58th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards

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58th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards
DateAugust 19, 2006
Location
Presented byAcademy of Television Arts & Sciences
Most awardsElizabeth I (5)
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The 58th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards honored the best in artistic and technical achievement in American prime time television programming from June 1, 2005, until May 31, 2006, as chosen by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.[1][2] The awards were presented on August 19, 2006, at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, California. A total of 79 Creative Arts Emmys were handed out across 67 categories. The ceremony preceded the 58th Primetime Emmy Awards, held on August 27.

The miniseries Elizabeth I led all programs with five wins, followed by Baghdad ER and Rome with four wins each and the 78th Annual Academy Awards with three wins. For overall program fields, awards went to Baghdad ER, Before the Dinosaurs, Dance in America: Swan Lake with American Ballet Theatre, Extreme Makeover: Home Edition, High School Musical, I Have Tourette's but Tourette's Doesn't Have Me, Rome: Engineering an Empire, The Simpsons, 10 Days That Unexpectedly Changed America, The XX Olympic Winter Games – Opening Ceremony, and Two Days in October. HBO led all networks with 17 wins.

Winners and nominees[edit]

Leslie Jordan in 2022
Leslie Jordan, Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series winner
Cloris Leachman in 2009
Cloris Leachman, Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series winner
Patricia Clarkson in 2009
Patricia Clarkson, Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series winner
Kelsey Grammer in 2010
Kelsey Grammer, Outstanding Voice-Over Performance winner

Winners are listed first, highlighted in boldface, and indicated with a double dagger (‡).[2][3][a] Sections are based upon the categories listed in the 2005–2006 Emmy rules and procedures.[1] Area awards and juried awards are denoted next to the category names as applicable.[b] For simplicity, producers who received nominations for program awards have been omitted.

Programs[edit]

Programs

Performing[edit]

Performing

Animation[edit]

Animation

Art Direction[edit]

Art Direction
  • Rome: "Caesarion" / "Triumph" / "Kalends of February" – Joseph Bennett, Domenico Sica, and Cristina Onori (HBO)

Casting[edit]

Casting
  • Grey's Anatomy – Linda Lowy and John Brace (ABC)
    • Big Love – Junie Lowry Johnson and Libby Goldstein (HBO)
    • Boston Legal – Ken Miller and Nikki Valko (ABC)
    • House – Amy Lippens and Stephanie Laffin (Fox)
    • LostApril Webster, Veronica Collins Rooney, and Mandy Sherman (ABC)

Choreography[edit]

Choreography

Cinematography[edit]

Cinematography
  • The Amazing Race: "Here Comes the Bedouin!" – Per A. C. Larsson, Sylvester Campe, Tom Cunningham, Chip Goebert, Uri Sharon, and Scott Shelley (CBS)
    • The Apprentice: "Episode #509" – Jim Harrington, Alan Pierce, Jeff Watt, Rodney Chauvin, Tom Magill, and Vince Monteleone (NBC)
    • Deadliest Catch: "The Clock's Ticking" – Doug Stanley, Scott Simper, Patrick Cummings, Zac McFarlane, Marc Carter, and Bryan Miller (Discovery Channel)
    • Project Runway: "Clothes Off Your Back" – Tony Sacco (Bravo)
    • Survivor: "Big Trek, Big Trouble, Big Surprise" – Mark "Ninja" Lynch, Michael Murray, Mark Hryma, Derek Carver, Leighton DeBarros, and Kevin Garrison (CBS)

Commercial[edit]

Commercial

Costumes[edit]

Costumes
  • Benise: Nights of Fire! – Erin Lareau (PBS)
  • Dancing with the Stars: "Episode 208A" – Dana Campbell and Randall Christensen (ABC)
  • MADtv: "Episode #1109" – Wendy Benbrook and Wanda Leavey (Fox)

Directing[edit]

Directing

Hairstyling[edit]

