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This is a list of the awards won by the animated sitcom The Simpsons.
[edit] Best Animated Television Program/Outstanding Achievement in an Animated Television Program
Year |
Result |
1992 |
Won |
1993 |
Won |
1994 |
Won |
1995 |
Won |
1996 |
Won |
1997 |
Won |
1998 |
Won |
1999 |
Won |
2000 |
Won |
2001 |
Won |
2002 |
Not Nominated |
2003 |
Won |
2004 |
Won |
2005 |
Not Nominated |
2006 |
Not Nominated |
[edit] Best International Program or Series
[edit] Best International Comedy Show
- 2005 - Won
- 2004 - Won (Matt Groening was also given a life time achievement award)
- 2002 - Nominated
- 2000 - Won
- Nominated for: 54 Emmies over Seven categories (Includes Awards that resulted in a Win)
- Won: 23 Emmies in three categories (As of 2006)
- Outstanding Animated Series: Won 9, Nominated for 15
- Outstanding Voice-Over: Won 12
- Outstanding Music and Lyrics: Won 2, Nominated for 9
- Outstanding Music Composition: Won 0, Nominated for 9
- Outstanding Music Direction: Won 0, Nominated for 2
- Outstanding Main Title Theme: Won 0, Nominated for 1
- Outstanding Sound Mixing: Won 0, Nominated for 6
[edit] Outstanding Animated Program (for programming one hour or less)
Note 1: For the 1990 Emmy Awards, Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire was nominated as a separate cartoon because officially it is considered a TV special and not a part of the series. For this list, it is not a part of the overall count of Simpsons emmy nominations.
Note 2: According to DVD commentary, no episodes were nominated in this category in 1993 and 1994 because the producers had instead submitted episodes into the Outstanding Comedy Series category. However, The Simpsons was not nominated in that category, so in 1995 the producers gave up and went back to submitting episodes in the Animation category.
[edit] Outstanding Voice-Over Performance
NOTE - This Award is given out by a committee, there are no nominations
[edit] Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music and Lyrics
[edit] Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore)
[edit] Outstanding Music Direction
[edit] Outstanding Achievement in Main Title Theme Music
Year |
Result |
Song |
Composer |
1990 |
Nominated |
Main Title Theme |
Danny Elfman |
[edit] Outstanding Individual Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or a Special
[edit] Best Television Series - Musical or Comedy
- 2000 - Given a Star at 7021 Hollywood Blvd. which applies to the Simpsons in person, not the series
[edit] Favourite Cartoon
- 2002 - Won
- Nominated every year between 1996 and 2007
- 1997
- Won For providing exceptional animation and stinging social satire, both commodities which are in extremely short supply in television today.
[edit] Choice TV Show - Comedy
- Nominated every year between 2000 and 2005
[edit] Choice TV Parental Units
- 2005 - Nominated for Marge and Homer
[edit] Choice Animated TV Show
[edit] Animation
[edit] Trivia
- Harry Shearer is the only member of the Main Cast to never win an Emmy for Voice Over Performance. Other notable Simpsons regulars who have not won include Pamela Hayden, Maggie Roswell, Tress MacNeille and guest stars Albert Brooks, Jon Lovitz, Joe Mantegna and Phil Hartman.
- The Simpsons, which has been called the best and funniest TV show of the 1990s, has never been nominated for an Emmy in the comedy category. In 1993 and 1994, the producers did try to submit the show in the category (According to DVD commentary, the episodes that were submitted in 1993 were Mr. Plow and A Streetcar Named Marge) with less than encouraging results. It became apparent that the Emmy voters were not ready to accept an animated show into the Outstanding Comedy show category, and the producers gave up. In 2003, the show was surprisingly nominated for a Golden Globe for Outstanding Comedy Series. The producers felt this was long overdue, but the show lost the award to Curb your Enthusiasm.
- The Simpsons has frequently made fun of the Emmys (as well as other major awards such as the Oscars and especially the Grammys). Some examples:
- In Brother Can You Spare Two Dimes?, Homer wins the First Annual Montgomery Burns Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Field of Excellence. At the show, Bart and Lisa have the following exchange:
- Lisa: "This award show is the biggest farce I ever saw!"
- Bart: "What about the Emmys?"
- Lisa: "I stand corrected."
- In The Front, Grampa won an award that looks suspiciously like an Emmy for writing an episode of Itchy & Scratchy (the show is actually called the Annual Cartoon Awards). His competition includes such shows as "Strondar, Master of Vacom": the wedding episode; "Action Figure Man": the how to buy action figure man episode; and "Ren and Stimpy": season premiere (clip not done yet), a knock at the questionable and forgettable competition that The Simpsons faced in the animation category during the early years of the show.
- In 1996, the producers submitted the episode Treehouse of Horror VI for the Emmy. The episode would lose to Pinky and the Brain. In various Season 7 DVD commentaries, the producers berate themselves for submitting Treehouse of Horror VI (which they did because it had 3D animation) when they had an amazing array of emotionally driven episodes - Mother Simpson, Bart Sells His Soul and Lisa the Vegetarian are cited - that could have "crushed Pinky and the Brain".
- In 1999, The Simpsons lost the Emmy to King of the Hill, a show co-created by former Simpsons writer Greg Daniels and had several former Simpsons writers and directors working on it. In 2002, the show lost to Futurama, a show created by Simpsons creator Matt Groening and former Simpsons writer David X Cohen and also had several former (and future) Simpsons staff working on it. Ironically, the Futurama episode that won the Emmy (Roswell That Ends Well) was written by J. Stewart Burns, the same man who would write several acclaimed Simpsons episodes as well as The Way We Weren't, which would be nominated for an Emmy in 2004.
- In the DVD commentary for Radio Bart, the staff expresses their disbelief that the episode lost the Emmy for animated program to Claymation Easter. Mike Reiss said they thought Ren & Stimpy would win and were absolutely floored when it didn't. David Silverman said he believes The Simpsons and Ren & Stimpy split the vote, allowing Claymation Easter to grab the Emmy.
- After winning the Emmy in 2006, James L. Brooks set a new record for most Primetime Emmys won with 19. He has won nine for The Simpsons, five for The Mary Tyler Moore Show, three for Taxi, and two for The Tracey Ullman Show. Of those, sixteen were for producing, and three were for writing (two for The Mary Tyler Moore Show and one for The Tracey Ullman Show).
[edit] References