It was a record-breaking night for Shogun at the 2024 Emmys.
After sweeping 18 categories, the FX series—which premiered in February—made history by having the most wins of any show in just one season. It’s also the first non-English program to win Outstanding Drama Series (see the full list of winners here).
While Shogun had already secured its highest count record by Emmys night after earning 14 trophies at the Sept. 7 and 8 Creative Arts Emmys, it grew its lead a week later with four more awards. Not only was the show named Outstanding Drama Series, but Frederick E.O also received the Outstanding Directing prize in the category. In addition, Hiroyuki Sanada—who plays warlord Yoshii Toranaga in the drama set in 1600 Japan—took home the lead actor honor.
“It was an east-meets-west dream project with respect,” he told the audience during his acceptance speech, “and Shogun taught me that when people work together, we can make miracle. We can create a better future together.”
Anna Sawai, who portrays noblewoman and translator Lady Toda Mariko, also won Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series.
“Very emotional,” she tearfully told Laverne Cox ahead of the event on Live From E!: Emmys, later adding, “It’s very huge. I’m just so happy for the whole team.”
And she’s thrilled fans have been loving the series.
“Everyone just worked so hard because they wanted the best for the show,” the actress continued. “There were no egos. I’m just happy that everyone’s receiving it, and everyone’s touched by our story.”
With 25 nominations, Shogun was the most-nominated series of the night followed by The Bear (which received 23 nods and won in 11 categories this year) and Only Murders in the Building (which was up in 21 categories and honored in three).
To learn more about the award-winning hit, keep reading.
Based on James Clavell’s novel of the same name, the drama is set in the year 1600. In the premiere of the 10-episode series, the Taiko (former chief advisor to the emperor) dies. But before his death, he reveals his plans for a Council of Regents—consisting of five opposing warlords—to rule until his son is old enough to step in. Among them is Lord Yoshii Toranaga.
“Lord Yoshii Toranaga is fighting for his life as his enemies on the Council of Regents unite against him,” FX shares, “when a mysterious European ship is found marooned in a nearby fishing village.”
As the network explains, the series follows Toranaga's story as well as that of Protestant English pilot John Blackthorne—whose ship washes up in Japan and who receives information that could affect his rivals (Portuguese merchants and Jesuit priests) as well as Toranaga—and Lady Toda Mariko, a Christian noblewoman and translator who is dealing with her past and forms a relationship with Blackthorne.
Hiroyuki Sanada plays Lord Yoshii Toranaga while Anna Sawai portrays Lady Toda Mariko and Cosmo Jarvis takes on the role of John Blackthorne. Other cast members include Tadanobu Asano, Hiroto Kanai, Takehiro Hira, Moeka Hoshi, Tokuma Nishioka, Shinnosuke Abe, Yuki Kura, Yuka Kouri and Fumi Nikaido.
You can watch the FX series on Hulu and Disney+.
Yes! FX previously announced that the network, Hulu and the Estate of James Clavell are working to extend the series for both a season two and a season three.
Considering the first installment already ran through Clavell’s novel, the second will now have to go beyond the page.
“There’s a lot of chaos but creative chaos, where we’re throwing everything that we have at the wall, seeing what sticks,” Rachel Kondo, who created the show along with Justin Marks, told The Hollywood Reporter in June. “It’s been exciting and nerve-wracking because, obviously, this is uncharted territory — we don’t have a roadmap, we just have history.”
So with the help of Clavell’s estate, she continued, they’re “trying to study his process of curation.” Still, Marks added, a lot of questions remain.
“There’s a lot of great conspiracy theory in history, a lot of different theories about, ‘Oh, it was said that this went on, but this really went on,’ and those little darker corners are what we’ve really enjoyed exploring,” he noted to THR—though it appears there aren’t as many questions for how long the series will run. “The third season is really an ending,” he continued. “We know where it starts, and we know where it ends, and we know who is there on that journey. We’re just focusing on part two right now to really make sure we can get to that point. But part two is, as second chapters go, kind of a darker chapter.”
While an official release date hasn’t been announced, Sanada—who is also one of the show’s producers—suggested they’re still in the early stages of development.
“We decided to go forward,” he told the Television Academy backstage at the 2024 Emmys, “but just started the writing room and then think about where to go to shoot.”
