So, who are the special snowflakes among the Screen Actors Guild? Anne Thompson has already posted IndieWire’s SAG Awards predictions on the film front, and below you can find our expectations for TV. The pandemic continues to cause disarray, as many perennial contenders saw production delays that pushed them out of eligibility. That means “The Handmaid’s Tale” isn’t competing in the Drama categories, “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” won’t be back in the Comedy mix, and maybe, just maybe, “Game of Thrones” won’t be nominated this year.
Below, check out IndieWire’s TV predictions in all categories, and check back Thursday morning for analysis of the full results. Winter is finally here. Let’s enjoy it, shall we?
Best Actress in a Drama Series
- Laura Linney, “Ozark” 2. Olivia Colman, “The Crown” 3. Julia Garner, “Ozark” 4. Gillian Anderson, “The Crown” 5. Emma Corrin, “The Crown” Spoilers: Helena Bonham Carter, “The Crown”; Jodie Comer, “Killing Eve”; Jurnee Smollett, “Lovecraft Country”; Sarah Paulson, “Ratched”; Viola Davis, “How to Get Away With Murder”; Sandra Oh, “Killing Eve” In a Perfect World: Rhea Seehorn, “Better Call Saul”; Christine Baranski, “The Good Fight”; Aya Cash, “The Boys” Could all five slots really be controlled by just two shows? It’s entirely possible, perhaps even likely. Helena Bonham Carter (“The Crown”) and Olivia Colman (“The Crown”) represent two of last year’s three nominees still eligible (Jodie Comer is the third), while Laura Linney has been nominated for each season of “Ozark” so far, and her co-star Julia Garner entered the fray during the show’s last eligible season. Toss in Gillian Anderson and Emma Corrin, both of whom made very buzzy, very well-received debuts in this season of “The Crown,” and there are technically more likely nominees from both Netflix originals than there are slots available. Comer, Jurnee Smollett (“Lovecraft Country”), and even Viola Davis (in her last season of “How to Get Away With Murder”) would all be likely bets under different circumstances, but it’s hard to see past the high viewerships and awards pedigree of the top two contenders.
Best Actor in a Drama Series
- Jason Bateman, “Ozark” 2. Sterling K. Brown, “This Is Us” 3. Matthew Rhys, “Perry Mason” 4. Bob Odenkirk, “Better Call Saul” 5. Jonathan Majors, “Lovecraft Country”
Spoilers: Josh O’Connor, “The Crown”; Tobias Menzies, “The Crown”; Tom Pelphrey, “Ozark”; Rege-Jean Page, “Bridgerton”; Pedro Pascal, “The Mandalorian”; John Lithgow, “Perry Mason”; Milo Ventimiglia, “This Is Us”; Antony Starr, “The Boys” In a Perfect World: Nicco Annan, “P-Valley”; John Malkovich, “The New Pope”; Jude Law, “The New Pope”; Ben Mendelsohn, “The Outsider”; Jack Dylan Grazer, “We Are Who We Are”; The “Billions” Boys NBC
Best Ensemble in a Drama Series
- “The Crown” 2. “Ozark” 3. “This Is Us” 4. “Better Call Saul” 5. “Lovecraft Country” Spoilers: “The Mandalorian,” “Bridgerton,” “Perry Mason,” “Killing Eve” In a Perfect World: “P-Valley,” “We Are Who We Are,” “The Boys,” “The New Pope,” “Tales From the Loop,” “Billions”
History tells us to trust in the past, so with that in mind, expect “The Crown,” “Ozark,” “This Is Us,” and “Better Call Saul” to all make the cut in the Ensemble race. Each has been nominated here before, and each has been nominated recently — either last year, or for their last eligible season, save for “This Is Us,” which missed out after two straight years in the club. So why will the NBC drama make the cut this year? Simple: Four of the five 2020 nominees are no longer eligible, and without many new, dominant, actorly series to take those slots, I expect strong ratings to buoy back a show that’s always featured a solid, likable cast. As for the fifth slot, it’s a four-way race between “Lovecraft Country,” “The Mandalorian,” “Bridgerton,” and “Perry Mason.” Each one of these has viewership in its corner (an increasingly key attribute at the SAGs), but “The Mandalorian” and “Bridgerton” seem more craft-friendly than actors’ favorites. If HBO’s lush reboot proves endearing to voters, its cast will be irresistible, but I’m betting on “Lovecraft’s” Jurnee Smollett, Jonathan Majors, and Aunjanue Ellis to cast a more powerful spell on the Screen Actors Guild.
