2024 Emmy Awards predictions: Can Shogun slay The Bear?

Hiroyuki Sanada in Shogun
Hiroyuki Sanada in Shogun

The 76th Primetime Emmy Awards are this Sunday (September 15), coming live from the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles. The headlines have been grabbed by Japanese epic Shogun (25 nominations across the Primetime and Primetime Creative awards) and stressful restaurant drama The Bear (23 nominations – the most ever for a comedy in a single year, despite the show not being a comedy). This makes it a very jolly year for Disney-owned production giants FX.

There’s plenty of British interest, from Slow Horses and Ripley to The Crown and Baby Reindeer – which makes it a shame that we can’t watch it in this country. In the US, it will be shown live on ABC from 8pm EDT. Schitt’s Creek father-and-son duo Eugene and Dan Levy will host, but don’t expect a slew of risque jokes – they have promised a “kinder, gentler approach”.

Outstanding Comedy Series

Who should win: Curb Your Enthusiasm

Fifty-five Emmy nominations; two wins (one for directing, the other for Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series). No one is going to pretend that the 12th and final series was its finest, but awards ceremonies shouldn’t be afraid of being sentimental and it would be a fitting send-off for Larry David, one of the true greats of modern television. And just imagine his speech.

Jeff Garlin, JB Smoove, Larry David and Susie Essman in the final episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm
Jeff Garlin, JB Smoove, Larry David and Susie Essman in the final episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm - HBO

Who will win: The Bear

Altogether now: “It’s not a comedy!” No, it isn’t, but it won last year and it will win this year, for a second series that often outstripped its outstanding first. Anyone doubting the show’s brilliance - and it does suffer from a tendency to gaze at its very beautiful navel - should be guided towards episode six, Fishes, a feature-length flashback episode set over a chaotic Christmas Eve dinner. It is stunning storytelling.


Outstanding Drama Series

  • The Crown (Netflix)

  • Fallout (Prime Video)

  • The Gilded Age (HBO)

  • The Morning Show (Apple TV+)

  • Mr. & Mrs. Smith (Prime Video)

  • Shōgun (FX)

  • Slow Horses (Apple TV+)

  • 3 Body Problem (Netflix)

Who should win: Slow Horses

What a curious list. The Gilded Age? 3 Body Problem? That series of The Crown? Good grief. Never mind, there are some worthy names here, and I am going to fly the flag for Blighty and blow His Majesty’s trumpet for Slow Horses. How quickly it has become everyone’s favourite show, how comfortably we have accepted Gary Oldman as the ornery Jackson Lamb (can you even remember him as George Smiley?). The show pumps out series of such high quality at such a pace that we could take it for granted. We shouldn’t.

Who will win: Shogun

But who could argue with this? Shogun will walk away with a clutch of awards on Sunday night, including this big one. Disney shipwrecked us in 17th-century Japan with Cosmo Jarvis’s English sailor, but, like him, we were soon very happy to be lost in the feudal tussles and sweeping backdrops. Many a TV epic has fallen at the first hurdle; this one could run and run.


Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series

  • Baby Reindeer (Netflix)

  • Fargo (FX)

  • Lessons in Chemistry (Apple TV+)

  • Ripley (Netflix)

  • True Detective: Night Country (HBO)

Who should win: Ripley

Here’s what TV can do that film can’t. Anthony Minghella’s 1999 film adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s first Tom Ripley novel was a ripsnorting, sun-dappled breeze, zipping us through the gory story in a couple of hours. Steven Zaillian turned off the colour and turned down the pace, laconically wafting us through eight leisurely but enthralling episodes. Watching Andrew Scott’s seedy conman gradually edge his way to murder was as gripping as it was nauseating.

Andrew Scott in Ripley
Andrew Scott in Ripley - Netflix

Who will win: Ripley

The Emmys has a soft spot for populist dramas and maudlin sitcoms, but it tends to view the Limited and Anthology awards as the preserve of high art. Previous recent winners include the superlative Beef, The White Lotus, Watchmen and Chernobyl. As such, I back them to reward Ripley. Could the voters be seduced by a superb fifth series of Fargo, a return-to-form True Detective or that British curio Baby Reindeer? Of course. If Lessons in Chemistry wins, we take to the streets.


Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series

Matt Berry – What We Do in the Shadows as Leslie “Laszlo” Cravensworth (FX)

Larry David – Curb Your Enthusiasm as Larry David (HBO)

Steve Martin – Only Murders in the Building as Charles-Haden Savage (Hulu)

Martin Short – Only Murders in the Building as Oliver Putnam (Hulu)

Jeremy Allen White – The Bear as Carmen “Carmy” Berzatto (FX)

D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai – Reservation Dogs as Bear Smallhill (FX)

Who should win: Steve Martin

Ah come on, give him an Emmy. Yes he technically has one - for Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series for The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour in 1972 - but Martin’s return to form with the effortlessly entertaining Only Murders deserves recognition. With apologies to co-star and co-creator Martin Short, but Martin nudges ahead by virtue of that patter song. “Which of the Pickwick triplets did it…”

Steve Martin in Only Murders in the Building
Steve Martin in Only Murders in the Building - Hulu

Who will win: Jeremy Allen White

Let’s not kid ourselves.


Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series

  • Quinta Brunson – Abbott Elementary as Janine Teagues (ABC)

  • Ayo Edebiri – The Bear as Sydney Adamu (FX)

  • Selena Gomez – Only Murders in the Building as Mabel Mora (Hulu)

  • Maya Rudolph – Loot as Molly Novak (Apple TV+)

  • Jean Smart – Hacks as Deborah Vance (Max)

  • Kristen Wiig – Palm Royale as Maxine Simmons (Apple TV+)

Who should win: Ayo Edebiri

Not entirely sure what’s changed since series one (for which she won Outstanding Supporting Actress at last year’s ceremony), but Edebiri deserves enormous credit for pulling attention onto a compelling female character in the salty, testosterone-heavy world of The Bear. It’s such a complete performance you struggle to imagine her in anything else.

Ayo Edebiri and Jeremy Allen White in The Bear
Ayo Edebiri and Jeremy Allen White in The Bear - FX

Who will win: Quinta Brunson

The Emmys loves a comedy legacy, especially for female actors (remember Julia Louis-Dreyfus’s six on the bounce for Veep?) and this award will come down to Jean Smart for Hacks (winner 2021, 2022) and Brunson for Abbott Elementary (winner 2023). My money is on the latter.


Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series

  • Idris Elba – Hijack as Sam Nelson (Apple TV+)

  • Donald Glover – Mr. & Mrs. Smith as John Smith / Michael (Prime Video)

  • Walton Goggins – Fallout as The Ghoul / Cooper Howard (Prime Video)

  • Gary Oldman – Slow Horses as Jackson Lamb (Apple TV+)

  • Hiroyuki Sanada – Shōgun as Lord Yoshii Toranaga (FX)

  • Dominic West – The Crown as Charles, Prince of Wales (Netflix)

Who should win: Gary Oldman

Once again I am going to fly the Union flag ahead of the Rising Sun, though with little hope. Oldman, perhaps, will lose out because he’s so good - as Lamb he barely looks like he’s acting. More than any other character of recent years, you know exactly what he smells like. A pungent performance in every sense.

Who will win: Hiroyuki Sanada

And once again, who could argue with this? A look down the previous years suggests this category can throw up some oddities (Rami Malek for Mr Robot, anyone?), so don’t entirely rule out a noseless Walton Goggins or a hunky Idris Elba adding a bit of unexpected sparkle to their mantelpieces. But Sanada is mesmerising as Toranaga, the beating moral heart of Shogun.


Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series

  • Jennifer Aniston – The Morning Show as Alex Levy (Apple TV+)

  • Carrie Coon – The Gilded Age as Bertha Russell (HBO)

  • Maya Erskine – Mr. & Mrs. Smith as Jane Smith / Alana (Prime Video)

  • Anna Sawai – Shōgun as Toda Mariko (FX)

  • Imelda Staunton – The Crown as Queen Elizabeth II (Netflix)

  • Reese Witherspoon – The Morning Show as Bradley Jackson (Apple TV+)

Who should win: Anna Sawai

A tipping point performance for an actress who has been on the verge of the bigtime for a few years - Giri/Haji, Pachinko, er… The Fast and the Furious 9. She managed to imbue her Mariko with such depth and such an internal life that poor Cosmo Jarvis looked occasionally wooden opposite her.

Anna Sawai in Shogun
Anna Sawai in Shogun - FX

Who will win: Maya Erskine

A hunch. Erskine is well-known in America for her comedy roles - especially the critically acclaimed Pen15 - and I suspect the Emmy voters will have been wowed by her transformation into a serious actress (with a nice side order of action hero too). To stop Mr & Mrs Smith becoming the Donald Glover show is quite some achievement.


Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie

  • Matt Bomer – Fellow Travelers as Hawkins “Hawk” Fuller (Showtime)

  • Richard Gadd – Baby Reindeer as Donny Dunn (Netflix)

  • Jon Hamm – Fargo as Sheriff Roy Tillman (FX)

  • Tom Hollander – Feud: Capote vs. The Swans as Truman Capote (FX)

  • Andrew Scott – Ripley as Tom Ripley (Netflix)

Who should win: Tom Hollander

Of the three Brits up for this award, I’d give Hollander the nod. Gadd is compelling, but his performance never really managed to escape its stage origins. Scott, as I have said above, is superb as Tom Ripley, and would be a worthy winner. But Hollander became the latest in recent years - following Toby Jones and Philip Seymour Hoffmann - to so wholly inhabit Truman Capote. One of those performances that leaves you talking in their cadence for days afterwards.

Tom Hollander in Feud: Capote vs. The Swans
Tom Hollander in Feud: Capote vs. The Swans - FX

Who will win: Jon Hamm

I suspect the Brits won’t win this one, and it will be between Hamm and Bomer. Series five of Fargo was such a brilliant return to form that the actors involved have been swept along with it. Hamm, as Sheriff Roy Tillman, reminded us of his magnetism – and his gift for comedy – as a character of delightfully vile proportions.


Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie

  • Jodie Foster – True Detective: Night Country as Detective Elizabeth Danvers (HBO)

  • Brie Larson – Lessons in Chemistry as Elizabeth Zott (Apple TV+)

  • Juno Temple – Fargo as Dorothy “Dot” Lyon (FX)

  • Sofía Vergara – Griselda as Griselda Blanco (Netflix)

  • Naomi Watts – Feud: Capote vs. The Swans as Babe Paley (FX)

Who should win: Naomi Watts

Tom Hollander’s mewling impersonation of Capote could only ever work if anchored by excellent work around him. The “swans” were quite the ensemble – Diane Lane, Chloe Sevigny, Demi Moore, Molly Ringwald, Calista Flockhart - but the best of them was Watts as the bruised and confused Babe Paley.

Jodie Foster and Kali Reis in True Detective: Night Country
Jodie Foster and Kali Reis in True Detective: Night Country - HBO

Who will win: Jodie Foster

The Emmys isn’t shy about rewarding A-listers for stepping onto the small screen and I imagine the board quite like the idea of Foster clutching that golden winged woman holding an atom (arts meets science, since you ask). Again, another performer who could benefit from starring in a show that relocated its puff.


Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series

  • Lionel Boyce – The Bear as Marcus Brooks (FX)

  • Paul W. Downs – Hacks as Jimmy LuSaque, Jr. (Max)

  • Ebon Moss-Bachrach – The Bear as Richard “Richie” Jerimovich (FX)

  • Paul Rudd – Only Murders in the Building as Ben Glenroy (Hulu)

  • Tyler James Williams – Abbott Elementary as Gregory Eddie (ABC)

  • Bowen Yang – Saturday Night Live as various characters (NBC)

Who should win: Paul Rudd

The Emmys is also partial to a heavyweight guest star and while there’s no shortage of those in Only Murders, Rudd’s was particularly enjoyable (in a relatively ropey third season). His vain, preening luvvie had all the hallmarks of an actor devouring the comedic role he’d been waiting for for years.

Ebon Moss-Bachrach in The Bear
Ebon Moss-Bachrach in The Bear - FX

Who will win: Ebon Moss-Bachrach

Let’s not kid ourselves.


Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

  • Carol Burnett – Palm Royale as Norma Dellacorte (Apple TV+)

  • Liza Colón-Zayas – The Bear as Tina Marrero (FX)

  • Hannah Einbinder – Hacks as Ava Daniels (Max)

  • Janelle James – Abbott Elementary as Ava Coleman (ABC)

  • Sheryl Lee Ralph – Abbott Elementary as Barbara Howard (ABC)

  • Meryl Streep – Only Murders in the Building as Loretta Durkin (Hulu)

Who should win: Sheryl Lee Ralph

Abbott Elementary’s matriarch also suffers from the Slow Horses syndrome - Ralph’s performance is such an oven-ready sitcom classic that we can so easily forget the skill that goes into it. The Emmys didn’t, of course, giving her this award in 2022, making her the first black woman to win it in 37 years (and only the second black woman to win it at all, at the time). Her speech was barnstorming – let’s have another.

Who will win: Carol Burnett

The woman wins awards the same way a toddler picks up dirt. She has seven Golden Globes; a win here would take her to the same number of Emmys. America likes to applaud its greats. Palm Royale, though? Forgettable show.


Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series

  • Tadanobu Asano – Shōgun as Kashigi Yabushige (FX)

  • Billy Crudup – The Morning Show as Cory Ellison (Apple TV+)

  • Mark Duplass – The Morning Show as Charles “Chip” Black (Apple TV+)

  • Jon Hamm – The Morning Show as Paul Marks (Apple TV+)

  • Takehiro Hira – Shōgun as Ishido Kazunari (FX)

  • Jack Lowden – Slow Horses as River Cartwright (Apple TV+)

  • Jonathan Pryce – The Crown as Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (Netflix)

Who should win: Takehiro Hira

The Morning Show? Really? The Emmys’ enduring fascination with that show will always baffle me - even people who love it admit it’s watchable trash. No disrespect to Crudup, Duplass and Hamm, three very fine actors, but I hope they don’t win. Shogun is the one that deserves a slew, including for the wonderful Hira.

Imelda Staunton and Jonathan Pryce in The Crown
Imelda Staunton and Jonathan Pryce in The Crown - PA

Who will win: Jonathan Pryce

I suspect (fear) The Crown will not go home empty-handed, despite its empty-headed final series. Pryce was a rare beacon of class in those final episodes, and the Welshman wrung true pathos out of the Duke of Edinburgh.


Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series

  • Christine Baranski – The Gilded Age as Agnes van Rhijn (HBO)

  • Nicole Beharie – The Morning Show as Christina Hunter (Apple TV+)

  • Elizabeth Debicki – The Crown as Princess Diana (Netflix)

  • Greta Lee – The Morning Show as Stella Bak (Apple TV+)

  • Lesley Manville – The Crown as Princess Margaret (Netflix)

  • Karen Pittman – The Morning Show as Mia Jordan (Apple TV+)

  • Holland Taylor – The Morning Show as Cybil Richards (Apple TV+)

Who should win: Lesley Manville

The Morning Show? Really? Never mind… It’s no secret that I am no great admirer of The Crown’s final years, but Manville’s Princess Margaret was a rare bright spot. Her demise was tragic and moving, thanks in no small part to Manville’s excellence. If The Crown must be rewarded, let’s give it to the truly deserving.

Lesley Manville in The Crown
Lesley Manville in The Crown - Netflix

Who will win: Elizabeth Debicki

Instead, however, I imagine the award will go to Debicki’s excellent but surface-level impersonation of Diana Frances Spencer.


Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie

  • Jonathan Bailey – Fellow Travelers as Tim Laughlin (Showtime)

  • Robert Downey Jr. – The Sympathizer as Claude / Professor Robert Hammer / Ned Godwin / Niko Damianos / The Priest (HBO)

  • Tom Goodman-Hill – Baby Reindeer as Darrien O’Connor (Netflix)

  • John Hawkes – True Detective: Night Country as Hank Prior (HBO)

  • Lamorne Morris – Fargo as State Trooper Whitley “Witt” Farr (FX)

  • Lewis Pullman – Lessons in Chemistry as Calvin Evans (Apple TV+)

  • Treat Williams – Feud: Capote vs. The Swans as Bill Paley (FX) (posthumous)

Who should win: Robert Downey Jr

There is no little irony in the fact that in a drama about Western perceptions of Vietnam, starring a superlative Vietnamese cast, the only Emmy nomination goes to the Western actor who played all the Western roles. Still, Downey Jr was a hoot as a grizzled CIA veteran, a grubby Orientalist, a cheesy congressman and, especially, a hotheaded movie director.

Robert Downey in The Sympathizer
Robert Downey in The Sympathizer - HBO

Who will win: Robert Downey Jr

No one would be upset if the late Treat Williams got the nod, while John Hawkes is a class act in everything he does. Bur Mr Iron Man will take this one.


Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie

  • Dakota Fanning – Ripley as Marge Sherwood (Netflix)

  • Lily Gladstone – Under the Bridge as Cam Bentland (Hulu)

  • Jessica Gunning – Baby Reindeer as Martha Scott (Netflix)

  • Aja Naomi King – Lessons in Chemistry as Harriet Sloane (Apple TV+)

  • Diane Lane – Feud: Capote vs. The Swans as Nancy “Slim” Keith (FX)

  • Nava Mau – Baby Reindeer as Teri (Netflix)

  • Kali Reis – True Detective: Night Country as Detective Evangeline Navarro (HBO)

Who should win: Jessica Gunning

Questions over moral grey areas aside, Baby Reindeer gave us some memorable performances. None more so than Gunning, as stalker Martha. It was Annie Wilkes meets Susan Boyle, and it haunts me still.

Who will win: Kali Reis

The former middleweight and light welterweight world boxing champion has transitioned to acting with aplomb, and her performance as the battle-scarred Inupiat cop gave notice of her charisma and talent.

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