Notable Firsts or Records
Re: Notable Firsts or Records
Thanks tootpadu for the clarification.
My previous email has been modified to remove Melvyn Douglas.
My previous email has been modified to remove Melvyn Douglas.
Re: Notable Firsts or Records
Melvyn Douglas got another nomination in Lead for I Never Sang For My Father.dbensics wrote:Name all performers who have a perfect record of Oscar wins-to-nominations, where the total nominations > 1.
All these performers are a perfect 2 for 2.
Helen Hayes
Luise Rainer
Vivien Leigh
Hilary Swank
Melvyn Douglas
Kevin Spacey
Christoph Waltz
Re: Notable Firsts or Records
When Christoph Waltz won for Django Unchained and Sally Field lost for Lincoln they switched places on this particular record list.
Name all performers who have a perfect record of Oscar wins-to-nominations, where the total nominations > 1.
All these performers are a perfect 2 for 2.
Helen Hayes
Luise Rainer
Vivien Leigh
Hilary Swank
Kevin Spacey
Christoph Waltz
Name all performers who have a perfect record of Oscar wins-to-nominations, where the total nominations > 1.
All these performers are a perfect 2 for 2.
Helen Hayes
Luise Rainer
Vivien Leigh
Hilary Swank
Kevin Spacey
Christoph Waltz
Last edited by dbensics on Tue Mar 12, 2013 6:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Notable Firsts or Records
Another interesting statistic...
Life of Pi is the first film not rated PG-13 or R by the MPAA to win the Oscar for Best Director since Out of Africa (1985), a gap of 27 years.
Life of Pi is the first film not rated PG-13 or R by the MPAA to win the Oscar for Best Director since Out of Africa (1985), a gap of 27 years.
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Re: Notable Firsts or Records
Oscar year 1968 would also technically count in the list of six different winning pictures in the top six categories.
Oliver
Charly
The Lion in Winter
Funny Girl
The Subject was Roses
Rosemary's Baby
The tie between Hepburn and Streisand makes up for the double-win by Oliver for Best Picture and Best Director.
Oliver
Charly
The Lion in Winter
Funny Girl
The Subject was Roses
Rosemary's Baby
The tie between Hepburn and Streisand makes up for the double-win by Oliver for Best Picture and Best Director.
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Re: Notable Firsts or Records
This is a very interesting stat, and what strikes me especially about it is that the categories that made it possible -- esp. in the 80s -- were the specialty techs: visual effects, sound editing, makeup. This year, by fluke, we had four different films win those three categories; that each had at least 5 nominations seems off the charts unlikely.Greg wrote:Outside of the special film categories (Foreign Language Film, Animated, Documentary, and Short Subjects - and this year not for for Foreign Language Film), this is the first Oscars since the one for the films 1975 where no award went to a film with fewer than 4 nominations
Re: Notable Firsts or Records
Outside of the special film categories (Foreign Language Film, Animated, Documentary, and Short Subjects - and this year not for for Foreign Language Film), this is the first Oscars since the one for the films 1975 where no award went to a film with fewer than 4 nominations; and, it is the first time ever that every film lost in the majority of categories for which it was nominated.
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Re: Notable Firsts or Records
Now he just has to pull an Affleck/Howard/Spielberg and win the DGA but not get nominated for the Oscar.FilmFan720 wrote:It's even crazier than that...it's lose the DGA and not get nominated for the Oscar, then win the DGA and lose the Oscar, then win the DGA and win the Oscar, and then lose the DGA and win the Oscar!Mister Tee wrote:Ang Lee's wildly checkered career with the directing branch/DGA/Academy voters seems worth a chapter all its own. He's got to be the only director to win the DGA and lose the Oscar, then lose the DGA and win the Oscar, yes?
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Re: Notable Firsts or Records
It's even crazier than that...it's lose the DGA and not get nominated for the Oscar, then win the DGA and lose the Oscar, then win the DGA and win the Oscar, and then lose the DGA and win the Oscar!Mister Tee wrote:Ang Lee's wildly checkered career with the directing branch/DGA/Academy voters seems worth a chapter all its own. He's got to be the only director to win the DGA and lose the Oscar, then lose the DGA and win the Oscar, yes?
