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The Water Cooler: Julianna Margulies and Hugh Laurie stand out in a crowded field
Emmy Award voters have plenty to choose from, but the stars of 'The Good Wife' and 'House' are most deserving.
By Mary McNamara, Los Angeles Times Television Critic
June 16, 2010
Emmy Award voters have plenty to choose from, but the stars of 'The Good Wife' and 'House' are most deserving.
By Mary McNamara, Los Angeles Times Television Critic
June 16, 2010
Julianna Margulies and Hugh Laurie.Quelle: LA Times
There, that was easy, wasn't it?
I could spend, and have spent, hours of my life arguing that most of the best acting is done on television these days. However the academy voters manage to whittle down the host of great performances we have seen this year to six nominees, I guarantee you there won't be a person on the list who doesn't deserve an award of some sort.
But in the end, winners must be picked, and this year in those dramatic categories, the winners are clear, at least to me.
And here's why:
[..]
Laurie, meanwhile, has been doing the same thing for years now; it's shocking, actually, that he hasn't won yet. Maybe he makes it look too easy, maybe it's because "House" has been a top-rated drama for so long it just can't generate the buzz. But in the sixth season, following its first real ratings dip, the creators and Laurie pulled out all the stops. From the two-hour premiere to the emotional (if requisitely disaster-themed) finale, the show and its star reminded us exactly how powerful a well-established drama can be when it pulls itself to its full height.
The supporting actor awards are harder to call because of simple mathematics — for every lead who deserves a nomination, there are invariably two or three other actors matching the star's performance with excellence of their own. The entire casts of "House" and "The Good Wife" deserve nominations, while such shows as "Big Love," Mad Men," "Lost," "In Treatment" and "Grey's Anatomy" are such perfect ensembles that "lead" and "supporting" don't really apply.
Whoever's nominated, whoever wins, it's been a miraculous year. If you wonder why attendance is down at the multiplex, the answer is simple — these days, there's much better drama to be found on the flat screen.
Zuletzt geändert von mj1985 am Mi 17. Nov 2010, 22:24, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.
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Why Hugh Laurie Must Win the Emmy in 2010-Part 1
By Barbara Barnett
Jun 16, 2010
By Barbara Barnett
Jun 16, 2010
Dear Emmy Awards People:Quelle: http://blogcritics.org/video/article/wh ... t-win-the/
I know that the nominations will not be announced for another three weeks, but the buzz has already begun. And I thought it was my duty to weigh in on one of Emmy's most egregious oversights in recent years.
So. Listen up! This is the year Hugh Laurie must finally get his due from you guys. House, M.D. is starting its seventh season, and although Mr. Laurie has been nominated in four of its five years thus far (boo, hiss for really missing that second season!), he has yet to receive one of those golden statuettes. This is the year. Really. Seriously. The. Year.
You may reasonably ask, why this year? My answer is simple: it should have been all the years (or at least one or two of them, by now). And being as he has not yet won one, this, therefore, must be the year. And what a year! "Broken," is one of the best performances ever seen in a television drama series.
I do not mean to say that the winners in the years 2005 to 2009 were undeserving. They are all fine actors, deserving of praise and awards. They had big episodes and notable scenes. And they emoted the hell out of them. But back to Mr. Laurie.
Hugh Laurie becomes Dr. Gregory House. And for the 44-ish minutes we see him during an episode, he seems so naturally House: disabled, misanthropic, genius American doctor, that it’s hard to believe it’s acting. Laurie is none of those things (except maybe the genius part). The transformation is complete and it’s actually jarring to see Hugh Laurie, actor, being interviewed as himself. He is, even physically, completely unlike the character he plays. But he's so convincing at House, it's hard to imagine that Hugh Laurie and Dr. Gregory House are not the same person.
Perhaps you are confused when Laurie suggests he “simply try to read it out and not screw it up,” as he has said so often. He is not telling the truth, because—as we all know—everyone lies. Well, maybe lie is a bit extreme. Let’s just say, he’s being incredibly modest, as he has been known to be.
Laurie’s performance is uniformly layered and revelatory. His character is guarded, nothing he says can ever be taken at face value. His is the language of deflection. So much so, that Laurie’s acting is the only thing that can sometimes guide us through to the heart of Gregory House. He says something: a throwaway line, a biting remark, a rationally cold assertion. In another actor’s hands they are words, and taken for what they are, they paint a picture of an unsympathetic jerk. Spoken by Laurie, infused with the grace of his performance, they tell you something else entirely.
Film historian Patricia Eliot Tobias, president of The International Buster Keaton Society notes a similarity between Laurie and the legendary silent film star Buster Keaton. Like Keaton “Hugh Laurie has enormous expressive eyes that convey more than what appears on the surface. Both have the unusual ability to underplay, allowing us to see an underlying sadness using very little facial expression. Like Keaton, Laurie tells us more with just the flick of an eyelash than lesser actors do with their entire faces. Perhaps because their acting is minimalist, they don't always get the credit they deserve for their talent. And yet, it takes a truly great actor to be funny one minute, tragic the next, physically and facially over-the-top when needed and barely moving the next, but always letting us know what he's thinking and feeling.”
Go back and take a look at the episodes you may have overlooked; unforgettable performances that mean the difference between unremitting bastard and tarnished knight. If he veers too much to one or the other, the character is either too unsympathetic or too endearing. Laurie is a high wire performer with this character; he knows the line, treading it with daring, courage and grace.
