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35th Academy Awards

The 35th Academy Awards, honoring the best in film for 1962, were held on April 8, 1963, at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in Santa Monica, California, hosted by Frank Sinatra.

35th Academy Awards
DateApril 8, 1963
SiteSanta Monica Civic Auditorium
Hosted byFrank Sinatra
Produced byArthur Freed
Directed byRichard Dunlap
Highlights
Best PictureLawrence of Arabia
Most awardsLawrence of Arabia (7)
Most nominationsLawrence of Arabia (10)
TV in the United States
NetworkABC

The year's most successful film was David Lean's Lawrence of Arabia, with 10 nominations and 7 wins, including Best Picture and Lean's second win for Best Director. For his role as T. E. Lawrence, Peter O'Toole received his first of eight career nominations for Best Actor, all unsuccessful; as of the 94th Academy Awards, O'Toole and Glenn Close share the record for the most acting nominations with no wins. To date, Lawrence of Arabia is the only Best Picture winner with no female speaking roles.

Arthur Penn's The Miracle Worker earned the rare distinction of winning two acting Oscars (Best Actress for Anne Bancroft and Best Supporting Actress for Patty Duke) without a nomination for Best Picture. The only other film to do this to date was Hud, the following year.

Ceremony Edit

The Best Actress Oscar occasioned the last act of the long-running feud between Joan Crawford and Bette Davis. They had starred together for the first time in What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?, a surprise hit the previous summer. Davis was nominated for her role as the title character, a faded child star who humiliates the wheelchair-using sister who eclipsed her fame in adulthood, while Crawford was not.[1]

Crawford told the other nominated actresses that, as a courtesy, she would accept their awards for them should they be unavailable on the night of the ceremony. Davis did not object as her rival had often done this, but, on the night of the ceremony, she was livid when Crawford took the stage to cheerfully accept the award on behalf of Anne Bancroft, who had a Broadway commitment. Davis believed that Crawford had told other Oscar voters to vote for The Miracle Worker star in order to upstage her. The rekindled animosity between the two resulted in Crawford leaving the cast of Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte, a planned follow-up to Baby Jane that began filming the next summer, early in production.[1]

Awards Edit

 
David Lean, Best Director winner
 
Gregory Peck, Best Actor winner
 
Anne Bancroft, Best Actress winner
 
Ed Begley, Best Supporting Actor winner
 
Patty Duke, Best Supporting Actress winner, youngest person to receive an Oscar in a competitive category at the time[2]
 
Pietro Germi, Best Story and Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen co-winner
 
Henry Mancini, Best Song co-winner
 
Johnny Mercer, Best Song co-winner

Nominations announced on February 25, 1963. Winners in each category are listed first and highlighted with boldface text.[3]

Best Picture Best Director
Best Actor Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Best Supporting Actress
Best Story and Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen Best Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium
Best Foreign Language Film Best Documentary Feature
Best Documentary Short Best Live Action Short Subject
Best Short Subjects – Cartoons Best Music Score — Substantially Original
Best Scoring of Music — Adaptation or Treatment Best Song
Best Sound Best Art Direction, Black-and-White
Best Art Direction, Color Best Cinematography, Black-and-White
Best Cinematography, Color Best Costume Design, Black-and-White
Best Costume Design, Color Best Film Editing
Best Special Effects

Honorary Academy Awards Edit

Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award Edit

Presenters and performers Edit

Presenters Edit

Performers Edit

Multiple nominations and awards Edit

Notes Edit

A^ : During pre-production on Lawrence of Arabia, producer Sam Spiegel and director David Lean were unhappy with Michael Wilson's original screenplay, so Spiegel asked playwright Robert Bolt to rewrite the script, as Spiegel wanted to get the film rights of Bolt's play A Man for All Seasons. Bolt found the script lacking in good dialogue and also character depth. He essentially wrote the whole script, using T. E. Lawrence's book, The Seven Pillars of Wisdom, as his starting point. While Bolt rewrote the whole script, he still retained the characterization of all of the characters found in Wilson's original script. It was decided that Bolt would be credited as the sole writer of Lawrence of Arabia and not Wilson, because he was blacklisted at the time. The nomination for Wilson was granted on September 26, 1995, by the Academy Board of Directors, after research at the WGA found that the then-blacklisted writer shared the screenwriting credit with Bolt.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Longworth, Karina (March 10, 2017). "Did Bette and Joan Really Have a Feud?". Slate. from the original on April 1, 2017. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  2. ^ "Oscar-winning former child star Patty Duke dies, age 69". USA TODAY. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  3. ^ "The 35th Academy Awards (1963) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. from the original on April 26, 2016. Retrieved May 12, 2016.

