11 Women Who Made History This Year

By Talia Lakritz

In January, “Pose” star Michaela Jae “Mj” Rodriguez made history as the first trans actor to win a Golden Globe Award.

Rodriguez beat out Jennifer Aniston, Uzo Aduba, Elizabeth Moss, and Christine Baranski to win the award for best actress in a TV drama at the Golden Globes, which were not televised this year. She won the award for her performance in the Emmy Award-winning show “Pose,” which released its final season last summer.

At age 19, Zara Rutherford became the youngest woman to fly solo around the world.

Rutherford, whose father is a former British military pilot, circumnavigated the globe in her single-seater sport plane over five months. She broke two world records in the process as both the youngest woman to fly around the world and the first woman to do so in a microlight aircraft, according to the Washington Post.

American speed skater Erin Jackson won a gold medal in Beijing in February, making her the first Black woman to win the event at the Winter Olympics.

Jackson took home the gold in the 500-meter speed-skating event.

“I know I will be reflecting on this for a long time to come but if I had one thing to share it would be this: If a Black girl from central Florida can stand on the top step of an Olympic podium on the other side of the world as a champion ice skater, well, perhaps it’s true that anything is possible,” Jackson said in a statement shared with Insider’s Gabi Stevenson.

Speed skater Suzanne Schulting of the Netherlands set a new world record in the women’s 1,000-meter short track.

Schulting, the defending Olympic champion, finished the quarterfinals race with a record time of 1:26.514. In the finals, she finished in 1:28.391 and won gold.

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Speed skater Ireen Wüst of the Netherlands became the first athlete in history to win an individual gold medal at five different Olympic Games.

Wüst has won a total of 12 medals, including six gold, since her first Olympics in 2006. At 35 years old, she is also the oldest speed skater to win a gold medal.

At 49 years and 348 days old, German speed skater Claudia Pechstein set a new record for the oldest woman to ever compete in the Winter Olympics.

Pechstein is also the only woman to ever compete in eight Olympic Games. She has won a total of nine medals: five gold, two silver, and two bronze.

Australian golfer Hannah Green became the first woman to win a mixed-gender professional golf tournament.

Green made history as the winner of Australia’s TPS Murray River event on February 20, Reuters reported. She was also the 2019 Women’s PGA Championship winner.

In March, Ariana DeBose became the first openly queer woman of color and the first Afro-Latina actress to win a SAG Award for acting.

DeBose won best supporting actress for her role as Anita in “West Side Story.”

“It’s indicative that doors are opening,” DeBose told reporters backstage in the virtual SAG media room after her win, according to NBC News. “It’s an honor to an Afro Latina queer women of color and a dancer and a singer and an actor.”

Jane Campion’s second Oscar nomination for best director made her the first woman to receive multiple Oscar nominations for directing. She went on to win the award at this year’s ceremony.

Campion’s first nomination was in 1994 for “The Piano,” although she did not win that year.

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Her second nomination came this year for “The Power of the Dog”and marked the first time a woman had received multiple nominations in the category. She won the award, which meant it was also the first time that two female directors won the award back-to-back — Chloe Zhao won for “Nomadland” last year.

DeBose made history again as the first openly queer actor of color and the first Afro-Latina actress to win an Oscar.

DeBose won the Academy Award for best supporting actress for her role as Anita in “West Side Story.”

“Imagine this little girl in the back seat of a white Ford Focus. When you look into her eyes you see an openly queer woman of color, an Afro Latina, who found her strength in life through art. And that’s what I believe we’re here to celebrate,” DeBose said in her acceptance speech. “So to anybody who’s ever questioned your identity ever, ever, ever, or you find yourself living in the grey spaces, I promise you this: There is indeed a place for us.”

Billie Eilish won an Oscar for best original song, making her the first Academy Award winner born in the 21st century.

Eilish, who was born in December 2001, and her brother and collaborator, Finneas O’Connell, took home the award for best original song for their James Bond theme “No Time to Die.”

After accepting the award, a shocked Eilish said, “Whoa. Oh my God. You guys! This is so unbelievable, I could scream!”

Although just 20 years old, Eilish is not the youngest ever recipient of the award — Markéta Irglová won best original song for “Falling Slowly” from “Once” in 2008, when she was 19.

See also  TIME Magazine's Person of the Year 2017 - The Silence Breakers.

The Senate confirmed Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Supreme Court nomination in April, making her the first Black woman to become a Supreme Court justice.

Jackson is poised to serve as the 116th justice and the first Black woman on the Supreme Court in its 233-year history once retiring Associate Justice Stephen Breyer, 83, steps down this summer, Insider’s Oma Seddiq reported.

She also makes history as the first former public defender elevated to the top court, bringing a diverse legal background to the bench that was highly sought after by the Biden White House. 

Three Republicans— Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, and Mitt Romney of Utah — broke with their party and joined all 50 Democrats in the historic vote, a showing of bipartisanship that has become increasingly rare for Supreme Court confirmations.

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