Once again beating ABC with 7 Emmys, HBO bagged the most prizes at the 62nd Primetime Emmy Awards after the premium cable network’s little TV movie ‘Temple Grandin’ ruled the 2010 Emmys Eve on Sunday.
Last night, Temple Grandin, an impressive biopic that was made under the banner of HBO and surprisingly conquered that very problem which was extensively alleged in the livestock industry as the most demanding subject matter to make its way to the big screen, won five Emmy prizes for its team including the ‘Outstanding Made for TV Movie’.
Temple Grandin, a 2010 biographical movie directed by Mick Jackson, stars Claire Danes, an American screen and television actress, in the role of Temple Grandin, who is a woman with high-functioning autism.
Temple Grandin, a Doctor of Veterinary Sciences and an esteemed professor at Colorado State University transformed customary ways for the humane managing of domestic animals on slaughterhouses and cattle ranches.
Temple Grandin aired for the first time on HBO on 6th February, 2010. Temple Grandin received tremendously positive reviews all across the US and last night on Sunday 29th August, 2010, after just 6 months of its release, Temple Grandin earned the awards for ‘Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries’ and ‘Outstanding Made for Television Movie’. Temple Grandin was nominated for several Primetime Emmy Awards.
According to its producer, Emily Gerson Saines, she decided to make Temple Grandin after finding inspiration in Temple Grandin’s life story, a lady whose own child had been diagnosed with autism.



