Here’s every winner from the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards

Succession and The Bear each capture six Emmys, while Beef takes home five statuettes

Aux Features 75th Primetime Emmy Awards
Here’s every winner from the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards
RuPaul Photo: Frazer Harrison

The long-delayed 75th Emmy Awards were a relatively calm affair on Sunday night. As expected, Succession walked away with a good handful of trophies—six, to be exact—and nearly swept the Drama categories, except for one (Outstanding Supporting Actress went to Jennifer Coolidge for The White Lotus). Similarly, The Bear took home six trophies and nearly swept the Comedy categories, except for one (Outstanding Lead Actress went to Quinta Brunson for Abbott Elementary).

Elsewhere during the show, Elton John became the 19th EGOT (that’s an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony) winner in history after his Farewell From Dodger Stadium concert special won the Outstanding Variety Special (Live) award, and there were several cute TV cast reunions on the stage, including stars from Cheers, Ally McBeal, All In The Family, Martin and Grey’s Anatomy. Check out all the winners, including the night’s only true surprise win (Niecy Nash-Betts for Dahmer — Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story), below.


Outstanding Drama Series

Andor
Better Call Saul
The Crown
House Of The Dragon
The Last Of Us
Succession
The White Lotus
Yellowjackets

Outstanding Lead Actress In A Drama Series

Sharon Horgan, Bad Sisters
Melanie Lynskey, Yellowjackets
Elisabeth Moss, The Handmaid’s Tale
Bella Ramsey, The Last of Us
Keri Russell, The Diplomat
Sarah Snook, Succession

Outstanding Lead Actor In A Drama Series

Jeff Bridges, The Old Man
Brian Cox, Succession
Kieran Culkin, Succession
Bob Odenkirk, Better Call Saul
Pedro Pascal, The Last Of Us
Jeremy Strong, Succession

Outstanding Supporting Actress In A Drama Series

Jennifer Coolidge, The White Lotus
Elizabeth Debicki, The Crown
Meghann Fahy, The White Lotus
Sabrina Impacciatore, The White Lotus
Aubrey Plaza, The White Lotus
Rhea Seehorn, Better Call Saul
J. Smith-Cameron, Succession
Simona Tobasco, The White Lotus

Outstanding Supporting Actor In A Drama Series

F. Murray Abraham, The White Lotus
Nicholas Braun, Succession
Michael Imperioli, The White Lotus
Theo James, The White Lotus
Matthew Macfadyen, Succession
Alan Ruck, Succession
Will Sharpe, The White Lotus
Alexander Skarsgård, Succession

Outstanding Outstanding Comedy Series

Abbott Elementary
Barry
The Bear
Jury Duty
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Only Murders In The Building
Ted Lasso
Wednesday

Outstanding Lead Actress In A Comedy Series

Christina Applegate, Dead To Me
Rachel Brosnahan, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Quinta Brunson, Abbott Elementary
Natasha Lyonne, Poker Face
Jenna Ortega, Wednesday

Outstanding Lead Actor In A Comedy Series

Bill Hader, Barry
Jason Segel, Shrinking
Martin Short, Only Murders In The Building
Jason Sudeikis, Ted Lasso
Jeremy Allen White, The Bear

Outstanding Supporting Actress In A Comedy Series

Alex Borstein, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Ayo Edebiri, The Bear
Janelle James, Abbott Elementary
Sheryl Lee Ralph, Abbott Elementary
Juno Temple, Ted Lasso
Hannah Waddingham, Ted Lasso
Jessica Williams, Shrinking

Outstanding Supporting Actor In A Comedy Series

Anthony Carrigan, Barry
Phil Dunster, Ted Lasso
Brett Goldstein, Ted Lasso
James Marsden, Jury Duty
Ebon Moss-Bachrach, The Bear
Tyler James Williams, Abbott Elementary
Henry Winkler, Barry

Outstanding Limited Or Anthology Series

Beef
Dahmer — Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
Daisy Jones And The Six
Fleishman Is In Trouble
Obi-Wan Kenobi

Outstanding Lead Actor In A Limited Or Anthology Series Or A Movie

Taron Egerton, Black Bird
Kumail Nanjiani, Welcome To Chippendales
Evan Peters, Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
Daniel Radcliffe, Weird: The Al Yankovic Story
Michael Shannon, George & Tammy
Steven Yeun, Beef

