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57th Primetime Emmy Awards
2005 American television programming awards From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 57th Primetime Emmy Awards were held on Sunday, September 18, 2005, and were hosted by Ellen DeGeneres. The ceremony was broadcast on CBS. BBC America received its first major nomination this year.
The ceremony, which aired three weeks after Hurricane Katrina hit, featured a mini-telethon for Habitat for Humanity and gave DeGeneres more opportunity to use the ceremony to somberly remember the victims of the Gulf Coast. Opening the ceremony was the famous 1970's band Earth, Wind & Fire with a comedic version of "September", in collaboration with The Black Eyed Peas. The ceremony featured tributes to ABC-TV anchor Peter Jennings (who died seven weeks earlier) presented by rival anchors Dan Rather and Tom Brokaw, and to talk show host Johnny Carson (who died on January 23, 2005) by close friend and Late Show host David Letterman. Also, the show featured Emmy Idol, five segments in which famous TV stars performed popular TV theme songs in a format like American Idol.
Everybody Loves Raymond became the first comedy to have its final season win the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series since Barney Miller in 1982. The CBS comedy series also tied for the lead in major nominations and wins with ten and three, respectively. Freshman series Desperate Housewives became just the second series to earn three nominations in a lead acting category, joining The Golden Girls which had three nominations for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series for four separate years. In the drama field, new series Lost won Outstanding Drama Series.
Actress Angela Lansbury received her eighteenth and final nomination for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series. However, she failed to win causing her record losing streak to be extended. Lansbury died on October 11, 2022.
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Winners and nominees
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Winners are listed first and highlighted in bold:[1]












Programs
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Acting
Lead performances
Supporting performances
Directing
Writing
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Most major nominations
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Most major awards
- Notes
- "Major" constitutes the categories listed above: Program, Acting, Directing, and Writing. Does not include the technical categories.
Presenters
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The awards were presented by the following people:[2]
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In Memoriam
- Eddie Albert
- Anne Bancroft
- Mason Adams
- Barbara Bel Geddes
- William Bell
- Shana Alexander
- Dana Elcar
- Rodney Dangerfield
- Greg Garrison
- John Fiedler
- Ossie Davis
- Frank Gorshin
- Perry Lafferty
- Howard Morris
- James Doohan
- Paul Henning
- Brian Kelly
- Bob Denver
- Howard Keel
- Brock Peters
- Christopher Reeve
- Pat McCormick
- Herb Sargent
- Chris Schenkel
- Danny Simon
- Hal Sitowitz
- Michael Weisbarth
- Ruth Warrick
- Paul Winchell
- Jerry Orbach
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References
External links
Wikiwand - on
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