'Modern Family' Kicks Off Emmys With 4 Wins

david
September 18, 2011 06:47 PM
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"Modern Family" won the first four Emmy Awards on Sunday, capturing best supporting comedy actress, best supporting comedy actor, best writing for a comedy and best direction for a comedy series.

Julie Bowen was named best supporting actress in a comedy series and Ty Burrell, who plays her husband on the show, won as best actor in the category. Jim Parsons of "The Big Bang Theory" won as best lead actor in a comedy.

Ty Burrell accepts the award for outstanding supporting actor in a comedy series for “Modern Family” at the 63rd Primetime Emmy Awards on Sunday, Sept. 18, 2011 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Melissa McCarthy won best lead actress in a comedy series for her role as Molly Flynn on "Mike & Molly." In addition to an Emmy trophy, she was crowned with a tiara and handed a bouquet of roses.

The award for outstanding reality competition program went to "Amazing Race," which also won in 2009. Best writing for variety, music or comedy series went to "The Daily Show With Jon Stewart." And for the ninth straight year in a row, "The Daily Show" won the award for outstanding variety program. "Saturday Night Live's" Don Roy King won the best directing for variety.

Best writing in drama went to Jason Katims for "Friday Night Lights."

The awards began on a controversial note when it was revealed that a taped comedy routine by Alec Baldwin for the show was cut from the telecast because it contained a joke about the News Corp. phone hacking scandal.

The actor was to be part of an opening video for Sunday night's ceremony airing on Fox, a News Corp.-owned network. But he tweeted before the awards that the network had killed his joke about the hacking scandal in Britain involving the now-closed News of the World tabloid.

Fox said it believed the joke was inappropriate to make light of an issue being taken very seriously by the company.

First-time Emmy producer Mark Burnett, whose string of reality TV hits includes "Survivor," was in charge of the ceremony, but kept mum when asked about Baldwin.

"There's nonstop drama, but everything is fine," he said cryptically on the red carpet before the show.

The last-minute controversy was emerging even as stars such as Christine Hendricks of "Mad Men" and Julia Stiles of "Dexter" were arriving for the show.

"She looks awesome, as always," said fan Jessica Steiner, 26, of Hendricks, who was wearing a rhinestone-encrusted gown with a plunging neckline.

"Modern Family" nominee Sofia Vergara wore an ultra-glam, one-shouldered peach goddess gown and chandelier earrings. Gwyneth Paltrow stood by her, in a sleek black gown with cut-outs.
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"Gwyneth is classy, and Sofia is sexy," said fan Vanessa Baeza, 27. "But I think Sofia looks better. Her dress is more flattering."

Inside the Nokia Theatre, Hendricks' show is facing a threat from the mobsters and crooked politicians of "Boardwalk Empire."

AMC's 1960s Madison Avenue saga, which has earned three consecutive Emmy Awards as best drama series, is competing Sunday with HBO's tale of Atlantic City, N.J, schemers making the most of the wild days of Prohibition in the 1920s.

"The Sopranos," another HBO show about New Jersey hoodlums, was an Emmy magnet for the cable TV channel that earned 21 trophies during its six seasons.
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HBO and AMC's leading men are in a showdown as well. "Mad Men" star Jon Hamm, shut out three times by Bryan Cranston of "Breaking Bad," caught a break when Cranston's series didn't air within the Emmy eligibility period.

But newcomer "Boardwalk Empire" brought Steve Buscemi into the picture with a first-string nomination for the actor who has been acclaimed for supporting roles. Also nominated for best drama series are "Dexter," "Friday Night Lights," "Game of Thrones" and "The Good Wife."

Executives from accounting giant Ernst & Young were spotted arriving with the winners envelopes in a silver briefcase. Fans in the bleachers cheered as they passed.

They also cheered when Ryan Seacrest came by. "Ryan! Ryan!" yelled the crowd in unison. Seacrest turned to them and mimed that he was framing them in a shot

"Modern Family" actor Eric Stonestreet gave better than that: He gave a bagel. Actually, he threw one, autographed in black marker, into the crowd, to roars of approval from fans.

A new category, which combines the previously separate best miniseries and made-for-TV movie nominees, includes the miniseries "Mildred Pierce," with Kate Winslet nominated in the role of an embattled mother, and the movie "Too Big to Fail," about the U.S. fiscal crisis in 2008.

McCarthy, a star of "Bridesmaids," said she was most surprised at the blazing heat on the Emmy red carpet. "I didn't realize the Emmys are held on the sun," she said. "It's just the whole energy of it. I keep running into people I know and want to know. There's just so much positive energy."

HBO came into the night with a leading 15 awards earned at the Sept. 10 creative arts awards, followed by PBS with 10, Fox with nine, CBS with seven and NBC with five.

After hitting an all-time viewership low of 12.3 million in 2008, the Emmys rebounded somewhat in the last two years and drew a 2010 audience of 13.47 million, compared to 26.7 million for this year's Grammys and nearly 38 million for the Oscars.



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