Maya Rudolph Gets Career Emmy No. 6, Angela Basset Wins Her First at Creative Arts Emmys

Maya Rudolph poses with her Emmy for outstanding voice-over performance for "Big Mouth" in the press room during night one of the Television Academy's 76th Creative Arts Emmy Awards at the Peacock Theater on Saturday, Sept. 7, 2024 in Los Angeles. (Photo by Mark Von Holden/Invision for the Television Academy/AP Content Services)
Maya Rudolph poses with her Emmy for outstanding voice-over performance for "Big Mouth" in the press room during night one of the Television Academy's 76th Creative Arts Emmy Awards at the Peacock Theater on Saturday, Sept. 7, 2024 in Los Angeles. (Photo by Mark Von Holden/Invision for the Television Academy/AP Content Services)
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Maya Rudolph Gets Career Emmy No. 6, Angela Basset Wins Her First at Creative Arts Emmys

Maya Rudolph poses with her Emmy for outstanding voice-over performance for "Big Mouth" in the press room during night one of the Television Academy's 76th Creative Arts Emmy Awards at the Peacock Theater on Saturday, Sept. 7, 2024 in Los Angeles. (Photo by Mark Von Holden/Invision for the Television Academy/AP Content Services)
Maya Rudolph poses with her Emmy for outstanding voice-over performance for "Big Mouth" in the press room during night one of the Television Academy's 76th Creative Arts Emmy Awards at the Peacock Theater on Saturday, Sept. 7, 2024 in Los Angeles. (Photo by Mark Von Holden/Invision for the Television Academy/AP Content Services)

Maya Rudolph won her sixth career Emmy on Saturday night, taking the trophy for best character voice-over for her work on "Big Mouth" at the Creative Arts Emmy Awards, while Angela Bassett won her first for her narration of the National Geographic show "Queens."

The former and future "Saturday Night Live" star Rudolph is up for three more Emmys. Her voice-over work as the Hormone Monstress on the Netflix animated show "Big Mouth" has earned her four of her Emmys.

"I’m really proud to be a part of this show," she said. "It humanizes being human."

She got emotional when she talked about the privilege that she gets to do what she loves in her life.

"It’s making me cry because I’m very menopausal," Rudolph said.

She won on the first of the two-night Creative Arts Emmys, which honor behind-the-scenes artistic and technical achievement in television and are a precursor to the main Emmys ceremony, hosted by Dan and Eugene Levy, that will air at 8 p.m. EST Sept. 15 on ABC.

Bassett appeared to collect her trophy for best narrator, a category that is usually star studded but where the winner, like Barack Obama last year, rarely shows.

"Oh my God, wow, my first Emmy," an emotional Bassett said. "I couldn’t be more thrilled and more grateful."

Bassett was attracted to the wildlife documentary project because of the all-female-led production team, a rarity in the medium, she said backstage.

"It just touched my heart," she said. "So, I said yes."

Bassett is a two-time Oscar nominee who won an honorary Academy Award earlier this year.

Other winners included the recently retired Pat Sajak, who won best game show host for his final season on "Wheel of Fortune." It was his fourth time winning the award, and first time since 1998.

"Saturday Night Live" thrived in the craft categories with six wins, including victories for its makeup and production design.

Rudolph won two Emmys when she was a cast member on the show, and is nominated for two more for her work as host of the sketch institution last season. Those will be awarded Sunday.

She will be returning this fall to play Vice President Kamala Harris on the 50th season of "SNL" in the weeks leading up to the election.

"I feel like I am connected somehow to an incredible time in this country and an excitement that I haven't felt in a long time," she said backstage on Saturday.

She is also nominated at the main Emmys ceremony for best actress in a comedy for her Apple TV+ series "Loot." She is a longshot for that award, where the favorites are Jean Smart for "Hacks" and Ayo Edebiri for "The Bear," which leads all shows in the comedy category with 23 nominations.

The Ron Howard-directed documentary "Jim Henson Idea Man" won four times and "Welcome to Wrexham" won three including best unstructured reality show. "Shark Tank" won best structured reality show. In an awards show crossover, the telecast of the Oscars won four Emmys including best live variety special.

Dick Van Dyke, who turns 99 next month, may have stolen the show when "Dick Van Dyke 98 Years Of Magic" won best pre-recorded variety special.

Van Dyke did a little dance and announced "that hurt" afterward. As the winners were being played off stage, he said, "I’d like to take this opportunity to invite you to my memorial. I don’t have a date yet but I’m not feeling very well."

