Before taking the stage to accept his award, LeBlanc kissed his co-star and date for the evening, Michelle Stafford, as well as heading to The Bold and the Beautiful's section of the audience to give a kiss to Y&R co-creator, Lee Phillip Bell. On stage, however, LeBlanc offered one of the more cryptic acceptance speeches of the night, a speech that on several occasions referred to soup.
Backstage, LeBlanc attempted to clarify exactly what he'd ben referring to.
"Does anyone know that allusion or did I totally lose [everyone]? It is one of my favorite quotes in theater. The poor, homeless woman is looking at [artist Andy] Warhol's Campbells Soup [painting]. And all through that play, she can't figure out, 'Is it soup or is it art' And at the end, she figured it out."
"These guys were legends -- and are still -- when I was beginning [in daytime]," LeBlanc stated. "They're inspirations. There couldn't be a classier bunch of guys. I was in the deep end of the pool."
Though this year marked LeBlanc's third win in the category, this year he showed surprising emotion.
"Someone texted me right before and said 'Be present.' Don't ever be present on a stage when you're getting a prize! You'll just dissolve into tears," LeBlanc joked of his on-stage reaction.
LeBlanc, who underwent surgery for a broken wrist earlier this month, also mused that despite his tears he is still "pleasant and delightful... and well-medicated."
Haskell has been nominated twice for a Daytime Emmy -- and twice won. Her first win, in 1994, was propelled by a brilliant performance in a storyline revolving around her character's rape by a group of frat brothers. This year, Haskell secured her win through a stellar performance in a controversial storyline where her character, suffering memory loss from an accident, fell in love with one of her rapists. As it turns out, fans were not the only ones who may have had some hesitation over the plot twist.
"I'll tell you what, I was very concerned," Haskell ceded. "I had to trust the people that are writing for me. It's my job and I do it to the best of my ability. It doesn't always agree with everything that I maybe think that would happen, but that's drama and I certainly am not out to offend people. I hope that they understand that this is a drama series and I will do my best to stay true to the character."
"Everybody wants to know if he's coming out here," Haskell said of the big question of the night. "Not without me! That's a lot to digest with the kids and everything. So we'll just see."
One Life to Live now holds a whopping eleven wins in the Lead Actress category, more than twice the total of the second-place soap. Haskell's castmate, Erika Slezak (Viki Buchanan) has six wins, former OLTL star Judith Light (ex-Karen Wolek) picked up two consecutive wins in the 1980s, and Robin Strasser (Dorian Lord) and Hillary B. Smith (Nora Hanen) each have a previous win.