Of course, Shogun isn’t the first book adaption to find success onscreen. To read about other tomes that made the leap to TV, scroll on.
Miniseries Lessons in Chemistry—based on Bonnie Gramus' 2022 debut novel of the same name—received a total of 10 Emmy noms in 2024, including ones for stars Brie Larson, Lewis Pullman, Aja Naomi King and Millicent Shelton. Both the Apple TV+ series—which earned a nomination for Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series—and the book follow chemist Elizabeth Zott (Larson) as she navigates heartache, misogyny and ultimately stardom as a cooking show host in 1960s Southern California.
After Shōgun premiered in 2024, it became the first Japanese-language series to be nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series—garnering 25 nominations in total at the 2024 Emmys. The FX show is based on James Clavell's 1975 novel of the same name, which focused on events and important figures from Japan in the 1600s, just as the Edo period was beginning. In addition to the 2024 series, the book was previously adapted into a 1980 miniseries and also into a stage musical, board game and video games.
Since its 2019 debut, The Morning Show has remained a powerhouse in the streaming world, thanks to stellar performances from its stars including Jennifer Aniston, Reese Witherspoon and Billy Crudup, who have all earned Emmy nominations during the Apple TV+ show's run. Based on Brian Stelter 2013 non-fiction book Top of the Morning: Inside the Cutthroat World of Morning TV, The Morning Show has given viewers a behind-the-scenes look at morning television and nabbed 27 nominations in the process—plus a 2020 win for Crudup for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series.
An adaptation of Patricia Highsmith's 1955 psychological thriller The Talented Mr. Ripley, Ripley stars Andrew Scott as the titular Tom Ripley, a grifter in 1960s New York who is hired by a wealthy shipping magnate to persuade his son Dickie (Johnny Flynn) to leave his European escapades and return to the U.S. The Netflix miniseries—which also costars Dakota Fanning—premiered in 2024 and received 13 Emmy nominations in 2024, including Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series, Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie Scott and Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie for Fanning.
A 2019 bestselling novel by Casey McQuiston, Red, White & Royal Blue became a hit Amazon Prime movie in 2023, depicting the love story between the fictional son of the president of the United States (Taylor Zakhar Perez) and the Prince of England (Nicholas Galitzine). The film earned a 2024 Emmy nomination for Outstanding Television Movie.
The second entry in Ryan Murphy's anthology series, 2024's Feud: Capote vs. The Swans tells the story of how celebrated writer Truman Capote (Tom Hollander) ruined his friendships with his "Swans"—a group of New York City socialites—after writing about thinly veiled versions of them in a 1975 Esquire article. Based on Laurence Leamer's 2021 book Capote's Women: A True Story of Love, Betrayal, and a Swan Song for an Era, the FX show boasted a bevy of stars including Naomi Watts, Diane Lane, Chloë Sevigny, Calista Flockhart, Demi Moore, Molly Ringwald and the late Treat Williams. The second season earned 10 Emmy nominations in 2024, including acting nods for Hollander, Watts, Williams and Lane.
Based on the 2008 novel of the same name by Thomas Mallon, 2023's Fellow Travelers tells the story of Hawkins Fuller (Matt Bomer) and Timothy Laughlin (Jonathan Bailey) as they navigate a volatile relationship that spans from the 1950s to the 1980s. Both Bomer and Bailey received 2024 Emmy acting nominations for the Showtime miniseries: Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie for Bomer and Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie for Bailey.
Netflix's adaptation of Julia Quinn's romance book series Bridgerton was a cultural phenomenon at the end of 2020. Why? Well, thanks to a diverse cast, an incredible score and some steamy sex scenes, subscribers to the streaming service couldn't get enough of the series. Bridgerton also received critical acclaim, earning an Outstanding Drama Series nomination at the 2021 Emmys.
This drama full of epic battles and star-crossed romance is based on the popular book series by George R.R Martin. While the novels are best-sellers in their own right, the TV show has garnered fans from all over the world, including many who wouldn't even call themselves fans of the source material. Over the course of eight seasons, the HBO series received 58 Emmy Awards, more than any other drama in history. And while viewers remain divided on the controversial conclusion, which saw the series surpass Martin's plotting to reveal an ending all its own, the show will go down as one of the most celebrated of all time.