He’s great in every episode, and in six seasons he is yet to phone in a performance. I asked my readers which episodes and scenes they would call to the attention of Emmy voters, in case you have yet to pick up on the extreme beauty of his craft—unlike the Golden Globe people and his peers—awarding him with two screen actors guild awards. There are too numerous to mention individually, but in general all agreed that the power of Laurie’s performance is in the moments when he lets down his guard, sometimes only for moments, and he allows us to see behind the eyes to the storm of emotion lying behind them. And his unique ability to make you laugh and weep, like a classic tragic clown, sometimes in the same scene.
I always come back to the first scene I noticed the brilliance of Laurie’s acting. Yes, I had always thought he was brilliant, from the start. But it was “DNR” (1.09) when it really hit me, and when I happened upon a shooting script of the episode it dawned on me just how much Laurie accomplishes on screen with whatever dialogue he’s given. Or not given (because some of his most memorable acting comes from scenes without any dialogue at all; it’s just Laurie and the camera).
House shooting scripts are not vociferous on notes. I’ve read a dozen or more scripts (not transcripts, but the actual shooting scripts). They seldom give much direction—to Hugh or the other actors, trusting that the performances will arise naturally from the words on the page. And they do.
House had wanted in on this case because he is a admirer of his patient’s (jazz trumpeter John Henry Giles) music. Seeking an alternate explanation for his condition than “ALS,” House isn’t trying to solve the puzzle of the diagnosis because of a whim or (again, as Wilson says) a “Rubik’s complex.” Despite his words; despite what Wilson suggests, there is no doubt when House confronts Marty Hamilton (Giles’ physician) that House’s passion arises from something more profound. House is trying to find an alternative because without one Giles is condemned to death. And we viewers know that not because of House says, but what’s in his eyes and body language.
There is a scene in which House and his best friend Wilson watch from the hallway as Giles’ doctor “pulls the plug.” It’s over and Giles’ is resigned to die. By this time, no one but House believes Giles’ condition is something curable. He is clinging to a false hope, although no one really sees it that way; his colleagues believe he simply wants to create a medical mystery where none exists. Again, we only know this through Laurie’s haunted expression, which we can observe through his tightly controlled guard.
As Foreman, Hamilton, Cora (Giles’ manager and close friend), Wilson and House all look on as the life support machinery is halted; only House cannot stand to watch. He turns his face, unable to witness what he may think of as murder—and at the very least an unnecessary death. It’s a fleeting moment, a subtle motion of the head and it says volumes about what House is really feeling. Mr. I-don’t-feel anything is the ONLY one incapable of accepting this death and cannot watch. Read the dialogue and you get none of that. Watch the performance and you can’t miss it.
There are such moments in every season. And you would be right if you suggest that moments alone do not make an Emmy winning performance. But with Laurie, it’s not just the moments. It’s the portrait he paints of this incredibly complex character.
In “Maternity” (1.04), there is a scene in which House must make a life or death decision about a therapeutic trial he’s about to do. He knows by making a treatment choice, he’s effectively condemning one of six patients (newborn babies) to death. Just having left an argument with Cuddy during which his attitude towards the babies and the test is cavalier—even arrogant, he’s told her, and the hospital lawyer that he’s going to “flip a coin” to decide who lives or dies. Now he now sits at his desk looking at the coin.
There is nothing in the shooting script to indicate how House feels about it—just that he flips the coin. But unlike Cuddy—and the lawyer—the audience cannot be mistaken about the turmoil going on in House’s mind as he sits there with the coin. The gravity of the situation and what he’s about to do is clear in his body language and grim expression. This is not a cavalier decision made with no sense of feeling. It’s a decision, necessary to save the lives of five other babies.
We understand and sympathize with House. But only because of the performance Hugh brings to it—the pathos with which he imbues this outwardly unlikeable character. At this stage of the series—early in season one—the tone is so incredibly important. So would another actor have just tossed the coin? I think yes. And that’s why Hugh Laurie is so essential to the role. Without his sensitive and sometimes very raw portrayal, House is an unmitigated bastard: cold, callous, misanthropic—a jerk whose extreme objectivity and rationality refuse to be tempered by feeling.
But it’s not just those quiet, between-the-lines moments. One need only watch “Three Stories” (1.21) to appreciate the mastery of Laurie’s performance as he weaves together three medical cases to tell his own story. It’s a lecture, and indeed, all he’s doing is essentially “reading out” the writer’s lines. But then there’s the scene when he talks about the impact of decisions made about his leg years earlier. And the full weight of all he’s been saying during the lecture crushes him with the truth.
The impact of House’s words hit his colleagues and students, and the impact of Laurie’s precise delivery make us understand everything he’s been through and how he got to the place he’s in. Again, the dialogue gives us nothing. But the performance gives us House’s resignation, and the years of weariness that weigh upon him.
House is not a big, dramatic action show. It is, at its core a character study, and its brilliance lies in the slow reveals and small moments, not big courtroom scenes; not lengthy speeches; not death-bed missives. And maybe that’s the problem, and why Hugh has not yet won an Emmy. (I’m not letting you off the hook, Emmy people, simply trying to comprehend the incomprehensible.)
So, if I’ve piqued your interest, please stay tuned for part two of this little mini-series: “100 Reasons Why Hugh Laurie Must Win Emmy This Year.” It’s a look back at the most momentous moments from Laurie’s six years of playing House. Watch for it in this space later this week.
Zuletzt geändert von Tritziii am Mi 17. Nov 2010, 22:24, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

