"Angels
in America," the surreal HBO miniseries adapted from a Pulitzer
Prize-winning play about New Yorkers affected by the AIDS crisis in
the 1980s, received a leading 21 Emmy nominations Thursday.
"The
Sopranos" was the leading nominee among series, with 20 bids.
In
a year that saw changes in Emmy rules intended to broaden the field
beyond familiar nominees, newcomers included Fox's critically acclaimed
sitcom "Arrested Development" and CBS' drama "Joan
of Arcadia."
TV
Academy members gave a fond farewell to HBO's "Sex and the City"
with a best comedy series nod for its final season, but didn't nominate
two other departing series, "Friends" and "Frasier."
Along
with "The Sopranos," which has yet to win a best drama series
award, and "Joan of Arcadia," other nominees in the best
drama series category include "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation,""24,"
and "The West Wing." The White House drama was last year's
winner.
Joining
"Arrested Development" and "Sex and the City"
in the best comedy series category are "Curb Your Enthusiasm,""Will
& Grace" and last year's winner, "Everybody Loves Raymond."
John
Ritter, the "8 Simple Rules" comedy star who died last year,
received a posthumous nomination as best lead actor in a comedy series.
Also nominated in the category are Larry David of "Curb Your
Enthusiasm," Kelsey Grammer of "Frasier," Matt LeBlanc
of "Friends" and Tony Shalhoub of "Monk," who
was last year's winner.
Jennifer
Aniston of "Friends" was nominated for best lead actress
in a comedy series, along with Patricia Heaton of "Everybody
Loves Raymond," Bonnie Hunt of "Life with Bonnie,"
Jane Kaczmarek of "Malcolm in the Middle" and Sarah Jessica
Parker of "Sex and the City."
In
the acting category for dramas, nominated lead actresses include last
year's winner Edie Falco of "The Sopranos," Jennifer Garner
of "Alias," Mariska Hargitay of "Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit," Allison Janney of "The West Wing" and
Amber Tamblyn of "Joan of Arcadia."
James
Gandolfini of "The Sopranos," who was named best lead actor
in a drama series last year, was nominated again. He's joined by Anthony
LaPaglia of "Without a Trace," Martin Sheen of "The
West Wing," James Spader of "The Practice" and Kiefer
Sutherland of "24."
The
controversial TV movie "The Reagans," which was bounced
from CBS to cable network Showtime after some protested its portrayal
of President Reagan, received seven nominations including outstanding
made-for-TV movie. James Brolin and Judy Davis, who played Ronald
and Nancy Reagan, received acting nods.
Other
nominees in the TV movie category include "And Starring Pancho
Villa as Himself,""Something the Lord Made,""Ike:
Countown to D-Day" and "The Lion in Winter."
HBO
received a dominant 124 nominations, nearly twice that of runner-up
NBC with 65 bids. CBS received 24 nominations, ABC had 33, Fox had
31 and PBS had 27.
"Angels
in America," based on Tony Kushner's play which combines harsh
reality and fantasy, was nominated as outstanding miniseries and earned
acting nods for stars Emma Thompson, Al Pacino and Meryl Streep.
Other
nominated miniseries are "American Family: Journey of Dreams,""Horatio
Hornblower,""Prime Suspect 6: The Last Witness" and
"Traffic: The Miniseries."