Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series (Half-Hour)

The Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series (Half-Hour) is an annual award presented as part of the Primetime Emmy Awards. It was created as Outstanding Cinematography for a Half-Hour Series, incorporating both single and multi-camera programs, in 2008 alongside Outstanding Cinematography for a One Hour Series. From 2011 to 2016, the awards were combined as Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series.

Primetime Emmy Award for Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series (Half-Hour)
Awarded forOutstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series (Half-Hour)
CountryUnited States
Presented byAcademy of Television Arts & Sciences
Currently held byThe Mandalorian (2020)
Websiteemmys.com

The categories were divided again in 2017.[1] However, only single-camera series are eligible for the award with multi-camera half-hour series competing for Outstanding Cinematography for a Multi-Camera Series.

Winners and nominations

Outstanding Cinematography for a Half-Hour Series

2000s

Year Program Episode Nominees Network
2008
Californication"Pilot"Peter LevyShowtime
According to Jim"The Chaperone"George MooradianABC
In Treatment"Week 6: Sophie"Frank MurphyHBO
My Name Is Earl"Stole a Motorcycle"Michael GoiNBC
Scrubs"My Princess"John Inwood
30 Rock"Rosemary's Baby"Vanja Cernjul
2009
Californication"In Utero"Michael WeaverShowtime
According to Jim"Heaven Opposed to Hell"George MooradianABC
Everybody Hates Chris"Everybody Hates Back Talk"Mark Doering-PowellThe CW
30 Rock"Apollo, Apollo"Matthew ClarkNBC
Weeds"No Man Is Pudding"Michael TrimShowtime

2010s

Year Program Episode Nominees Network
2010
[2]
Weeds"A Modest Proposal"Michael TrimShowtime
Gary Unmarried"Gary Shoots Fish in a Barrel"Gary BaumCBS
Hung"Pilot"Uta BriesewitzHBO
Nurse Jackie"Apple Bong"Vanja CernjulShowtime
30 Rock"Season 4"Matthew ClarkNBC
Two and a Half Men"Crude and Uncalled For"Steven V. SilverCBS

Between 2011-2016, half-hour and one-hour series were both eligible for Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series. No half-hour series were nominated during these years.

Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series (Half-Hour)

Year Program Episode Nominees Network
2017
[3]
Veep "Qatar" David Miller HBO
Ballers "Game Day" Rodney Taylor HBO
Divorce "Pilot" Reed Morano
Mozart in the Jungle "Now I Will Sing" Tobias Datum Amazon
Silicon Valley "Success Failure" Tim Suhrstedt HBO
Transparent "If I Were a Bell" Jim Frohna Amazon
2018
[4]
Atlanta "Teddy Perkins" Christian Sprenger FX
Barry "Chapter Eight: Know Your Truth" Paula Huidobro HBO
The End of the F***ing World "Episode 3" Justin Brown Netflix
GLOW "Pilot" Christian Sprenger
Insecure "Hella LA" Patrick Cady HBO
Mozart in the Jungle "Ichi Go Ichi E" Tobias Datum Amazon
2019
[5]
Russian Doll "Ariadne" Chris Teague Netflix
Ballers "Rough Ride" Anthony Hardwick HBO
Fleabag "Episode 1" Tony Miller Amazon
Homecoming "Optics" Tod Campbell
Insecure "High-Like" Ava Berkofsky HBO
What We Do in the Shadows "Manhattan Night Club" D.J. Stipsen FX

2020s

Year Program Episode Nominees Network
2020
[6]
The Mandalorian "Chapter 7: The Reckoning" Greig Fraser and Baz Idoine Disney+
The End of the F***ing World "Episode 2" Benedict Spence Netflix
Homecoming "Giant" Jas Shelton Amazon
Insecure "Lowkey Happy" Kira Kelly HBO
"Lowkey Lost" Ava Berkofsky

Programs with multiple wins

2 wins

Programs with multiple nominations

Totals include nominations for Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series (One Hour). Totals for Outstanding Cinematography for a Multi-Camera Series are excluded, as this category exclusively recognizes single-camera half-hour series since 2017.

References

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