Emmy Magazine Features

Always And Only

When the role is right for Angela Bassett, only she will do. That’s why the team behind Fox’s 9-1-1 built the show around her — producers and directors crave the strength and self-respect she always brings to the screen. As a young actress, she says, she’d do without rather than take a job “that would degrade Black women or the Black female experience.”

By Margy Rochlin
Story

To portray Margaret Thatcher in The Crown, Gillian Anderson had to immerse herself in Britain’s “Iron Lady,” both mentally and physically.

Even in the streaming age, Americans who savor the best in British drama are still gathering ‘round the telly as the weekend wanes.

An actor-producer who knows how good guys can stray to the dark side, Bryan Cranston confronts a new crisis of conscience in Showtime’s Your Honor .

The Marvel Cinematic Universe comes to television with WandaVision  the new Disney+ series that places a super-powered Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany in the suburbs of classic sitcoms.

Like clans that ban politics at holiday dinner, cable’s Christmas movie makers are going for the greater good. Forget the usual one-upsmanship — they’re focused on inclusion.

In 10 seasons of Curb Your Enthusiasm, Larry David — as a most uncivil version of himself — has upended every social interaction with insult and injury. To mark the comedy’s 20th year, some of the show’s principals reflect on Curb’s flagrant humor and 20 terrific episodes.

With five nights of socially distanced shows, the Creative Arts Emmys made the best of a very different year.

“What could go right?” joked Jimmy Kimmel at the start of the first virtual Emmys. A lot, it turned out. From an almost-empty arena, the 72nd awards proved the pandemic was no match for ingenuity — and the need for humans to connect.

Step into our virtual photobooth!

As an actress, Kate Mara thrives on tough and troubling roles, like her upcoming lead in A Teacher. As a producer, she’s assuming some control “over the roles I get to play and the people I get to work with.”

"She’s the first and only actor I wanted,” says the showrunner of Nat Geo’s Genius: Aretha. And just like that, Cynthia Erivo — the feisty phenom who wowed in Harriet and belted her heart out on Broadway — became the Queen of Soul. “She’s tiny, but she’s got so much power,” says the director of Harriet . “She’s a force of nature.”

Now soaring to new altitudes, Kaley Cuoco stars in — and executive-produces — The Flight Attendant for HBO Max. But she’ll always cherish her long run on The Big Bang Theory, as well as that too-brief time on 8 Simple Rules with John Ritter, who taught her leadership and respect on the set.

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