Van Dyke became the oldest person to get a daytime Emmy when he won in June for appearing on "Days of Our Lives."

The season's top overall nominee, "Shogun," got a win of sorts Saturday when the team that puts together the post-show making of featurette took home an Emmy. The FX series itself is up for 25 Emmys. Seventeen of those will be handed out on Sunday, which focuses on scripted television.

Plenty of big names are also up for Creative Arts Emmys on Sunday, including Oscar winners Jamie Lee Curtis and Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Oscar nominee Ryan Gosling.



Papal Thriller ‘Conclave’ Leads BAFTA Nominations, Music and Horror Fare Well

Ralph Fiennes attends the 36th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival, in Palm Springs, California, US, January 3, 2025. (Reuters)
Ralph Fiennes attends the 36th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival, in Palm Springs, California, US, January 3, 2025. (Reuters)
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Papal Thriller ‘Conclave’ Leads BAFTA Nominations, Music and Horror Fare Well

Ralph Fiennes attends the 36th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival, in Palm Springs, California, US, January 3, 2025. (Reuters)
Ralph Fiennes attends the 36th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival, in Palm Springs, California, US, January 3, 2025. (Reuters)

Papal thriller "Conclave" led nominations for the BAFTA Film Awards on Wednesday, with music-themed and horror productions also faring well at Britain's top movie honors.

"Conclave," about scheming cardinals deciding who to elect as pope, secured 12 nods including for best film, director for Edward Berger and leading actor for Ralph Fiennes.

Isabella Rossellini was nominated for best supporting actress for playing a nun in the movie, based on the novel by British writer Robert Harris.

Berger's last film, a German remake of the anti-war classic "All Quiet on the Western Front," swept the 2023 BAFTA awards with a historic seven wins.

"Emilia Perez," which mixes the diverse genres of musical and crime, followed "Conclave" with 11 nominations. The Spanish-language film stars Zoe Saldana as a lawyer who helps a Mexican cartel leader, played by Karla Sofia Gascon, fake his death.

Gascon got a leading actress nomination, while Saldana and singer-actor Selena Gomez, who plays the drug lord's wife, were recognized for supporting actress.

One of the top contenders during this year's awards season, "Emilia Perez" also received nods for best film and director for French filmmaker Jacques Audiard.

Fellow musical "Wicked," the hit adaptation of the stage show, and the Bob Dylan biopic "A Complete Unknown," in which Timothee Chalamet portrays the singer during his rise to fame in the 1960s, were also recognized, with seven and six nominations respectively. Adding to the music theme, "Kneecap," about the rise of an Irish hip-hop trio, also got six nods.

"A Complete Unknown" will also compete at the Feb. 16 ceremony for the top prize of best film, along with "The Brutalist," in which Adrien Brody portrays a Hungarian immigrant seeking to rebuild his life in the United States after World War Two. That movie received nine nominations, including three acting nods.

"Anora," about a young exotic dancer who becomes involved with the son of a Russian oligarch, completes the list for best film. The omission of "Wicked," whose stars Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande received nominations, surprised fans.

"The pleasant surprise is the range of the types of movies," Anna Higgs, chair of the BAFTA Film Committee, told Reuters.

"We don't just have classic awards dramas ... but we also have sci-fi and horror in the mix as well as a whole heap of musicals and musical-themed movies this year," Higgs said.

HORROR FILMS

Both Chalamet and Brody, who won a Golden Globe this month, were nominated for leading actor, alongside Fiennes, Colman Domingo for the prison drama "Sing Sing" and surprise inclusions Hugh Grant for playing a serial killer in the horror film "Heretic" and Sebastian Stan for his portrayal of a young Donald Trump in "The Apprentice."

Gascon's leading actress rivals include Golden Globe winner Demi Moore for the body horror film "The Substance," which received five nominations, including for Coralie Fargeat, the only woman to make the best director category. That list did not include any British filmmakers.

Gothic horror film "Nosferatu" also received five nominations, in another boost for the genre.

The leading actress category includes Erivo, Mikey Madison for "Anora," Saoirse Ronan for playing a woman dealing with addiction in "The Outrun," and Marianne Jean-Baptiste as a woman struggling with depression in "Hard Truths."

More than half of the acting contenders - 14 out of 24 - are first-time BAFTA Film Awards nominees.

Observers will be looking at the BAFTAs for indications of Oscar triumphs. Last year's main category winners were the same at both ceremonies.