Primetime Emmy Award For Outstanding Supporting Actress in A Comedy Series

Primetime Emmy Award For Outstanding Supporting Actress In A Comedy Series

This is a list of winners of the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series.

Read more about Primetime Emmy Award For Outstanding Supporting Actress In A Comedy Series:  Superlatives, Winners and Nominees, Multiple Nominations For Supporting Actress, Multiple Awards For Lead, Supporting and Guest Actress Combined, Multiple Nominations For Lead, Supporting and Guest Actress Combined, See Also

Famous quotes containing the words award, outstanding, supporting, actress, comedy and/or series:

    The award of a pure gold medal for poetry would flatter the recipient unduly: no poem ever attains such carat purity.
    Robert Graves (1895–1985)

    The theater is a baffling business, and a shockingly wasteful one when you consider that people who have proven their worth, who have appeared in or been responsible for successful plays, who have given outstanding performances, can still, in the full tide of their energy, be forced, through lack of opportunity, to sit idle season after season, their enthusiasm, their morale, their very talent dwindling to slow gray death. Of finances we will not even speak; it is too sad a tale.
    Ilka Chase (1905–1978)

    There would be no supporting life were we to feel quite as poignantly for others as we do for ourselves.
    Samuel Richardson (1689–1761)

    An actress reading a part for the first time tries many ways to say the same line before she settles into the one she believes suits the character and situation best. There’s an aspect of the rehearsing actress about the girl on the verge of her teens. Playfully, she is starting to try out ways to be a grown-up person.
    Stella Chess (20th century)

    Unless comedy touches me as well as amuses me, it leaves me with a sense of having wasted my evening. I go to the theatre to be moved to laughter, not to be tickled or bustled into it.
    George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950)

    Through a series of gradual power losses, the modern parent is in danger of losing sight of her own child, as well as her own vision and style. It’s a very big price to pay emotionally. Too bad it’s often accompanied by an equally huge price financially.
    Sonia Taitz (20th century)