If I had an Emmy ballot 2011: Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy
Celebrating the men of 'Community,' 'How I Met Your Mother' and more
In an ideal world, "Community" co-stars Donald Glover and Danny Pudi would be competing against each other for an Emmy.
Welcome to part four of our journey through the Emmy ballot on HitFix. Once again, Fienberg and I are approaching each category from two directions, with Dan as the pragmatist and me as the optimist. So as we move onto the Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy category, Dan has his usual exhaustive photo gallery of potential nominees, starting with the most likely candidates before eventually moving onto a bit of wish fulfillment, while after the jump, I continue to pretend that I'm a voting member of the TV Academy and have to pick six nominees for this category. (And, again, actors determine what category to submit themselves in, or whether to submit at all. You can download the full performers list here.)
This category isn't quite as brutal as its drama equivalent, but it's close. I briefly pondered resurrecting the "one actor per show" idea to deal with it, but ultimately didn't think that was fair to two exceptional pairs of co-stars.
I actually almost made it three pairs, with either Adam Scott or Chris Pratt joining Nick Offerman from "Parks and Recreation" on my fake ballot. But as with last year, I ultimately felt that Offerman is so far above everyone else from that show in this category - with all due respect to Scott's marvelous straight man work and Pratt's great boyish enthusiasm - that I would just go with the man, the mustache, the legend: Ron Effing Swanson. Obviously, Ron is one of the best-written characters on television, but Offerman's absolute conviction, his willingness to do anything (including dance in a tiny hat) and his charisma make Ron not only incredibly funny, but somehow believable. Just check out this clip below, which is a joke about Ron's love of meat, but is played with such weariness by Offerman that it says so much about what a struggle it is to be a Swanson in a world of non-Swansons.
Picking Offerman on his own left room for another solo act, and for the second (and last) category in a row, I have someone from "Glee." Again, the show as a whole is a big mess, but there's no mistaking just how great Chris Colfer is as Kurt. Raw, honest, effective dramatic acting, and Kurt's emotional moments tend to be among those rare occasions when "Glee" manages to get out of its own way. As I said in the supporting actress post, the category isn't Funniest Supporting Actor, but Outstanding Supporting Actor. I'm not sure "Glee" is a comedy, and Kurt is only occasionally a comic character, but he's eligible here, and he's really really good.
Now we come to our first pair, from "Community." I simply couldn't choose between Donald Glover and Danny Pudi. I think Glover makes me laugh more than anyone else on that show - Troy's crying (as you can see in the clip below) now triggers an almost Pavlovian response from my funny bone - and yet was able to turn on a dime and anchor a warm, largely serious episode like the one about Troy's 21st birthday. Pudi, meanwhile, helps enable "Community" to try so many styles and tones with the way he commits to his role as Abed, the show's navigator, but he's versatile enough that he can play Abed as Han Solo, a mean girl or - in a transformation so impressive that he seems to be an entirely different person - the Andre Gregory character from "My Dinner With Andre," delivering a spellbinding monologue about being an extra on the set of "Cougar Town."
All year long, I referred to this as an up and down season of "How I Met Your Mother," and virtually all of the ups came from one or both of Jason Segel and Neil Patrick Harris. As Marshall and Barney lost and found a father, respectively, both actors got to do some impressive dramatic work (Segel especially) while still shouldering most of the laugh load in an otherwise problematic season.
Tough omissions: Like I said, I would love to find room for Adam Scott, Chris Pratt and also Aziz Ansari, but this is Ron Swanson's world, and they're just co-starring in it. With last year's winner Eric Stonestreet unfortunately hobbled by repetitive, annoying writing this season, Ty Burrell made me laugh more consistently than any of the other "Modern Family" men. In another largely dramatic role, John Corbett was excellent throughout this final season of "United States of Tara" at showing a man torn between the woman he loves and the kids she's unintentionally destroying. (For that matter, Keir Gilchrist was terrific as the destroyed son.) Charlie Day always cracks me up on "Always Sunny," and likewise Garret Dillahunt on "Raising Hope." And even if he wasn't the only "Cougar Town" man to submit himself this season (unless you count Bob Clendenin submitting as a guest star for playing Tom), Josh Hopkins would have gotten some high consideration from me for continuing to be so silly and fun while slowly carrying more and more emotional weight.
Alan Sepinwall may be reached at sepinwall@hitfix.com
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Login or create a HitFix account Login SignupLucky
June 18, 2011 at 7:33AM EST Reply to CommentIf only... Grat picks, I agree with you on everything, and I'd love to somehow squeeze Chris Pratt in. Aziz Ansari is also great, which I found out when I realised how annoyed I get when I think about him.
