Creative Arts Emmys: ‘Shōgun’ Sets New Record on Night 2 With 14 Wins (Complete Winners List)
“Shōgun” dominated the second and final night of the 76th Creative Arts Emmys on Sunday, taking home the most awards with 14 and putting itself in prime position for the main ceremony on Sept. 15. The FX period drama set a new record for the most wins ever for a single season of a drama series — a full week before the Primetime Emmys even get started.
The celebration began early for “Shōgun” when it collected the evening’s first award, Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series, for Nestor Carbonell’s performance in the episode “Anjin.” It went on to scoop up accolades for achievements in casting, costumes, makeup, hairstyling, stunts, production design, editing, visual effects, sound editing, sound mixing, main title design and cinematography. “Shōgun” nearly pulled off a perfect run at the Creative Arts Emmys, winning 14 out of the 16 categories it was nominated in. In setting the new record, it won more Creative Arts Emmys than “Game of Thrones,” the most nominated show in Emmy history. (The HBO fantasy drama took home 10 in 2019.)
“Shōgun” is all but certain to add to its impressive haul at the Primetime Emmy Awards, where it has eight nominations in six top categories, including drama series, lead actor for Hiroyuki Sanada and lead actress for Anna Sawai.
In distant second was FX on Hulu’s “The Bear,” which took home seven awards. It swept the guest comedy acting categories with Emmys for first-time winners Jamie Lee Curtis and Jon Bernthal, and also was recognized for casting, editing, sound editing, sound mixing and cinematography.
Hulu’s “Only Murders in the Building” followed with three wins for music composition, original music and lyrics (making Benj Pasek and Justin Paul the newest members of the EGOT club) and production design. All three top shows are products of Disney, which vaulted over other networks with 51 wins. Netflix came in second with 18.
Other notable winners on Night 2 included Michaela Coel for her memorable guest spot in Prime Video’s “Mr. & Mrs. Smith,” which also won for stunt coordination. “Baby Reindeer,” “The Morning Show,” “Ripley,” “The Crown” and the canceled “How I Met Your Father” scored two wins apiece, while nine others were honored with one.
It all came after Night 1 of the Creative Arts Emmys was dominated by “Saturday Night Live” and “Jim Henson Idea Man,” plus first Primetime Emmy wins for Alan Cumming, Angela Bassett and Pat Sajak.
The Creative Arts Emmys, which celebrated the year’s best in artistic and technical achievement in television and took place live at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles over two nights, will be edited into a single broadcast airing Saturday, Sept. 14, at 8 p.m. PST on FXX and will be available to stream starting Sunday, Sept. 15 on Hulu. The 76th Primetime Emmy Awards, hosted by father-son duo Eugene and Dan Levy, will air live Sept. 15 at 8 p.m. EST/5 p.m. PST on ABC.
Among the presenters on Sunday were Curtis, Brie Larson, Parker Posey, Carbonell, Wendi McLendon-Covey, Adam Pally, Devery Jacobs, Phillipa Soo, Judy Reyes, Giovanni Ribisi, Alex Edelman, Austin Stowell, Allison Tolman, Damon Wayans Jr. and Jimmy O. Yang.
The complete winners list is below.
Complete list of winners for the 76th Creative Arts Emmy Awards (Night 2)
OUTSTANDING GUEST ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES Nestor Carbonell, “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING CHOREOGRAPHY FOR SCRIPTED PROGRAMMING Nina McNeely, “The Idol”
OUTSTANDING CASTING FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES OR MOVIE Nina Gold and Martin Ware, “Baby Reindeer”
OUTSTANDING CASTING FOR A COMEDY SERIES “The Bear”
OUTSTANDING CASTING FOR A DRAMA SERIES “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING FANTASY/SCI-FI COSTUMES Shawna Trpcic, Elissa Alcala and Devon Patterson, “Ahsoka”
OUTSTANDING PERIOD COSTUMES FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES OR MOVIE “Feud: Capote vs. the Swans”
OUTSTANDING PERIOD COSTUMES FOR A SERIES “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING CONTEMPORARY COSTUMES FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES OR MOVIE ”American Horror Story: Delicate”
OUTSTANDING CONTEMPORARY COSTUMES FOR A SERIES Amy Roberts, Giles Gale and Sidonie Roberts, “The Crown”
