FRESH
YARN presents:
Take
It From Me, A Four-Time Emmy Nominee
By George McGrath
A
show I co-wrote, Tracey Ullman's Trailer Tales received five nominations,
but I'm not nominated for an Emmy this year. I was not surprised -- I
am not due for another series of nods until 2007. No, I'm not Mrs. Nostradamus.
It's pure mathematics.
I received
my first nomination for writing Pee-wee's Playhouse in 1987. In
1988, I was nominated again in the same category. In 1997, I was
nominated for producing Tracey Takes On. And in 1998, I
was nominated again in the same category. Clearly the gods of numerology
have created a mathematical path of nominations from which I may not waver.
I should
be completely honest. That's what people expect from a 4X Nominee. The
two Pee-wee's Playhouse nods were "Daytime" nominations.
For those of you who have not "dabbled in the day," let me try
to explain the difference between the two awards.
If the Primetime
Emmy Awards is eating dinner in a fancy restaurant with the five people
you'd most want to meet -- dead or alive -- (excluding Jesus -- that would
just be weird) -- and everyone compliments you and hand-feeds you butterfly
shrimp; the Daytime Emmys is a gang-related picnic at a park in
North Hollywood where you're forced to eat burnt hot dogs because you
accidentally walked your dog too close to their piece of cardboard that
had the word "Party" and an arrow painted on it.
Anyway, I
didn't win any of the possible Emmy's dangled before me. Don't get me
wrong. I'm not bitter. I believe with the intensity of a young Faith Ford
that the real honor is the nomination and bla bla bla. But when you're
sitting there. And you're in a tuxedo. You want to win. You really do.
I will save
my Daytime reminiscences for a much-less-likely-to-be-written essay. What
follows are some Primetime memories and hopefully helpful hints for the
first-time nominee. But first a tip for the never-won multiple-nominee.
I Always
Get Nominated, But I Never Win. Do I Smell?
Possibly.
But it is unlikely that your nauseating stink is the main factor in your
losing streak.
I have served
as a judge for the Primetime Emmy's for several years. I have judged writing
categories, variety series, specials, and once (never again) mini-series.
I am constantly surprised at the tapes that people submit. Every year
there are tapes submitted by really great shows that show them at their
worst. And the judges are specifically told to NOT judge anything but
the submitted tape, and to not let their prior impressions of the show
influence their vote.
Don't trust
your memory to select your entry -- watch it -- the whole damn thing --
that's what the judges have to do. If it's for writing, is there a big
giant improvised piece where writing might normally be? Does the host
say something like "Well, that bombed" more than once in his
monologue? If it's a variety show, is one of your guests Crispin Glover?
Every year
I want to run to Conan O'Brien and cradle his pointy pink skull in my
arms and say, "Hush baby, let mama pick a tape to submit for you
this year. You just go home now and look pretty. Everything's gonna be
fine, baby. Real fine."
Okay,
Shut Up. I've Got the Nomination. What Do I Do Now?
Here are
some tips for this year's first-time nominees:
- I have
a very important wardrobe tip for the men. Try on your tuxedo shirt
prior to the day of the show with enough time to replace it should your
neck have swollen since last year. You don't want to choke, and you
might be on camera. I know you don't want a gullet. It barely worked
for Charles Durning, it is certainly not going to work for you. If the
shirt's sleeves are still perfect, you can go to a notions store and
buy one of those neck button extender things. But please make sure your
bowtie gives it coverage. Nobody wants to see your button extender.
- For the
ladies, I have seen nominees and their "lady friends" injured
by heavily brocaded jacket and skirt sets. If you don't want to sit
on it, it shouldn't be on your outfit around the ass. And, if you're
wearing a new dress, have a loved one look at the back before you show
up. Rule of thumb. Never make others look at parts of your body that
you don't have to. I have seen women arrive in backless gowns revealing
a hideous back that they clearly have never seen -- I'm talking moles.
Scar tissue. Veins that have worked their way to the surface when they
shouldn't have. Not to mention "dress induced crevices." You're
not Jessica Alba. Cover that scary thing.
It's the
Big Night, Please Give Me Some Life-Saving Tips!
- Unless
you are a recognizable celebrity, or an alcoholic, arrive in your own
car. If you take a limo, you will arrive in the same lane as Doris Roberts
and Jimmy Smits (god-willing) - and the fans are waiting to see who
pops out of that back seat. They want to see Jennifer Garner. They don't
want to see you. And their celebrity-induced hysteria quickly turns
to an unhappy rumbling of "Who's that?" "Nobody."
Rumble, rumble.
- For the
love of god, bring your paperwork. Keep all your tickets and passes
in the envelope they came in, and let the appropriate temp employees
sort through it as needed. You're not Jean Smart -- if you don't have
your tickets for everything, you're not getting in.
- Don't
get drunk in the lobby before the show due to nervous insecurity. You're
not Frankie Muniz -- nobody is going to think you're cuter drunk.
- Here's
a fun way to make four hours seem like three and a half. I like to keep
the big program in my lap and play "psychic predictions" for
each category as they come up. It is especially fun during the series
of awards you have no interest in and no opinion about. (Like the sound
editing awards category that "Horatio Hornblower" walked away
with.) Of course, you need a fun date to play along, and please whisper
-- Noah Wylie is a row away, he isn't playing and doesn't want to hear
you playing.
- Most importantly,
don't be too big to Nominee-watch. Try to spot the actor and actress
nominees when they come in and keep your eye on them. Watch them anticipate
their category - watch them pretend to enjoy the other nominees' names
being mentioned - watch them while the winner gives their speech. Trust
me. You will come home with a bucket full of memories.
I
will never forget Della Reese having her mind blown when she didn't win
the Emmy she had told Joan Rivers "God wants me to have." I'm
sure I don't have to tell you the year was 1998. And the winner in her
category, Camryn Manheim, only made things worse by proclaiming "This
is for the fat girls." Della did not hide her displeasure, and didn't
work her scowl up into anything more attractive. You know she was thinking,
"Fat girls? I could eat you and then eat a meatball hero. I walked
through a plate glass window, bitch!"
The
previously mentioned Doris Roberts was amazing to watch. Nobody ever wanted
anything more than Doris wanted that statue. She was on the aisle. She
wasn't chatting or waving. She wasn't browsing her program. She was sitting
like she was in the front car of a roller coaster slowly approaching its
first killer drop -- hands clenched, chin up, lips tight, squinting slightly
and staring straight ahead. It was clear Miss Doris Roberts had been Megan
Mullalley'd for the last time. She willed that win, and it was fun to
watch.
One year
I sat two rows behind Brett Butler as she enjoyed her last nomination.
The waves of anger she emitted were visible. She was rows behind the other
nominees, and on the side. Not a good sign. (Of course, I was two rows
behind her.) She snorted and shifted in her seat. And, strangely, she
had an empty seat on either side of her. I guess she stabbed and killed
her seat fillers. I said "guess." But, I mean, where were they?
The biggest night of the year for seat fillers and they're just gone?
- Pre-show
and during commercials, there are always celebrities elaborately mouthing
conversation with another celebrity seated a row or two away. It's fun
to read their lips. You see a lot of "Oh, I'll never get it"
and "keep your fingers crossed."
- Smoke
'em if you got 'em. Let the seat fillers scatter. You need your tar.
And the smoking crowd that gathers on the plaza is, as you would probably
guess, populated by the really cool people. And one or two really scary
looking, leathery, tar-stained harbingers of death, of course. The most
fun I ever had on the plaza was enjoying a delicious Parliament with
Lisa Kudrow minutes after she won her Emmy.
Okay,
The Show Is Over. Do I Just Go Home Now or What?
And miss
the Governor's Ball? Who do you think you are? James Brolin?
- Okay,
hopefully you still have that envelope with all your stuff in it (don't
get gravy on your ticket so you can make a bundle selling it on EBay).
- You have
an assigned table. Find it. If you are so far into the room that you
are near the band, take a minute to figure out how you will get out
of there if there's a fire. I don't give that advice a lot, but I know
that it has taken me fifteen minutes to make my way back to the front
door (tar!) with no one screaming "fire" and stampeding past
me. I can only imagine what a nightmare it would be if the kids from
That 70's Show panicked.
- You will
have your food served to you. It is pretty. Eat it. Hope your group
is large enough to fill a table and preclude a combo table - you don't
want to find yourself sitting next to somebody from VH1.
The Only
Famous People Still Here are The Shield -- Now What?
What is wrong
with you? For a nominee, you're so needy.
- If there
is a memento (some glass thing you will treasure in its original box
in some drawer of mementos), sometimes they give it away on your way
out. Look for some pretty Academy interns sitting at a long crappy table
with stuff on it. For gods sake, take it. Courteney Cox got a million
dollars worth of really good electronic and lotion-related crap, you
should at least get your
ornament.
- Did I
warn you to park in a lot if possible and avoid the valet? Oops. Get
ready for a really insanely long wait for your car. I'm sorry. I should
have warned you. But I was so worried you'd get drunk in the lobby I
guess I forgot
Okay,
I've Read Enough. Please Shut the Fuck Up.
Now there's
the winning spirit! Enjoy your nomination. Have fun! Be fancy! Save the
Variety with your agency's full page "We Congratulate our
Nominees" ad! I hope you win. I will join you in 2007 and 2008. And
again in 2017 -- I will be the drunk old guy with the gullet riding my
free Rascal Scooter down the red carpet pretending it's not whether you
win or lose, bla bla bla.
One last
comforting thought for the non-winners. No matter what happens the rest
of your life, even if you are hit by a car tomorrow, your obituary in
the Hollywood Reporter will begin with the phrase "Emmy-nominee
Your Name Here
" Not bad. Not bad at all.
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