Hannah Lee Ansari does a great job.
June 19, 2011 at 10:52PM ESTRecently I saw an episode of Clone High for the first time, and now can't get over the idea that Tom is basically Ghandi from that cartoon.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FGXI9MtPu4c
r1pvanw1nkl3
June 18, 2011 at 7:53AM EST Reply to CommentI think I enjoyed Chris Pratt's performance as Andy more than Nick Offerman. I mean, the man is great of course, but I think Pratt's performance was really key in turning the character from what he was early on to the lovable guy he is now. Either him or Donald Glover would be my pick for this year.
jules I would LOVE to see Chris Pratt get a nomination, but I don't think it will happen. I'll hope they at least nominate Offerman. That will feel like a win to me.
June 18, 2011 at 8:25AM ESTStealth
June 18, 2011 at 8:22AM EST Reply to CommentWhy would Offerman even be in the Supporting category? Isn't he (technically) the male lead?
Zach L Technically yea, but apparently Rob Lowe put himself in for lead. Still scratching my head over that one
June 18, 2011 at 8:37AM ESTsorbop No, he's not a lead actor and never has been considered a lead on Parks and Recreation. It has nothing to do with Rob Lowe and his monumental ego. The only lead on PaR is Amy Poehler. Just because there are male actors on a show, doesn't necessarily mean that one of them has to be a lead among them.
June 18, 2011 at 11:04AM ESTpar
June 18, 2011 at 8:39AM EST Reply to Commentmy choices -
Ty Burrell
Garrett Dillahunt
Donald Glover
Ed O'Neill
Chris Pratt
Adam Scott
my predictions -
Ty Burrell
Chris Colfer
Jon Cryer
Neil Patrick Harris
Ed O'Neill
Eric Stonestreet
DonBoy
June 18, 2011 at 8:48AM EST Reply to CommentIn the Swanson clip: "I worry that what you heard was..." is a great choice there.
Crumdawg97 Once asked a waiter in a Vegas restaurant for a "huge bowl of ice cream, with like 40 scoops." I didn't have the Ron Effing Swanson foresight to throw in a "I worry that what you heard was..."
June 18, 2011 at 12:32PM ESTWaiter brought me a little plate with 3 scoops.
If only Ron had been around to guide me before that experience.
tag8833
June 18, 2011 at 8:56AM EST Reply to CommentWhat a strong category. Especially compared to Supporting Actress in a Comedy.
1. Nick Offerman
2. Danny Pudi
3. Charlie Day
4. Keir Gilchrist
5. Adam Scott
6. John Corbett
Mike
June 18, 2011 at 10:28AM EST Reply to CommentTo me, this is the single hardest category to pick a winner out of any of them. While the people getting nominations may be tough to settle on in most categories, usually I’ve been able to settle on a winner in my mind from Martindale to Goggins to Brie in the first 3, but I just can’t in this category.
How can one choose between Ron Swanson and his cornrows and dirty kimono, Barney Stinson meeting his father, Tracy Jordan in the Cash Cab, Ben Wyatt losing his shit in front of the Pawnee media, Troy Barnes meeting LeVar Burton, Marshall Eriksen’s speech to the heavens after his dad’s funeral, Abed Nadir delivering a monologue about his time on the Cougar Town set, or Tom Haverford setting his douche meter to 11 when he finds out he matched up with Leslie on a dating site?
The saddest thing about it is that all of those performances will likely be ignored by the Emmy voters anyway, aside from NPH.
sorpop
June 18, 2011 at 11:07AM EST Reply to CommentIf Offerman doesn't secure a nomination and win this year, I'm giving up on the Emmys (again) and (this time) on humanity itself.
