"First Lady of Song" Ella Fitzgerald becomes the first Black woman to at the Recording Academy’s inaugural awards show on May 4, 1959.
During the event at the Beverly Hilton in Los Angeles, Fitzgerald took home two of 28 awards for best jazz and female vocal performances. “Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Irving Berlin Song Book” bested performances by Doris Day, Eydie Gorme, Peggy Lee and Keely Smith for best female vocal performance. In contrast “Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Duke Ellington Song Book” won for jazz performance.
That year, Count Basie became the first Black man to win a Grammy, also taking home two awards, for best jazz group performance and best performance by a dance band.
Born on April 25, 1917, Fitzgerald made her first stage performance at the Apollo Theater in 1934, when she won first prize in an amateur singing competition. A year later, her song “A-Tisket, A-Tasket” became a hit and her career soared. Over the course of her career, Fitzgerald sold more than 40 million albums, won 13 Grammys (including the first Grammy’s lifetime achievement award given to a woman, in 1967), received the Kennedy Center Honors in 1979, and was given the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1992. at the age of 79.