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26th Daytime Emmy Awards
Date
  • May 21, 1999 (Ceremony)
  • May 15 (Creative Arts Awards)
LocationThe Theater, Madison Square Garden, New York City
Presented byNational Academy of Television Arts and Sciences
Hosted byOprah Winfrey
Television/radio coverage
NetworkCBS

The 26th Daytime Emmy Awards were held in 1999 to commemorate excellence in daytime television programming from the previous year (1998). The main ceremonies were held May 21, 1999, at The Theater in Madison Square Garden in New York City and were televised live by CBS. Memorable moments that occurred at the ceremonies included the ABC soap opera General Hospital winning a record number of Daytime Emmys with a total of eight, and Susan Lucci's first-ever win in the Outstanding Lead Actress category after losing a total of 18 times. Winners in each category are in bold.[1]

Outstanding Drama Series[]

Outstanding Lead Actor[]

Outstanding Lead Actress[]

Outstanding Supporting Actor[]

  • Stuart Damon (Alan Quartermaine, General Hospital)
  • Michael E. Knight (Tad Martin, All My Children)
  • Christian LeBlanc (Michael Baldwin, The Young and the Restless)
  • Kristoff St. John (Neil Winters, The Young and the Restless)
  • Jerry verDorn (Ross Marler, Guiding Light)

Outstanding Supporting Actress[]

Outstanding Younger Actor[]

Outstanding Younger Actress[]

Outstanding Drama Series Writing Team[]

Outstanding Drama Series Directing Team[]

Outstanding Music Direction and Composition[]

Outstanding Sound Mixing – Special Class[]

Outstanding Sound Editing[]

  • Dave Howe, Thomas McGurk and Michael McAuliffe (Bill Nye, the Science Guy)
  • Christopher Harvengt, Kim Naves, James A. Williams, Jason W. Jennings and Tiffany S. Griffith (Honey, I Shrunk the Kids: The TV Show)
  • Neil Cedar (The Wubbulous World of Dr. Seuss)
  • Tim Isle and George Haddad (Young Hercules)
  • David Appleby, Tim O'Connell, Todd Beckett and Tony Van den Akker (Galileo: On the Shoulders of Giants)
  • Yuri Reese, George Haddad and Dick Hansen (Young Hercules)

Outstanding Single-Camera Editing[]

  • Felicity Oram, John Reul, Michael Gross and Darrell Suto (Bill Nye, the Science Guy)
  • Jeff Warren, Mike Lee and Rik Morden (Edison: The Wizard of Light)
  • Gary Stephenson (The New Yankee Workshop)
  • Dena Mermelstein, Juantxo Royo, Douglas Schuetz and Steve Pequignot (Reading Rainbow)
  • Bill Howe (This Old House)

Outstanding Game Show[]

Outstanding Game Show Host[]

  • Ben Stein & Jimmy Kimmel (Win Ben Stein's Money)
  • Bob Barker (The Price is Right)
  • Tom Bergeron (Hollywood Squares)
  • Pat Sajak (Wheel of Fortune)
  • Alex Trebek (Jeopardy!)

Outstanding Children's Series[]

  • Erren Gottlieb, James McKenna, Elizabeth Brock, Jamie Hammond, Hamilton McCulloch and Bill Nye (Bill Nye, the Science Guy)
  • Brian Henson, Jocelyn Stevenson and Joan O'Connor (Jim Henson's Animal Show)
  • Linda Ellerbee, Rolfe Tessem, Wally Berger and Mark Lyons (Nick News with Linda Ellerbee)
  • Twila Liggett, LeVar Burton, Tony Buttino, Cecily Truett, Larry Lancit, Orly Wiseman, Stacey Raider and Ed Wiseman (Reading Rainbow)

Outstanding Directing for a Children's Series[]

  • Michael Gross and Darrell Suto (Bill Nye, the Science Guy)
  • Steve Feldman, Fred Holmes and Jim Rowley (Barney & Friends)
  • Alan Zdinak and Paul Zehrer (Blue's Clues)
  • Ed Wiseman, Larry Lancit and Mark Mannucci (Reading Rainbow)
  • Lisa Simon, Emily Squires, Ted May, Steve Feldman, Reggie Life and Victor DiNapoli (Sesame Street)

Outstanding Children's Animated Program[]

Outstanding Special Class Animated Program[]

  • Steven Spielberg, Tom Ruegger, Rusty Mills, Liz Holzman, Charles M. Howell, Gordon Bressack, Jed Spingarn, Wendell Morris, Tom Sheppard, Earl Kress, Andrea Romano, Russell Calabrese, Kirk Tingblad, Mike Milo, Nelson Recinos and Charles Visser (Pinky and the Brain)
  • Peter Hastings, Prudence Fenton, Matthew Knox, John A. Smith, Bryan Evans and Scott M. Gimple (One Saturday Morning – How Things Werk)
  • William Joyce, Michael Hirsh, Patrick Loubert, Clive A. Smith, Fabrice Giger, Corinne Kouper, Pamela Slavin, D. Scott Dyer, Guillaume Hellouin, Stephen Hodgins, Patricia R. Burns, Mike Fallows, Peter Sauder and Ben Joseph (Rolie Polie Olie)
  • Louie Anderson, Ahmos Hassan, Thomas L. Wilhite, Willard Carroll, Matthew O'Callaghan, Russell P. Marleau, John Lanza and Bert Ring (Life with Louie)
  • Jean MacCurdy, Alan Burnett, Paul Dini, Glen Murakami, Bruce Timm, Hilary Bader, Stan Berkowitz, Rich Fogel, Bob Goodman, Hiroyuki Aoyama, Curt Geda, Kenji Hachizaki, Butch Lukic, Toshihiko Masuda, Dan Riba, Andrea Romano and Yuichiro Yano (The New Batman/Superman Adventures)
  • Jean MacCurdy, Tom Minton, James T. Walker, John Behnke, Rob Humphrey, Jim Peterson, Karl Toerge, Andrea Romano, Charles Visser and Al Zegler (The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries)

Outstanding Performer in an Animated Program[]

Outstanding Makeup[]

  • Anna Lujan, Chanty La Grana and Keith Crary (Leeza)
  • Richard Penna and Gina Riggi (Sally Jessy Raphael Show)

Lifetime achievement award[]

  • Bob Barker

References[]

  1. "The Twenty-Sixth Annual Daytime Emmy Awards". Soap Central and National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. New York City. Retrieved February 9, 2016. {{cite web}}:

External links[]


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