OMfG He really touched my finger and asked me a question


Oh my... I REALLY was able to snatch HIS beer glass. The one, of which he drank.
Beiträge: 1558
Registriert: Mi 21. Okt 2009, 21:00
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Sehr schöner Artikel von Barbara Barnett. Sie hat mit ihren Aussagen eigentlich immer recht und zeigt schön die schauspielerischen Qualitäten auf, die Hugh von anderen Schauspielern unterscheidet.
Allerdings will sie ja, dass Hugh den Emmy für Season 6 gewinnt, deshalb ist es für mich nicht ganz ersichtlich, wieso sie in der zweiten Hälfte des Artikels nur mit Szenen aus Season 1 argumentiert. Denn so gut seine schauspielerische Leistung in Season 1 auch war, gewinnen wird er den Emmy nicht mit Szenen, die mehr als fünf Jahre zurückliegen.
Sie hat mit ihren Ausführungen zwar vollkommen recht, aber ich hätte es passender gefunden, auch mit Szenen aus Season 6 zu argumentieren. Denn auch dort gibt es Szenen, in denen seine reine Körperhaltung weit über den Text hinausgeht (Broken, Help me..).
Ich bin mal gespannt, ob sie diese Szenen aus Season 6 in dem zweiten Teil ihres Artikels noch genauer betrachten wird.
Allerdings will sie ja, dass Hugh den Emmy für Season 6 gewinnt, deshalb ist es für mich nicht ganz ersichtlich, wieso sie in der zweiten Hälfte des Artikels nur mit Szenen aus Season 1 argumentiert. Denn so gut seine schauspielerische Leistung in Season 1 auch war, gewinnen wird er den Emmy nicht mit Szenen, die mehr als fünf Jahre zurückliegen.
Sie hat mit ihren Ausführungen zwar vollkommen recht, aber ich hätte es passender gefunden, auch mit Szenen aus Season 6 zu argumentieren. Denn auch dort gibt es Szenen, in denen seine reine Körperhaltung weit über den Text hinausgeht (Broken, Help me..).
Ich bin mal gespannt, ob sie diese Szenen aus Season 6 in dem zweiten Teil ihres Artikels noch genauer betrachten wird.
Zuletzt geändert von Housekatze am Mi 17. Nov 2010, 22:24, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.
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Registriert: So 4. Apr 2010, 12:34
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Why Hugh Laurie Must Win the Emmy in 2010-Part 2
By Barbara Barnett
Jul 05, 2010
http://blogcritics.org/video/article/wh ... -win-the2/
By Barbara Barnett
Jul 05, 2010
http://blogcritics.org/video/article/wh ... -win-the2/
Zuletzt geändert von LisaH am Mi 17. Nov 2010, 22:25, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.
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Wunderschöner Artikel, in dem erklärt wird, wieso Lisa - neben Hugh - eine Emmynominierung verdient!
Hier einige Auszüge:
Hier einige Auszüge:
The most recent season of House gave Edelstein’s character her own episode, 5 to 9, which is undoubtedly the show she submitted to the Emmy committee. That particular episode combined with a strong season for Cuddy/Edelstein and thrilling season finale that at last linked Cuddy and House romantically has generated for Edelstein far and away the best shot she’s ever had at an Emmy nomination. (...)http://www.awardspicks.com/blog/2010/07 ... r-an-emmy/
In previous seasons, Laurie was so good that everyone else on the show had to exist in his shadow. In the latest season, however, Laurie has pushed himself to the next level where he’s so good that he gives everyone else a chance to reach their own highest potential. (...)
Edelstein above all the others took this opportunity and ran with it. On a show traditionally dominated by the ultimate alpha male, she built a character who struggles to be a working mother; a stoic authority figure at the hospital and a nurturing maternal figure at home. (...)
In many ways Hugh Laurie gets to be the sun around which the show revolves, but the sun can’t be fully appreciated unless it’s contrasted with the moon. Edelstein is the moon to Laurie’s sun, the Pippen to his Jordan. She reflects his light in a way that grows her character and his. (...)
Magic needed Worthy, Jordan needed Pippen, and Laurie needs Edelstein. Sadly, in acting the team effort, though necessary for greatness, doesn’t culminate in a collective win.
Zuletzt geändert von Housekatze am Mi 17. Nov 2010, 22:25, insgesamt 2-mal geändert.
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Ausiello hat auch mal Paul, den Orakel-Tintenfisch, gespielt.. Allerdings gehts bei ihm nicht um Fußball, sondern darum, wer morgen eine Nominierung bekommt..
http://www.ew.com/ew/gallery/0,,2030097 ... _2,00.html
The nominees for Best Actor in a Drama Series will be...That´s it.. Da wird er wohl - leider - nah dran sein, denn mit weiteren Nominierungen rechne ich auch irgendwie nicht. Obwohl es meiner Meinung nach eigntl eine Best Drama Nominierung für Broken/Help me geben muss..
Timothy Olyphant, Justified
Bryan Cranston, Breaking Bad
Michael C. Hall, Dexter
Hugh Laurie, House, M.D.
Jon Hamm, Mad Men
Simon Baker, The Mentalist
http://www.ew.com/ew/gallery/0,,2030097 ... _2,00.html
Zuletzt geändert von Housekatze am Mi 17. Nov 2010, 22:25, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.
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Registriert: So 18. Okt 2009, 21:18
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Ich hoffe wirklich das sie mit Help Me und Broken endlich eine Nominierung für Best Drama bekommen, mehr Drama als in Help Me geht ja nun fast nicht mehr 

