AP

74th Emmy Awards | Live News

Sep 12, 2022, 5:40 AM | Updated: 9:42 pm

Host Kenan Thompson and dancers perform a tribute to 'Friends' at the 74th Primetime Emmy Awards on...

Host Kenan Thompson and dancers perform a tribute to 'Friends' at the 74th Primetime Emmy Awards on Monday, Sept. 12, 2022, at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark Terrill)

(AP Photo/Mark Terrill)

Follow along here for more on the night’s buzziest moments from the 74th Emmy Awards, coming to you live from the AP.

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‘Succession,’ ‘Ted Lasso’ top Emmys; 1st time winners shine

By LYNN ELBER

The HBO drama “Succession” and comedy “Ted Lasso” took top honors at the Emmy Awards in a ceremony that spread its awards between repeat winners and also honored several first-timers.

Jason Sudeikis and Jean Smart collected back-to-back acting trophies, while Zendaya picked up her second drama actress prize for “Euphoria.”

Several new Emmy winners were minted, with Lizzo, Lee Jung-jae of “Squid Game” and Quinta Brunson and Sheryl Lee Ralph of “Abbott Elementary” collecting trophies.

Read the full story here: https://apnews.com/article/2022-emmys-show-74e969a265d171c2f990ce98074cf534

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11:07 p.m. ET

Sorry, “Squid Game,” “Succession” once again took the best drama series Emmy.

“Evidently a little bit more voting involved in our winning than Prince Charles,” said showrunner Jesse Armstrong.

Star Brian Cox chimed in to “keep it royalist.”

“I’m not saying we’re more legitimate in our position than he is, I’ll leave that to other people,” Armstrong added.

He and his cast spent quite a long time hugging each other on stage before Armstrong realized that their time was running out and got to his speech.

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11:04 p.m. ET

Selma Blair was tapped to present the final award of the night, best drama series. People stood as the actress walked out sporting a black-and-gold dress and cane. The actress and recently announced “Dancing With the Stars” contestant has been public about her multiple sclerosis diagnosis, raising awareness with a 2019 documentary and this year’s memoir, “Mean Baby.”

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11:00 p.m. ET – More from backstage

“I’ve been singing that song for years. I think of myself as an artist, as a woman, a woman of color. I’m an endangered species. I don’t sing any victim songs. I’m a woman. I’m an artist. It’s so many young actors, artists and even kids that think they know. Find your voice and put it where it belongs.”

Sheryl Lee Ralph spoke backstage about when she used to watch “Tinker Bell” on television and would say to herself: “I’m going to Hollywood, I’m going to Hollywood. I’m going to be an actress. I’m going to drive a Mustang. I’m going there.”

“The fact that I’m here, recognized after all this time as one of the best of the best in my industry with a group of women, they are all the best. And to top it off, this particular year, there’s tons of great TV. My little show to breakthrough and be seen the way it is, oh my God. I’ve got the golden ticket. Yes, I do. Where’s my chocolate? I’m ready.”

Long overdue?

“If this would have taken place any other time, it wouldn’t happen. But it happened right here, right now. In ‘Abbott Elementary’ at a time when the whole world and country needed a show they could look at, love it, laugh and plan their TV viewing around Wednesday nights.”

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10:58 p.m. ET

“Ted Lasso” won its second straight award for best comedy series, presented by a sunglasses-sporting Pete Davidson. What seemed like two dozen members of the cast and crew swarmed the stage as star Jason Sudeikis accepted the Emmy.

“This show is about good and evil, this show is about like the truth and lies, this show is about all that stuff, but it’s mostly about our response to those things and your response to our show has been overwhelming,” Sudeikis said.

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10:53 p.m. ET

“The White Lotus” is unstoppable, as far as the Emmys are concerned. The Mike White show, which is currently filming its second season, won best limited or anthology series, allowing White to thank HBO which he missed out on in his previous speeches.

“I know it’s unconditional love, but sorry…” White said.

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10:48 p.m. ET

“Squid Game” star Lee Jung-jae made history as the first Asian actor to win lead actor in a drama series. He beat out the likes of Brian Cox, Jason Bateman, Jeremy Strong and Bob Odenkirk in the competitive category.

The South Korean star thanked Netflix and the “Squid Game” creators “for making realistic problem we all face come to life so creatively” and, in Korean, thanked those watching from Korea.

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10:43 p.m. ET

Jesse Armstrong won the best writing for a drama award, taking home the second award of the night for “Succession.”

