Sandra Oh of "Grey's Anatomy" won the award in 2005, followed by Chandra Wilson in 2006, who won for the same show. Those two victories -- along with Davis' -- were all for series produced by Shonda Rhimes.
The award for outstanding comedy actress also went to an African-American performer -- Uzo Aduba won her first-ever SAG award for her work on "Orange Is The New Black" at the Jan. 25 ceremony, marking the first year both winning lead actresses were people of color. "Ugly Betty's" America Ferrera won for lead actress in a comedy series in 2006, and was the first Latina to score the prize.
The SAG Awards are an indication that Hollywood is moving in the right direction -- especially after not one actor of color was nominated for the upcoming Academy Awards -- but Davis tells Variety that there is still much progress to be made.
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"It starts with the casting. It starts with the narratives. The narratives have got to be inclusive," Davis said on the red carpet, moments before her big win. "We're in the 21st century now. People are multicultural now. We know more now about the world and what the world looks like, and it's got to be reflected in the scripts."
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