Outstanding Lead Actress In A Limited Or Anthology Series Or A Movie

Lizzy Caplan, Fleishman Is In Trouble
Jessica Chastain, George & Tammy
Dominique Fishback, Swarm
Kathryn Hahn, Tiny, Beautiful Things
Riley Keough, Daisy Jones And The Six
Ali Wong, Beef

Outstanding Supporting Actress In A Limited Or Anthology Series

Annaleigh Ashford, Welcome To Chippendales
Maria Bello, Beef
Claire Danes, Fleishman Is In Trouble
Juliette Lewis, Welcome To Chippendales
Camilla Morrone, Daisy Jones And The Six
Niecy Nash-Betts, Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
Merritt Wever, Tiny Beautiful Things

Outstanding Supporting Actor In A Limited Or Anthology Series

Murray Bartlett, Welcome To Chippendales
Paul Walter Hauser, Black Bird
Richard Jenkins, Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
Joseph Lee, Beed
Ray Liotta, Black Bird
Young Mazino, Beef
Jesse Plemons, Love & Death

Outstanding Directing For A Drama Series

Andor, “Rix Road,” directed by Benjamin Caron
Bad Sisters, “The Prick,” directed by Dearbhla Walsh
The Last Of Us, “Long Long Time,” directed by Peter Hoar
Succession, “America Decides,” directed by Andrij Parekh
Succession, “Connor’s Wedding,” directed by Mark Mylod
Succession, “Living+,” directed by Lorene Scafaria
The White Lotus, “Arrivederci,” directed by Mike White

Outstanding Writing For A Drama Series

Andor, “One Way Out,” written by Beau Willimon
Bad Sisters, “The Prick,” teleplay by Sharon Horgan, Dave Finkel, and Brett Baer
Better Call Saul, “Point And Shoot,” written by Gordon Smith
Better Call Saul, “Saul Gone,” written by Peter Gould
The Last Of Us, “Long, Long Time,” written for television by Craig Mazin
Succession, “Connor’s Wedding,” written by Jesse Armstrong
The White Lotus, “Arrivederci,” written by Mike White

Outstanding Directing For A Comedy Series

Barry, “wow,” directed by Bill Hader
The Bear, “Review,” directed by Christopher Storer
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, “Four Minutes,” directed by Amy Sherman-Palladino
The Ms. Pat Show, “Don’t Touch My Hair,” directed by Mary Lou Belli
Ted Lasso, “So Long, Farewell,” directed by Declan Lowney
Wednesday, “Wednesday’s Child Is Full Of Woe,” directed by Tim Burton

Outstanding Writing For A Comedy Series

Barry, “wow,” written by Bill Hader
The Bear, “System,” written by Christopher Storer
Jury Duty, “Ineffective Assistance,” written by Mekki Leeper
Only Murders In The Building, “I Know Who Did It,” written by John Hoffman, Matteo Borghese, Rob Turbovsky
The Other Two, “Cary & Brooke Go To An AIDS Play,” written by Chris Kelly, Sarah Schneider
Ted Lasso, “So Long, Farewell,” written by Brendan Hunt, Joe Kelly, Jason Sudeikis

Outstanding Directing For A Limited Or Anthology Series Or Movie

Beef – “Figures Of Light,” directed by Lee Sung Jin
Beef – “The Great Fabricator,” directed by Jake Schreier
Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story – “Bad Meat,” directed by Carl Franklin
Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story – “Silenced,” directed by Paris Barclay
Fleishman Is In Trouble – “Me-Time,” directed by Valerie Faris and Jonathan Dayton

Outstanding Writing For A Limited Or Anthology Series Or Movie

Beef, “The Birds Don’t Sing, They Screech In Pain,” written by Lee Sung Jin
Fire Island, written by Joel Kim Booster
Fleishman Is In Trouble, written by Taffy Brodesser-Akner
Prey, written by Patrick Aison, Dan Trachtenberg
Swarm, “Stung,” teleplay and story by Janine Nabers, story by Donald Glover
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story, written by Al Yankovic and Eric Appel

Outstanding Variety Talk Series

The Daily Show With Trevor Noah
Jimmy Kimmel Live
Late Night With Seth Meyers
The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
The Problem With Jon Stewart

Outstanding Scripted Variety Series

A Black Lady Sketch Show
Last Week Tonight With John Oliver
Saturday Night Live

Outstanding Writing For A Variety Series

The Daily Show With Trevor Noah
Last Week Tonight With John Oliver
Late Night With Seth Meyers
The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
Saturday Night Live

Outstanding Variety Special (Live)

The 75th Annual Tony Awards
Chris Rock: Selective Outrage
Elton John Live: Farewell From Dodger Stadium
The Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show Starring Rihanna
The Oscars

Outstanding Reality Or Competition Program

The Amazing Race
RuPaul’s Drag Race
Survivor
Top Chef
The Voice

30 Comments

  • ghboyette-av says:

    I guess I’ve never really paid attention, but do all the awards usually happen at the same time like this?

