- Source: Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance
The Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance was a Creative Arts Emmy Award given out by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. It was awarded to a performer for an outstanding "continuing or single voice-over performance in a series or a special." Prior to 1992, voice actors could be nominated for their performance in the live-action acting categories. The award was first given in 1992 when six voice actors from The Simpsons shared the award. From 1992 to 2008, it was a juried award, so there were no nominations and there would be multiple or no recipients in one year. In 2009, the rules were changed to a category award, with five nominees.
Usually, winners would be voice actors from animated shows, but some narrators of live-action shows won such as Keith David in 2005 and 2008. No winner was named in 1996 or 2007.
Nine voice actors from The Simpsons won a combined 14 Emmys in the category. Of those, Dan Castellaneta won four and Hank Azaria won three. Ja'net Dubois won two for The PJs, Keith David won two for his narration of various documentaries, and Maurice LaMarche won two for Futurama. Voice actors from shows on Fox won 17 of the 27 awards presented.
In 2014, the category was separated into two categories – Outstanding Narrator and Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance. This split acknowledged and accommodated a general industry uptrend in the distinctly different achievements that are voice-over narration and voice-over character performance.
Rules
While most of the Primetime Emmy Awards choose winners from a group of nominees, the award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance was juried from 1992 to 2008. Each entrant was screened by a panel of Academy of Television Arts & Sciences members from the Animation branch as well as members of the Acting branch with voice-over credits. Potential nominees had to submit a DVD that contained an edited version of a single episode and a picture of the character(s) that were voiced. Submissions that were less than 30 minutes had to be edited to be shorter than five minutes; entries longer than 30 minutes were edited to be less than ten. Prior to 2007, the maximum edited lengths were ten and fifteen minutes respectively. Each entrant with majority approval went on to a second panel. Emmy winners had to be unanimous choices of this second panel, except that for every 12 persons or fraction thereof on the panel, one "no" vote was allowed, except from the head of the panel.
In 2009, the Academy changed the award from a "juried" award to a "category", with six nominees and one winner.
Winners (1992–2008)
Winners and nominations (2009–2013)
Winners are listed first, highlighted in boldface, and indicated with a double dagger (‡).
Multiple wins
Wins include Outstanding Narrator and Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance
4 wins
Hank Azaria
Dan Castellaneta
Seth MacFarlane
Maya Rudolph
3 wins
David Attenborough
Keith David
2 wins
Ja'net Dubois
Jeremy Irons
Maurice Lamarche
Barack Obama
References
External links
Advanced Primetime Awards database
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Primetime Emmy Award
- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Special Visual Effects
- Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards ke-70
- Kristen Wiig
- Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards ke-71
- Nancy Cartwright
- Idris Elba
- Anne Hathaway
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- Ellen DeGeneres
- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance
- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Narrator
- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance
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- 76th Primetime Emmy Awards
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