Best Actress in a Comedy Series
- Catherine O’Hara, “Schitt’s Creek 2. Christina Applegate, “Dead to Me” 3. Annie Murphy, “Schitt’s Creek” 4. Kaley Cuoco, “The Flight Attendant” 5. Issa Rae, “Insecure” Spoilers: Hannah Waddingham, “Ted Lasso”; Linda Cardellini, “Dead to Me”; Elle Fanning, “The Great”; Lily Tomlin, “Grace and Frankie”; Jane Levy, “Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist,” Maitreyi Ramakrishnan, “Never Have I Ever” In a Perfect World: Pamela Adlon, “Better Things”; Maya Erskine, “Pen15”; Anna Konkle, “Pen15”; America Ferrera, “Superstore”; Hailee Steinfeld, “Dickinson” Can “Schitt’s Creek” replicate its Emmy success at the SAGs? With many of last year’s dominant shows out of the running (“Fleabag,” “Barry,” “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” and “The Kominsky Method” are all ineligible), the path has been cleared for the popular PopTV comedy to have one more lovefest. Look for Catherine O’Hara and Annie Murphy to both land spots, while last year’s only other eligible nominee Christina Applegate will likely repeat as well. Can her co-star Linda Cardellini get in? It’ll likely come down to her, “Ted Lasso’s” Hannah Waddingham, and long-time snub “Insecure” star Issa Rae. (The HBO comedy has never been nominated at the SAGs, though with less competition and a strong recent season perhaps this is finally the year.) Meanwhile, look for six-time Ensemble nominee Kaley Cuoco to earn her first solo nod for “The Flight Attendant,” which seems to have the buzz and viewership combination needed for SAG success.
Best Actor in a Comedy Series
- Jason Sudeikis, “Ted Lasso” 2. Dan Levy, “Schitt’s Creek” 3. Eugene Levy, “Schitt’s Creek” 4. Ramy Youssef, “Ramy” 5. Steve Carell, “Space Force” Spoilers: Anthony Anderson, “Black-ish”; Ted Danson, “The Good Place”; Larry David, “Curb Your Enthusiasm”; Nicholas Hoult, “The Great”; Matt Berry, “What We Do in the Shadows” In a Perfect World: Mahershala Ali, “Ramy”; Jim Carrey, “Kidding”; Ben Feldman, “Superstore”; Hank Azaria, “Brockmire”; Josh Thomas, “Everything’s Gonna Be Okay”
OK, this list might look a little off, but here me out. Apple proved last year it had the viewership needed to get its top-tier talent nominated — Jennifer Aniston even won. (Remember that? Wasn’t that great? Yes, yes it was.) Also, I think we can all agree “The Morning Show” didn’t have quite the across-the-board love “Ted Lasso” does, so I have to believe voters will back Jason Sudeikis as hard as Apple is backing his show. Dan and Eugene Levy should capitalize on the “Schitt’s Creek” love, but neither has been nominated here before, so their inclusion is far from a sure thing. Anthony Anderson (“Black-ish”), Ted Danson (“The Good Place”), and Ramy Youssef (“Ramy”) could all steal one or both their spots, but even if they don’t, there’s one more dark horse worth keeping an eye on: Steve Carell. The former “Office” star is absolutely beloved at the SAGs, with nine solo nominations over film and television. At this time last year, many had written off his chances of getting nominated for “The Morning Show,” citing bad reviews and an unlikable character. He still got in. “Space Force” may not be top of mind, but it earned sizable viewership on Netflix, and Carell has earned unlikelier nods. The safe money would be on Ted Danson, but I’ll take a flyer on Carell. FX
Best Ensemble in a Comedy Series
- “Schitt’s Creek” 2. “Ted Lasso” 3. “What We Do in the Shadows” 4. “Dead to Me” 5. “Curb Your Enthusiasm” Spoilers: “Insecure,” “The Good Place,” “Black-ish,” “The Great,” “Ramy,” “The Flight Attendant,” “Modern Family” In a Perfect World: “Better Things,” “Sex Education,” “Superstore,” “Pen15,” “Vida” Who will or can win Best Ensemble is a question for after the dust of nomination morning settles, but hoo boy, would it be fun to see “Schitt’s Creek” square off against “Ted Lasso” and “What We Do in the Shadows.” PopTV’s comedy is the presumptive favorite, but we’ll know just how strong it is once its total nominations count comes in; Apple TV+, meanwhile, has the new kid on the block, and his popularity is surging by the day. “What We Do in the Shadows” would make things extra intriguing, if only because the Ensemble winner doesn’t always go to the most-nominated show, and the FX original is innately strong as a unit, even if its hard to choose a favorite among the individual performers. I’m willing this into existence by placing them in the top three slots, but “Dead to Me,” “Insecure,” “The Good Place,” “Black-ish,” and “Curb Your Enthusiasm” are all strong options. My gut says Larry David’s classic will catch the last spot, after helping so many folks get through the early days of the pandemic.
