Manitoba

Winnipeg woman lands role of a lifetime as seat-filler to the stars at Emmy Awards

Glitz, glam and fame — the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards had it all — and a Winnipeg woman managed to snag a front row seat to it all as a seat-filler.

'Pinnacle' of experience was getting to keep Christina Applegate's seat warm while on stage, says Amanda Buhse

A woman with long blond hair and red lipstick smiles in a photo.
Amanda Buhse just served as a seat-filler Monday night at the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards in Los Angeles. (Submitted by Amanda Buhse)

Glitz, glam and fame — the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards had it all — and a Winnipeg woman managed to snag a front row seat to it all. Sort of.

Amanda Buhse got the call on Sunday notifying her to catch a flight to Los Angeles to be a seat-filler for the show the next day. She had applied just two days earlier and was shocked to hear she'd get the chance to sit next to Hollywood royalty.

She grabbed a black Ralph Lauren dress she had from a previous wedding, threw it in her bag with some high heels and a couple other outfits and headed to the airport.

"It happened very last-minute," Buhse told Up to Speed guest host Emily Brass. "I arrived into L.A. Monday morning about an hour before I actually had to be at the event.... It was the most, I think, quick and furiously exciting 24 hours of my entire life."

She said the job is to fill vacant seats in the first 10 rows of live award shows when nominees or presenters are heading on stage, getting a drink or going to the washroom so the audience looks full. Seat fillers who are waiting in the wings rush in to fill the void.

"You see these live televised events on TV and they're so seamless and they're supposed to be," Buhse said. 

"But it's so fascinating to see what happens behind the scenes during those commercial breaks. It's just chaos … up until even a second before the next segment goes live."

Guest host Emily Brass speaks to Winnipegger, Amanda Buhse, about her experience as a seat filler at the Emmy Awards in Los Angeles.

Over the past two years, Buhse has applied online a couple times through a company that hires seat-fillers for the Emmys and Grammys.

This was the first time she landed the role, and competition was tight: Buhse said there were 6,000 applicants and only 50 selected. Buhse said she is the only one from Canada selected.

A blue band with the word 'Emmys' is seen around a wrist.
Amanda Buhse shows off her Emmys wrist band at the awards in Los Angeles on Monday night. (Submitted by Amanda Buhse)

She was shocked and honoured. Short-notice flights to L.A. were expensive but she says she couldn't miss out on the "once-in-a-lifetime opportunity."

"Just walking in, you're awestruck. This beautiful theatre is so huge. There's every single person that you know in television is there watching you."

One of those people was Natasha Lyonne, who was nominated for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series for her role in Poker Face.

Natasha Lyonne on the Emmys red carpet wearing a silver, metallic floor-length gown.
Nominated for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series, Poker Face star Natasha Lyonne rocked a metallic Schiaparelli gown and David Webb jewelry. (Credit: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images)

In the course of her duties, Buhse says Lyonne complimented her hairdo.

"I was like 'Oh my gosh!' This night has already been an achievement because I love her."

Buhse said it was cool to see celebrities mingling off-camera.

At different times she got to sit in front of Trevor Noah, to the right of Bill Hader and behind Christina Applegate. When Applegate went on stage, Buhse got tapped to keep her seat warm.

"That was, I think, the pinnacle moment," she said. "It was unreal."

With files from Sierra Sanders