Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance

The Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance is a Creative Arts Emmy Award given out by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. It is awarded to a performer for an outstanding "continuing or single voice-over performance in a series or a special."[1] Prior to 1992, voice-actors could be nominated for their performance in the live action acting categories.[2] The award was first given in 1992 when six voice actors from The Simpsons shared the award. From 1992 to 2008, it was a juried award, so there were no nominations and there would be multiple or no recipients in one year. In 2009, the rules were changed to a category award, with five nominees.

Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance
Awarded forOutstanding Continuing or Single Voice-Over Performance in a Series or Special
CountryUnited States
Presented byAcademy of Television Arts & Sciences
First awarded1992
Last awarded2013
Currently held byLily Tomlin,
An Apology to Elephants (2013)
Websiteemmys.com

Usually, the winner is a voice actor from an animated show, but some narrators of live action shows have won such as Keith David in 2005 and 2008. No winner was named in 1996 or 2007.[3]

Nine voice actors from The Simpsons have won a combined 14 Emmys. Of those, Dan Castellaneta has won four and Hank Azaria has won three. Ja'net Dubois has won two for The PJs, Keith David has won two for his narration of various documentaries and Maurice LaMarche has won two for Futurama. Voice actors from shows on Fox have won 17 of 27 awards.

In 2014, the category was separated into two categories – Outstanding Narrator and Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance. As with longform and reality, this split acknowledges and accommodates a general industry uptrend in the distinctly different achievements that are VO narration and VO character performance.[4]

Rules

While most of the Primetime Emmy Awards choose winners from a group of nominees, the award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance was juried from 1992 to 2008. Each entrant was screened by a panel of Academy of Television Arts and Sciences members from the Animation branch as well as members of the Acting branch with voiceover credits. Potential nominees had to submit a DVD that contained an edited version of a single episode and a picture of the character(s) that were voiced. Submissions that were less than 30 minutes had to be edited to be shorter than five minutes; entries longer than 30 minutes were edited to be less than ten.[1] Prior to 2007, the maximum edited lengths were ten and fifteen minutes respectively.[5] Each entrant with majority approval went on to a second panel. Emmy winners had to be unanimous choices of this second panel, except that for every 12 persons or fraction thereof on the panel, one "no" vote was allowed, except from the head of the panel.[1]

In 2009, the Academy changed the award from a "juried" award to a "category", with six nominees and one winner.[6]

Winners (1992–2008)

YearWinnerCharacter(s)Series or specialNetworkRef.
1992Nancy CartwrightBart SimpsonThe Simpsons: "Separate Vocations"Fox[7]
Dan CastellanetaHomer SimpsonThe Simpsons: "Lisa's Pony"Fox[7]
Julie KavnerMarge SimpsonThe Simpsons: "I Married Marge"Fox[7]
Jackie MasonRabbi KrustofskiThe Simpsons: "Like Father, Like Clown"Fox[7]
Yeardley SmithLisa SimpsonThe Simpsons: "Lisa the Greek"Fox[7]
Marcia WallaceEdna KrabappelThe Simpsons: "Bart the Lover"Fox[7]
1993Dan CastellanetaHomer Simpson, Barney Gumble, Abraham Simpson and other charactersThe Simpsons: "Mr. Plow"Fox[8]
1994Christopher PlummerNarratorMadelineFamily[9]
1995Jonathan KatzDr. KatzDr. Katz, Professional TherapistComedy Central[10]
1996No Emmy awarded in this category
1997Jeremy IronsSiegfried SassoonThe Great War and the Shaping of the 20th Century: "War Without End"PBS[11]
Rik MayallMr. ToadThe Wind in the WillowsFamily[11]
1998Hank AzariaApu NahasapeemapetilonThe SimpsonsFox[12]
1999Ja'net DuboisMrs. Florence AveryThe PJsFox[13]
2000Seth MacFarlaneStewie GriffinFamily GuyFox[14]
Julie HarrisSusan B. AnthonyNot for Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. AnthonyPBS[14]
2001Hank AzariaComic Book Guy, Apu, Carl Carlson, Lou,
Chief Wiggum and Moe Szyslak
The Simpsons: "Worst Episode Ever"Fox[15]
Ja'net DuboisMrs. Florence AveryThe PJs: "Let's Get Ready To Rumba"The WB[15]
2002Peter MaconNarratorAnimated Tales of the World: "John Henry, the Steel Driving Man"HBO[16]
Pamela AdlonBobby Hill, Clark Peters and Chane WassanasongKing of the Hill: "Bobby Goes Nuts"Fox[16]
2003Hank AzariaMoe Szyslak, Carl Carlson, Chief Wiggum,
Apu, Johnny Tightlips, Bumblebee Man and Cletus
The Simpsons: "Moe Baby Blues"Fox[17]
2004Dan CastellanetaKrusty the Clown, Homer Simpson, Abraham Simpson,
Groundskeeper Willie, Sideshow Mel, Barney and Itchy
The Simpsons: "Today I Am A Clown"Fox[18]
2005Keith DavidNarratorUnforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack JohnsonPBS[19]
2006Kelsey GrammerSideshow BobThe Simpsons: "The Italian Bob"Fox[20]
2007No Emmy awarded in this category
2008Keith DavidNarratorThe War: "A Necessary War"PBS[21]