Hairstyling
  • Elizabeth I: "Part 2" – Fae Hammond and Su Westwood (HBO)
    • Into the West: "Casualties of War" – Mary Lampert and Jennifer Santiago (TNT)
    • Into the West: "Manifest Destiny" – Iloe Flewelling (TNT)
    • Mrs. Harris – Bunny Parker, Susan Schuler, and Elle Elliot (HBO)

Lighting Direction[edit]

Lighting Direction

Main Title Design[edit]

Main Title Design

Makeup[edit]

Makeup

Music[edit]

Music

Picture Editing[edit]

Picture Editing
  • The Amazing Race: "Here Comes the Bedouin!" – Matt Deitrich, Michael Bolanowski, Evan Finn, Eric Goldfarb, Julian Gomez, Andy Kozar, and Paul Nielsen (CBS)
    • American Idol: "Audition City: Greensboro" – Bill De Ronde, Barnaby Levy, Cliff Dorsey, Ryan Tanner, Oren Castro, and Narumi Inatsugu (Fox)
    • Project Runway: "Clothes Off Your Back" – Steve Lichtenstein, Clark Vogeler, Joe Mastromonaco, LaRonda Morris, Drew Brown, and Noel Guerra (Bravo)
    • Survivor: "Salvation and Desertion" – Ivan Ladizinsky, Tim Atzinger, Fred Hawthorne, Conroy Browne, and Evan Mediuch (CBS)
    • Survivor: "Starvation and Lunacy" – Michael Greer, H. A. Arnarson, Fred Hawthorne, J. D. Sievertson, Tim Atzinger, Evan Mediuch, and Dave Harrison (CBS)

Sound Editing[edit]

Sound Editing
  • Smallville: "Arrival" – Michael Lawshe, Timothy Cleveland, Paul Diller, Stuart Calderon, Jason Oliver, Jessica Dickson, David Cowan, Chris McGeary, Casey Crabtree, and Michael Crabtree (WB)
    • CSI: Crime Scene Investigation: "A Bullet Runs Through It, Part 1" – Mace Matiosian, Ruth Adelman, David Van Slyke, Jivan Tahmizian, Mark Allen, Troy Hardy, Zane Bruce, and Joseph Sabella (CBS)
    • ER: "Two Ships" – Walter Newman, Tom Harris, Darleen Stoker, Rick M. Hromadka, Darren Wright, Kenneth Young, Bruce Honda, Sharyn Tylk-Gersh, Casey Crabtree, and Michael Crabtree (NBC)
    • Supernatural: "Pilot" – Michael Lawshe, Timothy Cleveland, Paul Diller, Marc Meyer, David Lynch, Jessica Dickson, Karyn Foster, Chris McGeary, David Lee Fein, and Jody Thomas (WB)
    • 24: "9:00 PM – 10:00 PM" – William Dotson, Catherine Speakman, Pembrooke Andrews, Jeffrey Whitcher, Shawn Kennelly, Rick Polanco, Jeffrey Charbonneau, Laura Macias, and Vince Nicastro (Fox)
  • Flight 93Harry Snodgrass, Mark Linden, Tara A. Paul, David A. Sharf, Geoff Raffan, Carlos Ramirez, Joan Rowe, and Chris Julian (A&E)
    • Category 7: The End of the World: "Night 1" – Joseph Melody, Devon Curry, Kevin Fisher, Rick Steele, Anton Holden, Joy Ealy, J. Michael Hooser, Burt Weinstein, Tim Terusa, Mark Steele, Sean Byrne, Peter DiRado, Tim Chilton, and Sharon Michaels (CBS)
    • Into the West: "Manifest Destiny" – Michael Graham, Kristi Johns, Bill Bell, Bob Costanza, Mike Dickeson, Gary Macheel, Lou Thomas, Adriane Marfiak, Anton Holden, Burt Weinstein, Tim Terusa, Charles Kolander, Rusty Tinsley, Jim Schultz, Jill Sanders, and Tim Chilton (TNT)
    • Sleeper Cell: "Youmud-Din" – Mark Kamps, Todd Murakami, Jane Boegel, Jason Lezama, Patrick Hogan, Bob Newlan, Matt Fausak, and Dale Perry (Showtime)
    • Stephen King's Desperation – Richard Taylor, Todd Murakami, Jason Lezama, Andrew Ellerd, Bob Costanza, Brian Thomas Nist, Patrick Hogan, Mark Cookson, Mark Kamps, Robert Ramirez, Fred Judkins, Rick Steele, Sonya Lindsay, and Stan Jones (ABC)

