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50th Primetime Emmy Awards

1998 American television programming awards


1998 American television programming awards

FieldValue
name50th Primetime Emmy Awards
date{{unbulleted list
locationShrine Auditorium,
Los Angeles, California
presenterAcademy of Television Arts and Sciences
networkNBC
producerDon Mischer
most_awards{{Plainlist
most_nominations{{Plainlist
award1_typeOutstanding Comedy Series
award1_winnerFrasier
award2_typeOutstanding Drama Series
award2_winnerThe Practice
award3_typeOutstanding Miniseries
award3_winnerFrom the Earth to the Moon
award4_typeOutstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series
award4_winnerLate Show with David Letterman
previous49th
mainPrimetime Emmy Awards
next51st

| September 13, 1998 (Ceremony) | August 29, 1998 (Creative Arts Awards) Los Angeles, California

  • Major:
  • Frasier
  • George Wallace
  • NYPD Blue (3)
  • All:
  • Frasier
  • 70th Academy Awards (5)}}
  • ER
  • NYPD Blue (8)}}

The 50th Primetime Emmy Awards were held on Sunday, September 13, 1998. It was broadcast on NBC. 27 awards were presented.

When Frasier was announced as the winner of Outstanding Comedy Series, Emmy history was made. The NBC sitcom became the first show to win one of the two main series prizes five consecutive years. This record has since been passed by The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, whose winning streak was ten years, but for the main two genres, it was not matched until 2014, when the ABC sitcom Modern Family won its fifth consecutive award for Outstanding Comedy Series. Frasier tied for the most major wins overall with three, and most overall wins with five.

The Practice won Outstanding Drama Series. For the second straight year, medical drama ER came into the night as the most nominated program, but once again walked away empty handed, going 0/8 in major categories.

Ally McBeal became the first hour-long series to be nominated for Outstanding Comedy Series since Love, American Style in 1971.

This year saw the Emmys move to a new venue, the Shrine Auditorium, marking the return of the award ceremony to Los Angeles for the first time since the 1976 Emmy Awards, following a 20-year residency at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium outside L.A. in Pasadena. The Shrine had hosted the 70th Academy Awards the previous march; the Oscars tied with Frasier with five overall awards, including two major awards.

As of the 2023 Emmy Awards ceremony, this is the last year where all the nominees for Outstanding Drama Series were from the broadcast networks.

Winners and nominees

Programs

Acting

Lead performances

Supporting performances

Directing

Writing

Most major nominations

NetworkNo. of
Nominations
NBC49
HBO29
ABC25
CBS19
Fox13
ProgramCategoryNetworkNo. of
Nominations
ERDramaNBC8
NYPD BlueABC
The Larry Sanders ShowComedyHBO7
MerlinMiniseriesNBC6
12 Angry MenMovieShowtime5
Ally McBealComedyFox
FrasierNBC
George WallaceMiniseriesTNT
The X-FilesDramaFox
3rd Rock from the SunComedyNBC4
Don King: Only in AmericaMovieHBO
The 70th Annual Academy AwardsVarietyABC3
Chicago HopeDramaCBS
From the Earth to the MoonMiniseriesHBO
Garth: Live from Central ParkVariety
GiaMovie
Late Show with David LettermanVarietyCBS
Moby DickMiniseriesUSA
More Tales of the CityShowtime
The PracticeDramaABC
SeinfeldComedyNBC
Tracey Takes On...VarietyHBO
CinderellaABC2
Dennis Miller LiveHBO
Dharma & GregComedyABC
Ellen
Homicide: Life on the StreetDramaNBC
Law & Order
Mad About YouComedy
The Tonight Show with Jay LenoVariety
Touched by an AngelDramaCBS
What the Deaf Man HeardMovie

Most major awards

NetworkNo. of
Awards
ABC8
HBO6
NBC
CBS4
TNT3
ProgramCategoryNetworkNo. of
Awards
FrasierComedyNBC3
George WallaceMiniseriesTNT
NYPD BlueDramaABC
The 70th Annual Academy AwardsVariety2
Don King: Only in AmericaMovieHBO
The Larry Sanders ShowComedy
The PracticeDramaABC

;Notes

In Memoriam

Patrick Stewart presented a clip tribute to the TV actors who had died: Red Skelton, Shari Lewis, Lloyd Bridges, Roy Rogers, singer John Denver, Robert Young, dancer Jerome Robbins, sports narrator Harry Caray, Frank Sinatra, singer Buffalo Bob, E. G. Marshall, J. T. Walsh, Sonny Bono, Phil Hartman, and Chris Farley. As an interesting note, Gary Sinise won the award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or Movie for his portrayal of George Wallace on the day that the latter died.

References

References

  1. [https://www.emmys.com/awards/nominees-winners/1998 Emmys.com list of 1998 Nominees & Winners]
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