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List of awards and nominations received by The Sopranos
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Sopranos, an American crime drama television series created by David Chase that aired on the premium cable network HBO between 1999 and 2007, won and was nominated for a variety of different awards. The show won 21 Primetime Emmy Awards in 111 nominations. The series was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series seven times, in every year eligible, winning in 2004 (as the first series on a cable network to do so) and 2007. It also won five Golden Globe Awards in 23 nominations, including a win for Best Drama Series for its first season in 2000. The series was honored with two consecutive Peabody Awards in 2000 and 2001, and also won several major guild awards for its actors, directors, producers, and writers.[1][2][3][4]
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Additionally, because of the long hiatuses between certain seasons, the series was intermittently ineligible for awards.
Lead actor James Gandolfini and lead actress Edie Falco received the most nominations and wins of the ensemble cast, including three wins each for the Primetime Emmy Award, in their respective categories; as well as Falco winning the Golden Globe Award in 2000 and 2003, and Gandolfini winning in 2000. David Chase also received numerous accolades for his work on the series as a director, producer and writer, including the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series on three occasions. The Sopranos received 16 Directors Guild of America Award nominations, winning two of them; its four nominations in 2000 set a record for most nominations for a series in one category in a year.[5] It received six Producers Guild of America Award nominations, winning three of them. At the Screen Actors Guild Awards, Gandolfini and Falco were honored three times each, and the entire cast also won for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series in 2000 and 2008. The show won four Writers Guild of America Awards from 11 nominations and 12 TCA Awards from 24 nominations. Its five nominations and four wins at the TCA Awards in 1999 set records for most nominations and wins in a year.[6]
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Awards and nominations
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Notes
Nominees for awards
- Additional nominees: Henry J. Bronchtein and Ilene S. Landress (unit production managers); Mark McGann (first assistant director); Michelle L. Keiser (second assistant director)
- Additional nominees: Ilene S. Landress (unit production manager); Mark McGann (first assistant director); Michelle L. Keiser (second assistant director)
- Additional nominees: Henry J. Bronchtein (unit production manager); Michael DeCasper (first assistant director); Kristin Cameron-Bernstein (second assistant director)
- Additional nominees: Alysse Bezahler (unit production manager); Henry J. Bronchtein (first assistant director); Kenneth G. Brown (second assistant director)
- Additional nominees: Ilene S. Landress (unit production manager); Mark McGann (first assistant director); Lisa M. Rowe (second assistant director)
- Additional nominees: Henry J. Bronchtein (unit production manager); Mark McGann (first assistant director); Jeff Bernstein (second assistant director)
- Additional nominees: Scott Hornbacher (unit production manager); Michael DeCasper (first assistant director); Scott Schaeffer (second assistant director); Noreen Cheleden (second second assistant director)
- Additional nominees: Scott Hornbacher (unit production manager); Michael DeCasper (first assistant director); Kristin Cameron-Bernstein (second assistant director); John Silvestri (second second assistant director); Mikki Ziska (additional second assistant director)
- Additional nominees: Henry J. Bronchtein (unit production manager); Michael DeCasper (first assistant director); Kristin Cameron-Bernstein (second assistant director); John Silvestri (second second assistant director)
- Additional nominees: Ilene S. Landress and Scott Hornbacher (unit production managers); Michael DeCasper (first assistant director); Kristin Cameron-Bernstein (second assistant director); John Silvestri (second second assistant director); Charlie Foster (DGA trainee)
- Additional nominees: Henry J. Bronchtein (unit production manager); Mark McGann (first assistant director); Noreen Cheleden (second assistant director); John Silvestri (second second assistant director); Charlie Foster (DGA trainee)
