9 surprising, historic and memorable moments from past Emmys - Los Angeles Times
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The 9 most surprising, historic and memorable moments from past Emmys

Close-up view of Emmy Award statues lined up in a row.
Emmy Award statues were in attendance.
(Al Seib/Los Angeles Times)
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The first Emmy Awards were handed out in 1949 (with tickets going for $5 a pop), honoring the best in Los Angeles area television. The event has expanded exponentially since then to include national programming, prime-time and daytime programming, cable and streaming, and a number of other categories over the decades. Through it all, the televised ceremonies — and their hosts — have been hailed and derided in just about equal measure. Here are nine moments from those evenings over the years that stand out as award-worthy in and of themselves.

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  • ‘I Love Lucy’ ran for six seasons, winning the best situation comedy Emmy in 1953 and 1954.

  • This is one of our nine most surprising, historic and memorable moments from past Emmys.

  • The comic actor’s acceptance speeches were always off-kilter but never off-color.

  • Isabel Sanford remains the only Black woman to have won the lead actress in a comedy award.

  • The comedian hosted the 2001 Emmys after 9/11 and terrorism concerns caused two cancellations.

  • The two comedians smooched in a parody of the Madonna-Britney Spears kiss that rocked MTV audiences.

  • At the 58th Emmy Awards, the comedian was brought onstage in a giant, sealed capsule — with just enough air to last through a three-hour ceremony.

  • Although ‘Handmaid’s Tale’ launched four years earlier on Netflix, Hulu’s tale of women forced to produce children for a new ruling class of men better caught the academy’s attention.

  • The “Pose†actor made history in 2019 becoming the first openly gay Black man to win the lead actor in a drama Emmy.

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