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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Emmy_AwardsEmmy Awards - Wikipedia

    The Daytime Emmy Awards, generally held in May or June, are presented in recognition of excellence in American daytime television programming. The first daytime-themed Emmy Awards were given out at the primetime ceremony in 1972, but the first separate awards show made just for daytime programming was not held until 1974. [citation needed]

  2. A History of Emmy - The 1940s. Louis McManus' Statuette Prototype. The Emmy® Awards are conceived in 1948. The Television Academy’s founding fathers struggle to name the award: Television Academy founder Sid Cassyd suggests “Ike,” the nickname for the television iconoscope tube.

  3. Sep 5, 2022 · The inaugural Emmy Awards ceremony was held on January 25, 1949 at the Hollywood Athletic Club. Musician and radio host Rudy Vallée held the title of the event's first host, but not for long. When Vallee had to leave town at the last minute, radio host Walter O'Keefe was chosen as a substitute. Advertisement.

    • When did the Emmys begin?1
    • When did the Emmys begin?2
    • When did the Emmys begin?3
    • When did the Emmys begin?4
    • When did the Emmys begin?5
    • 1950
    • 1951
    • 1952
    • 1953
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    • 1961
    • 1963
    • 1969
    • 1970

    The first Emmy Awards only gave out awards in five categories: Best Film Made for Television, Most Outstanding Television Personality, Most Popular Television Program, a technical award, a special one-time award, and the station award for Outstanding Overall Achievement. In 1950, the Academy added several categories, including one for best commerci...

    In 1951, the 3rd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards had an unusual host: a future chief justice in the United States Supreme Court. At the time, Earl Warren was the governor of California. It wasn't until two years later, in 1953, after a failed presidential bid, that he was appointed the 14th chief justiceof the United States Supreme Court.

    Hosted by Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, the 1952 Emmy Awards were the first to consider shows outside of Los Angeles area programming. Previously, only shows that had been produced or aired in the L.A. area were eligible to win. But in 1952, Your Show of Shows, which was filmed in New York City and aired nationwide, won the trophy for best variety s...

    According to Variety columnist Sheilah Graham, the 1953 awards weren't the Emmy's best year. In her write-up she noted, "Nothing much happened at the Emmy Awards, apart from the stage proscenium falling down and conking a violinist on the head, and the mic going out of order for 10 minutes, silencing host Art Linkletter." Another article in the mag...

    In the last year of its run, sketch comedy show Caesar's Hour made Emmy history by winning awards in all four major acting categories. The first show to do so, Sid Caesar, Nanette Fabray, Carl Reiner, and Pat Carroll all took home statuettes for their performances as various characters. In addition, Caesar's Hourwon Best Series, One Hour or More.

    The number of Emmy categories has fluctuated over the years, from six in 1949 to 27 today. While today's categories are fairly whittled down, covering all the basics without a hoard of superfluous extras, that hasn't always been the case. For example, at the 1958 Emmys, a truly nonsensical division was added: Best Continuing Performance in a Series...

    In 1961, The Flintstones cartoon made history when it became the first animated TV show to be nominated for Best Comedy Series. No other animated series would accomplish the same feat until Family Guywas nominated in 2009. The only first lady, to date, to win an Emmy Award, Jackie Kennedy took home her statuette for her famed televised White House ...

    The Dick Van Dyke Showswept the 1963 Emmy awards. The sitcom, which aired for five years, won in the series, writing, and directing categories. One of the show's stars, Mary Tyler Moore, would go on to make her own Emmy history just over a decade later. Two network presidents, Fred W. Friendly of CBS News and Thomas W. Moore of ABC, boycotted the 1...

    The 1969 awards marked the first time that the Outstanding Drama Series statuette went home to a studio that was not one of the big three. PBS predecessor, the National Educational Television Network, won the night with top honors for its show NET Playhouse. The anthology series would go on to be nominated two more times.

    In the first 21 iterations of the Primetime Emmy Awards, shows from the "big three" television networks—ABC, CBS, and NBC—had been the primary victors. But in 1970, their trophy sweep came to a halt when Susan Hampshire of The Forsyte Sagawon the statuette for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series: The Forsyte Sagaaired on PBS.

  4. 3 days ago · The National Academy was formed in 1946 and in 1949 presented the first Emmys. In that year six awards were made. Separate ceremonies evolved for news and documentaries in 1973, for daytime programming in 1974, for prime-time programming in 1977, and for sports in 1979.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Dec 5, 2022 · The very first Emmy Awards, held on January 25, 1949 at the Hollywood Athletic Club, was a low-key affair compared to today’s spectacle. Tickets to attend cost just $5, and only six awards...

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  7. Nov 13, 2009 · The first Emmy Awards ceremony is held on January 25, 1949 at the Hollywood Athletic Club. The awards recognize excellence in television (which in the 1940s was a novel medium).

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