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11th Academy Awards

The 11th Academy Awards were held on February 23, 1939, at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles, California,[1] and hosted by Frank Capra.[2]

11th Academy Awards
DateFebruary 23, 1939
SiteBiltmore Hotel
Hosted byFrank Capra
Highlights
Best PictureYou Can't Take It with You
Most awardsThe Adventures of Robin Hood (3)
Most nominationsYou Can't Take it with You (7)
Harry Cohn and Frank Capra

Frank Capra became the first person to win three Best Director awards, to be followed by John Ford (who would go on to win four) and William Wyler. La Grande Illusion was the first non-English language film to be nominated for Best Picture.

This was the first of only two times in Oscar history in which three of the four acting winners had won before; only Fay Bainter was a first-time award winner. The only other time that this happened was at the 67th Academy Awards in 1994. Fay Bainter was the first performer in the Oscars history to receive two acting nominations in the same year, while Spencer Tracy became the first of two actors to win Best Actor two years in a row; the other, Tom Hanks, also did so in 1994.

George Bernard Shaw's screenplay win for Pygmalion made him the first—and, for over 60 years, only—person to win both a Nobel Prize and an Academy Award until Bob Dylan received Nobel Prize in Literature in 2016 after having won the Academy Award for Best Original Song in 2001. Shaw protested his win, roaring, from London:

It's an insult! It's perfect nonsense. My position as playwright is known throughout the world. To offer me an award of this sort is an insult, as if they have never heard of me before—and it's very likely they never have.[3][4][n 1]

Radio coverage was banned at the ceremony. A reporter, George Fischer from Los Angeles' Mutual Radio Network station, KHJ, which had been reporting from the Academy Awards since 1930, locked himself in a booth and was able to broadcast for about 12 minutes before security guards broke down the door. Partial radio coverage was permitted again beginning with the 1942 ceremony.[7]

Winners and nominees edit

 
Frank Capra; Best Picture and Best Director winner
 
Spencer Tracy; Best Actor winner
 
Bette Davis; Best Actress winner
 
Walter Brennan; Best Supporting Actor winner
 
Fay Bainter; Best Supporting Actress winner
 
George Bernard Shaw; Best Screenplay co-winner
 
Erich Wolfgang Korngold; Best Original Score winner
 
Walt Disney; Honorary Academy Award recipient
 
Harry Warner; Honorary Academy Award recipient
 
Deanna Durbin; Juvenile Academy Award recipient
 
Mickey Rooney; Juvenile Academy Award recipient

Nominees were announced on February 5, 1939. Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface.

Academy Honorary Awards edit

Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award edit

Academy Juvenile Awards edit

Academy Juvenile Awards were presented to:

  • Deanna Durbin and Mickey Rooney – "for their significant contribution in bringing to the screen the spirit and personification of youth, and as juvenile players setting a high standard of ability and achievement". (Shared; miniature statuette)

Multiple nominations and awards edit

Films with multiple awards
Awards Film
3 The Adventures of Robin Hood
2 Boys Town
Jezebel
You Can't Take It with You

In memoriam edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Oscars.org (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences). Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved August 10, 2011.
  2. ^ "Every Oscar Host in History: See the Full List From Douglas Fairbanks to Jimmy Kimmel". Oscars.org (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences).
  3. ^ Wallechinsky, David; Wallace, Irving (1975). The People's Almanac. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc. p. 834. ISBN 0-385-04060-1.
  4. ^ Holroyd, Michael (1997). Bernard Shaw: The One-Volume Definitive Edition. London: Chatto & Windus. ISBN 978-0-7011-6279-5.
  5. ^ Pascal, Valerie (1971). The Disciple and his Devil: Gabriel Pascal and Bernard Shaw. London: Michael Joseph. OCLC 740749440.
  6. ^ Burton, Alan; Chibnall, Steve (July 11, 2013). Historical Dictionary of British Cinema. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. p. 715. ISBN 978-0-81-088026-9.
  7. ^ Dunning, John (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio (Revised ed.). New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3. Retrieved September 10, 2019.