Best Actress in a Limited Series or TV Movie
- Anya Taylor-Joy, “The Queen’s Gambit” 2. Nicole Kidman, “The Undoing” 3. Michaela Coel, “I May Destroy You” 4. Cate Blanchett, “Mrs. America” 5. Kerry Washington, “Little Fires Everywhere” Spoilers: Uzo Aduba, “Mrs. America”; Octavia Spencer, “Self-Made”; Daisy Edgar-Jones, “Normal People”; Jessie Buckley, “Fargo”; Allison Janney, “Bad Education”; Zendaya, “Euphoria Special Episode No. 1”; Elizabeth Olsen, “WandaVision” In a Perfect World: Marielle Heller, “The Queen’s Gambit”; Kate Mara, “A Teacher”; Heidi Schreck, “What the Constitution Means to Me”
Thanks to the SAG’s limited categories for limited series, “The Queen’s Gambit” may get more attention at other awards shows, but it should still walk away with this category. Anya Taylor-Joy is the star of the moment, even when she’s facing down titans like Nicole Kidman (“The Undoing”), Cate Blanchett (“Mrs. America”), Kerry Washington (“Little Fires Everywhere”), Uzo Aduba (“Mrs. America”), and Octavia Spencer (“Self-Made”). Daisy Edgar-Jones could sneak into the race on the back of “Normal People’s” popularity (and a very deserving performance, of course), while Michaela Coel is a powerhouse of her own making. (“I May Destroy You” could be a legitimate rival to “The Queen’s Gambit,” though its summer release seems to be dampening the buzz.)
Best Actor in a Limited Series or TV Movie
- Hugh Grant, “The Undoing” 2. Ethan Hawke, “The Good Lord Bird” 3. Mark Ruffalo, “I Know This Much Is True” 4. Hugh Jackman, “Bad Education” 5. Paul Mescal, “Normal People” Spoilers: Brendan Gleeson, “The Comey Rule”; Bryan Cranston, “Your Honor”; Chris Evans, “Defending Jacob”; John Boyega, “Small Axe”; Jeff Daniels, “The Comey Rule”; Chris Rock, “Fargo” In a Perfect World: Jude Law, “The Third Day”; André Holland, “The Eddy”; Dylan McDermott, “Hollywood”; Michael Stuhlbarg, “Your Honor”; Nick Offerman, “Devs” It would be rather surprising indeed to see any of these five men not nominated come Thursday. Hugh Grant is riding high of late, after a mini career revival via multiple prestige roles, and “The Undoing” absolutely lives and dies on his performance. Ethan Hawke goes whole hog in “The Good Lord Bird,” providing more entertainment per word than any other actor on the ballot, though Mark Ruffalo does do twice the work for the same nomination, playing twins in HBO’s “I Know This Much Is True.” (He also won the Emmy in 2020.) Hugh Jackman got the best reviews of his career for “Bad Education,” and Paul Mescal is the consensus breakout star of the year — well, presuming you already knew about Anya Taylor-Joy, that is. Brendan Gleeson and Bryan Cranston would be Nos. 6 and 7, if there were that many slots, and perhaps they can surprise. It will likely come down to if enough voters saw “The Comey Rule” and stuck with “Your Honor.” Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.