- Additional nominees: Henry J. Bronchtein (unit production manager); Mark McGann (first assistant director); Noreen Cheleden (second assistant director); Matt Gordon (second second assistant director); Marcy Patterson (DGA trainee)
- Additional nominees: Scott Hornbacher (unit production manager); Jeff Bernstein (first assistant director); Nancy Herrmann (second assistant director); Matt Gordon (second second assistant director); Marcy Patterson (DGA trainee)
- Additional nominees: Henry J. Bronchtein and Ilene S. Landress (unit production managers); Jeff Bernstein (first assistant director); Nancy Herrmann (second assistant director); Charlie Foster (second second assistant director); Selena Beal (additional second second assistant director); Regina Heymann (second assistant director/location manager); Marcos Gonzalez Palma (DGA trainee)
- Additional nominees: Henry J. Bronchtein and Ilene S. Landress (unit production managers); John E. Gallagher (first assistant director); Peter Soldo (second assistant director); Charlie Foster (second second assistant director); Henri Sann (additional second second assistant director); April Taylor (second assistant director/location manager); Kathleen Mulligan (DGA trainee)
- Nominees: Various artists; David Chase and Martin Bruestle (producers)
- Presented to Home Box Office and Brillstein-Grey Entertainment
- Presented to Home Box Office, Chase Films, and Brad Grey Television
- Nominees: David Chase and Brad Grey (executive producers); Robin Green and Mitchell Burgess (co-executive producers); Frank Renzulli (supervising producer); Ilene S. Landress and Allen Coulter (producers)
- Nominees: David Chase, Brad Grey, Robin Green, and Mitchell Burgess (executive producers); Frank Renzulli (co-executive producer); Ilene S. Landress, Martin Bruestle, Allen Coulter, Todd A. Kessler, and Terence Winter (producers)
- Nominees: David Chase, Brad Grey, Robin Green, and Mitchell Burgess (executive producers); Ilene S. Landress (co-executive producer); Terence Winter (supervising producer); Martin Bruestle, Henry J. Bronchtein, and Todd A. Kessler (producers)
- Nominees: David Chase, Brad Grey, Robin Green, Mitchell Burgess, and Ilene S. Landress (executive producers); Terence Winter (co-executive producer); Henry J. Bronchtein and Martin Bruestle (producers)
- Nominees: David Chase, Brad Grey, Robin Green, Mitchell Burgess, Ilene S. Landress, and Terence Winter (executive producers); Henry J. Bronchtein (co-executive producer); Matthew Weiner and Martin Bruestle (producers)
- Nominees: David Chase, Brad Grey, Ilene S. Landress, and Terence Winter (executive producers); Henry J. Bronchtein and Matthew Weiner (co-executive producers); Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider (supervising producers); Martin Bruestle and Gianna Maria Smart (producers)
- Nominees: David Chase, Brad Grey, Ilene S. Landress, Terence Winter, and Matthew Weiner (executive producers); Henry J. Bronchtein (co-executive producer); Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider (supervising producers); Martin Bruestle and Gianna Maria Smart (producers)
- Nominee: David Chase[i]
- Nominees: David Chase, Brad Grey, Mitchell Burgess, Robin Green, Ilene S. Landress, and Terence Winter
- Nominees: David Chase, Brad Grey, Ilene S. Landress, Terence Winter, Matthew Weiner, Diane Frolov, Andrew Schneider, Henry J. Bronchtein, Martin Bruestle, and Gianna Maria Smart
- Nominees: Mitchell Burgess, David Chase, Diane Frolov, Robin Green, Andrew Schneider, Matthew Weiner, and Terence Winter
- Nominees: David Chase, Diane Frolov, Andrew Schneider, Matthew Weiner, and Terence Winter
Other
- Also recognized for his work on The Rockford Files, Kolchak: The Night Stalker, and "many other breakthrough TV shows"
- Episodes 1, 2, and 13 were selected for the festival.[69]
- Presented for their work with Edie Falco and James Gandolfini
- While both Weiner and Winter are credited by the Writers Guild of America with writing the episode,[82] the initial nomination list only named Weiner as a nominee.[83] Later sources list both as nominees.[84][85]
- Tied with Cheri Montesanto, Matthew W. Mungle, Laverne Munroe, Clinton Wayne, and Robin L. Neal for "Deadalive" from The X-Files[89]
- Brad Grey was originally listed as a nominee for the award but was later removed after a review by the Producers Guild of America.[91] Following the decision, Chase reportedly said he would not accept the award if Grey's contributions were not recognized.[92] Chase did not appear at the awards ceremony on March 2 when The Sopranos won the award.[93]
- Tied with David E. Kelley for The Practice
- Tied with The West Wing
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References
External links
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