Benjamin Svetkey's Awards Wrap Up: Are 'The Great' and 'Julia' Too Good for Emmy? Let's Hope Not No images? [Click here](
ID=167008;size=700x180;setID=527264;uid={EMAIL}5804118;click=template_daily_awards_wrap_up [Daily Awards Wrap Up] June 15, 2022
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Are ‘The Great’ and ‘Julia’ Too Good for Emmy? Let’s Hope Not Our columnist makes the case for a pair of shows that may be overlooked but absolutely deserve to be nominated
[- - -] By Benjamin Svetkey [The Great - Julia] “The Great” (Hulu) / “Julia” (HBO Max) They almost certainly wonât win. They arenât even on too many Emmys short lists to be nominated. But there are two shows eligible for Outstanding Comedy Series this year that â at least in this humble TV watcherâs opinion â really do deserve some sort of prize.
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A James Beard Award for one of them, perhaps? And maybe the Order of Lenin for the other?
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The first is âJulia,â HBO Maxâs delicious comedy-drama following the life and career of cooking icon Julia Child, the grand dame of PBS who for 10 years, from 1963 to 1973, taught America how to sauté. Childs has been played by some heavyweights in the past â Meryl Streep in 2009âs âJulia and Juliaâ and, of course, Dan Aykroyd in his famous 1978 “SNL” skit â but never before with the heart and soul, not to mention vocal alacrity, that veteran English actress Sarah Lancashire (âCoronation Street,â âWhere the Heart Isâ) brings to the role. I know the comedy actress category is crowded this year â with Jean Smart for âHacks,â Quinta Brunson for âAbbott Elementary,â Rachel Brosnahan for âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ and Tracee Ellis Ross for âBlack-ish,â to name a few of the top contenders elbowing for a nomination â but seriously. If a performance as joyful and exuberant as Lancashireâs doesnât rate a nomination than Emmy voters should be smacked with a red-hot spatula. Weirdly, the show itself, recently picked up for a second season, barely registers in most Emmy prognosticatorâs prediction lists, so itâs the longest of longshots to win the big prize of best comedy series. Tres disappointing. After all, itâs this yearâs âTed Lasso,â a character-driven show so quirky and engaging and, at times, heartbreaking, itâs impossible not to fall in love with it. âJuliaââs best, maybe only, shot at an Emmy is with its supporting players, who definitely know their way around the awards circuit. David Hyde Pierce, who was nominated for Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series 11 times and picked up four trophies back in the 1990s and early 2000s for playing Niles Crane in âFrasier,â could conceivably pick up his 12th nom for playing Juliaâs adoring, if sometimes annoying, husband, Paul Childs. And Bebe Neuwirth, who won two back-to-back supporting actress prizes for her role as Lilith, Frasierâs ex-wife, has at least a theoretical shot at another for her portrayal as Avis DeVoto, Childâs life-long friend who helps her launch her cooking show on PBSâs local Boston station. Fingers crossed. ID=167008;size=300x250;setID=523257;uid={EMAIL}5804118;click=template_daily_awards_wrap_up The other Emmy-deserving show is âThe Great,â Huluâs wacky, wildly inaccurate portrait of Catherine the Great, ruler of all Russia in the late 1700s. Not since âHoganâs Heroesâ has an American television show had so much fun playing tragic European history for laughs.
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Elle Fanning portrays the empress as a young woman, at first with adorable wide-eyed innocence but soon shifting gears into ruthless but still adorable doggedness, determined to drag a backwards Russia into 18th-century modernity. Fanning is truly awesome in the part.
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Even more awesome is Nicholas Hoult â the boy from âAbout a Boy,â now grown up â as her arranged (and deranged) husband Peter the Third, a brutal loon who sashays through the Winter Palace smashing wine glasses while shouting âHuzzah!,â issuing random laws (beards are forbidden!), and bedding his best friendâs wife, amongst many other ladies of the court.
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Iâm not sure why this show, which enters its third season in November, isnât getting more Emmy traction; virtually nobody making predictions is giving it or many of its actors (including Belinda Bromilow as Peterâs even loonier aunt, Adam Godley as the deeply repressed Archbishop and Phoebe Fox as Catherineâs maid and best friend) much hope for a nomination.
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Maybe itâs just too zany and ribald for timid, politically correct Emmy voters. Or maybe its subject matter â you know, Vladmir Putinâs favorite historical figure â is a touch radioactive at the moment, given current events in Ukraine.
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Still, youâd think that an absurdist, ahistorical comedy that takes the piss out of Russiaâs expansionist history would be the sort of thing even Volodymyr Zelenskyy could get behind.
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He might even say, âHuzzah!â Read Benjamin Svetkey’s recent columns [HERE](.
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