
Photo depicts Oscar® winners. Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic; Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times; ABC; Getty
Of the 450 nominees for Best Actress in a Supporting Role since 1937, 13% or 58 were women of color, including 2 of 5 nominees in 2026. The first nomination and win for a woman of color occurred in 1940 (Hattie McDaniel). Overall, 16 women of color have won an Oscar® for Best Actress in a Supporting Role: Hattie McDaniel (1940), Miyoshi Umeki (1958), Rita Moreno (1962), Whoopi Goldberg (1991), Mercedes Ruehl (1992), Jennifer Hudson (2007), Penélope Cruz (2009), Mo'Nique (2010), Octavia Spencer (2012), Lupita Nyong'o (2014), Viola Davis (2017), Regina King (2019), Youn Yuh-jung (2021), Ariana DeBose (2022), Da'Vine Joy Randolph (2024), and Zoe Saldaña (2026).
There have been 35 Black/African American women nominated for this award, beginning with Hattie McDaniel, who also earned the first of 11 wins. Fifteen Hispanic/Latina women have been nominated, beginning in 1955 (Katy Jurado) with the first winner of 5 winners in 1962 (Rita Moreno). In 1958 (Miyoshi Umeki) the first Asian woman was nominated and won. In total Asian women earned 8 nominations and 2 wins. Three Middle Eastern/North African women were nominated. The first was nominated in 2000 (Catherine Keener). Jocelyne LaGarde was the only Indigenous woman nominated (1967). No Middle Eastern/North African or Indigenous women have won the award.
of 450 nominees, only 58 were women of color
Hattie McDaniel was the first underrepresented nominee and winner (1940)
Zoe Saldaña was the most recent underrepresented winner (2025)
There were 53 years when no underrepresented women were nominated