HBO's adaptation of Liane Moriarty's best-selling novel of the same name lured some A-list talent to the small screen, with Reese Witherspoon, Nicole Kidman, Shailene Woodley, Zoe Kravitz and Laura Dern occupying the very enviable real estate owned by the five women who find themselves caught up in a murder investigation. Every bit as enthralling as the book, the first season earned eight Primetime Emmy Awards and enticed none other than Meryl Streep herself to sign on for a pivotal role in the second season, which Moriarty helped shape despite there being no source material left to mine. Though not as universally beloved as the first, season two still earned Streep and Dern Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series nominations.
3 Body Problem garnered six 2024 Emmy nominations after its debut, including a coveted Outstanding Drama Series nomination. The Netflix series—set in the U.K. and China—follows a group of scientists dealing with an extraterrestrial mystery and planetary threat. It's based on Liu Cixin's book series Remembrance of Earth's Past, which debuted in 2006 with The Three-Body Problem. Cixin followed that up with The Dark Forest in 2008 and Death's End in 2010.
British spy thriller Slow Horses first premiered on Apple TV+ in 2022, but it was the show's third season that resonated with 2024 Emmy voters, nabbing nine nominations including Outstanding Drama Series, as well as Lead Actor and Supporting Actor nominations for stars Gary Oldman and Jack Lowden, respectively. The series is based on Mick Herron's spy novel series, Slough House, with the first book Slow Horses debuting in 2010. There are currently eight books in the series, with the most recent entry Bad Actors dropping in 2023.
Palm Royale earned three 2024 Emmy nominations after its debut: Outstanding Comedy Series, Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series for Kristen Wiig and Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for Carol Burnett. Although based on the 2018 book Mr. & Mrs. American Pie by Juliet McDaniel, the Apple TV+ show wildly diverges from its source material. Set in the late ‘60s, the series follows Wiig's former beauty pageant queen Maxine Simmons as she attempts to break into Florida's Palm Beach high society. However, in the novel, Maxine finds herself exiled to Scottsdale, Ariz., from Palm Springs when she causes a drunken scene at Thanksgiving after her husband reveals he's leaving her to be with his secretary.
Lily Gladstone earned an Outstanding Supporting Actress In A Limited Or Anthology Series Or Movie 2024 Emmy nomination for Hulu's 2024 miniseries Under The Bridge, based on Rebecca Godfrey's 2005 true crime book of the same name. The show traces the events of the 1997 murder of 14 year old Reena Virk by eight of her peers in Saanich, British Columbia, Canada.
The 2024 miniseries The Sympathizer is a historical black comedy based on Viet Thanh Nguyen's Pulitzer Prize-winning 2015 novel of the same name. The HBO series takes place near the end of the Vietnam War, centering on a Vietnamese spy who makes his way to a refugee camp in the U.S., and finds his loyalties tested as he continues to report back to the Viet Cong. The show earned an Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie at the 2024 Emmys for Robert Downey Jr., who took on five different roles in the series.
Premiering on Hulu in 2017, this adaptation of Margaret Atwood's dystopian 1985 novel centered in the totalitarian state of Gilead following a Second American Civil War. And while the series has long since left its source material behind as it continues the tale of June Osborne (Elisabeth Moss), the titular subjugated handmaid, and her quest for freedom. It's won several Emmys, including Outstanding Drama Series in its first season.
This groundbreaking mini-series was originally adapted from Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alex Haley's 1976 novel Roots: The Saga of an American Family. Just one year later, Roots, starring LeVar Burton, premiered on ABC and became a cultural phenomenon, winning nine Emmys as well as a coveted Peabody Award. The ratings were also sky high, and the finale still holds a record as the second-most-watched-overall series finale in U.S. TV history. In 2016, a remake of the same name premiered, starring Malachi Kirby and Anika Noni Rose.
A waitress who can read minds and vampires with southern accents are only a few of the intriguing characters on this immortal drama. The series, starring now-real-life couple Anna Pacquin and Stephen Moyer, is based on The Southern Vampire Mysteries books by Charlaine Harris and focuses on a small town in Louisiana. After seven seasons, the show came to an end in 2014, but we will forever be grateful for giving all of us the gift of naked Alexander Skarsgård and Joe Manganiello.
A modern take on the iconic detective series by British author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, this U.K. series starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman was not only a success in its homeland, but the drama won fans all over the world, including the U.S., where it won the trophy for Best Television Film at the 2016 Emmys.