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Re: Notable Firsts or Records
Also Jack Nicholson/James L. Brooks, for Terms of Endearment and As Good As It Gets.dws1982 wrote:There's also Dianne Wiest/Woody Allen. Walter Brennan/William Wyler too...I guess Wyler replaced Howard Hawks on Come and Get It, after Hawks had a run-in with Sam Goldwyn, and there's debate over how much of the completed film was actually directed by Wyler.anonymous1980 wrote:I don't know but is Christoph Waltz the first person to win more than Oscar for performances directed by the same director?
The Waltz win joins a select group of repeat supporting actors within a five-year span -- a group obviously including Walter Brennan, but also Anthony Quinn, Peter Ustinov and Jason Robards.
Both screenplay winners were for films not nominated for best director. In the two-screenplay-category era, the only other example I can find is 1995, where Sense and Sensibility and The Usual Suspects won.
Ang Lee's wildly checkered career with the directing branch/DGA/Academy voters seems worth a chapter all its own. He's got to be the only director to win the DGA and lose the Oscar, then lose the DGA and win the Oscar, yes?
Re: Notable Firsts or Records
Melvyn Douglas won his second two years after Robards did though it was in a much larger timespan.OscarGuy wrote:I believe Waltz is the first actor to win two Supporting Actor awards in over 30 years (Jason Robards was the previous)...unless I'm forgetting someone obvious.
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Re: Notable Firsts or Records
I believe Waltz is the first actor to win two Supporting Actor awards in over 30 years (Jason Robards was the previous)...unless I'm forgetting someone obvious.
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Re: Notable Firsts or Records
There's also Dianne Wiest/Woody Allen. Walter Brennan/William Wyler too...I guess. Wyler replaced Howard Hawks on Come and Get It, after Hawks had a run-in with Sam Goldwyn, and there's debate over how much of the completed film was actually directed by Wyler.anonymous1980 wrote:I don't know but is Christoph Waltz the first person to win more than Oscar for performances directed by the same director?
Last edited by dws1982 on Mon Feb 25, 2013 1:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Notable Firsts or Records
Brenda Chapman is the first female to win in the Best Animated Feature category. Leaving Cinematography the only category left where no female has won or even been nominated (apart from of course the male acting categories).
Ang Lee is the first person of color to win 2 Best Director Oscars.
I don't know but is Christoph Waltz the first person to win more than Oscar for performances directed by the same director?
Ang Lee is the first person of color to win 2 Best Director Oscars.
I don't know but is Christoph Waltz the first person to win more than Oscar for performances directed by the same director?
Notable Firsts or Records
Obviously: First tie in Sound Editing, and I think, the first tie in a technical category. Previous ties were in acting categories or in the Documentary/Short Films categories. At least until this year, ties in the Documentary/Short Films categories were far more likely to happen, from a mathematical standpoint, because the voting pool was much smaller.
Another obvious one (mentioned on the show last night): Daniel Day-Lewis is the first three-time Best Actor winner.
This is only the fourth year in Oscar history where the top six awards went to six different movies. The other years were 2005, 1956, and 1952. (This is the movie year, not the year the awards were given.) In all four cases, the Best Picture winner either tied for the most awards of the night, or saw another movie win the most awards. In all four cases, the Best Director winner was a multiple winner in that category, and they also won Director more than once for films that didn't win Best Director. (Ang Lee won 2005 and 2012 for movies that lost Best Picture; Stevens in 56, after winning in 51 for a movie that lost Picture; The Quiet Man was Ford's third directing Oscar for a movie that lost Picture.) The Best Supporting Actor winner in all four years would ultimately become a two-time Oscar winner.
I'll add some more if I think of anything. Feel free to add your own.
Another obvious one (mentioned on the show last night): Daniel Day-Lewis is the first three-time Best Actor winner.
This is only the fourth year in Oscar history where the top six awards went to six different movies. The other years were 2005, 1956, and 1952. (This is the movie year, not the year the awards were given.) In all four cases, the Best Picture winner either tied for the most awards of the night, or saw another movie win the most awards. In all four cases, the Best Director winner was a multiple winner in that category, and they also won Director more than once for films that didn't win Best Director. (Ang Lee won 2005 and 2012 for movies that lost Best Picture; Stevens in 56, after winning in 51 for a movie that lost Picture; The Quiet Man was Ford's third directing Oscar for a movie that lost Picture.) The Best Supporting Actor winner in all four years would ultimately become a two-time Oscar winner.
I'll add some more if I think of anything. Feel free to add your own.