Sound Mixing[edit]

Sound Mixing

Special Visual Effects[edit]

Special Visual Effects
  • The Triangle: "Part 1" – Marc Weigert, Volker Engel, Ingo Putze, Robin Graham, Todd Sheridan Perry, Conrad Murrey, Sam Khorshid, Paul Graff, and Ben Grossmann (Sci Fi Channel)
    • Before the Dinosaurs – Tim Greenwood, Neil Glasbey, Chloe Leland, Nigel Booth, Jeremy Hunt, Daren Horley, Peter Thorn, and Darren Byford (Discovery Channel)
    • Into the West: "Hell on Wheels" – Tim McHugh, Craig Weiss, Glenn Campbell, Christopher DeCristo, Christopher Moore, Niel Wray, Don L. McCoy, George Garcia, and Eric Ehemann (TNT)
    • MammothArmen Kevorkian, Liz Castro, Matt Scharf, David Morton, Christian Bloch, Stefan Bredereck, Jason Zimmerman, Spencer Levy, and Scott Dewis (Sci Fi Channel)
    • The Nightingale (Great Performances) – Hugues Namur, Paul Carteron, Morgan Sagel, Anne Chatelain, Oliver Garcelon, Alexander Gregoire, Guillaume Ho Tsong Fang, Ugo Bimar, and Julien Limouse (PBS)

Stunt Coordination[edit]

Stunt Coordination
  • E-Ring: "Snatch and Grab" – Jimmy Romano (NBC)
    • Alias: "Reprisal (Part 1)" / "All the Time in the World (Part 2)" – Shauna Duggins (ABC)
    • Numb3rs: "Harvest" – Jim Vickers (CBS)
    • 24: "9:00 PM – 10:00 PM" – Jeff Cadiente (Fox)
    • The Unit: "First Responders" – Norman Howell (CBS)

Technical Direction[edit]

