The Television Academy has once again canceled the post-Emmys Governors Balls, and has also announced that the Creative Arts Emmys will return to the weekend before the Primetime Emmys telecast, and take place on Saturday, Sept. 11, and Sunday, Sept. 12.
Just like the plans for this year’s Primetime Emmys ceremony, the live audience for the Creative Arts Emmys will be limited to nominees and their guests, and be held at the Microsoft Theatre in downtown Los Angeles’ LA Live complex. How this year’s Creative Arts Emmys will be divided by categories on Sept. 11 and Sept. 12 will be announced later.
Last year, in comparison, the Creative Arts Emmy Awards, which focus on artisans’ creative and technical achievements in television across all genres, were held as virtual, pre-taped livestreams over four nights — with a fifth night, also virtual, that aired on FXX. (All five were hosted by Nicole Byer.) This year’s Creative Arts Emmys ceremonies will be edited into a telecast to air on Saturday, Sept. 18 at 8 p.m. on FXX, the night before the Primetime Emmys telecast.
As for the Governors Balls, while they won’t return just yet, the TV Academy is reviving another batch of celebrations: The smaller peer group gatherings honoring nominees in various categories, which usually take place throughout the week before the Primetime Emmys, will make a comeback.
This will mark the second year in a row without any Emmy Governors Ball after party, as public health concerns remain regarding the COVID-19 pandemic. In-person events have slowly returned in the industry as COVID-19 vaccination rates continue to improve — but, as the Delta variant prompts a rise in infections, including in Southern California, there’s still reason to hold off on large-scale gatherings. The return of the Creative Arts and Primetime Emmy ceremonies to the Microsoft Theatre at LA Live are expected to be done under certain protocols still being addressed; recent Hollywood premieres have required both proof of COVID vaccination and a negative COVID test, for example.
The Governors Ball would have added an extra layer of stress to the event, including food service and more in-person contact — the kind of things that people will still be getting used to in September, and might be daunting with hundreds of people in attendance. But the Emmy Nominee celebrations, which will take place at the Television Academy’s headquarters in North Hollywood, will give the org a chance to still honor nominated contenders in an intimate setting.
In recent years, as the Creative Arts Emmys expanded to two nights the weekend before the Primetime Emmys, there have been three Governors Balls, following each ceremony. Last year, of course, the Creative Arts Emmys were produced as a completely virtual, online event, while the Primetime Emmys was held at a mostly empty Staples Center, with just host Jimmy Kimmel, a handful of presenters and a skeleton production team in physical attendance. With most of the nominees at home, along with video equipment that had been sent to their houses, COVID protocols prevented any kind of afterparty.
(Excerpt) Read more in: Variety