Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Narrator
Category since 2014 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Narrator is awarded to one individual each year.
Remove ads
In 2014, the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance was separated into two categories – Outstanding Narrator and Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance.[1] Rules hold that the "submission must be performed/read as a traditional narration and may not be audio lifted from an on-camera performance or interview. If the narration is performed in the first person as a character rather than the narrator, even if credited as narrator, it should be submitted in the character voice-over category."[2]
In the following list, the first titles listed in gold are the winners; those not in gold are nominees, which are listed in alphabetical order. The years given are those in which the ceremonies took place:
Remove ads
Winners and nominations
1990s
2010s
2020s
Remove ads
Performers with multiple wins
Total include wins for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance.
|
|
Performers with multiple nominations
Total include nominations for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance.
|
|
Notes
- This program was nominated as Outstanding Individual Achievement - Informational Programming. As a juried award, nominees had to garner 50% approval to win the award.
- In 2020, the TV Academy rescinded a win in this category for the Disney Channel special George Stevens: D-Day to Berlin, narrated by George Stevens Jr. The program was a re-edit of the 1985 BBC documentary D-Day to Berlin, in violation of a rule that "a program that is a foreign acquisition without benefit of a domestic co-production cannot be re-introduced into eligibility in a current awards year, even though it may have been modified with new footage, sound track, musical score, etc."
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads