From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
23rd Primetime Emmy Awards
1971 American television programming awards
1971 American television programming awards
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 23rd Primetime Emmy Awards |
| date | May 9, 1971 |
| location | Pantages Theatre, |
| Los Angeles, California | |
| presenter | Academy of Television Arts and Sciences |
| host | Johnny Carson |
| network | NBC |
| most_awards | *The Bold Ones: The Senator* |
| *The Mary Tyler Moore Show* (4) | |
| most_nominations | *The Mary Tyler Moore Show* (8) |
| award1_type | Outstanding Comedy Series |
| award1_winner | *All in the Family* |
| award2_type | Outstanding Drama Series |
| award2_winner | *The Bold Ones: The Senator* |
| award3_type | Outstanding Single Program - Drama or Comedy |
| award3_winner | *The Andersonville Trial* |
| award4_type | Outstanding Variety Series - Musical |
| award4_winner | *The Flip Wilson Show* |
| award5_type | Outstanding Variety Series - Talk |
| award5_winner | *The David Frost Show* |
| previous | [22nd](22nd-primetime-emmy-awards) |
| main | Primetime Emmy Awards |
| next | [24th](24th-primetime-emmy-awards) |
Los Angeles, California The Mary Tyler Moore Show (4) The 23rd Emmy Awards, later known as the 23rd Primetime Emmy Awards, were handed out on May 9, 1971. The ceremony was hosted by Johnny Carson. Winners are listed in bold and series' networks are in parentheses.
The top shows of the night were All in the Family and The Bold Ones: The Senator. The Mary Tyler Moore Show had the most major nominations (eight) and tied with The Bold Ones: The Senator for the most wins (four) of the night.
Actress Lee Grant set an Emmy milestone when she joined the exclusive club of actors who were nominated for two performances in the same acting category. She won the award for Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, for her performance in The Neon Ceiling, she was also nominated for an episode of Columbo.
Susan Hampshire became PBS' first win in the Lead Actress, Drama category, for The First Churchills, as well as being the network's first ever Acting win. (Hampshire also won in the same category, the previous year, again beating the Big Three television networks, but from the NET network, a network which dissolved within a year, but became the direct predecessor for PBS.)
David Burns became the second posthumous performance in Emmy history to win for ITV Sunday Night Theatre.
Winners and nominees
Programs
Acting
Lead performances
Supporting performances
Single performances
Directing
Writing
Most major nominations
| Network | Number of |
|---|---|
| Nominations | |
| NBC | 46 |
| CBS | 29 |
| ABC | 23 |
| PBS | 11 |
| Program | Category | Network | Number of |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nominations | |||
| *The Mary Tyler Moore Show* | Comedy | CBS | 8 |
| *All in the Family* | 7 | ||
| *The Bold Ones: The Senator* | Drama | NBC | |
| *The Price* | Special | 5 | |
| *The Flip Wilson Show* | Variety | 4 | |
| *Hamlet* | Special | ||
| *Marcus Welby, M.D.* | Drama | ABC | |
| *The Odd Couple* | Comedy | ||
| *Vanished* | Special | NBC | |
| *The Andersonville Trial* | PBS | 3 | |
| *The Carol Burnett Show* | Variety | CBS | 2 |
| *The Churchills* | Drama | PBS | |
| *A Clear and Present Danger* | Special | NBC | |
| *Here's Lucy* | Comedy | CBS | |
| *Ironside* | Drama | NBC | |
| *Mannix* | CBS | ||
| *NFL Monday Night Football* | Sports | ABC | |
| *The Neon Ceiling* | Special | NBC | |
| *Room 222* | Comedy | ABC | |
| *Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In* | Variety | NBC | |
| *Singer Presents Burt Bacharach* | CBS | ||
| *That Girl* | Comedy | ABC | |
| *Tribes* | Special | ||
| *Wide World of Sports* | Sports |
Most major awards
| Network | Number of |
|---|---|
| Awards | |
| NBC | 14 |
| CBS | 9 |
| PBS | 5 |
| ABC | 3 |
| Programs | Category | Network | Number of |
|---|---|---|---|
| Awards | |||
| *The Bold Ones: The Senator* | Drama | NBC | 4 |
| *The Mary Tyler Moore Show* | Comedy | CBS | |
| *All in the Family* | Comedy | CBS | 3 |
| *The Price* | Special | NBC | |
| *The Andersonville Trial* | PBS | 2 | |
| *The Flip Wilson Show* | Variety | NBC | |
| *Singer Presents Burt Bacharach* | CBS | ||
| *Wide World of Sports* | Sports | ABC |
;Notes
References
References
- [http://www.emmys.com/awards/nominees-winners/1971 Emmys.com list of 1971 Nominees & Winners]
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about 23rd Primetime Emmy Awards — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report