Arts & Entertainment
'The Studio' And Seth Rogen Have Record-Setting Emmys As Noah Wyle, 'The Pitt' Get Top Drama Wins
The evening also brought meaningful wins for Jean Smart, Stephen Colbert and 15-year-old Owen Cooper, from Netflix's "Adolescence."

LOS ANGELES, CA โ Seth Rogen and โThe Studioโ turned the Emmys into a wrap party, winning best comedy series Sunday and breaking a comedy record for victories in a season with 13, while Noah Wyle and โThe Pittโ took the top drama prize.
The evening also brought meaningful wins for Jean Smart, Stephen Colbert and 15-year-old Owen Cooper, whose Netflix series โAdolescenceโ dominated the limited series categories.
โIโm legitimately embarrassed by how happy this makes me,โ โThe Studioโ co-creator Rogen said with his signature giggle, surrounded by cast and crew from the Apple TV+ movie-business romp after it won best comedy at the Peacock Theater in a show hosted by Nate Bargatze that aired on CBS. Rogen personally won four, including best actor.
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โThe Pittโ from HBO Max completed a sentimental journey with its win for best drama series. The character-driven medical drama won over viewers and gained emotional momentum during a season whose biggest drama prizes once seemed destined to be swept by โSeverance.โ
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Wyle won best actor in a drama for playing a grizzled, warm-but-worn-down supervising doctor, getting his first Emmy after five nominations with no victories in the 1990s for playing a scrubbed young cub doctor on โER.โ
โWhat a dream this has been,โ Wyle said. โOh my goodness.โ
Katherine LaNasa, whose nurse is perhaps the show's most beloved character, was a surprise winner of best supporting actress in a drama over three women of โThe White Lotusโ on a night when every acting Emmy but one went to a first-time victor.
The first-timers included Britt Lower, who won best actress in a drama, and Tramell Tillman, who won best supporting actor, in the night's two biggest moments for โSeverance.โ

Along with its creative arts wins, the Orwellian workplace satire ended up with eight for its acclaimed second season. Star Adam Scott lost out to Wyle for best actor.

The show's losses kept the evening from being a total triumph for Apple TV+, which has still never won a best drama prize, though it has now won best comedy three times between โThe Studioโ and โTed Lasso.โ
Lowerโs win was a surprise in a category where Kathy Bates was considered a heavy favorite, for โMatlock.โ
Cristin Milioti won best actress in a limited series for โThe Penguin.โ
Jean Smart bucked the rookie trend, winning her fourth Emmy for best actress in a comedy for โHacksโ and her seventh Emmy overall. At 73, she extended her record for oldest winner in the category.
โAdolescenceโ triumphs
Netflixโs widely acclaimed โAdolescence,โ the story of a 13-year-old in Britain accused of a killing, won six times, including the Emmy for best limited series. Co-creator Stephen Graham won for lead acting and writing while Cooper won best supporting actor and became the youngest Emmy winner in over 40 years.
Cooper said in his acceptance that he was โnothing three years ago.โ
โItโs just so surreal,โ Cooper said. โHonestly, when I started these drama classes a couple years back, I didnโt expect to be even in the United States, never mind here.โ
Best supporting actress went to Erin Doherty, who played a therapist opposite Cooper in a riveting episode that like all four โAdolescenceโ episodes was filmed in a single shot.
A blockbuster night for โThe Studioโ
โThe Studioโ came into the evening having won nine Emmys already during last weekend's Creative Arts ceremony. On Sunday night, it added four more, which all went to Rogen. Along with the comedy series award, he won best directing with his co-creator and longtime collaborator Evan Goldberg, and best writing with Goldberg and others.
The show brought blockbuster buzz for its first season from the start and the Emmys ate it up, whether because of Hollywood's love for stories about itself (with A-list guest stars) or the television industry's love for stories that mock the self-importance of movie people.
Backstage, Rogen clumsily tried to hold up all four Emmys at once. Asked whether the night will be fodder for season two, he said no.
โThis is, like, far too good a thing to have happen on our show,โ he said. โOur show is generally based on stress and disappointment and right now, weโre all very happy.โ
A night of surprise winners
Smart's castmate and constant scene partner Hannah Einbinder, who had also been nominated for all four seasons of โHacksโ but unlike Smart had never won, took best supporting actress in a comedy.
She said she had become committed to a long-term bit where โit was cooler to lose.โ
โBut this is cool too!โ she shouted, then ended her speech by cursing the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency and saying โFree Palestine!โ Political sentiments from the stage were otherwise rare.

In perhaps the night's biggest upset, Jeff Hiller won best supporting actor in a comedy for โSomebody Somewhere,โ over Ike Barinholtz of โThe Studioโ and others.
Colbert gets a rousing send-off
Colbert may have been the night's most popular winner, taking best talk series for โThe Late Show With Stephen Colbertโ for the first time. He got huge ovations both when he took the stage to present the first award and when he won.
The win may have been the result of a protest vote and a desire to pay tribute to its host, weeks after its cancellation by CBS. Jimmy Kimmel, who was among his competitors, campaigned for Colbert to win.
โSometimes you only truly know how much you love something when you get a sense that you might be losing it,โ Colbert said in his acceptance.
Many perceived the end of the show as punishment of Colbert and placation of President Donald Trump after Colbert was harshly critical of a legal settlement between the president and Paramount, which needed administration approval for a sale to Skydance Media. Executives called the decision strictly financial.
Colbert showed no bitterness to CBS, thanking the network, which telecast the Emmys and aired a commercial celebrating his win, for letting him be part of the late-night tradition.
Bargatze delivered his opening monologue only after the first award was handed out.
The show opened with a sketch where โSaturday Night Liveโ stars Mikey Day, Bowen Yang and James Austin Johnson joined Bargatze, who played television inventor Philo T. Farnsworth opining on what the future of TV will be like.
Bargatze-as-Farnsworth mentions that there will one day be a Black Entertainment Television. When asked if there will be a network for white people, he replied, โWhy, CBS of course.โ
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By ANDREW DALTON AP Entertainment Writer