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  • Thu Sep 15 2011, 5:35 PM PDT

    Why It's Called an Emmy

    by: Tim Appelo, The Hollywood Reporter

    How did Emmy get her name? Valerie Macon/Getty Images Why do they call the Emmy Award "Emmy"?

    "It's a feminization of 'Immy,' which is short for the image orthicon tube," explains John Leverence, senior vice president of awards for the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. The image orthicon, which revolutionized TV, was originally built to guide flying explosive weapons in World War II. "The objective was the guided torpedo, but it ended up being used in television," said RCA engineer Paul Wymer. The 4,000 "Emmys," as engineers fondly called the devices, didn't win the war, because the weapons they were used in weren't quite reliable, but the orthicon later made TV feasible. It was called "the atomic bomb of television."

    [Photos: Emmy Nomination Snubs, Shockers and Surprises]

    After Syd Cassyd founded the Academy in 1946, he wanted to call its TV award the Ike, short for iconoscope tube (the image orthicon's predecessor gizmo). Inconveniently, war hero and president-to-be Dwight Eisenhower was nicknamed Ike. So engineering exec Henry Lubcke, the third Academy president, changed the statue's sex, and the Immy became the Emmy.

    [Photos: David Strick Portraits of 2011 Emmy Nominees]

    Ironically, one of this year's Emmy nominees, ReelzChannel's "The Kennedys," is partly about a 1944 image orthicon disaster that changed U.S. history. Jealous of his brother John F. Kennedy's PT-109 medal, Joseph Kennedy Jr. volunteered to pilot a bomber with 11 tons of explosives, the most ever packed into a plane. He was going to bail out and let Emmy direct the plane to Belgium to blow up Hitler’s V-1 rocket base, but according to Gary Edgerton's "Columbia History of American Television," a "friendly radio frequency signal" blew Kennedy up over Suffolk. Whatever killed Joe Jr., it forced Joe Kennedy Sr. to send a different son to the White House and makes for an emotional moment in "The Kennedys" that helps boost its dark-horse chances for an Emmy.

    [Photos: 2011 Emmy Nominations]

    The woman on the Emmy statue has an even deeper history than her name. "The artist Louis McManus's original 1946 painting for the Emmy was a very Valkyrie kind of character," says Leverence. "When the actual statue was designed, it became much cleaner, like Art Nouveau lamps I've seen in antique shops. I've often thought McManus took that basic Art Nouveau pose, stuck wings on her, had her stand a bit more upright, and there was Emmy. Oscar stood on a film reel, Emmy on a global grid. Emmy appeared as a lithe Art Nouveau muse of art who exalted the electron of science."

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    "Antiques Roadshow's" Eric Knowles thinks Emmy may be McManus's 1948 update of the similarly posed female on the 1933 Chicago World's Fair poster. "The graceful stance is suggestive of a celebrated Hollywood dancer of that era, such as Ginger Rogers, whilst her lightning-shape wings are indicative of the electric dynamism of the modern age. The pierced globe or orrery might equally imply an international or even universal sphere of influence." Knowles cites another Emmy forebear: Lee Lawrie's 1933 Atlas and the frieze of Time at Rockefeller Center.

    [Video: Drama Showrunners Emmy Roundtable With Frank Darabont and Kurt Sutter]

    LA County Museum of Art curator Elizabeth Williams traces Emmy all the way back to the Nike or Winged Victory of Samothrace, sculpted in the second century B.C. for the Sanctuary of the Great Gods, unearthed in 1863, installed in the Louvre, and inspirational to the Art Nouveau lampmakers Leverence thinks inspired McManus. "It's the image of Nike, the goddess of victory, her head and garments thrown back as if she's flying," says Williams. "You want the goddess of victory on your side."

    [Video: TV Executives Emmy Roundtable With AMC's Charlie Collier and More]

    The most modern influence on the Emmy sculpture may have been the most important: Louis's wife, Dorothy McManus, his beautiful model. "Maybe they should be called the Dorothies," says Williams.

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142 comments

comments 1-10 of 142  | newest | < newer | older > | oldest
  • GEECEE
    When are we going to get the "Awardies"! That's an award for the best award show, its emcees, presenters, and whatever other catagories that they can come up with.
    report abuseposted September 18, 2011, 3:27 pm PDT
  • marine
    i think i'll start a protest, discrimination, i want the statue to be a male, not some street walking drunkard female.
    report abuseposted September 18, 2011, 3:17 pm PDT
  • yorkieczar
    @leon w Rosemary was Joe and Rose Kennedy’s third child, their first daughter. She was born in September 1918, two months before the end of World War I, during the Spanish influenza epidemic. Her name was Rose Marie Kennedy, but she became known as “Rosemary.” Later the Kennedys speculated that she was retarded because the nurse had prevented her birth until the arrival of the obstetricia
    report abuseposted September 18, 2011, 2:55 pm PDT
  • Mike
    NCIS is one of the greatest shows on TV. They don't need an Emmy to prove it, and neither does Blue Bloods, Law & Order Criminal Intent & CSI: NY. Pinky and the Brain & Oggy and the Cockroaches are better than The Cleveland Show! In fact, there are so few good shows & so many horrible shows nominated, besides cheering 30 Rock, we'll pass this Emmy Show altogether! Thanks for rui
    report abuseposted September 18, 2011, 2:29 pm PDT
  • Charles
    To all 'NCIS' fans: It doesn't (and shouldn't) matter how popular a show is. Ideally, popularity, quality, and importance would always coexist. Sadly, not always true. Hence, very popular 'NCIS' fails to win Emmys and barely watched 'Mad Men' scoops them up. I'd say Emmy gets it right in such cases. On another tack, 'Glee' is NOT a comedy. It is a drama with comic elements.
    report abuseposted September 18, 2011, 1:16 pm PDT
  • stephen
    but what is actually is is, a image to atlas...u know, another pagan diety. with the satanic lightning bolts for wings. jus sayn.
    report abuseposted September 18, 2011, 12:52 pm PDT
  • ZenVoodoo
    That Joe Jr. story is hilarious! Hey Joe, how's it going up there? Boom!
    report abuseposted September 18, 2011, 12:30 pm PDT
  • Floyd
    All the award shows are very lame. Imagine televising the awards that your company might hand out on occasion. Ridiculous. A circle jerk of people patting themselves on their own backs. Personally, as far as any of the shows go, I can't watch most of them because of the non-stop commercials.
    report abuseposted September 18, 2011, 12:26 pm PDT
  • Observer
    The Emmy should be renamed the 'Poli' like in politics. The perpetual snub of NCIS is a perfect example. When will "Reality TV finally phase out?
    report abuseposted September 18, 2011, 11:58 am PDT
  • yahoo user
    I completely agree with Barbara about NCIS which gets snubbed every year and yet has consistently high ratings. It doesn't make any sense that pay cable TV shows with fewer viewers win over broadcast TV shows. The Emmy nomination and selection process continues to be flawed. The awards show continues to be boring ... zzzzzzz
    report abuseposted September 18, 2011, 11:41 am PDT
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