  • dp4m-av says:

    Weren’t some of these (like Guest Actor, which I believe Nick Offerman already won) done at the Creative Arts Emmys like a week and a half ago?

  • browza-av says:

    Is Esposito hosting? I don’t see him in the list of nominees.

  • tiger-nightmare-av says:

    Rhea Seehorn was robbed. I can’t believe people still take Stifler’s mom seriously after phoning it in with a really bad accent on Two Broke Girls.

  • breadnmaters-av says:

    The Emmy Awards on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, why tf? I guess some people didn’t have the option to get the day off to honor it.
    And enough stories about monsters already, thanks. When the worst one in the country doesn’t get his way in November all hell is going to break loose.

  • blpppt-av says:

    And once again, BCS gets shut out. That’s a wrap.

  • it-has-a-super-flavor--it-is-super-calming-av says:

    RuPaul won! Though not here apparently. Can’t even find someone to recap Drag Race anymore it seems. 

  • disqusdrew-av says:

    I shouldn’t be surprised or upset considering the Emmys past history of screwing over Rhea Seehorn, but dammit, I’m still pissed off Rhea Seehorn got denied once again by the farcical fools that decide the Emmys. Look, I enjoyed The White Lotus, but for fucks sake, Jennifer Coolidge was playing Jennifer Coolidge. As Kim Wexler, Seehorn was setting fire to screen from season 1 of BCS right until the very end. Her final season performances were an inferno. Everyone in that room knows who the winner is despite whomever else is going home with the trophy.
    And by extension, its criminal the complete lack of awards for Better Call Saul in general. Breaking Bad is an all time great television series and you can make the case that its spinoff show is even better. That’s INCREDIBLY rare to pull off yet these people saw fit to constantly pass over Better Call Saul.

  • wangfat-av says:

    So the Emmys stuck to the usual pick one comedy and one drama and give literally every award to them approach? Always fun 🙄

  • liebkartoffel-av says:

    Wait…fucking Obi-Wan was nominated for an Emmy?

    • shindean-av says:

      Why not? That doesn’t mean it was the best or the winner, Ewan was great and sometimes one actor is all a show needs to push it (honestly, look at House MD, nobody was even allowed to be as eccentric as the main character or match him and it shows).

  • toolatenick-av says:

    There should be a limit to the number actors from the same show in each category. Best supporting actor had eight people representing only two shows? They’re great shows but that seems pretty silly.

  • houstyman-av says:

    Rhea being passed over is criminal here. Coolidge already awarded for the same role and didn’t do much more with it than White Lotus S1. She’s not even the most deserving of the win in this category from White Lotus. Fahy would’ve been a better pick but Rhea and BCS must be the biggest Emmy oversight ever.I don’t necessarily think they deserve the wins tonight over the Succession wins, but there were plenty of opportunities to honour them in the past.

  • 777byatlassound-av says:

    Pleased for BEEF, as that was a superb season of television. i can’t wait to rewatch it.

  • tscarp2-av says:

    Not that I mind Oliver getting another win, but damn, I wish someone would just once acknowledge how goddamned funny A Black Lady Sketch Show is.

  • roboj-av says:

    Better Call Saul never won a single Emmy despite 53 nominations.

  • kinjacaffeinespider-av says:

    Emmys continue to ignore Hollywood famous guy, Beck Bristow!

  • jmyoung123-av says:

    If Succession is a drama, then The Bear is a drama. It is ridiculous that it gets to clean up in the comedy section due to it being a half hour show.  

  • weedlord420-av says:

    Okay was there another special this year called the The Oscars or did an award show seriously nominate another award show for an award? That’s the craziest damn thing I’ve ever heard.Like damn I know people say Hollywood-types/award show voters love movies/TV shows about Hollywood, but nominating the Oscars for an Emmy is so masturbatory someone needs to come arrest it for indecent exposure.

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