Jeff Kober‘s name is on the Emmy ballot twice this year — once by day, once by night.
The veteran character actor is up for Best Drama Guest Actor at the 78th Primetime Emmys for playing Duke Ekins, Dr. Robby’s motorcycle-riding confidant, on HBO Max’s The Pitt. He’s also nominated at the 53rd Daytime Emmy Awards for Best Drama Guest Performance, reprising the role of Cyrus Renault on General Hospital — familiar territory, since he earned the Best Drama Supporting Actor trophy for the part back in 2022.
Cyrus was a Pacific Northwest drug lord running his empire from behind bars, and Kober played him from his 2020 debut through a five-year run defined by kidnappings, prison break, and a slow-burn reveal that he was the estranged half-brother of Mayor Laura Collins (Genie Francis). The character met a violent end in February 2025, shot by Josslyn Jacks (Eden McCoy) after a killing spree that included poisoning several Port Charles residents, among them Sam McCall (Kelly Monaco). Kober made a surprise, one-episode return on Dec. 5, 2025 as a ghost haunting the mind of his troubled sister, Laura.
His Primetime nod, meanwhile, came the hard way. HBO Max didn’t include Kober among the actors officially entered for Emmy consideration this season, so he self-submitted and campaigned for himself, and it worked. He wasn’t alone: fellow Pitt guest star Brittany Allen took the same route and landed a nomination of her own for playing terminally ill patient Roxie Hamler. Both actors have Daytime Emmy wins on their résumés: Kober for General Hospital, Allen for All My Children (Best Younger Actress in a Drama, 2011).
Kober spoke to Gold Derby last month about playing Duke, before nominations were even announced, and how his work on General Hospital prepared him. “Two completely different hospitals,” he said. “It’s nothing compared to General Hospital. I’ll tell you what — that taught me so much about acting, because there were days on The Pitt where we would shoot six, seven, eight pages a day. General Hospital, one day I had 55 pages, and it’s four cameras, and you just get all your words and wind yourself up and go one time through, and that’s it. As long as you don’t knock over a camera, they’re going to keep it, they don’t care. And so it really gave me a whole different level of permission to just let it rip, because you can’t be careful, you can’t make sure you catch your moments. I know they’re in there somewhere.”
Duke appears in six episodes of The Pitt‘s second season, showing up at the hospital for what starts as a hoarseness check and turns into a more serious diagnosis. Kober submitted the “8:00 P.M.” episode for Emmy consideration.