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10:36 p.m. – Backstage tidbit

“Ted Lasso” star Brett Goldstein has no problem with singer Lizzo calling him a “big girl.”

Before Lizzo handed Goldstein the award for best supporting actor, the Grammy winner was seemingly caught off guard when read the teleprompter then referred to the actor as a “really big girl.” The singer quickly clarified that she “didn’t write that, they did.”

When Goldstein collected his award, he took part in the punchline saying “I am a very big girl.” He reiterated backstage that the moment was fun for him.

“If Lizzo wants to call me a ‘big girl,’ she can call me that all she wants,” he said.

Lizzo won an Emmy for her Amazon Prime Video series “Lizzo’s Watch Out for the Big Grrrls.”

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10:35 p.m.

“It’s really boring when non-famous people do this.” – “Ted Lasso” director and comedy directing winner M.J. Delaney on thank-you lists during acceptance speeches

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10:32 p.m.

Both lead acting in a comedy awards were repeats from last year, with Jean Smart nabbing the best actress award for “Hacks” on HBO Max. Channeling her prickly character, Smart playfully accused fellow nominee Rachel Brosnahan of trying to sabotage her by sending her designer cookies so she wouldn’t fit into a dress.

Smart also won out over Quinta Brunson for lead actress in a comedy series.

“I didn’t realize the breadth and appeal of our show,” Smart said, recounting a moment in a mall where several young boys shouted out her “Hacks” character’s name “Deborah Vance.” She told them they were too young to be watching the HBO Max comedy.

It was a difficult category but there was a groundswell of support for Brunson, who would have made history as the first Black actor to win in the category since 1981, when Isabel Sanford won for “The Jeffersons.”

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10:27 p.m. ET

“I don’t think I can use my translator because I have 45– 41 seconds,” Hwang Dong-hyuk said while accepting his outstanding directing for a drama series award. He won for the first episode of Netflix’s “Squid Game,” the Korean juggernaut that he also created.

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10:25 p.m. ET

Zendaya added another Emmy to her mantle winning best actress in a drama series for her role as Rue in HBO’s “Euphoria” for the second year.

“My greatest wish for ‘Euphoria’ was that it could help heal people,” she said. “I want to say thank you to everyone who has shared their stories with me. I want you to know that anyone who has loved a Rue or feels like they are a Rue, I want you to know that I’m so grateful for your stories and I carry them with me and I carry them with her. So thank you.”

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10:15 p.m. ET

“Jimmy, wake up, I won,” said Quinta Brunson, who won for writing for a comedy series for her show “Abbott Elementary “– the first of three major awards she’s up for, including acting and producing the freshman sitcom. Laying at her feet was Jimmy Kimmel, who committed to an elaborate bit in which he was passed out on stage for the duration of presenting and accepting. Before announcing the winner, Will Arnett dragged his limp body out on stage, explaining that “This is like the 13th time in a row he’s lost…He got into the skinny margaritas back there.”

Committing to the bit until the end, Arnett dragged Kimmel all the way off stage as the show went to commercial.

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10:08 p.m. ET

Jason Sudeikis is in no danger of relegation, notching back-to-back wins in lead actor in a comedy series for “Ted Lasso.”

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10:02 p.m. ET

The lengthy in memoriam segment opened with a tribute to Betty White and closed with Sidney Poitier. Playing to the hometown crowd, the montage included an audio clip of beloved Dodgers announcer Vin Scully as John Legend played his song “Pieces.” Also remembered were Nichelle Nichols, Bob Saget, James Caan, Gilbert Gottfried, Dean Stockwell, Ray Liotta, Paul Sorvino, Willie Garson, Robert Morse, Louie Anderson, Anne Heche, journalist Bernard Shaw and John Madden,

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9:58 p.m. ET

Nothing like a good burger to bring Kenan and Kel back together. Kel Mitchell made a surprise appearance at the Emmy Awards, in a bit about a bar run by honorary bartender Kumail Nanjiani, in which he orders a good burger. Thompson and Mitchell jumped up and down and hugged.

“Make it two good burgers,” Thompson said. “Let’s do some kung fu as they roll into the next batch.”

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9:57 p.m. ET

Jerrod Carmichael, clad in a fur coat and no shirt, won best writing for a variety special for his comedy special “Jerrod Carmichael: Rothaniel.”

“I’m not a sore winner, but I’m going to go home because I can’t top this right now,” he said.

