International Emmys to honor British TV veteran David Frost; Britain, Brazil top nominees

By Charles J. Gans, AP
Saturday, November 21, 2009

International Emmys to honor David Frost

NEW YORK — British TV personality David Frost will be honored at the 37th Annual International Emmy Awards for a wide-ranging career that has taken him from pioneering political satire on television to conducting serious interviews with former President Richard Nixon and other newsmakers.

ABC’s Barbara Walters will present the International Emmy Founders Award to Frost at Monday night’s awards gala at the Hilton New York Hotel.

“When they’re up there on the stage, you are going to be looking at two of the greatest interviewers in the history of television paired together,” said Bruce L. Paisner, president and CEO of the International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.

The presentation will highlight an evening in which 41 nominees from 17 countries will be competing in 10 categories for International Emmys, honoring excellence in TV programming produced outside the U.S.

British television productions garnered a leading nine nominations, including the long-running MI5 spy series “Spooks” for best drama and the TV talent show parody “Peter Kay’s Britain’s got the Pop Factor …” for top comedy.

Mexico’s “Capadocia,” produced by HBO Latin America, had three nominations. The series set in a fictional women’s prison rife with corruption is in contention for best drama, actress (Cecilia Suarez) and actor (Oscar Olivares).

China’s “Ultimate Rescue” was a double nominee for best TV movie/mini-series and actor (Chen Li).

Other British nominees include actress Julie Walters for her role in “A Short Stay in Switzerland,” inspired by the true story of a woman who took her own life in a Zurich clinic after being diagnosed with an incurable degenerative disease, and Ben Whishaw for his star turn in the thriller “Criminal Justice,” about the odyssey of a 21-year-old defendant accused of murder.

Brazil had five nominations, including the comedy “The Slum,” followed by the Philippines, Germany and Mexico with three apiece.

Also competing in the best actress category are France’s Emma De Caunes for “Night Birds” and the Philippines’ Angel Locsin for “The Wolf.” Robert de Hoog of the Netherlands was the other best actor nominee for his role in “Skin.”

Paisner said the honorary award to Frost is “long overdue.” The Founders Award has been presented annually since 1980 to a person who “crosses cultural boundaries to touch our common humanity.”

Frost, 70, first gained prominence on both sides of the Atlantic in the early 1960s as host of the irreverent groundbreaking satirical program “That Was The Week That Was” that lampooned the political establishment.

Frost later turned to producing and hosting more serious interview-based shows. He holds the distinction of having interviewed all seven British prime ministers serving since 1964 as well as all seven U.S. presidents in office between 1969 and 2008. Now, he is hosting the weekly program “Frost Over the World” on Al Jazeera English.

“He’s had an amazing and unique media career,” Paisner said. “One of the really interesting things about David is that he’s made a lot of comebacks. I think a lot of people had stopped thinking about him and then (the stage play and Oscar-nominated film) ‘Frost/Nixon’ appeared and you really saw how good he could be.”

Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, who is German-born, will present the International Emmy Directorate Award to Markus Schachter for his outstanding leadership of Germany’s ZDF television network.

On the Net:

International Emmys: www.iemmys.tv

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