Emmy nominees getting ready for Sunday’s big night
September 22, 2019 - 8:05 am
LOS ANGELES — This is the time of year when the cast of HBO’s “Veep” would usually be shooting a new season. Now that the show is done, actor Tony Hale says they’ll have to settle for getting together at the Emmy Awards.
“Obviously, a win would be so much fun,” Hale said at Friday night’s reception for nominees. “But it’s more a celebration just to be together. This is around the time we’d be shooting, so we’re just kind of sad. So, it’d be nice to see each other and just kind of celebrate the culmination of … the seven-year journey we had.”
“Veep” has won best comedy the last three times it was nominated and will try for a fourth at Sunday’s Emmy Awards. Hale, who played loyal aide Gary Walsh to star Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ character of Selina Meyer, has won two Emmys for his role.
Louis-Dreyfus has the more crowded shelf of trophies, having won six times as best comic actress for her character.
There’s a similar feeling for Carice van Houten of “Game of Thrones,” another honored HBO series that has wrapped up.
“We’ve had a lot of parties along the way, of course,” she said. “But this feels like it really is the end. So, I feel like we really want to go out with a blast and, you know, hopefully we’ll take them all.”
Actress Patricia Clarkson of “Sharp Objects” plans to wear a Christian Siriano dress “that he literally kind of draped on my body.” You feel like Cinderella at an event like this, she said.
“It’s like you’ve died and gone to heaven,” she said. “But it is work. You know, you have to make sure you get it right. And, you know, I’m not 25. I’m not wearing a slit up to my you know what. So … I’m careful.”
Clarkson is 59.
Jonathan Banks of “Better Call Saul,” a six-time Emmy nominee, is not looking forward to the temperature extremes of Emmy night.
Even though he shoots a series in the desert, he said Emmy’s night is “hot enough just to kill you.”
“You wear a tuxedo because your wife makes you wear a tuxedo, and other people suggest that you do it,” Banks said. “So you’re boiling hot and then you go into a place that is 60 degrees. And, immediately, you’re a candidate for pneumonia.”
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Media writer David Bauder in New York contributed to this report.