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9:51 p.m. ET

Presenting Mike White with the writing award were “The Office” writer-actors and old flames-turned-best friends Mindy Kaling and B.J. Novak, who references their infamous roller coaster of a relationship while castigating the nominees for only having to write a handful of episodes each season:

“We came up doing network sitcoms. Twenty-two episodes a year,” Kaling said.

“And that show, that would take up your whole life: No time for other projects,” Novak continued.

“No time for a social life,” Kaling jumped in. “You had no choice but to form insanely complicated relationships with your co-stars.”

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9:44 p.m. ET

The award for outstanding director for a limited or anthology series or movie went to Mike White for “The White Lotus.”

“I had funny things to say,” White said in accepting his first Emmy, deciding instead to deliver an earnest speech. He thanked his parents, breaking down briefly as he mentioned his father “who’s struggling right now.”

White was called back to the stage practically seconds later to accept the award for outstanding writing for a limited or anthology series or movie went to Mike White for “The White Lotus.”

“Now I forgot what I was going to say,” he said.

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9:40 p.m. ET

Geena Davis was on hand to accept the 2022 Governors Award on behalf of her non-profit organization, The Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media, which she founded in 2004. The group researches and advocates for equal representation in film and television.

“Tonight’s about honoring the best of television, and as you know, as Lizzo knows, television can often directly impact how people see themselves,” Davis said. “In the time since I launched the institute, we’ve made a great deal of progress. But still there’s more work to do.”

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9:28 p.m. ET

Lizzo upset Emmys darling “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” winning best competition program for “Lizzo’s Watch Out For The Big Grrrls.” She was fittingly presented the award by fellow Prime Video stars from “The Lord of the Rings: Rings of Power.”

“When I was a little girl all I wanted to see was me in the media: Someone fat like me, black like me, beautiful like me,” she recounted in her acceptance speech, saying she eventually had to be that person. Her competition series features women competing to be her backup dancers.

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9:21 p.m. ET

No awkward dancing here, Amanda Seyfried was emotional and sincere accepting her first Emmy for ” The Dropout ” in which she plays disgraced Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes. She was up against several other ripped-from-the-headlines roles, including Lily James, for “Pam & Tommy” and Julia Garner for “Inventing Anna.”

Seyfried made sure to tell her kids to go to bed before thanking her family and her dog Finn.

Read more about Seyfried’s performance here: https://apnews.com/article/elizabeth-holmes-technology-business-health-arts-and-entertainment-8d95cc7c6e805fc4e08274bcaa2f23db

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9:15 p.m. ET

Cheers! Jennifer Coolidge won her first Emmy for her turn as the grieving Tanya McQuoid in “The White Lotus,” in a category where she was up against four of her co-stars and two actors from “Dopesick.”

“I just want to say I took a lavender bath tonight and it made me swell up inside my dress and I’m having a hard time speaking,” Coolidge said.

As her time ran out, she rushed through thank yous and pleaded with the producers to “hold on” before resorting to simply dancing along to the play-off music. But she didn’t get to finish her speech and was escorted off stage.

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9:10 p.m. ET

Bowen Yang, self-anointed Emmys backup host, on what could happen to Kenan Thompson: “Did you see the Oscars?” he said. “You could straight up disappear like a show on HBO Max.”

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9:03 p.m. ET

With a win for Variety Talk Series, that’s 24 Emmys for “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver,” but who’s counting?

Oliver nets the variety talk series award for the seventh year in a row. He and his staff took what’s become an annual stroll to the stage, as the onscreen text cheekily thanked and teased missing staffers over Oscar Isaac.

“It’s saying ‘Stop Now’ in big letters. I don’t know whether that’s to this speech or in general, but either way, fair point,” Oliver concluded.

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8:58 p.m. ET

“Thank you so much for what was in my head, a standing ovation,” said Martin Short, presenting alongside his “Only Murders in the Building” co-stars Selena Gomez and Steve Martin.

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8:57 p.m. ET

“Saturday Night Live” won yet again for variety sketch series, with only “A Black Lady Sketch Show” as a foe. “SNL” is the most nominated show in the history of the Emmys, with 315 nods. It’s nominated in nine categories this year alone.

