Age
edit- Oldest and Earliest Academy Award Winners
Category | Oldest Living Winner | Date of Birth | Earliest Surviving Winner | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|
Best Actor | Ernest Borgnine | 24 January 1917 | Ernest Borgnine | 1955 |
Best Actress | Luise Rainer | 12 January 1910 | Luise Rainer | 1936 |
Best Supporting Actor | Karl Malden | 22 March 1912 | Karl Malden | 1951 |
Best Supporting Actress | Celeste Holm | 29 April 1917 | Celeste Holm | 1947 |
Best Director | Richard Attenborough | 29 August 1923 | Mike Nichols | 1968 |
- Oldest and Earliest Academy Awards Nominees
Category | Oldest Living Nominee | Date of Birth | Earliest Surviving Nominee | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|
Best Actor | Kirk Douglas | 9 December 1916 | Richard Todd | 1949 |
Best Actress | Luise Rainer | 12 January 1910 | Luise Rainer | 1936 |
Best Supporting Actor | Karl Malden | 22 March 1912 | James Whitmore | 1949 |
Best Supporting Actress | Olivia de Havilland | 1 July 1916 | Olivia de Havilland | 1939 |
Best Director | Jack Cardiff | 18 September 1914 | Michael Anderson | 1956 |
- But See: The earliest nominee in this category (Best Actor) who is still alive is Jackie Cooper (1931) followed by Mickey Rooney (1940). The earliest winner in this category who is still alive is Ernest Borgnine (1956) followed by Maximilian Schell (1962) both won over Spencer Tracy and starred in the films Tracy was nominated. The few remaining living nominees from the 1940s-50s Hollywood era include Kirk Douglas (3 nominations), Tony Curtis and Richard Todd (1 each). Sidney Poitier also received his first nomination in 1958 with Curtis.
- Oldest Winner
- Oldest Nominee
- Youngest Winner
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- Winner with the Earliest Birthdate
- Winner with the Most Recent Birthdate
- Nominee with the Earliest Birthdate
- Nominee with the Most Recent Birthdate
- Oldest Living Winner
- Oldest Living Nominee
- Youngest Living Winner
- Youngest Living Nominee
- Earliest Surviving Winner
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- Most Recent Surviving Winner
- Most Recent Surviving Nominee
Declined awards
editOnly three people have ever declined the Academy Award:
- 1936 - Dudley Nichols (Best Adapted Screenplay for The Informer) boycotted the 9th Academy Awards ceremony because of conflicts between the Academy and the Writer's Guild;
- 1971 - George C. Scott (Best Actor for Patton) declined the award, declaring that the Academy Award ceremony was "a two-hour meat parade";
- 1972 - Marlon Brando (Best Actor for The Godfather) declined the award to protest the U.S. discrimination and mistreatment of Native Americans; Brando sent Sacheen Littlefeather in his place.
Source: [1]
Debut
edit- Winners
- Nominees
Posthumous
edit- Winners
- Nominees
Tie
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Consecutive
edit- Awards
- Nominations
Most
edit- Awards
- Nominations
- Unsuccessful Nominations
Longevity
edit- Greatest Span Between Awards
- Greatest Span Between Nominations
Roles
edit- Various
Performances
edit- Shortest Screen time
- Longest Screen time
- Debut
- Non-speaking
- Foreign Language
- Shakespearean
Award combinations
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- Acting and Directing
Demographics
edit- Race
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Multiple
edit- Multiple Awards in Same Year
- Multiple Nominations in Same Year
- Multiple Awards in Different Years
- Multiple Nominations in Different Years
Film
edit- With Most Acting Nominations
- With Most Acting Awards
- For Each Separate Category (BA BSA BA BSA)
- For Total
Director
edit- Director Who Directed the Most Acting Award Nominees
- Director Who Directed the Most Acting Award Winners
- Director Who Directed the Most Best Picture Nominees
- Director Who Directed the Most Best Picture Winners
Actors
edit- Actor Who Appeared in the Most Best Picture Nominees
- Actor Who Appeared in the Most Best Picture Winners
Lost Film Performances
edit- Winning Performances
- Nominated Performances
Statistics
edit- Number of Nominations
- Number of Nominees
- Number of Awards
- Number of Winners
- Number Living
- Number Deceased
- Average Age