At 77, Oscar-winner Kathy Bates has carved a new path through Emmy history, becoming the oldest performer ever nominated for lead actress in a drama series thanks to her sharp-witted turn as retired lawyer-turned-sleuth Madeline “Matty” Matlock in CBS’s reboot of “Matlock.”
The milestone eclipses the mark set by Angela Lansbury, who was 70 when “Murder, She Wrote” earned its final nod in 1996. Bates’s latest recognition pushes her career tally to 14 Primetime Emmy nominations, which already include two wins for guest and supporting roles.
“Matlock” has proved more than a nostalgia play; the legal caper averages 13.5 million weekly viewers—making it broadcast television’s most-watched freshman series and a rare network entry in an awards race now dominated by cable and streaming. Co-star Jason Ritter credits the show’s on-set tone to its leading lady: “If you try to put her on a pedestal, she’ll stop you—she’s a true collaborator,” he told Awards Radar.
While Bates is the oldest nominee in her category, she is still younger than the overall acting-nominee record holder, the late Cicely Tyson, who received a guest-actress nod at 93 in 2018. Age barriers have been falling across the Academy: Dick Van Dyke tied the record for oldest Emmy winner last season at 98, underscoring a broader embrace of veteran talent.
Tuesday’s announcement came during the Television Academy’s livestream, where officials hailed a record voter turnout and confirmed that comedian Nate Bargatze will host the 77th ceremony on Sept. 14 at Los Angeles’ Peacock Theater. The eligibility window spanned June 1 2024 to May 31 2025, reflecting a year in which streaming juggernauts “Severance” and “The White Lotus” again led the nomination board.
For broadcast networks, Bates’s nod is a timely jolt: “Matlock” has already secured a second-season renewal, suggesting CBS’s bet on a classic brand with a contemporary social-justice twist is paying dividends. As Emmy voters weigh their ballots, the veteran performer’s record-setting bid stands as both a personal triumph and a reminder that compelling storytelling can still emanate from prime-time’s oldest platforms.





















