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List of Emmy Award winners

Early winners Monday night at the Emmy Awards include Michael Keaton and Murray. Keaton won for best actor in a limited series or TV movie for his work in “Dopesick.” Bartlett won the supporting actor trophy in that category for “The White Lotus” and Julia Garner won best supporting actress in a drama Series for “Ozark.” Although HBO’s “Succession,” which won the best drama series award in 2020, and “Ted Lasso” from Apple TV+ are considered the frontrunners for top series honors, there’s potential for surprises.

Follow the award winners here: https://apnews.com/article/emmy-awards-entertainment-movies-tv-644ef4de2886ce7d4395765fb34b44fa

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8:53 p.m. ET

Brett Goldstein can’t help himself. The “Ted Lasso” actor and writer thanked the television academy for a second chance at giving an acceptance speech after his expletive-filled thank yous were bleeped out last year, before launching into another forcing the censors to cut the audio once more. Maybe next year his family will get to hear what he was to say.

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8:49 p.m. ET

“Succession” star J. Smith-Cameron used her purse to make a political statement: She walked the gold carpet holding a red satin clutch with the words “bans off our bodies” prominently displayed in gold. It’s the slogan of the national abortion rights campaign led by Planned Parenthood in response to the U.S. Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade.

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8:47 p.m. ET

Sheryl Lee Ralph was stunned by her win for best supporting actress in a comedy series — before turning around and stunning the audience with a song. She was treated to a standing ovation as she was visibly overcome by emotion while taking the stage. The “Abbott Elementary” star sung Dianne Reeve’s “Endangered Species” before delivering her speech to another standing ovation.

Her choice of song, “Endangered Species,” was originally by Dianne Reeves. Reeves is a jazz singer and five-time Grammy winner who has been releasing albums since 1987.

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8:39 p.m. ET

Viewers of Julia Garner’s acceptance speech were treated to a new innovation at this years Emmys, meant to cut down the time spent on a laundry list of thank yous. Nominees were allowed to submit ahead of time a list of people whose names would flash onscreen upon a win. Think agents, managers, significant others and anyone else who could fit into the 350 characters allotted. While Garner used the onscreen text to thank people like Netflix executive Reed Hastings, she used her 45 seconds on the stage to verbally thank the cast and crew of “Ozark.”

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8:38 p.m. ET

Sorry, “Saul” fans, Rhea Seehorn is going home empty handed. Julia Garner won the supporting actress in a drama series Emmy for “Ozark,” beating out Sydney Sweeney, Sarah Snook, J. Smith Cameron, Patricia Arquette, Jung Ho-yeon and Christina Ricci.

“Thank you for writing Ruth, she’s changed my life,” Garner said.

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8:32 p.m. ET

If it is to be said, so it be. So it is. Matthew MacFadyen won best supporting actor in a drama series and his first Emmy for his “bonkers gift of a role” as Tom Wambsgans in “Succession.” Co-stars Nicholas Braun and Kieran Culkin were also nominated in the category.

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8:29 p.m. ET

“Yellowstone” didn’t get any Emmy nominations this year, but the wildly popular show starring Kevin Costner was still prominently featured on the television drama sizzle reel.

—- 8:26 p.m. ET

Ah, the obligatory Leonardo DiCaprio girlfriend joke, this time directed at Zendaya who just turned 26, which Thompson quipped makes her too old to date the actor.

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8:24 p.m. ET

Wishful ratings thinking? Kenan Thompson explained to the theoretical “under 20” viewers that, “NBC is a network that used to show ‘The Office’.”

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8:20 p.m. ET

Who hasn’t been caught mid-sip of wine on national television early in a long awards show? “The White Lotus” showrunner Mike White was not quite ready for his close-up when winner Murray Bartlett turned to thank him for his role as the stressed out manager of the luxury hotel.

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8:17 p.m. ET

Murray Bartlett beat out two of his “White Lotus” co-stars to win supporting actor in a limited or anthology series or movie for his role as an uptight hotel manager who slowly and dramatically unravels. There were just three shows represented among the six nominees altogether.

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8:12 p.m. ET

Michael Keaton takes home the first award of the night — and his first Emmy — for lead actor in a limited or anthology series or movie. The “Dopesick” actor is also nominated for producing the Hulu show.

“My face hurts so much from all the fake smiling I’ve been doing,” said Keaton, Emmy in hand.

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8:07 p.m.

“Hey, y’all seen ‘Living Single’? I think you’d like it,” Kenan Thompson said after dancing through an elaborate homage to the “Friends” opening credits, with backup dancers, the orange couch and a remix of “I’ll Be There For You.”