Zuletzt geändert von mj1985 am Mi 17. Nov 2010, 22:25, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.
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Registriert: So 18. Okt 2009, 21:18
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Heute am 08. Juli um 13:30 Uhr (deutscher Zeit) sind die Emmy-Nominierungen.
Ihr könnt hoffentlich bei diesem Stream:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/awa ... /watch.jsp das ganze mitverfolgen
Ihr könnt hoffentlich bei diesem Stream:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/awa ... /watch.jsp das ganze mitverfolgen
Zuletzt geändert von mj1985 am Mi 17. Nov 2010, 22:25, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.
Beiträge: 2182
Registriert: Mo 21. Dez 2009, 12:37
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Man und grade heute hab ich mich für Späddienst entschieden
Naja ich hoffe es stört mich keiner und ich kann mich ein voll und ganz hinter meinem verräumten Arbeitsplatz und der vielen Arbeit verstecken :daumendrück:

Zuletzt geändert von Tritziii am Mi 17. Nov 2010, 22:25, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

OMfG He really touched my finger and asked me a question


Oh my... I REALLY was able to snatch HIS beer glass. The one, of which he drank.
Beiträge: 1558
Registriert: Mi 21. Okt 2009, 21:00
Lieblingscharakter: House
Lieblingsepisode/n: 1x06, 2x02, 4x01, 4x16, 5x24, 6x20, 7x03
Fox-Gucker: Nein
mj1985 hat geschrieben:Heute am 08. Juli um 13:30 Uhr (deutscher Zeit) sind die Emmy-Nominierungen.Bist du dir wirklich sicher, dass das schon um 13.30 Uhr beginnt? Momentan ist nämlich noch nichts los und wenn das wirklich um 05.30 Uhr LA-Zeit beginnt, dann ist es bei uns schon 14.30 Uhr..
Ihr könnt hoffentlich bei diesem Stream:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/awa ... /watch.jsp das ganze mitverfolgen
Zuletzt geändert von Housekatze am Mi 17. Nov 2010, 22:25, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.
Beiträge: 2182
Registriert: Mo 21. Dez 2009, 12:37
Lieblingscharakter: Greg 8o
Shipper: Hall-y
Lieblingsepisode/n: 1x11, 1x21, 3x1, 3x4
Fox-Gucker: Ja
Wohnort: Wittichenau
Da waren wir/ Hugh






Zuletzt geändert von Tritziii am Mi 17. Nov 2010, 22:25, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

OMfG He really touched my finger and asked me a question


Oh my... I REALLY was able to snatch HIS beer glass. The one, of which he drank.