'Ted Lasso,' 'The Crown,' 'Queen's Gambit' win top Emmy Awards

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Royal drama "The Crown" and feel-good comedy "Ted Lasso" nabbed the top prizes at television's Emmy awards on a night dominated by streaming shows, British talent and rare wins by women.

Chess drama The Queen's Gambit was named best-limited series and tied with The Crown for the most wins overall at 11 apiece.

The best drama series win for The Crown gave Netflix its biggest prize so far, while Apple TV+ entered streaming's big league with the best comedy series win for Ted Lasso. Neither Netflix nor Apple TV+ had previously won a best comedy or best drama series Emmy.

Olivia Colman and Josh O'Connor for playing Queen Elizabeth and heir to the throne Prince Charles in a fourth season of The Crown that focused on the unhappy marriage of Charles and Princess Diana.

"We're all thrilled. I am very proud. I'm very grateful. We're going to party," said Peter Morgan, creator of The Crown, at a gathering in London for the cast and crew.

An exuberant Kate Winslet was named best actress for her turn as a troubled detective in the limited series Mare of Easttown, while Ewan McGregor won for playing fashion designer Halston.

Jason Sudeikis, the star and co-creator of Ted Lasso, was named best comedy actor. The show also brought statuettes for Britons Hannah Waddingham and Brett Goldstein for their supporting roles in the tale of a struggling English football team that won over TV fans with its folksy humour during the dark days of the coronavirus pandemic. 

"This show is about family. This show's about mentors and teachers and this show's about teammates. And I wouldn't be here without those three things in my life," Sudeikis said on Sunday.

But it wasn't all plain sailing. Ted Lasso lost the comedy writing and directing awards to Hacks, about a fading stand-up female comedian played by Jean Smart, who got a standing ovation when she was named best comedy actress.

Despite a nominees list that boasted the strongest showing in years for people of colour, only a handful emerged as winners.

They included Britain's Michaela Coel, who won for writing the harrowing sexual assault drama I May Destroy You in which she also starred and directed; RuPaul, host of the competition show RuPaul's Drag Race; and the cast of hip hop Broadway musical Hamilton, which won the Emmy for variety special after it was filmed for television.

Dancer, singer and actor Debbie Allen was given an honourary award celebrating 50 years in show business. "It’s taken a lot of courage to be the only woman in the room most of the time," Allen said.

It was a good night for women, and for Britons.

"Write the tale that scares you, that makes you feel uncertain, that isn't comfortable," said Coel, who dedicated her Emmy to sexual assault survivors.

Lucia Aniello got a rare directing win for a woman for the comedy series "Hacks" about a fading female comedian. She also was one of the winning co-writers. Britain's Jessica Hobbs took home a directing Emmy for "The Crown."

"Not a lot of women have won this award so I feel like I am standing on the shoulders of some really extraordinary people," Hobbs said.

Concerns over the Delta variant of the coronavirus forced Sunday's ceremony to move to an outdoor tent in downtown Los Angeles, with a reduced guest list and mandatory vaccinations and testing but a red carpet that harked back to pre-pandemic times.

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