'Succession' star Sarah Snook wins her first Emmy for lead actress in a drama

Jodie Foster and Sarah Snook at the 75th Emmy Awards at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles, CA, Monday, Jan. 15, 2024.
Jodie Foster, left, presents Sarah Snook the award for lead actress, drama, at the 75th Emmy Awards on Monday. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.

Shiv Roy never got to become chief executive of Waystar Royco, but Sarah Snook, the actor who played her, can now claim another impressive title: Emmy winner.

The Australian performer won the Emmy for lead actress in a drama series Monday for her performance as the only daughter of media tycoon Logan Roy in the HBO series "Succession." This was Snook's third nomination for "Succession," but her first time competing in the leading actress category and her first win — a move that reflected her character's increased prominence over the show's four seasons.

Accepting her prize Monday night, Snook dedicated her "biggest thank you" to her daughter, whom she was pregnant with during the last season of the show.

"Really, it was her who carried me," she said, her voice breaking. "The proximity of her life growing inside me gave me the strength to do this."

Read more: 'Succession,' 'The Bear' and 'Beef' dominate 2023 Emmy Awards

Snook gave a nod to the drama's other winners during her acceptance speech, which included Matthew Macfadyen, Jesse Armstrong, Mark Mylod and Kieran Culkin. The show also won the award for drama series.

"We all put our all into it, and the bar was set so high, and I think that's what spurred us on, from every department," she said. "We all gave it our best."

Shiv, Snook's character, is the youngest of Logan's children and was, at least initially, the most liberal, working for a progressive senator. But she eventually left politics and came to work for her father in hopes of one day succeeding him as chief executive.

As Snook said of her character in an interview with The Times last year, "She doesn’t believe in a glass ceiling, because she could buy the building.”

Read more: Sarah Snook wasn't sold on 'Succession' at first. Now, she feels a 'sense of loss'

In the show's acclaimed final season, which concluded in May, Logan's sudden death left the future of Waystar Royco uncertain. Shiv — and the shifting power dynamics in her toxic marriage to Tom — took center stage. The episode Snook submitted for Emmy consideration was "Tailgate Party," in which she and Tom fought bitterly during an election eve party.

Before "Succession" made her into a star on American television, Snook was primarily known for her award-winning work in Australia and for a supporting role in "Steve Jobs."

Read more: Kieran Culkin wins Emmy for lead actor in a drama, asks wife for another baby during acceptance speech

Sign up for L.A. Goes Out, a weekly newsletter about exploring and experiencing Los Angeles from the L.A. Times.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.