CBS’ , the female-fronted police procedural, became a groundbreaking series for women upon its debut in 1982, but the 1985 Emmy were notably historic for the show that starred Tyne Daly and Sharon Gless as NYPD detectives. During the ceremony at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium, Karen Arthur became the first woman to win an Emmy for outstanding directing for a drama series, honored for “Heat,” a fourth-season episode. Arthur was well aware of what her triumph meant for other women in the industry — men had dominated the category for more than 35 years.
A woman wouldn’t win the category again until Mimi Leder was victorious in 1996 for (Betty Thomas had taken the comedy series prize in 1994). “I was up against the big dogs, men. The big guys who always win.
And so the fact that I got that over them said something also, which would have helped break the glass ceiling at that point,” Arthur, now 82, recalled on the podcast last year. ultimately took home six that night, including outstanding drama series and lead actress for Daly. This was especially gratifying given that the Orion Television series had been canceled in 1983 and only landed a renewal following an extensive letter-writing campaign staged by fans.
Upon its season-three return, wrote in its review, “Even on characterization and acting strength alone, this series deserves to be around for a while.” The show ended its run in 1988 after seven seasons and 14 total Emmys. .
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