Kathy Bates made Emmy history Tuesday, becoming the oldest performer ever nominated in the lead drama actress category at age 77 for her role in the CBS reboot of “Matlock.”
With the nomination, Bates surpasses a record previously held by Angela Lansbury, who was 70 when she received her final nod in 1996 for “Murder, She Wrote.”
In “Matlock,” Bates stars as Madeline “Matty” Matlock, a shrewd and resilient attorney who reenters the legal world decades after a mysterious and tragic retirement. The public version of her backstory is one of personal loss: widowed and left financially devastated by her husband’s gambling, she’s forced to raise her grandson after the death of her daughter in a car accident. Matty is hired at the high-powered law firm Jacobson Moore, where she reports to Olympia, a sharp, younger partner, despite her decades of legal expertise.
The performance has earned widespread acclaim for Bates, but this is far from her first brush with Emmy recognition. She was previously nominated in the same category in 2011 and 2012 for her role as Harriet Korn in NBC’s “Harry’s Law,” becoming the fifth-oldest nominee in the category’s history at age 64. Though she didn’t win for that role, Bates has taken home two Emmys — one for her guest appearance on “Two and a Half Men” and another for her supporting role in “American Horror Story: Coven.”
Now at 77, Bates tops a list of legendary nominees who’ve been recognized later in their careers, including Lansbury, Cicely Tyson (Age 70 for “Sweet Justice” in 1995), Imelda Staunton (Age 68 for “The Crown” in 2024) and Glenn Close (Age 65 for “Damages” in 2012).
The nomination also marks a significant moment for CBS, as Bates becomes the broadcast network’s first category nominee in over a decade, following Julianna Margulies’ win for “The Good Wife” in 2014.
In addition to her television accolades, Bates is an Academy Award winner for her unforgettable turn as Annie Wilkes in “Misery” (1990), along with other nominations for “Primary Colors” (1998), “About Schmidt” (2002) and “Richard Jewell” (2019). In addition, she’s also a Tony Award nominee for lead actress in a play for the 1983 production of “‘night, Mother.”
Love Film & TV?
Get your daily dose of everything happening in music, film and TV in Australia and abroad.

This year’s Emmy nominations were announced by actors Harvey Guillén (“What We Do in the Shadows”) and Brenda Song (“Running Point”) from the Academy’s Wolf Theatre.
The 77th Emmy Awards will be hosted by Nate Bargatze and broadcast live Sunday, Sept. 14 at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT on CBS, as well as stream live and on demand via select packages on Paramount+.
From Variety US