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8:03 p.m. ET

Donning a top hat, the self-described “mayor of television” Kenan Thompson opened the show from amid the audience:

“Tonight, we come together to honor the greatest invention in the history of mankind: television”

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8:01 p.m. ET

A full, ceiling-high bar is set up behind one of the stages but nothing’s on tap: “This bar right here is not real,” producer-writer Chris Spencer told the audience as he announced the rules for the show before the telecast. “This is a set. Do not touch this.”

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8:00 p.m. ET

Inside the theater, most of the orchestra seats have been removed and replaced by dozens of tables. Six large trees line the perimeter of the room and window panels provide view of the LA skyline. Strings of tiny white lights, intermixed with green ferns, hang above a crowd that’s largely eschewed social distancing.

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Emmy Awards: Stars look to keep cool on sweltering carpet

By LYNN ELBER

Emmy Awards host Kenan Thompson and the ceremony’s producers are promising a feel-good event. That description doesn’t apply to several of the top nominated shows. Among the best drama contenders at Monday night’s ceremony are the violently dystopian “Squid Game” and “Succession,” about a powerful and cutthroat family. Even comedy nominee “Ted Lasso,” the defending champ, took a dark turn last season. But after several pandemic-affected awards seasons, Emmy producers say the night will be big and festive.

Read the full story: https://apnews.com/article/2022-emmys-show-74e969a265d171c2f990ce98074cf534

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7:58 p.m. ET

The stars are inside the Microsoft Theater so it’s time to roll up the gold carpet. We’ll take you through the highly anticipated show, so stick around for more!

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7:48 p.m. ET

Emmys host Kenan Thompson moved quickly along the carpet, making his way inside the Microsoft Theater to prepare for the show. “Sorry, we can’t stop,” a handler called to reporters out as Thompson strode by.

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7:47 p.m. ET

Last year seemed to be the year of the velvet suit for men, but if the Emmy carpet is any indication, white is having a moment: Andrew Garfield, Seth Rogen and Nicholas Braun all turned up in bright white suits.

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7:35 p.m. ET

Ted Lasso star Hannah Waddingham wears a pink corset gown on the #Emmys gold carpet. She is nominated for best supporting actress in a comedy series.

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7:28 p.m. ET ‘ Photo

Rhea Seehorn, or Kim Wexler if you’re a “Better Call Saul” fan, made a grand entrance to the Emmy Awards where many onlookers have decided it’s her year to win. She’s up for supporting actress in a drama series, her first, for the recently wrapped show in an ultra-competitive category where she’s up against Julia Garner for “Ozark,” Sydney Sweeney for “Euphoria” and “Succession” actors Sarah Snook and J. Smith Cameron.

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7:27 p.m. ET

“This was Puff Daddy’s coat. He wore it in a video.”

Nominated for two Emmys tonight — guest actor in a comedy series for “Saturday Night Live” and writing for a variety special — comedian Jerrod Carmichael laughed at the heat and humidity, strolling the carpet in a long white fox fur coat with nothing on underneath.

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7:26 p.m. ET

Henry Winkler, nominated for his portrayal of Gene Cousineau in HBO’s “Barry,” is wearing his “lucky tie” tonight. He sported the light lime green neckwear in 2018, when he won his very first Emmy — best supporting actor in a comedy series — for the same role.

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7:19 p.m. ET

“Hire women!” – “Only Murders in the Building” director Cherien Dabis, to the AP, on how to get more women behind the camera in television.

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7:14 p.m. ET Twitter

At the #Emmys, #TheRingsOfPower star Cynthia Addai-Robinson says she isn’t paying attention to online trolls “review-bombing” the “Lord of the Rings” prequel series.

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7:10 p.m. ET ‘ Full Story

Elle Fanning Old Hollywood for Emmys, others in red zone

By LEANNE ITALIE

The Emmys red carpet kicked off in sticky Los Angeles with a strong show of red on the fashion carpet. Natasha Rothwell of “The White Lotus” chose red for a gown with balloon short sleeves and a hot commodity on fashion carpets — pockets! Megan Stalter also went for red in a sheer dress that celebrated her curves. Jen Tullock of “Severance” was in the red zone, a thigh high slit and structured sleeve number by Thierry Mugler, worn with drop pearl earrings. Mark Indelicato was in the red club, sort of. Indelicato’s hair was bright red and his black tux sported long split tails like a train.

