The 2023 Emmy Awards have been postponed as actors and writers continue their strikes against media conglomerates, US media reported Thursday.
The 75th annual awards had been scheduled to air on September 18 on Fox.
While a new date has yet to be set, sources close to the prestigious ceremony confirm that the original date and month are no longer in consideration.
Ideally, the show won’t take place until SAG-AFTRA and the Writers Guild of America (WGA) reach agreements with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers — but both the TV Academy and 2023 broadcaster Fox are still in talks on when the rescheduled event will take place.
Had the Television Academy and Fox stuck with the September 18 date, they ran the risk of playing to a mostly empty room: Sixteen of the 25 awards given during the 2022 Emmy telecast went to actors or writers.
SAG-AFTRA’s strike rules call for actors not to do publicity for work made by struck companies, and an awards show would fall under that. WGA writers also pen material for the host and presenters (who would almost certainly be SAG-AFTRA members).
The postponement is the first for the Emmy Awards in more than two decades. The Television Academy and CBS pushed back the 2001 ceremony in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks; it aired in early November of that year.
Phase two voting for the Emmy Awards is still moving forward as originally planned. TV Academy members will vote on the nominees starting August 17. Whether the 2023 Emmys are handed out in 2023, that’s still up in the air for the moment.