External links Edit

  • The 35th Annual Academy Awards Synopsis at IMDb
  • The 35th Annual Academy Awards "Episode" at IMDb

35th, academy, awards, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2018. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources 35th Academy Awards news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The 35th Academy Awards honoring the best in film for 1962 were held on April 8 1963 at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in Santa Monica California hosted by Frank Sinatra 35th Academy AwardsDateApril 8 1963SiteSanta Monica Civic AuditoriumHosted byFrank SinatraProduced byArthur FreedDirected byRichard DunlapHighlightsBest PictureLawrence of ArabiaMost awardsLawrence of Arabia 7 Most nominationsLawrence of Arabia 10 TV in the United StatesNetworkABC 34th Academy Awards 36th The year s most successful film was David Lean s Lawrence of Arabia with 10 nominations and 7 wins including Best Picture and Lean s second win for Best Director For his role as T E Lawrence Peter O Toole received his first of eight career nominations for Best Actor all unsuccessful as of the 94th Academy Awards O Toole and Glenn Close share the record for the most acting nominations with no wins To date Lawrence of Arabia is the only Best Picture winner with no female speaking roles Arthur Penn s The Miracle Worker earned the rare distinction of winning two acting Oscars Best Actress for Anne Bancroft and Best Supporting Actress for Patty Duke without a nomination for Best Picture The only other film to do this to date was Hud the following year Contents 1 Ceremony 2 Awards 3 Honorary Academy Awards 3 1 Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award 4 Presenters and performers 4 1 Presenters 4 2 Performers 5 Multiple nominations and awards 6 Notes 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksCeremony EditThe Best Actress Oscar occasioned the last act of the long running feud between Joan Crawford and Bette Davis They had starred together for the first time in What Ever Happened to Baby Jane a surprise hit the previous summer Davis was nominated for her role as the title character a faded child star who humiliates the wheelchair using sister who eclipsed her fame in adulthood while Crawford was not 1 Crawford told the other nominated actresses that as a courtesy she would accept their awards for them should they be unavailable on the night of the ceremony Davis did not object as her rival had often done this but on the night of the ceremony she was livid when Crawford took the stage to cheerfully accept the award on behalf of Anne Bancroft who had a Broadway commitment Davis believed that Crawford had told other Oscar voters to vote for The Miracle Worker star in order to upstage her The rekindled animosity between the two resulted in Crawford leaving the cast of Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte a planned follow up to Baby Jane that began filming the next summer early in production 1 Awards Edit nbsp David Lean Best Director winner nbsp Gregory Peck Best Actor winner nbsp Anne Bancroft Best Actress winner nbsp Ed Begley Best Supporting Actor winner nbsp Patty Duke Best Supporting Actress winner youngest person to receive an Oscar in a competitive category at the time 2 nbsp Pietro Germi Best Story and Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen co winner nbsp Henry Mancini Best Song co winner nbsp Johnny Mercer Best Song co winner Nominations announced on February 25 1963 Winners in each category are listed first and highlighted with boldface text 3 Best Picture Best DirectorLawrence of Arabia Sam Spiegel producer The Longest Day Darryl F Zanuck producer The Music Man Morton DaCosta producer Mutiny on the Bounty Aaron Rosenberg producer To Kill a Mockingbird Alan J Pakula producer David Lean Lawrence of Arabia Frank Perry David and Lisa Pietro Germi Divorce Italian Style Arthur Penn The Miracle Worker Robert Mulligan To Kill a MockingbirdBest Actor Best ActressGregory Peck To Kill a Mockingbird as Atticus Finch Burt Lancaster Birdman of Alcatraz as Robert Stroud Jack Lemmon Days of Wine and Roses as Joe Clay Marcello Mastroianni Divorce Italian Style as Ferdinando Cefalu Peter O Toole Lawrence of Arabia as T E Lawrence Anne Bancroft The Miracle Worker as Anne Sullivan Bette Davis What Ever Happened to Baby Jane as Jane Hudson Katharine Hepburn Long Day s Journey into Night as Mary Tyrone Geraldine Page Sweet Bird of Youth as Alexandra Del Lago Lee Remick Days of Wine