Read the full story: https://apnews.com/article/2022-emmys-fashion-photos-d8624fd7435099009be675646fd426d5

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7:01 p.m. ET ‘ Video

Ben Stiller isn’t worried about being banned from Russia, he told the AP on the Emmy carpet before the show. “I’ll take it,” he said. “It’s all right.”

“I’m a Goodwill Ambassador for the UNHCR,” Stiller said referencing the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. “There’s over 100 million displaced people all over the world. So all of those people deserve a right to a home and be able to go back home and to be welcomed. That’s the message I like to put out there.”

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7:00 p.m. ET

“Euphoria” star Colman Domingo said he’s been celebrating his first Emmy nomination “all week long” and even had to take a few ibuprofen this morning because of all the dancing he’s been doing.

Colman wore a shimmering suit by Dolce & Gabbana, who he’s been collaborating with all season. “I wanted to feel like a king,” he said. “They brought that out with this number.” One of their earlier looks was a cream tuxedo that he said was a cross between Cary Grant and Teddy Pendergrass.

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6:53 p.m. ET ‘ Photo

Comfort was key for “Dopesick” star and nominee Kaitlyn Dever at her first Emmy Awards, she told the AP. She came sporting a red off-the-shoulder Naeem Khan dress chosen for her by her stylist Ryan Hastings.

“It feels almost like a heavy nightgown,” she said.

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6:40 p.m. ET

Jamie Tartt and Roy Kent might be on tenuous terms on “Ted Lasso” but off-camera Phil Dunster and Brett Goldstein were happy to mug for the cameras. Goldstein played the curmudgeon at first, giving Dunster a suspicious side-eye as he neared and photographers shouted, “Pretend like you like each other.” But he soon broke character and both ended up laughing with arms linked.

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6:39 p.m. ET

It’s hot and humid in Los Angeles this afternoon, but Laverne Cox gets to chill. The E! host has an air conditioner unit pointing at her, nominee Seth Meyers revealed while being interviewed on the gold carpet. Meanwhile, AP reporters witnessed suit-clad men are pushing a wheeled cooler full of bottled water along the carpet, moving deftly between the logjam of sweating stars and stopping frequently to grab and pass out the cool beverages.

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6:32 p.m. ET

“While she doesn’t leave him, I think she will eventually.” – Alexandra Daddario weighs in on the ultimate fate of her “White Lotus” character’s troubled marriage while talking to E! on the gold carpet.

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6:32 p.m. ET ‘ Photo

“Ozark” nominee Laura Linney wore a white and black-trimmed Christian Siriano gown to the Emmy Awards Monday night. She told the AP that, “The whole entertainment industry is at a crossroads of trying to figure out how to proceed in a whole new world… Television has had to sort of absorb much of the film industry and consequently, they’ve had to change their culture to satisfy the artistic needs of a different type of community. But consequently, television is better because of that.”

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6:24 p.m. ET ‘ Photo

“Hacks” breakout Megan Stalter arrived to the show in a nearly naked red slip dress to support her nominated co-stars, Jean Smart, Hannah Einbinder, Jane Adams, Harriet Samson Harris, Kaitlin Olson and Christopher McDonald.

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6:24 p.m. ET ‘ Photo

“Abbott Elementary” star and first time Emmy nominee Sheryl Lee Ralph said five days ago she didn’t have an outfit to the show, but designer Brandon Blackwood heard about it and came to her rescue.

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6:05 p.m. ET

Get your fashion fix on E! starting at 6 p.m. Eastern/3 p.m. Pacific for red carpet arrivals. Peacock’s stream from the carpet starts an hour later and NBC will air the show live while Peacock streams it in real time at 8 p.m. Eastern/5 p.m. Pacific. If you don’t have cable: Yes, Peacock has a seven-day free trial.

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6:03 p.m. ET ‘ Photo

Comedian Emily Heller was one of the early arrivals to the Emmy Awards with a statement outfit, literally: She had a sign with the words “Kick Me!” pinned to the back of her frock. It’s not a first for Heller who in 2018 carried a purse that said “gettyimages.”

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5:55 p.m. ET

There’s still more than two hours to get your own Emmys picks in, but if you’re stuck, take a leaf out of our experts’ book. AP’s Mark Kennedy and Lynn Elber discuss who will win and who should win from the highly competitive 25 awards presented during tonight’s telecast.

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5:52 p.m. ET

The gold carpet is ready for TV’s top stars at the #Emmys in downtown Los Angeles.

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74th Emmy Awards | Live News