Thursday,
October 18, 2001
Emmys
hope third time will be a charm
By Lynn Elber
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES
The Emmy Awards are giving it another try.
The show,
delayed twice by last months terrorist attacks, has
been rescheduled for Nov. 4 at the Shubert Theatre in Los
Angeles, the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences and
CBS said Wednesday.
Ellen
DeGeneres will remain as host. The Emmys wont have a
satellite studio in New York City, as was planned for earlier
this month.
Emmy
organizers considered holding the show on a military base
or studio lot, or canceling it outright before settling on
the Shubert. They even checked with the White House for encouragement.
Broadway
is going on, the World Series is going on, football is going
on, said CBS President Leslie Moonves. So
we are going on.
The awards
show is likely to settle into a middle ground between the
typical celebration of televisions best work planned
for Sept. 16 and the more sober tribute to victims and heroes
of the terrorist attack that was organized for Oct. 7. The
second show was postponed when bombing began in Afghanistan
that day.
This
show will not be downbeat, insisted academy Chairman
Bryce Zabel.
Dress
will be business attire, instead of black tie. A special unity
dinner will be held at the Century Plaza Hotel.
Gary
Smith, who has produced past Emmy telecasts, was brought in
to replace Don Mischer as executive producer.
Mischer
had to bow out because hes producing the opening and
closing ceremonies at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake
City.
Since
the first delay, the television industry has been divided
over whether the awards should be re-staged or dropped altogether.
It
just seems like the ship has sailed, said veteran
producer Steven Bochco, creator of NYPD Blue.
The Emmys usually kicked off a fall television season, and
now its already a month old.
Moonves
said he believed that 95 percent of people in the industry
support the rescheduling.
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