Sheryl Lee Ralph ethnicity All about her husband and children as Abbott Elementary star creates history with Emmys win
Sheryl Lee Ralph ethnicity All about her husband and children as Abbott Elementary star creates history with Emmys win × Follow Us Create Notifications New User posted their first comment this is comment text Link Approve Reject & ban Delete Log in Manage your profile Editing Story Queue Video Queue Editing Stats Writer Home SEO Redirection Admin Wiki Edits Taxonomy Home Edit Site Menu Mapping Dashboard Tag Pages Community Social Feed Queue Feed Center Notification Center Affiliate Home Manage Pages Bottom Tagline Dash Timeless Stories Logout SK POP Feature
Moesha.
Sister Act II.
Abbott Elementary and more!!!
EMMY WINNER! Put some respect on her name2796820Sheryl Lee Ralph! Original DreamGirl! Moesha.Sister Act II.Abbott Elementary and more!!!EMMY WINNER! Put some respect on her name https://t.co/ZykxMkA0am She said: "Because if you get a Quinta Brunson, if you get a husband like mine in your corner. If you get children like mine in your corner, and if you've got friends like everybody who voted for me, cheered for me, loved me, thank you! Thank you! Thank you!" For the prestigious award, Sheryl Lee Ralph was pitted against Alex Borstein (The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel), Hannah Einbinder (Hacks), Janelle James (Abbott Elementary), Kate McKinnon (Saturday Night Live), and Hannah Waddingham, Sarah Niles, and Juno Temple (Ted Lasso).
Sheryl Lee Ralph ethnicity All about her husband and children as Abbott Elementary star creates history with Emmys win
By Nikita Nikhil Modified 13 Sep 2022 Follow Us Comment Share Sheryl Lee Ralph is a mother to two kids from her first marriage. (Image via Frazer Harrison/Getty) American actress Sheryl Lee Ralph won the outstanding supporting actress in a comedy series award at the 2022 Emmy Awards and created history by becoming the second Black woman to bag it. The 65-year-old star, who dominated the nomination for her role as Barbara Howard in Abbott Elementary, delivered an emotional acceptance speech, which she began by singing a verse from Diane Reeves 90's song Endangered Species. philip lewis@Phil_Lewis_Sheryl Lee Ralph blew the roof off the #emmys with this speech!8301619948Sheryl Lee Ralph blew the roof off the #emmys with this speech! https://t.co/MFJzIqxBWC She sang: "I am an endangered species, but I sing no victim song. I am a woman, I am an artist, and I know where my voice belongs." She then went on to say: "To anyone who has ever ever had a dream and thought your dream wasn't wouldn't couldn't come true I am here to tell you that this is what believing looks like. This is what striving looks like, and don't you ever, ever give up on you." She further thanked her co-stars, family and the people who supported her. your favorite cousin@thenikkiscriptSheryl Lee Ralph! Original DreamGirl!Moesha.
Sister Act II.
Abbott Elementary and more!!!
EMMY WINNER! Put some respect on her name2796820Sheryl Lee Ralph! Original DreamGirl! Moesha.Sister Act II.Abbott Elementary and more!!!EMMY WINNER! Put some respect on her name https://t.co/ZykxMkA0am She said: "Because if you get a Quinta Brunson, if you get a husband like mine in your corner. If you get children like mine in your corner, and if you've got friends like everybody who voted for me, cheered for me, loved me, thank you! Thank you! Thank you!" For the prestigious award, Sheryl Lee Ralph was pitted against Alex Borstein (The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel), Hannah Einbinder (Hacks), Janelle James (Abbott Elementary), Kate McKinnon (Saturday Night Live), and Hannah Waddingham, Sarah Niles, and Juno Temple (Ted Lasso).