Judith Light and 'Last of Us' actors are first-time winners at Creative Arts Emmy Awards
LOS ANGELES — Judith Light from "Poker Face" and Nick Offerman and Storm Reid from "The Last of Us" were winners at Saturday night's Creative Arts Emmy Awards on a night when the theme was first-time Emmys for actors of all ages.
Light, 74, took her first Emmy in a nearly 50-year television career for playing a 1960s radical hiding out in a retirement home on an episode of "Poker Face," the Peacock comedy-mystery series starring Natasha Lyonne. The star of the 1980s and 1990s sitcom "Who's The Boss?", Light had been nominated four times previously, including twice for her acting on "Transparent."
"I've been in the business a long time, and this is quite a gift," Light said backstage.
Offerman, 53, won his first Emmy in four nominations, taking best guest actor in a drama series for his role as an angry survivalist who ends up in a tender gay relationship on "The Last of Us," the HBO video game adaptation about a fungal apocalypse that won a leading eight Emmys on Saturday.
Offerman's 20-year-old castmate Reid, currently a college student at nearby USC, won best guest actress in a drama in her first nomination for a similar episode, a flashback in the form of a tragic teen love story between her and best lead actress nominee Bella Ramsey.
Offerman praised "The Last of Us" for its "decency and inclusivity" and Reid said she was grateful for its "representation of young, queer Black women."
Sam Richardson, 39, won his own first Emmy for playing a billionaire soccer enthusiast from Ghana on "Ted Lasso," the Apple TV+ series that is the year's most nominated comedy with 21 nods. He had been nominated once previously for the same role.
The two-part ceremony, where nearly 100 awards are handed out, mostly to less famous crew members and crafts people, began Saturday night and continued Sunday night. It's a precursor to the main Emmy ceremony that will air at 8 EST/PST Jan. 15 on Fox, with "black-ish" star Anthony Anderson as host. Just like the main telecast, the Creative Arts Emmys arrive after a four-month delay because of Hollywood's writers and actors strikes.
Sunday, FX's "Welcome to Wrexham" and Netflix's "Queer Eye" won Emmys as best reality programs, "Jeopardy" won for best game show and Keke Palmer ("Password") for game show host. Ru Paul Charles again won as best reality or competition show host, for MTV's "RuPaul's Drag Race," and former President Barack Obama won his second Emmy for outstanding narration, this time for his Netflix documentary series "Working: What We Do All Day."
Another 1980s and '90s sitcom star, Jasmine Guy of NBC's "A Different World," won her first Emmy on Saturday, for best actress in a short-form comedy or drama series for " Chronicles Of Jessica Wu." Tim Robinson won the same award on the actors' side for "I Think You Should Leave With Tim Robinson." It's his second Emmy for performing on the Netflix show.
Best television movie went to the Roku Channel's biopic "Weird: The Al Yankovic Story," in which Daniel Radcliffe plays the title comic-music star.
The real Yankovic, a 64-year-old five-time Grammy winner, gave some advice backstage to young people starting out in entertainment. "Take accordion lessons," he said. "It'll pay off eventually."
The Creative Arts Emmys continue Sunday, when nominees will include Barack Obama, Michelle Obama and Oprah Winfrey.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Creative arts Emmy Awards honor guest actors