Ways the 2017 Emmys broke barriers

The 2017 Emmy Awards were historic on many fronts.

— -- By many accounts, Sunday night's Emmy Awards was historic — including for women, Hulu and diversity.

Then there were the female stars who made history last night. Keep reading for more on who made history at the 2017 Emmy Awards.

Lena Waithe

"My LGBTQI family," she said, accepting her award, "I see each and every one of you. The things that make us different, those are our superpowers."

Julia Louis-Dreyfus

"Veep" star Julia Louis-Dreyfus made history as the first performer to win six Emmys for the same role, taking the best actress in a comedy series award again this year for playing Selina Meyer in the HBO series.

"This ... continues to be the role of a lifetime and an adventure of utter joy," Louis-Dreyfus said when accepting the award.

Donald Glover became the first black director to win for outstanding directing of a comedy series, for work on his FX show, "Atlanta." He also took home the trophy for lead actor in a comedy series.

"I'm glad I was able to make history, but that's not what I was trying to do," he said backstage. "I was just trying to make the best product. I believe the people deserve quality and when they taste it, they see their own value and they don't ask for less. So I just want to make a really good show."

Sterling K. Brown

"This Is Us" star Sterling K. Brown didn't make history Sunday night, but he was the first black man in two decades to win the Emmy for lead actor in a drama series. During his speech, which was cut short, he gave a nod to Andre Braugher, the last black actor to win the award, in 1988 for his work on "Homicide: Life on the Street."

"It is my supreme honor to follow in your footsteps," Brown said.

Riz Ahmed

Despite his and others' historic wins that night, he told reporters backstage, "I don't know if any one person's win of an award or one person snagging one role or one person doing very well changes something that's a systemic issue of inclusion."

"I think that's something that happens slowly over time," Ahmed added. "If there are enough isolated examples of success, then maybe the dots start joining up and it's not as slow a process as it sometimes is."