Notes edit

  1. ^ This did not prevent him from putting the award—a golden figurine—on his mantelpiece.[5] Shaw was one of four to receive the award, along with Ian Dalrymple, Cecil Lewis and W. P. Lipscomb, who had also worked on adapting Shaw's text.[6]

External links edit

  • Official Website of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

11th, academy, awards, were, held, february, 1939, biltmore, hotel, angeles, california, hosted, frank, capra, datefebruary, 1939sitebiltmore, hotelhosted, byfrank, caprahighlightsbest, pictureyou, take, with, youmost, awardsthe, adventures, robin, hood, most,. The 11th Academy Awards were held on February 23 1939 at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles California 1 and hosted by Frank Capra 2 11th Academy AwardsDateFebruary 23 1939SiteBiltmore HotelHosted byFrank CapraHighlightsBest PictureYou Can t Take It with YouMost awardsThe Adventures of Robin Hood 3 Most nominationsYou Can t Take it with You 7 10th Academy Awards 12th Harry Cohn and Frank CapraFrank Capra became the first person to win three Best Director awards to be followed by John Ford who would go on to win four and William Wyler La Grande Illusion was the first non English language film to be nominated for Best Picture This was the first of only two times in Oscar history in which three of the four acting winners had won before only Fay Bainter was a first time award winner The only other time that this happened was at the 67th Academy Awards in 1994 Fay Bainter was the first performer in the Oscars history to receive two acting nominations in the same year while Spencer Tracy became the first of two actors to win Best Actor two years in a row the other Tom Hanks also did so in 1994 George Bernard Shaw s screenplay win for Pygmalion made him the first and for over 60 years only person to win both a Nobel Prize and an Academy Award until Bob Dylan received Nobel Prize in Literature in 2016 after having won the Academy Award for Best Original Song in 2001 Shaw protested his win roaring from London It s an insult It s perfect nonsense My position as playwright is known throughout the world To offer me an award of this sort is an insult as if they have never heard of me before and it s very likely they never have 3 4 n 1 Radio coverage was banned at the ceremony A reporter George Fischer from Los Angeles Mutual Radio Network station KHJ which had been reporting from the Academy Awards since 1930 locked himself in a booth and was able to broadcast for about 12 minutes before security guards broke down the door Partial radio coverage was permitted again beginning with the 1942 ceremony 7 Contents 1 Winners and nominees 2 Academy Honorary Awards 3 Irving G Thalberg Memorial Award 4 Academy Juvenile Awards 5 Multiple nominations and awards 6 In memoriam 7 See also 8 References 9 Notes 10 External linksWinners and nominees edit nbsp Frank Capra Best Picture and Best Director winner nbsp Spencer Tracy Best Actor winner nbsp Bette Davis Best Actress winner nbsp Walter Brennan Best Supporting Actor winner nbsp Fay Bainter Best Supporting Actress winner nbsp George Bernard Shaw Best Screenplay co winner nbsp Erich Wolfgang Korngold Best Original Score winner nbsp Walt Disney Honorary Academy Award recipient nbsp Harry Warner Honorary Academy Award recipient nbsp Deanna Durbin Juvenile Academy Award recipient nbsp Mickey Rooney Juvenile Academy Award recipient Nominees were announced on February 5 1939 Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface Outstanding Production You Can t Take It with You Frank Capra for Columbia The Adventures of Robin Hood Hal B Wallis and Henry Blanke for Warner Bros Alexander s Ragtime Band Darryl F Zanuck and Harry Joe Brown for 20th Century Fox Boys Town John W Considine Jr for Metro Goldwyn Mayer The Citadel Victor Saville for Metro Goldwyn Mayer Four Daughters Hal B Wallis and Henry Blanke for Warner Bros and First National Grand Illusion Frank Rollmer and Albert Pinkovitch for R A C and World Pictures Jezebel Hal B Wallis and Henry Blanke for Warner Bros Pygmalion Gabriel Pascal for Pascal Film Productions Test Pilot Louis D Lighton for Metro Goldwyn Mayer Best Director Frank Capra You Can t Take It with You Michael Curtiz Angels with Dirty Faces Norman Taurog Boys Town King Vidor The Citadel Michael Curtiz Four DaughtersBest Actor Spencer Tracy Boys Town as Father Edward J Flanagan Charles Boyer Algiers as