Time travel, rebellion, and a love triangle are just the beginning of this exciting series based on historical fiction books by author Diana Gabaldon. Caitriona Balfe plays a nurse who travels to a different century and eventually falls in love with a rogue Scottish highlander (Sam Heughan) despite already being married in her time.
Based on the 2014 novel You Should Have Known by Jean Hanff Korelitz, The Undoing once again put Nicole Kidman in a leading role at the heart of a murder mystery. Specifically, therapist Grace Fraser (Kidman)'s life is turned upside down when her husband Jonathan (Hugh Grant) becomes a suspect in the murder of Elena Alves (Matilda De Angelis).
While the finale left viewers feeling conflicted, everyone could agree that Kidman's wardrobe was A+ in the series.
This crime drama following Dexter Morgan (Michael C. Hall), a blood spatter expert by day and serial killer by night, was originally based on books by author Jeff Lindsay. Over the course of eight seasons on Showtime, the series garnered a cult following, as well as 23 Emmy nominations. That series finale, though? Let's just say it's never easy to stick a landing.
The creative team took a second shot at wrapping up Dexter's story as a limited event series, titled Dexter: New Blood in 2021.
The award-winning Netflix original series is based on author Piper Kerman's memoir Orange is the New Black: My Year in a Women's Prison and was an instant hit. Fans loved the show's mix of sarcastic humor and heart-wrenching storylines, as well as the strong female characters, including Crazy Eyes Suzanne (Uzo Aduba), Sophia (Laverne Cox), Pennsatucky (Taryn Manning) and the beloved Poussey Washington (Samira Wiley). After seven seasons, viewers left Litchfield behind for good in 2019.
Before Coach Taylor (Kyle Chandler) entered the TV screens and hearts of viewers, this sports drama was initially adapted into a film starring Billy Bob Thornton in the same role. But in 2006, author H.G. Bissinger's non-fiction book Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream, hit the small screen and made non-football fans into believers. In addition to Chandler, the series also starred Connie Britton, Minka Kelly, Scott Porter, Michael B. Jordan, and everyone's favorite bad boy, Taylor Kitsch as Tim Riggins. Everyone say it with us now, "Clear Eyes, Full Hearts..."
Another Liane Moriarty adaptation! In 2021, Nicole Kidman and David E. Kelley collaborated once more to bring Moriarty's 2018 novel Nine Perfect Strangers to life. Debuting on Hulu, the series followed Masha Dmitrichenko (Kidman), a wellness retreat guru ready to transform the lives of nine, wait for it, strangers, including Frances (Melissa McCarthy), Lars (Luke Evans), Tony (Bobby Cannavale), Carmel (Regina Hall), Napoleon (Michael Shannon), Jessica (Samara Weaving), Ben (Melvin Gregg), Heather (Asher Keddie) and Zoe (Grace Van Patten).
This series, based on books by Upper East Side native Cecily von Ziegesar, became an iconic representation of the secret lives of young NYC elite. Whether you're a Blair (Leighton Meester) or a Serena (Blake Lively) you can't deny that the high-fashion cast made you just a little bit jealous during its six seasons on The CW.
The successful book series by author Sara Shepard was a favorite guilty pleasure show for binge watchers everywhere. The stylish squad featured Lucy Hale, Shay Mitchell, Ashley Benson and Troian Bellisario, who always kept fans on the edge of their seats. After seven seasons on Freeform, PLL tried to answer all the questions its legion of fans had as the end neared. Whether they were satisfied with those answers, well, that's another story.
SyFy drama The Magicians gives fans of Lev Grossman's popular book series a glimpse into the magical world of students at Brakebills University. The characters must navigate the typical challenges of college students (like fraught relationships and drug addictions) with the added twist of learning how to control their magical powers - as if life wasn't already complicated enough. Over the course of five seasons, the missions grew more dire, usually tasking the heroes with saving the multiverse or magic itself. (No big deal, right?) But one thing stayed the same: You could always count on an incredible musical episode.
The cast of hotties, including Nina Dobrev, Paul Wesley, Kat Graham and Ian Somerhalder, in this supernatural series was definitely a major contributor to this CW hit's popularity. Fans of the book series by L. J. Smith got to see their favorite heroes come to life in the drama, which ended in 2017 after eight seasons.
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