OUTSTANDING PERIOD OR FANTASY/SCI-FI MAKEUP (NON-PROSTHETIC) “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING CONTEMPORARY MAKEUP (NON-PROSTHETIC) “The Morning Show”
OUTSTANDING PROSTHETIC MAKEUP Toby Lindala, Bree-Anna Lehto and Suzie Klimack, “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING CONTEMPORARY HAIRSTYLING Nicole Venables, Jennifer Petrovich, Janine Thompson and Lona Vigi, “The Morning Show”
OUTSTANDING PERIOD OR FANTASY/SCI-FI HAIRSTYLING “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING GUEST ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES Michaela Coel, “Mr. & Mrs. Smith”
OUTSTANDING STUNT PERFORMANCE Hiroo Minami, Nobuyuki Obikane, Martin Cochingco and Johnson Phan, “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING STUNT COORDINATION FOR COMEDY PROGRAMMING Mark Mottram, “The Gentlemen”
OUTSTANDING STUNT COORDINATION FOR DRAMA PROGRAMMING Stephen Pope, “Mr. & Mrs. Smith”
OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION DESIGN FOR A NARRATIVE PERIOD OR FANTASY PROGRAM (ONE HOUR OR MORE) Helen Jarvis, Chris Beach, Lisa Lancaster and Jonathan Lancaster, “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION DESIGN FOR A NARRATIVE CONTEMPORARY PROGRAM (ONE HOUR OR MORE) Martin Childs, Mark Raggett and Alison Harvey, “The Crown”
OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION DESIGN FOR A NARRATIVE PROGRAM (HALF-HOUR) Patrick Howe, Casey Smith and Rich Murray, “Only Murders in the Building”
OUTSTANDING PICTURE EDITING FOR A MULTI-CAMERA COMEDY SERIES Russell Griffin, “How I Met Your Father”
OUTSTANDING PICTURE EDITING FOR A SINGLE-CAMERA COMEDY SERIES Joanna Naugle, “The Bear”
OUTSTANDING GUEST ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES Jamie Lee Curtis, “The Bear”
OUTSTANDING PICTURE EDITING FOR A DRAMA SERIES Maria Gonzales and Aika Miyake, “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING GUEST ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES Jon Bernthal, “The Bear”
OUTSTANDING PICTURE EDITING FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES OR MOVIE Peter H. Oliver and Benjamin Gerstein, “Baby Reindeer”
OUTSTANDING SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS IN A SINGLE EPISODE “Ripley”
OUTSTANDING SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS IN A SEASON OR A MOVIE “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING MAIN TITLE DESIGN “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING MOTION DESIGN ”Jim Henson Idea Man”
OUTSTANDING SOUND EDITING FOR A COMEDY OR DRAMA SERIES (HALF-HOUR) AND ANIMATION “The Bear”
OUTSTANDING SOUND EDITING FOR A COMEDY OR DRAMA SERIES (ONE HOUR) “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING SOUND EDITING FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES, MOVIE OR SPECIAL ”Ripley”
OUTSTANDING SOUND MIXING FOR A COMEDY OR DRAMA SERIES (HALF-HOUR) AND ANIMATION Steve “Major” Giammaria, Scott D. Smith, Patrick Christensen and Ryan Collison, “The Bear”
OUTSTANDING SOUND MIXING FOR A COMEDY OR DRAMA SERIES (ONE HOUR) ”Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING SOUND MIXING FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES OR MOVIE Michael Minkler, Duncan McRae, Tim Fraser and Thor Fienberg, “Masters of the Air”
OUTSTANDING PERFORMER IN A SHORT FORM COMEDY OR DRAMA SERIES Eric André, “The Eric André Show”
OUTSTANDING MUSIC COMPOSITION FOR A SERIES (ORIGINAL DRAMATIC SCORE) Siddhartha Khosla, “Only Murders in the Building”
OUTSTANDING ORIGINAL MAIN TITLE THEME MUSIC Jeff Toyne, “Palm Royale”
OUTSTANDING ORIGINAL MUSIC AND LYRICS Benj Pasek, Justin Paul, Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman, “Only Murders in the Building”
OUTSTANDING MUSIC SUPERVISION Trygge Toven, “Fallout”
OUTSTANDING MUSIC COMPOSITION FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES, MOVIE OR SPECIAL (ORIGINAL DRAMATIC SCORE) Carlos Rafael Rivera, “Lessons in Chemistry”
OUTSTANDING CINEMATOGRAPHY FOR A MULTI-CAMERA SERIES (HALF-HOUR) Gary Baum, “How I Met Your Father”
OUTSTANDING CINEMATOGRAPHY FOR A SINGLE-CAMERA SERIES (HALF-HOUR) Andrew Wehde, “The Bear”
OUTSTANDING CINEMATOGRAPHY FOR A SERIES (ONE HOUR) Sam McCurdy, “Shōgun”
OUTSTANDING CINEMATOGRAPHY FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES OR MOVIE Robert Elswit, “Ripley”
OUTSTANDING TELEVISION MOVIE “Quiz Lady”
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