Technical Direction
  • Dancing with the Stars: "Episode #204" – John Pritchett, Brian Reason, Hector Ramirez, Dave Levisohn, John Repczynski, Danny Bonilla, Easter Xua, Diane Biederbeck, Suzanne Ebner, James Karidas, and Chris Gray (ABC)
    • American Idol: "Episode #530" – John Pritchett, Diane Biederbeck, Danny Bonilla, Manny Bonilla, Dave Eastwood, Suzanne Ebner, Bobby Highton, Ed Horton, Steve Martynuik, Ken Patterson, George Prince, John Repczynski, Easter Xua, Diane Biederbeck, Suzanne Ebner, James Karidas, and Mark Sanford (Fox)
    • Late Night with Conan O'Brien: "Episode #2226" – Gregory Aull, Richard S. Carter, Kenneth Decker, Kurt Decker, Eugene Huelsman, Gregory Kasoff, Chris Matott, James Palczewski, James Scurti, Mark Sofil, Eli Clarke, Carl M. Henry III, and Keith Winikoff (NBC)
    • Late Show with David Letterman: "Show #2472" – Timothy W. Kennedy, Al Cialino, David J. Dorsett, Karin-Lucie Grzella, Jack W. Young, John Hannel, John Curtin, George Rothweiler, Dan Flaherty, Fred Shimizu, Steven G. Kaufman, John Pry, Kevin Bailey, William J. White, and Daniel L. Campbell (CBS)
    • Saturday Night Live: "Host: Jack Black, Musical Guest Neil Young" – Steven Cimino, John Pinto, Richard B. Fox, Brian Phraner, Michael Bennett, Eric A. Eisenstein, John Rosenblatt, Gene Huelsman, Susan Noll, and Frank Grisanti (NBC)
  • The XX Olympic Winter Games – Opening Ceremony – Robert LaMacchia, Cody Alexander, Dan Beard, Joe Debonis, Kenneth Decker, Eric A. Eisenstein, Rick Fox Jr., Sal Guarna, Mike Harvath, Terry Hester, Igor Klobas, Richie Leible Jr., Tore Livia, Jon Mantak, Chris Matott, Robert Mikkelson, Brian Phraner, John Pinto, Marc Tippy, Nick Utley, James Wachter, Harry Weisman, Mike Wimberley, Ken Woo, John Murphy, and Jerrold Hochman (NBC)
    • 78th Annual Academy Awards – John B. Field, Kenneth Shapiro, Allan Wells, Ted Ashton, Robert Balton, John Burdick, David Eastwood, Marc Hunter, Charlie Huntley, Dave Levisohn, Jay Millard, Lyn Noland, Rob Palmer, Bill Philbin, David Plakos, Hector Ramirez, Brian Reason, Mark Whitman, Kris Wilson, Bret Crutcher, Aaron Fitzgerald, Dean Hall, Easter Xua, Mark Sanford, Keith Winikoff, and Chuck Reilly (ABC)
    • Andrea Bocelli: Amore Under the Desert Sky (Great Performances) – Allan Wells, Randy Baer, Bill Chaikowsky, Ken Dahlquist, Hank Geving, Manny Guitierrez, Larry Heider, Pat Kerby, Ken Patterson, Gordie Saiger, Rob Vuona, Daniel Webb, Easter Xua, Billy Steinberg, and Steve Rice (PBS)
    • Elton John: The Red Piano – Chuck Reilly, Barrie Dodd, Andy Watt, James Ramsay, Derek Pennell, Paul Freeman, Tom Geren, Kenny Patterson, David Plakos, Daniel Webb, Ted Ashton, Hector Ramirez, Gordie Saiger, David Eastwood, John Repczynski, Robert Palmer, Harry Skip Eppley, Chris Methven, and Guy Jones (NBC)
    • NFL Opening Kickoff 2005 – Eric Becker, Bob Del Russo, Freddy Fredrick, Pat Gleason, Charlie Huntley, Lyn Noland, Mark Whitman, Easter Xua, Jay Kulick, John Meiklejohn, John Kosmaczewski, Chuck Reilly, and Guy Jones (ABC)

Writing[edit]

Writing

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ The outlets listed for each program are the U.S. broadcasters or streaming services identified in the nominations, which for some international productions are different than the broadcaster(s) that originally commissioned the program.
  2. ^
    • Area awards are non-competitive and nominees are considered on their own terms. Any nominee with at least two-thirds approval received an Emmy. If no nominee received two-thirds approval, the nominee with the highest approval (and a minimum majority approval) received an Emmy.[1]
    • Juried awards generally do not have nominations; instead, all entrants were screened before members of the appropriate peer group, and one, more than one, or no entry was awarded an Emmy based on the jury's vote.[1]
  3. ^ For Outstanding Achievement for Program Specific Enhanced or Interactive Television
  4. ^ For Outstanding Achievement for Non-Program Specific Enhanced or Interactive Television for a Channel, Network or Service

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "58th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards – 2005–2006 Rules and Procedures" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 29, 2006. Retrieved June 8, 2023.
  2. ^ a b "58th Creative Arts Primetime Emmy Awards" (PDF). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. August 19, 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 29, 2006. Retrieved June 8, 2023.
  3. ^ "The 58th Primetime Emmy Awards and Creative Arts Emmys Nominations". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Archived from the original on November 3, 2006. Retrieved June 8, 2023.

External links[edit]