and Roses as Kirsten Arnesen ClayBest Supporting Actor Best Supporting ActressEd Begley Sweet Bird of Youth as Tom Boss Finley Victor Buono What Ever Happened to Baby Jane as Edwin Flagg Telly Savalas Birdman of Alcatraz as Feto Gomez Omar Sharif Lawrence of Arabia as Sherif Ali Terence Stamp Billy Budd as Billy Budd Patty Duke The Miracle Worker as Helen Keller Mary Badham To Kill a Mockingbird as Scout Shirley Knight Sweet Bird of Youth as Heavenly Finley Angela Lansbury The Manchurian Candidate as Mrs Eleanor Iselin Thelma Ritter Birdman of Alcatraz as Elizabeth McCartney StroudBest Story and Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen Best Screenplay Based on Material from Another MediumDivorce Italian Style Ennio de Concini Alfredo Giannetti and Pietro Germi Freud The Secret Passion Story by Charles Kaufman Screenplay by Charles Kaufman and Wolfgang Reinhardt Last Year at Marienbad Alain Robbe Grillet That Touch of Mink Stanley Shapiro and Nate Monaster Through a Glass Darkly Ingmar Bergman To Kill a Mockingbird Horton Foote David and Lisa Eleanor Perry Lawrence of Arabia Robert Bolt and Michael Wilson A Lolita Vladimir Nabokov The Miracle Worker William GibsonBest Foreign Language Film Best Documentary FeatureSundays and Cybele France Electra Greece The Four Days of Naples Italy Keeper of Promises The Given Word Brazil Tlayucan Mexico Black Fox AlvoradaBest Documentary Short Best Live Action Short SubjectDylan Thomas The John Glenn Story The Road to the Wall Heureux Anniversaire Big City Blues The Cadillac The Cliff Dwellers PanBest Short Subjects Cartoons Best Music Score Substantially OriginalThe Hole Icarus Montgolfier Wright Now Hear This Self Defense for Cowards A Symposium on Popular Songs Lawrence of Arabia Maurice Jarre Freud Jerry Goldsmith Mutiny on the Bounty Bronislaw Kaper Taras Bulba Franz Waxman To Kill a Mockingbird Elmer BernsteinBest Scoring of Music Adaptation or Treatment Best SongThe Music Man Ray Heindorf Billy Rose s Jumbo Georgie Stoll Gigot Michel Magne Gypsy Frank Perkins The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm Leigh Harline Days of Wine and Roses from Days of Wine and Roses Music by Henry Mancini Lyric by Johnny Mercer Love Song From Mutiny on the Bounty Follow Me from Mutiny on the Bounty Music by Bronislaw Kaper Lyric by Paul Francis Webster Song From Two for the Seesaw Second Chance from Two for the Seesaw Music by Andre Previn Lyric by Dory Langdon Tender Is the Night from Tender Is the Night Music by Sammy Fain Lyric by Paul Francis Webster Walk on the Wild Side from Walk on the Wild Side Music by Elmer Bernstein Lyric by Mack DavidBest Sound Best Art Direction Black and WhiteLawrence of Arabia John Cox Bon Voyage Robert O Cook The Music Man George R Groves That Touch of Mink Waldon O Watson What Ever Happened to Baby Jane Joseph D Kelly To Kill a Mockingbird Art Direction Alexander Golitzen and Henry Bumstead Set Decoration Oliver Emert Days of Wine and Roses Art Direction Joseph C Wright Set Decoration George James Hopkins The Longest Day Art Direction Ted Haworth Leon Barsacq and Vincent Korda Set Decoration Gabriel Bechir Period of Adjustment Art Direction George Davis and Edward Carfagno Set Decoration Henry Grace and Richard Pefferle The Pigeon That Took Rome Art Direction Hal Pereira and Roland Anderson Set Decoration Samuel M Comer and Frank R McKelvyBest Art Direction Color Best Cinematography Black and WhiteLawrence of Arabia Art Direction John Box and John Stoll Set Decoration Dario Simoni The Music Man Art Direction Paul Groesse Set Decoration George James Hopkins Mutiny on the Bounty Art Direction George Davis and Joseph McMillan Johnson Set Decoration Henry Grace and Hugh Hunt That Touch of Mink Art Direction Alexander Golitzen and Robert Clatworthy Set Decoration George Milo The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm Art Direction George Davis and Edward Carfagno Set Decoration Henry Grace and Richard Pefferle The Longest Day Jean Bourgoin and Walter Wottitz Birdman of Alcatraz Burnett Guffey To Kill a Mockingbird Russell Harlan Two for the Seesaw Ted D McCord What Ever Happened to Baby Jane Ernest HallerBest Cinematography Color Best Costume Design Black and WhiteLawrence of Arabia Freddie Young Gypsy Harry Stradling Hatari Russell Harlan Mutiny on the Bounty Robert Surtees The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm Paul C Vogel What Ever Happened to Baby Jane Norma Koch Days of Wine and Roses Don Feld The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance Edith Head The Miracle Worker Ruth Morley Phaedra Denny VachliotiBest Costume Design Color Best Film EditingThe Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm Mary Wills Bon Voyage Bill Thomas Gypsy Orry Kelly The Music Man Dorothy Jeakins My Geisha Edith Head Lawrence of Arabia Anne V Coates The Longest Day Samuel E Beetley The Manchurian Candidate Ferris Webster The Music Man William H Ziegler Mutiny on the Bounty John McSweeney Jr Best Special EffectsThe Longest Day Visual Effects by Robert MacDonald Audible Effects by Jacques Maumont Mutiny on the Bounty Visual Effects by A Arnold Gillespie Audible Effects by Milo B LoryHonorary Academy Awards EditJean Hersholt Humanitarian Award Edit Steve BroidyPresenters and performers EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Presenters Edit George Chakiris Presenter Best Supporting Actress Wendell Corey Presenter Best Foreign Language Film Joan Crawford Presenter Best Director Bette Davis Presenter Writing Awards Olivia de Havilland Presenter Best Picture Van Heflin Presenter Short Subjects Awards Audrey Hepburn and Eva Marie Saint Presenter Best Costume Design Gene Kelly Presenter Best Art Direction Sophia Loren Presenter Best Actor Karl Malden Presenter Best Film Editing Rita Moreno Presenter Best Supporting Actor Donna Reed Presenter Best Cinematography Ginger Rogers Presenter Best Original Score and Best Original Song Maximilian Schell Presenter Best Actress Miyoshi Umeki Presenter Documentary Awards Shelley Winters Presenter Best Sound Recording and Best Special Effects Performers Edit Alfred Newman musical director Robert Goulet Days of Wine and Roses from Days of Wine and Roses Love Song from Mutiny on the Bounty Follow Me from Mutiny on the Bounty Song from Two for the Seesaw Second Chance from Two for the Seesaw Tender Is the Night from Tender Is the Night and Walk on the Wild Side from Walk on the Wild Side Multiple nominations and awards EditThe following nineteen films received multiple nominations 10 nominations Lawrence of Arabia 8 nominations To Kill a Mockingbird 7 nominations Mutiny on the Bounty 6 nominations The Music Man 5 nominations Days of Wine and Roses The Longest Day The Miracle Worker and What Ever Happened to Baby Jane 4 nominations Birdman of Alcatraz and The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm 3 nominations Divorce Italian Style Gypsy Sweet Bird of Youth and That Touch of Mink 2 nominations Bon Voyage David and Lisa Freud The Secret Passion The Manchurian Candidate and Two for the Seesaw The following four films received multiple awards 7 awards Lawrence of Arabia 3 awards To Kill a Mockingbird 2 awards The Longest Day and The Miracle WorkerNotes EditA During pre production on Lawrence of Arabia producer Sam Spiegel and director David Lean were unhappy with Michael Wilson s original screenplay so Spiegel asked playwright Robert Bolt to rewrite the script as Spiegel wanted to get the film rights of Bolt s play A Man for All Seasons Bolt found the script lacking in good dialogue and also character depth He essentially wrote the whole script using T E Lawrence s book The Seven Pillars of Wisdom as his starting point While Bolt rewrote the whole script he still retained the characterization of all of the characters found in Wilson s original script It was decided that Bolt would be credited as the sole writer of Lawrence of Arabia and not Wilson because he was blacklisted at the time The nomination for Wilson was granted on September 26 1995 by the Academy Board of Directors after research at the WGA found that the then blacklisted writer shared the screenwriting credit with Bolt See also Edit5th Grammy Awards 14th Primetime Emmy Awards 15th Primetime Emmy Awards 16th British Academy Film Awards 17th Tony Awards 20th Golden Globe Awards 1962 in filmReferences Edit a b Longworth Karina March 10 2017 Did Bette and Joan Really Have a Feud Slate Archived from the original on April 1 2017 Retrieved April 27 2017 Oscar winning former child star Patty Duke dies age 69 USA TODAY Retrieved March 30 2016 The 35th Academy Awards 1963 Nominees and Winners oscars org Archived from the original on April 26 2016 Retrieved May 12 2016 External links EditThe 35th Annual Academy Awards Synopsis at IMDb The 35th Annual Academy Awards Episode at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 35th Academy Awards amp oldid 1177795396, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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