Global Television Comes of Age
29.07.2022 - 20:09
/ variety.com
Steve Clarke Television’s new international identity was confirmed on both sides of the camera with this year’s Emmy noms. Actors, writers, helmers, producers and below-the-line talent from outside the U.S.
have all emerged as global contenders in the annual kudos contest.Be it “Succession,” mentioned in 25 categories; “Ted Lasso,” which received 20 noms; or South Korea’s “Squid Game,” recipient of 14 noms and the first-ever drama series Emmy nominee not in the English language, TV’s international face came to the fore.“Succession” was commissioned by HBO but the show, said to be inspired by the feuding Murdoch dynasty, was created by British screenwriter Jesse Armstrong, nominated for an Emmy in one of the writing categories. In common with so much highend TV, fish-out-of-water feelgood saga “Ted Lasso,” a breakout hit for Apple TV +, was filmed in the U.K.
and featured a cast bristling with British talent. No fewer than eight U.K.
actors were given an Emmy nom for their performances in “Ted Lasso.” Sally Woodward Gentle, founder of U.K. shingle Sid Gentle, producer of “Killing Eve,” whose stars Jodie Comer and Sandra Oh were nominated for lead actress, says shows set and shot in Britain such as “Ted Lasso” can command a premium as they cut through in content-saturated, global markets.“If you’re a British producer and want a success in the States, you no longer have to remake the show with an American cast,” she adds.Seeing England through rosetinted glasses helps.
“I live near where ‘Ted Lasso’ is set [the affluent west London suburb of Richmond] and I can tell you that not every street looks like it does in the TV show. In these dark times, escapism is more important than ever.” Netflix’s Georgian romance
.