Jared K
June 18, 2011 at 12:08PM EST Reply to CommentIdeal Nominations
Ty Burrell, Modern Family (4)
Chris Colfer, Glee (6)
Donald Glover, Modern Family (3)
Nick Offerman, Parks and Recreation (1)
Ed O’Neill, Modern Family (5)
Danny Pudi, Community (2)
Nick Offerman and his alter ego, Ron F. Swanson, stand head and shoulders above the rest of the field this year, having delivered probably the funniest live-action performance of the past several years (I qualify with ‘live-action’ because H. Jon Benjamin’s Sterling Archer managed to infiltrate Swanson’s Stratosphere this season, but even I recognize that purple Kool-Aid will rain down from the sky before the Emmy voters nominate a voice actor for a primetime Emmy). Still, Offerman put considerable distance between himself and the dynamic duo of Danny Pudi and Donald Glover from another show near and dear to my heart, Community. With their powers combined into one super-nominee – Danny Glover, anyone? – they might be able to topple the Mountain Among Men, but even apart, they both excelled at bringing the dramatic aspects of their characters to life , while retaining and exceeding last season’s comedic potency. The next two spots go to Ty Burrell and Ed O’Neill, with the former delivering a worthy follow-up performance to last year’s nomination, and the latter making up for last year’s snub with an improved performance in a slightly down season of the show. I swap out the two How I Met Your Mother actors for the Modern Family actors largely because, as good as Jason Segel was this year and as solid as Neil Patrick Harris always is, I can’t stomach the idea of rewarding them for a season of How I Met Your Mother that I hated so virulently (yes, the fault was mostly Zoey’s, but still). By the same logic, I really should disqualify Chris Colfer for the awful season of Glee, but part of the reason Glee was so unbalanced this year was that Ryan Murphy kept giving Colfer more and more to do, and he kept crushing it all (the dramatic material that is, I don’t think he was funny once). Since I was willing to give Heather Morris and Naya Rivera the benefit of the doubt for similar reasons, I’m giving Colfer the final slot, mainly because I can’t decide which of the Parks and Recreation co-stars I’d give it to – Adam Scott? Aziz Ansari? Chris Pratt? They all complement each other so perfectly, it's hard to single one out.
Predicted Nominees
Ty Burrell, Modern Family (4)
Chris Colfer, Glee (1)
Neil Patrick Harris, How I Met Your Mother (2)
Nick Offerman, Parks and Recreation (6)
Ed O’Neill, Modern Family (5)
Eric Stonestreet, Modern Family (4)
Consistency and complacency is the name of the game for this category, with last year’s winner Eric Stonestreet, co-star Ty Burrell, perennial nominee Neil Patrick Harris and this year’s trendiest performer (and likely winner) Chris Colfer all locks to reprise their nominations. There are really only two uncertainties. The first: will voters try to make up for Ed O’Neill’s snub last year by giving him a nomination, likely the one that went to his co-star Jesse Tyler Ferguson last year (I say yes). The second: will voters reward Jon Cryer for surviving the unholy ****storm of Charlie Sheen’s implosion and handling it with remarkable grace, despite putting in little more than half a season of standard work on a declining show. Or will they take a risk and possibly recognize the most brilliant male comedic performance of the past year? Since Charlie Sheen and the show itself are both rightly ducking off the ballot this year, I hold a reasonable hope that voters will recognize that nothing about Two and a Half Men’s farce of a year, even Cryer, was Emmy-worthy, and that they’ll give Offerman his due. On the other hand, many voters will likely want to stick it to Charlie Sheen in the name of industry solidarity after he threw Cryer, Chuck Lorre, and his show under the bus by showing him he is not the engine that made Two and Half Men go (we’ll see). I cling to resolute optimism – for now, at least.
Other Notables
Aziz Ansari, Parks and Recreation
Josh Hopkins, Cougar Town
Chris Pratt, Parks and Recreation
Adam Scott, Parks and Recreation
Tammy These are like blog posts in themselves. The huge paragraphs aren't easy to read in this format.
June 18, 2011 at 1:24PM ESTWaltEagle
June 18, 2011 at 1:21PM EST Reply to CommentMy favourites:
1. Nick Offerman
2. Danny Pudi
3. Donald Glover
4. Charlie Day
5. Ted Danson
6. Eric Stonestreet
belinda
June 18, 2011 at 1:31PM EST Reply to CommentAs much as I like NPH and JS and they did good work, HIMYM had such a atrocious season I don't think it deserves any Emmy nods, which would unfortunately include these two.
So, sub in John Corbett and Keir Gilchrist for the duo instead. They were on fire for Tara, especially in the last half of the season.
Though I really want Jon LaJoie to be in there to.
Mike That seems to be really faulty logic to me since it defeats the purpose of having separate award categories. Why not just give all the nominations to the shows nominated in Best Comedy series then? It's not their fault that the season as a whole didn't work, their performances still did.
June 18, 2011 at 1:55PM ESTLJA
June 18, 2011 at 2:32PM EST Reply to CommentOfferman. Period. End of story.
Brooks
June 18, 2011 at 4:33PM EST Reply to CommentENOUGH WITH GLEE IN COMEDY CATEGORIES. Honestly, this is what ruins noms for actors in the correct genre...
odessasteps
June 18, 2011 at 6:02PM EST Reply to CommentI half-expected to see all of alan's choices be from Parks and Rec. :>
Ryan
June 18, 2011 at 9:05PM EST Reply to CommentNick Offerman
Donald Glover
Chris Pratt
Ty Burrell
Keir Gilchrist
Ann
June 19, 2011 at 1:46AM EST Reply to CommentNick Offerman all the way.
