Hammond, Pete (June 15, 2020). "Emmys: Creative Arts Goes Virtual, Gov Balls Canceled; TV Academy And ABC Mull Sept 20 Show Format While Network Also Looking To Set Later Oscar Date". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on January 6, 2022. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  • ^ a b Schneider, Michael (August 6, 2020). "Television Academy Reveals Creative Arts Emmys Plans, Via a Five-Night Event". Variety. Archived from the original on April 22, 2022. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  • ^ a b Travers, Ben (September 21, 2020). "2020 Emmys Review: Chaos Reigned in Primetime, and ABC's Show Was Better for It". IndieWire. Archived from the original on January 11, 2022. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  • ^ Hipes, Patrick (August 27, 2020). "Nicole Byer To Host Five-Night Creative Arts Emmys Ceremony". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on August 27, 2020. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  • ^ Schneider, Michael (September 14, 2020). "How the Television Academy Reinvented the Creative Arts Emmys Amid Coronavirus". Variety. Archived from the original on April 27, 2022. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  • ^ Schneider, Michael (August 13, 2020). "Creative Arts Emmys Nominees Have All Been Asked to Submit Acceptance Speeches (Exclusive)". Variety. Archived from the original on April 22, 2022. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  • ^ Andreeva, Nellie (September 19, 2020). "Creative Arts Emmys Suffer Technical Glitch With Two Guest Actor In a Drama Series Winners Announced". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on April 22, 2022. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  • ^ White, Peter (December 17, 2019). "2020 Emmy Rules Changes: Television Academy Unveils Adjustments to 'Hanging Episodes' & Kids Voting". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on December 18, 2019. Retrieved April 22, 2022.
  • ^ Schneider, Michael (December 17, 2019). "Emmys: TV Academy Reveals Fees for Digital Screeners, Now That DVDs Are Over". Variety. Archived from the original on December 31, 2021. Retrieved April 22, 2022.
  • ^ "2020 Emmy Awards Rules Changes" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Archived (PDF) from the original on December 31, 2021. Retrieved April 22, 2022.
  • External links[edit]


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