‘Shogun’ Makes History With 25 Emmy Nominations
As we enter the new post-Succession era, a fearsome potential ruler has emerged to seize power at the 2024 Emmys.
FX Productions’ lavish Japanese period series Shogun — a show, incidentally, all about the complicated succession process after the death of an esteemed leader — dominated the drama category announcements Wednesday morning with 25 nominations. No other show of any category scored more nominations.
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Besides getting a nomination for best drama, Shogun also earned a best dramatic actor nomination for Hiroyuki Sanada as Lord Yoshii Toranaga, while Anna Sawai took home a nomination for best dramatic actress for her role as Toda Mariko.
In the best supporting dramatic actor competition, there were nominations for Tadanobu Asano, who plays fan-favorite samurai Kashigi Yabushige, and also Takehiro Hira for his role as the would-be throne stealer Ishido Kazunari. There was also a best guest actor in a drama nomination for Néstor Carbonelle for playing the role of Rodrigues.
Shogun also earned a slew of nominations in technical categories, including for production design, original dramatic score, stunt performance, sound editing, casting, two in the cinematography category for Sam McCurdy and Christopher Ross, costume design, and a best series directing nomination for Frederick E.O. Toye.
Although the winners won’t be unveiled until September, the nods are already a big achievement for FX and parent company Disney for a pricey series that took nearly 10 years to bring to fruition and once looked like a very uncertain bet. It’s also a major moment for Asian representation and non-English-language television. Following Netflix’s Korean sensation Squid Game in 2022, Shogun is just the second majority non-English-language series to be nominated in the outstanding drama series category.
Shogun and its cast were originally expected to compete in the Emmys’ limited series categories. But after co-creators Justin Marks and Rachel Kondo revealed in May — to the delight of fans everywhere — that two more seasons are in the works, Shogun jumped into the drama race. Drama is typically considered the Emmys’ most prestigious arena and Shogun would likely be a strong contender in any year. But the show also had the good fortune of emerging amid a power vacuum. The category is a far more open field than it’s been in recent years since Emmys stalwarts like Succession and Better Call Saul have wrapped up their runs, while other favorites were delayed due to Hollywood’s writers and actors strikes (Stranger Things, Squid Game, Euphoria, The Last of Us, The White Lotus, Severance, et al.).
Shogun‘s nominations amounted to a sweeping set of firsts, as all of the honored Japanese castmembers are first-time nominees on an individual basis, and most are also the very first Japanese nominees in their respective categories in Emmys history. Previously, only Japanese actor Masi Oka, nominated for outstanding supporting actor for Heroes in 2007, had received a drama series nod from the Television Academy.
The Shogun saga, however, is not at all a newcomer to Emmys glory. Shogun is FX’s most watched series ever (based on global hours streamed), but it’s the second TV adaptation of James Clavell’s sprawling 1975 novel of the same name — a deeply influential, best-selling epic about duty, honor and the struggle for power in Feudal Japan. Produced by Paramount Television and shot on location in Japan with the biggest budget ever spent on a TV series at the time, the first Shogun became a pop culture sensation when it aired on NBC in 1980. The series earned 12 Emmy nominations at the 1981 awards show, winning for outstanding limited series, costume design and best title sequence. But Paramount’s adaptation ended where the story of Clavell’s beloved book concludes — just as the first season of FX’s Shogun does. So, the series’ writers will be venturing into unknown territory as they attempt to craft two new seasons of Shogun to extend the show’s Emmys reign.
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