39th Primetime Emmy Awards
The 39th Primetime Emmy Awards were held on Sunday, September 20, 1987. The ceremony was broadcast on Fox for the first time, as the network premiered a year earlier from the Pasadena Civic Auditorium in Pasadena, California.
39th Primetime Emmy Awards | |
---|---|
Date |
|
Location | Pasadena Civic Auditorium, Pasadena, California |
Presented by | Academy of Television Arts and Sciences |
Hosted by | Bruce Willis |
Highlights | |
Most awards | Promise (5) |
Most nominations | L.A. Law (13) |
Outstanding Comedy Series | The Golden Girls |
Outstanding Drama Series | L.A. Law |
Outstanding Miniseries | A Year in the Life |
Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Program | 41st Tony Awards |
Television/radio coverage | |
Network | Fox |
For the second straight year, The Golden Girls won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series. The winner for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series was L.A. Law, which, for its first season, won four major awards, and led all shows, with 13 major nominations. The winner for Outstanding Drama/Comedy Special, Promise, set a new record, with five major wins. This record still stands for TV movies, though it was tied by Temple Grandin in 2010. The Tracey Ullman Show received three major nominations on the night, making it the first ceremony in which the network Fox received a major nomination. This was the only time that Hill Street Blues wasn't nominated for Outstanding Drama Series, in its seventh and last season; also, no males actors of Hill Street Blues were nominated (even with 20 previous nominations). Only Betty Thomas for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series was nominated, and did not win, making her the only one in the cast to be nominated in all seasons.
NBC continued its dominance of the field, becoming the first network to gain over eighty major nominations (82). Its résumé was highlighted by gaining all five nominations for Outstanding Comedy Series. This had been done only once before (in 1977, but with a field of only four shows), and has not been matched in either field since.
Winners and nominees
Programs
|
|
|
|
Lead performances
|
|
|
|
|
|
Supporting performances
|
|
|
|
|
|
Guest performances
|
|
Individual performances
|
Directing
|
|
|
|
Writing
|
|
|
|
Most major nominations
Network | Number of Nominations |
---|---|
NBC | 82 |
CBS | 36 |
ABC | 15 |
Program | Category | Network | Number of Nominations |
---|---|---|---|
L.A. Law | Drama | NBC | 11 |
The Golden Girls | Comedy | 10 | |
St. Elsewhere | Drama | ||
Cheers | Comedy | 8 | |
Moonlighting | Drama | ABC | 7 |
Cagney & Lacey | CBS | 6 | |
Nutcracker: Money, Madness and Murder | Miniseries | NBC | |
Promise | Special | CBS | |
Family Ties | Comedy | NBC | 5 |
Newhart | CBS | ||
The 41st Annual Tony Awards | Variety | 4 | |
Escape from Sobibor | Special | ||
The Tracey Ullman Show | Variety | Fox | |
The Two Mrs. Grenvilles | Miniseries | NBC | |
LBJ: The Early Years | Special | 3 | |
Night Court | Comedy | ||
Pack of Lies | Special | CBS | |
Unnatural Causes | NBC | ||
Anastasia: The Mystery of Anna | Miniseries | 2 | |
The Cosby Show | Comedy | ||
The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd | |||
Hill Street Blues | Drama | ||
Late Night with David Letterman Fifth Anniversary Special | Variety | ||
Liberty Weekend | ABC | ||
Murder, She Wrote | Drama | CBS | |
Saturday Night Live | Variety | NBC | |
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson | |||
A Year in the Life | Miniseries |
Most major awards
Network | Number of Awards |
---|---|
NBC | 15 |
CBS | 9 |
ABC | 3 |
Program | Category | Network | Number of Awards |
---|---|---|---|
Promise | Special | CBS | 5 |
L.A. Law | Drama | NBC | 4 |
The Golden Girls | Comedy | 3 | |
Family Ties | 2 |
- Notes
- "Major" constitutes the categories listed above: Program, Acting, Directing, and Writing. It does not include the technical categories.