‘Game of Thrones’ seeks record in final Emmys battle

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LOS ANGELES, Sept 20, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – “Game of Thrones” will seek to make
Emmy history one final time Sunday when television’s best and brightest
gather at a glamorous ceremony in Los Angeles to bid farewell to a number of
long-running hit shows.

Despite its misfiring finale which divided fans, the fantasy epic about
feuding families and flame-shooting dragons secured a whopping 32 nominations
for this year’s Emmys — television’s version of the Oscars.

The most decorated fictional show in Emmys history, “Thrones” has twice won
12 awards in a single season.

It is well on its way to besting that record this year, with 10 awards
already bagged in lesser categories at last week’s Creative Arts Emmys,
including for the show’s blockbuster special effects and mock-medieval
swords-and-bodices costumes.

It is the overwhelming favorite to add the top drama series prize to its
haul on Sunday.

“All signs point to ‘Game of Thrones’ picking that up,” predicted Variety’s
Michael Schneider.

“Even if fans weren’t necessarily loving that final season … it doesn’t
matter — if the voters love it, then that’s what’s going to win the Emmy,”
he added.

The Television Academy’s 24,000-plus voters had two weeks in August to pick
their favorites.

To get across the line Sunday, “Thrones” has 14 contenders across seven
categories.

Serial winner Peter Dinklage is a front-runner for sharp-tongued dwarf
Tyrion Lannister, as is Maisie Williams as princess-turned-assassin Arya
Stark.

Emilia Clarke (Daenerys Targaryen) and Kit Harington (Jon Snow) are among
the others in the running.

“Thrones” was not just a critical hit but a sweeping cultural phenomenon —
more than 40 million tuned in to watch each episode of the final season.

Emmys organizers, who have copied the Oscars by eschewing a host this year,
will hope that such wild popularity lifts the ceremony’s viewing figures.

All 10 “Thrones” acting nominees will serve as guest presenters — as will
the likes of Gwyneth Paltrow, Ben Stiller and the Kardashians.

Further star power among the acting nominees will be provided by Oscar-
winners Michael Douglas, Olivia Colman, Mahershala Ali and Patricia Arquette.

– Comedy showdown –

Amazon’s “The Marvelous Mrs Maisel” and HBO’s “Chernobyl” have also emerged
as powerhouse contenders.

“Mrs Maisel” — Amazon’s story of a 1950s housewife-turned-stand up comic –
– won the best comedy Emmy last year, and the second season is well-placed to
add further prizes Sunday.

It is locked in a fierce showdown for the overall comedy gong with “Veep”
and “Fleabag.”

Like “Thrones,” US political satire “Veep” is contending its final Emmys
after a stellar run, including 17 statuettes.

The show won best comedy in 2015, 2016 and 2017, but took a forced hiatus
last year as Julia Louis-Dreyfus battled breast cancer.

She would claim the standalone record for acting Emmys with a ninth win.

Another long-running popular show taking its final Emmys bow is “The Big
Bang Theory,” the throwback sitcom about a group of geeky, young California
scientists.

It earned only one nomination — for directing — but its creators are
unlikely to mind after all 12 seasons were purchased by HBO Max streaming
service this week for a reported $500 million.

In the limited series categories, “Chernobyl,” HBO’s drama about the 1986
nuclear disaster, won seven technical Emmys last weekend. It even inflicted a
rare defeat on “Thrones” in production design.

But it may struggle to add to that tally on Sunday, when it competes with
Netflix’s “When They See Us,” the searing true story of five men wrongly
accused of raping a Central Park jogger, which has eight acting nominations.

In the variety sections, HBO’s political satire “Last Week Tonight”
starring British comedian John Oliver is again front-runner, while NBC’s all-
time leading Emmys winner “Saturday Night Live” remains formidable.

National Geographic’s “Free Solo” does not compete Sunday, but scooped an
impressive seven Emmys last weekend.

The Oscar-winning documentary about a hair-raising, free solo climb of El
Capitan in California’s Yosemite swept the non-fiction categories.