Winners and nominations (2009–2013)

Winners are listed first, highlighted in boldface, and indicated with a double dagger (‡).

YearNomineeCharacter(s)Series or SpecialEpisodeNetwork
2009
(61st)
[22][23]
Dan CastellanetaHomer SimpsonThe Simpsons"Father Knows Worst"Fox
Ron RifkinNarratorAmerican Masters"Jerome Robbins: Something To Dance About"PBS
Seth GreenVariousRobot Chicken"Robot Chicken: Star Wars Episode II"Cartoon Network
Seth MacFarlanePeter GriffinFamily Guy"I Dream of Jesus"Fox
Harry ShearerMr. Burns, Smithers, Kent Brockman and LennyThe Simpsons"The Burns and the Bees"
Hank AzariaMoe Szyslak"Eeny Teeny Maya Moe"
2010
(62nd)
[24][25]
Anne HathawayPrincess PenelopeThe Simpsons"Once Upon a Time in Springfield"Fox
H. Jon BenjaminSterling ArcherArcher"Mole Hunt"FX
Dave FoleyWaynePrep & LandingABC
Seth GreenCobra Commander, Movie Narrator and Robot Chicken NerdRobot Chicken"Cannot Be Erased, So Sorry"Cartoon Network
Hank AzariaApu and Moe SzyslakThe Simpsons"Moe Letter Blues"Fox
Dan CastellanetaGrampa Simpson and Homer Simpson"Thursdays with Abie"
2011
(63rd)
[26][27]
Maurice LaMarcheLrrr, Orson WellesFuturama"Lrrreconcilable Ndndifferences"Comedy Central
Bob BergenPorky PigThe Looney Tunes Show"Jailbird And Jailbunny"Cartoon Network
Dan CastellanetaHomer Simpson, Krusty the Clown, Barney Gumble, LouieThe Simpsons"Donnie Fatso"Fox
Seth GreenBatman, Cobra Commander, Judge, Light Cycle Driver, Newscaster, Robot Chicken Nerd, Teenager, VengerRobot Chicken"Catch Me If You Kangaroo Jack"Cartoon Network
Christopher PlummerNarratorMoguls and Movie Stars"The Birth of Hollywood"TCM
Brenda StrongMary Alice YoungDesperate Housewives"Come on Over for Dinner"ABC
2012
(64th)
[28]
Maurice LaMarcheClamps, Donbot, Hyperchicken, Calculon, Hedonismbot, MorboFuturama"The Silence of the Clamps"Comedy Central
Hank AzariaMoe Szyslak, Duffman, Mexican Duffman, Carl, Comic Book Guy, Chief WiggumThe Simpsons"Moe Goes from Rags to Riches"Fox
Dan PovenmireDoctor DoofenshmirtzDisney Phineas And Ferb: Across The 2nd DimensionDisney
Rob RiggleNoelPrep & Landing: Naughty vs. NiceABC
Brenda StrongMary Alice YoungDesperate Housewives"Give Me the Blame" / "Finishing the Hat"
Kristen WiigLolaThe Looney Tunes Show"Double Date"Cartoon Network
2013
(65th)
[29]
Lily TomlinNarratorAn Apology to ElephantsHBO
Seth MacFarlaneBrian Griffin, Stewie Griffin, Peter GriffinFamily Guy"Brian's Play"Fox
Alex BorsteinLois Griffin and Tricia Takanawa"Lois Comes Out Of Her Shell"
Seth GreenAbin Sur, Aquaman, Batman, Green Arrow, Martian Manhunter, Nerd and RobinRobot Chicken"Robot Chicken DC Comics Special"Cartoon Network
Sam ElliottNarrator"Hurtled From A Helicopter Into A Speeding Train"
Bob BergenPorky PigThe Looney Tunes Show"We’re In Big Truffle"

Multiple wins

Wins include Outstanding Narrator and Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance

4 wins

3 wins

2 wins

References

External links