Pepe le Moko James Cagney Angels with Dirty Faces as William Rocky Sullivan Robert Donat The Citadel as Dr Andrew Manson Leslie Howard Pygmalion as Professor Henry Higgins Best Actress Bette Davis Jezebel as Julie Marsden Fay Bainter White Banners as Hannah Parmalee Wendy Hiller Pygmalion as Eliza Doolittle Norma Shearer Marie Antoinette as Marie Antoinette Margaret Sullavan Three Comrades as Patricia HollmannBest Supporting Actor Walter Brennan Kentucky as Peter Goodwin John Garfield Four Daughters as Mickey Borden Gene Lockhart Algiers as Regis Robert Morley Marie Antoinette as King Louis XVI Basil Rathbone If I Were King as King Louis XI Best Supporting Actress Fay Bainter Jezebel as Aunt Belle Massey Beulah Bondi Of Human Hearts as Mary Wilkins Billie Burke Merrily We Live as Emily Kilbourne Spring Byington You Can t Take It with You as Penelope Penny Sycamore Miliza Korjus The Great Waltz as Carla DonnerBest Original Story Boys Town Eleanore Griffin and Dore Schary Alexander s Ragtime Band Irving Berlin Angels with Dirty Faces Rowland Brown Blockade John Howard Lawson Mad About Music Marcella Burke and Frederick Kohner Test Pilot Frank Wead Best Screenplay Pygmalion George Bernard Shaw Ian Dalrymple Cecil Lewis and W P Lipscomb based on the play by Shaw Boys Town John Meehan and Dore Schary based on a story by Schary and Eleanore Griffin The Citadel Ian Dalrymple Elizabeth Hill and Frank Wead based on the novel by A J Cronin Four Daughters Lenore Coffee and Julius J Epstein based on the short story Sister Act by Fannie Hurst You Can t Take It with You Robert Riskin based on the play by George S Kaufman and Moss HartBest Live Action Short Subject One Reel That Mothers Might Live MGM The Great Heart MGM Timber Toppers 20th Century Fox Best Live Action Short Subject Two Reel Declaration of Independence Warner Bros Swingtime in the Movies Warner Bros They re Always Caught MGMBest Short Subject Cartoon Ferdinand the Bull Walt Disney Productions and RKO Radio Brave Little Tailor Walt Disney Productions and RKO Radio Good Scouts Walt Disney Productions and RKO Radio Hunky and Spunky Paramount Mother Goose Goes Hollywood Walt Disney Productions and RKO Radio Best Original Score The Adventures of Robin Hood Erich Wolfgang Korngold Army Girl Victor Young Block Heads Marvin Hatley Blockade Werner Janssen Breaking the Ice Victor Young The Cowboy and the Lady Alfred Newman If I Were King Richard Hageman Marie Antoinette Herbert Stothart Pacific Liner Russell Bennett Suez Louis Silvers The Young in Heart Franz WaxmanBest Scoring Alexander s Ragtime Band Alfred Newman Carefree Victor Baravalle Girls School Morris Stoloff and Gregory Stone The Goldwyn Follies Alfred Newman Jezebel Max Steiner Mad About Music Charles Previn and Frank Skinner Storm Over Bengal Cy Feuer Sweethearts Herbert Stothart There Goes My Heart Marvin Hatley Tropic Holiday Boris Morros The Young in Heart Franz Waxman Best Song Thanks for the Memory from The Big Broadcast of 1938 Music by Ralph Rainger Lyrics by Leo Robin Always and Always from Mannequin Music by Edward Ward Lyrics by Chet Forrest and Bob Wright Change Partners from Carefree Music and Lyrics by Irving Berlin The Cowboy and the Lady from The Cowboy and the Lady Music by Lionel Newman Lyrics by Arthur Quenzer Dust from Under Western Stars Music and Lyrics by Johnny Marvin Jeepers Creepers from Going Places Music by Harry Warren Lyrics by Johnny Mercer Merrily We Live from Merrily We Live Music by Phil Charig Lyrics by Arthur Quenzer A Mist Over the Moon from The Lady Objects Music by Ben Oakland Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II My Own from That Certain Age Music by Jimmy McHugh Lyrics by Harold Adamson Now It Can Be Told from Alexander s Ragtime Band Music and Lyrics by Irving BerlinBest Sound Recording The Cowboy and the Lady Thomas T Moulton Army Girl Charles L Lootens Four Daughters Nathan Levinson If I Were King Loren L Ryder Merrily We Live Elmer Raguse Suez Edmund H Hansen Sweethearts Douglas Shearer That Certain Age Bernard B Brown Vivacious Lady John O Aalberg You Can t Take It with You John P Livadary Best Art Direction The Adventures of Robin Hood Carl Jules Weyl The Adventures of Tom Sawyer Lyle R Wheeler Alexander s Ragtime Band Bernard Herzbrun and Boris Leven Algiers Alexander Toluboff Carefree Van Nest Polglase The Goldwyn Follies Richard Day Holiday Stephen Goosson and Lionel Banks If I Were King Hans Dreier