Beyoncé Knowles-Carter has earned her first-ever Emmy Award for her "Beyoncé Bowl" special, and she still has the opportunity to win in two other categories.

The Television Academy announced the winners of the 77th Emmy Awards in juried categories from animation, costume, emerging media programming and motion design on Tuesday. More awards will be handed out on Sept. 6 and 7 at the dual Creative Arts ceremonies and during the Primetime Emmys on Sept. 14.

Beyoncé won an Emmy for outstanding costumes for variety, nonfiction or reality programming as a costume designer for her NFL halftime performance on Netflix, dubbed the “Beyoncé Bowl.” She won alongside her fellow costume designer Shiona Turini, costume supervisor Chelsea Staebell, assistant costume designers Erica Rice and Molly Peters, and head of workroom Timothy White.

Beyoncé is still up for outstanding variety special (live) as an executive producer and performer of the special and outstanding directing for a variety special. "Beyoncé Bowl" also received nods for choreography in variety or reality programming and production design for a variety special.

Produced by Beyoncé's Parkwood Entertainment and Jesse Collins Entertainment, her record-breaking Christmas Day live halftime performance became a standalone special on the streaming site.

During the special, the "Cowboy Carter" creator hit the stage at NRG Stadium, putting on an intricate 12-minute halftime performance as the Baltimore Ravens took down her home team, the Houston Texans, on Christmas Day 2024. It marked the first live performance of songs from her eighth studio album "Cowboy Carter."

Beyoncé was nominated for two Emmys for her visual album "Lemonade" in 2016. Three years later, she received four Emmy nods for her "Homecoming" documentary. She also scored nominations for her 2013 Super Bowl halftime show and an "On The Run Tour" HBO special with husband Jay-Z in 2015.

Of course, the Grammy-winning singer closed out her Cowboy Carter and the Rodeo Chitlin' Circuit Tour at Allegiant Stadium in Vegas on July 26. The concert signaled the end of her "Cowboy Carter" era — a 32-stop stadium tour that spanned the U.S. and Europe. The tour became the highest grossing country tour with over $400 million in earnings.

The Primetime Emmys will be held at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles on Sep. 14.

Follow Caché McClay, the USA TODAY Network's Beyoncé Knowles-Carter reporter, on Instagram, TikTok and X as @cachemcclay.

This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Beyoncé wins first Emmy Award for Netflix special ‘Beyoncé Bowl’

Reporting by Caché McClay, USA TODAY NETWORK / Nashville Tennessean

USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect