It was Regina King, winning her fourth career Emmy on Sunday, who perhaps summed up the proceedings the most succinctly — and accurately: “This is freaking weird.”
Why, yes, being handed your Emmy inside your home, by a person you didn’t know was coming, with fellow nominees zooming in from their own homes, while host Jimmy Kimmel played to a house of empty seats and cardboard cutouts — well, it WAS weird as heck.
But the “Pandemmys,” as host Kimmel called this strangest of award shows, also worked pretty darned well at times — when Kimmel and Jennifer Aniston weren’t coming close to accidentally burning down the Staples Center with an overly zealous attempt to disinfect a winner’s envelope with real flames (yes, a coronavirus joke).
Some key moments of an unforgettably unusual night:
WE’LL HAVE WHAT THEY’RE HAVING
Whatever flames were actually burning onstage, the real fire was happening up in Toronto, where the gathered cast and creators of “Schitt’s Creek” were having an incredible night. The first award of the evening, best actress in a comedy, went to the gifted veteran Catherine O’Hara, and then they kept winning, the Canadian crowd becoming increasingly giddy as it became clear this little show about a wealthy family down on its luck was sweeping the comedy awards. Nobody was more thrilled than Daniel Levy, son of best actor winner Eugene Levy; the younger Levy won the award for comedy writing, shared a directing award and captured the supporting actor trophy. “The internet is about to turn on me. I’m so sorry,” Levy said.