and John B Goodman Mad About Music Jack Otterson Marie Antoinette Cedric Gibbons Merrily We Live Charles D HallBest Cinematography The Great Waltz Joseph Ruttenberg Algiers James Wong Howe Army Girl Ernest Miller and Harry J Wild The Buccaneer Victor Milner Jezebel Ernest Haller Mad About Music Joseph Valentine Merrily We Live Norbert Brodine Suez Peverell Marley Vivacious Lady Robert De Grasse You Can t Take It with You Joseph Walker The Young in Heart Leon Shamroy Best Film Editing The Adventures of Robin Hood Ralph Dawson Alexander s Ragtime Band Barbara McLean The Great Waltz Tom Held Test Pilot Tom Held You Can t Take It with You Gene HavlickAcademy Honorary Awards editJ Arthur Ball for his outstanding contributions to the advancement of color in Motion Picture Photography Scroll Walt Disney for creating Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs 1937 recognized as a significant screen innovation which has charmed millions and pioneered a great new entertainment field for the motion picture cartoon One statuette and seven miniature statuettes representing the Seven Dwarfs on a stepped base This is a rare case of a film being recognized in two succeeding ceremonies as the film was also nominated for Best Score the previous year at the 10th Academy Awards Gordon Jennings Jan Domela Dev Jennings Irmin Roberts Art Smith Farciot Edouart Loyal Griggs Loren L Ryder Harry D Mills Louis H Mesenkop and Walter Oberst for outstanding achievement in creating Special Photographic and Sound Effects in the Paramount production Spawn of the North Plaque Oliver Marsh and Allen Davey for the color cinematography of the Metro Goldwyn Mayer production Sweethearts Plaque Harry M Warner in recognition of patriotic service in the production of historical short subjects presenting significant episodes in the early struggle of the American people for liberty Scroll Irving G Thalberg Memorial Award editHal B WallisAcademy Juvenile Awards editAcademy Juvenile Awards were presented to Deanna Durbin and Mickey Rooney for their significant contribution in bringing to the screen the spirit and personification of youth and as juvenile players setting a high standard of ability and achievement Shared miniature statuette Multiple nominations and awards editFilms with multiple nominations Nominations Film7 You Can t Take It with You6 Alexander s Ragtime Band5 Boys TownFour DaughtersJezebelMerrily We Live4 The Adventures of Robin HoodAlgiersThe CitadelIf I Were KingMad About MusicMarie AntoinettePygmalion3 Angels with Dirty Faces Army GirlCarefreeThe Cowboy and the LadyThe Great WaltzSuezTest PilotThe Young in Heart2 BlockadeThe Goldwyn FolliesSweetheartsThat Certain AgeVivacious LadyFilms with multiple awards Awards Film3 The Adventures of Robin Hood2 Boys TownJezebelYou Can t Take It with YouIn memoriam editThis section is empty You can help by adding to it October 2018 See also edit1938 in filmReferences edit The 11th Academy Awards 1939 Nominees and Winners Oscars org Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Archived from the original on July 6 2011 Retrieved August 10 2011 Every Oscar Host in History See the Full List From Douglas Fairbanks to Jimmy Kimmel Oscars org Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Wallechinsky David Wallace Irving 1975 The People s Almanac Garden City New York Doubleday amp Company Inc p 834 ISBN 0 385 04060 1 Holroyd Michael 1997 Bernard Shaw The One Volume Definitive Edition London Chatto amp Windus ISBN 978 0 7011 6279 5 Pascal Valerie 1971 The Disciple and his Devil Gabriel Pascal and Bernard Shaw London Michael Joseph OCLC 740749440 Burton Alan Chibnall Steve July 11 2013 Historical Dictionary of British Cinema Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press p 715 ISBN 978 0 81 088026 9 Dunning John 1998 On the Air The Encyclopedia of Old Time Radio Revised ed New York NY Oxford University Press pp 4 5 ISBN 978 0 19 507678 3 Retrieved September 10 2019 Notes edit This did not prevent him from putting the award a golden figurine on his mantelpiece 5 Shaw was one of four to receive the award along with Ian Dalrymple Cecil Lewis and W P Lipscomb who had also worked on adapting Shaw s text 6 External links editOfficial Website of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 11th Academy Awards amp oldid 1207896465, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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