He really deserves it. His comedic timing is brilliant--the rhythm in which he speaks, the tone of his voice, the way he moves. The subtle movements in his eyebrows alone deliver so much hilarity.
I don't think there is a single character on TV remotely like Ron Swanson. Offerman has done something really special with this character.
JLK
June 19, 2011 at 6:13AM EST Reply to CommentDoes anyone show more range than Josh Hopkins? He's silly with the guys and the leading man with Courteney Cox. Plus he sings. Check him out.
TomC
June 19, 2011 at 11:07AM EST Reply to CommentWe disagree about HIMYM' season as a whole, but I'm glad to see Jason Segel getting some recognition about some excellent work this season. NPH was great too.
Danny Pudi had some some great moments in Community season two, but Donald Glover is consistently brilliant. Alison Brie is not far off this, but Glover is definitely the star of the show for me.
Saulo
June 19, 2011 at 1:34PM EST Reply to CommentIt's going to be Ed O'Neil versus Chris Colfer, Modern Family versus Glee.
My top 6 favorite performances are: TY BURRELL (Modern Family), CHRIS COLFER (Glee), CHRIS PRATT (Parks and Recreation), GARRET DILLAHUNT (Raising Hope), JEREMY PIVEN (Entourage) - ok, Ari Gold is a character for which he already won three Emmy Awards and you probably think it's gold enough. Instead, a nomination for one of the Community guys would be great...
... and BRIAN BAUMGARTNER (The Office)! I know that it's not gonna happen. Even John Krasinski or Rainn Wilson are long shots here, but THE OFFICE is my favorite show and although the entire cast is amazing, I think Kevin Malone stole the show this season, especially after Steve Carell's departure.
webdiva
June 20, 2011 at 9:16AM EST Reply to CommentI look over this list (and all the comments besides), and I realize I don't watch ANY of these shows. If Nielsen ever chose my household for monitoring ratings, the sitcom would die an unlamented death. One reason may be that I just really don't find any of the situations these shows are about to be funny, nor do I care for the level of writing -- it's just not that good. Another is that my own type of humor is usually far drier than what makes it onto broadcast TV in the U.S. But here's the kicker: there are far more funny (to me) asides and one-line zingers that make me smile on dramas and dramedies than there used to be. I can get a better laugh out of some of the smart-ass asides on House, Burn Notice, or Law & Order (UK, or any other version, tho UK is my current fave of the bunch) than I can from the overwhelming majority of sitcoms. I just don't think sitcom writers in general try hard enough to be smart-funny and skip the verbal pratfalls, to the point that watching even five minutes of a typical comedy makes me feel like I'm losing brain cells -- fast. I don't enjoy feeling dumbed-down by a show, so I haven't bothered with sitcoms for decades.
In fact, when I consider the two that I do watch regularly, I realize it's because they have a geek factor that lends itself to more inventive humor: Chuck, and Eureka. Chuck spoofs spy-fi, whereas Eureka spoofs just about everything tech, geeky and clever in a different fish-out-of-water setting. Smart and funny to me beats stupid and funny every time. Besides, I suspect that I laugh at all the geeky bits for quite different reasons than the fanboys do.
So: considering that I don't expect the kind of humor in Chuck or Eureka to ever tickle the academy's fancy, I guess it doesn't really matter to me who makes it and who doesn't in this category. I did care when Saturday Night Live was in its heyday, but I haven't found even that to be so funny anymore. I guess there really are moments when a show ages beyond redemption. But a whole category of programming? Yes, maybe so, in the case of sitcoms. Then again, I'd much rather see the death of unreality TV before we see the death of sitcoms.
Ben Kabak
June 20, 2011 at 11:55AM EST Reply to CommentCant take anyone on Glee seriously.
EmNerd I can't take anyone seriously who just decides to throw insults out.
June 20, 2011 at 7:02PM ESTThis year the competiton in the "Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy" categorie surely is going to be intense.
AL
July 5, 2011 at 1:52PM EST Reply to CommentI've been recently catching up with Raising Hope and am now convinced that Garrett Dillahunt should not only be nominated, but win (and this is coming from a big Community fan)...mainly because he and the writers/produces have succeeded in making a flesh & bones version of early Homer Simpson (and that's quite an accomplishment). Lets hope the PTB don't exaggerate his quirks to the point that he turns into Homer Simpson-the later years (or a post-season-2 version of any character on Malcolm in the Middle).