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This page covers the Awards for 1940. If you wish, read my disclaimer.

Click here for information on the Awards Ceremony for this year's nominees.

 Use this link to go to my listing of every film and every person ever nominated for an Award! 

 Use this link to see every film nominated for an Award this year and how it ranks in nominations and Awards! 

"Awards are nice, but I'd much rather have a job." -- Jane Darwell, who hadn't worked for seven months before receiving her Award


Or use this link to view a larger version of the film.

Outstanding Production Prior to the Awards for 1951, no producer(s) named with nominations
 ALL THIS, AND HEAVEN TOO - Warner Bros. [Produced by Jack L. Warner and Hal B. Wallis, with David Lewis]
 FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT - Wanger, UA. [Produced by Walter Wanger]
 THE GRAPES OF WRATH - 20th Century-Fox. [Produced by Darryl F. Zanuck, with Nunnally Johnson]
 THE GREAT DICTATOR - Charles Chaplin Productions, UA. [Produced by Charles Chaplin]
 KITTY FOYLE - RKO Radio. [Produced by David Hempstead]
 THE LETTER - Warner Bros. [Produced by Hal B. Wallis]
 THE LONG VOYAGE HOME - Argosy-Wanger, UA. [Produced by John Ford]
 OUR TOWN - Lesser, UA. [Produced by Sol Lesser]
 THE PHILADELPHIA STORY - MGM. [Produced by Joseph L. Mankiewicz]
 REBECCA - Selznick International, UA. [Produced by David O. Selznick]

Actor
 Charles Chaplin in THE GREAT DICTATOR
 Henry Fonda in THE GRAPES OF WRATH
 Raymond Massey in ABE LINCOLN IN ILLINOIS
 Laurence Olivier in REBECCA
 James Stewart in THE PHILADELPHIA STORY

Actress
 Bette Davis in THE LETTER
 Joan Fontaine in REBECCA
 Katharine Hepburn in THE PHILADELPHIA STORY
 Ginger Rogers in KITTY FOYLE
 Martha Scott in OUR TOWN

Supporting Actor
 Albert Basserman in FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT
 Walter Brennan in THE WESTERNER
 William Gargan in THEY KNEW WHAT THEY WANTED
 Jack Oakie in THE GREAT DICTATOR
 James Stephenson in THE LETTER

Supporting Actress
 Judith Anderson in REBECCA
 Jane Darwell in THE GRAPES OF WRATH
 Ruth Hussey in THE PHILADELPHIA STORY
 Barbara O'Neil in ALL THIS, AND HEAVEN TOO
 Marjorie Rambeau in THE PRIMROSE PATH

Director
 George Cukor for THE PHILADELPHIA STORY
 John Ford for THE GRAPES OF WRATH
 Alfred Hitchcock for REBECCA
 Sam Wood for KITTY FOYLE
 William Wyler for THE LETTER

Writing (Screenplay)
 Nunnally Johnson - THE GRAPES OF WRATH
 Dalton Trumbo - KITTY FOYLE
 Dudley Nichols - THE LONG VOYAGE HOME
 Donald Ogden Stewart - THE PHILADELPHIA STORY
 Robert E. Sherwood & Joan Harrison - REBECCA

Writing (Original Story)
 Benjamin Glazer & John S. Toldy (pseudonym of Hans Székely) - ARISE, MY LOVE
 Walter Reisch - COMRADE X
 Hugo Butler & Dore Schary - EDISON, THE MAN
 Leo McCarey, Bella Spewack & Samuel Spewack - MY FAVORITE WIFE
 Stuart N. Lake - THE WESTERNER

Writing (Original Screenplay)
 Ben Hecht - ANGELS OVER BROADWAY
 Norman Burnside, Heinz Herald & John Huston - DR. EHRLICH'S MAGIC BULLET
 Charles Bennett & Joan Harrison - FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT
 Charles Chaplin - THE GREAT DICTATOR
 Preston Sturges - THE GREAT MCGINTY

Interior Decoration (Color)
 Cedric Gibbons & John S. Detlie - BITTER SWEET
 Richard Day & Joseph C. Wright - DOWN ARGENTINE WAY
 Hans Dreier & Roland Anderson - NORTHWEST MOUNTED POLICE
 Vincent Korda - THE THIEF OF BAGDAD (Film won 3 Awards)

Interior Decoration (Black and White)
 Hans Dreier & Robert Usher - ARISE, MY LOVE
 Lionel Banks & Robert Peterson - ARIZONA
 Jack Otterson - THE BOYS FROM SYRACUSE
 John Victor Mackay - DARK COMMAND
 Alexander Golitzen - FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT
 Richard Day & Joseph C. Wright - LILLIAN RUSSELL
 Van Nest Polglase & Mark-Lee Kirk - MY FAVORITE WIFE
 John DuCasse Schulze - MY SON, MY SON
 Lewis J. Rachmil - OUR TOWN
 Cedric Gibbons & Paul Groesse - PRIDE AND PREJUDICE
 Lyle Wheeler - REBECCA
 Anton Grot - THE SEA HAWK
 James Basevi - THE WESTERNER

Cinematography (Color)
 
Oliver T. Marsh & Allen Davey - BITTER SWEET
 Arthur C. Miller & Ray Rennahan - THE BLUE BIRD
 Leon Shamroy & Ray Rennahan - DOWN ARGENTINE WAY
 Victor Milner & W. Howard Greene - NORTHWEST MOUNTED POLICE
 Sidney Wagner & William V. Skall - NORTHWEST PASSAGE (BOOK I - ROGERS' RANGERS)
 Georges Périnal - THE THIEF OF BAGDAD

Cinematography (Black and White)
 James Wong Howe - ABE LINCOLN IN ILLINOIS
 Ernest Haller - ALL THIS, AND HEAVEN TOO
 Charles B. Lang - ARISE, MY LOVE
 Hal Rosson - BOOM TOWN
 Rudolph Maté - FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT
 Tony Gaudio - THE LETTER
 Gregg Toland - THE LONG VOYAGE HOME
 George Barnes - REBECCA
 Joseph Valentine - SPRING PARADE
 Joseph Ruttenberg - WATERLOO BRIDGE

Film Editing
 Robert E. Simpson - THE GRAPES OF WRATH
 Warren Low - THE LETTER
 Sherman Todd - THE LONG VOYAGE HOME
 Anne Bauchens - NORTHWEST MOUNTED POLICE
 Hal C. Kern - REBECCA

Music Scoring Awards (Original Score)
 Victor Young - ARIZONA
 Victor Young - DARK COMMAND
 Louis Gruenberg - THE FIGHT FOR LIFE
 Meredith Willson - THE GREAT DICTATOR
 Frank Skinner - THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES
 Richard Hageman - THE HOWARDS OF VIRGINIA
 Max Steiner - THE LETTER
 Richard Hageman - THE LONG VOYAGE HOME
 Roy Webb - MY FAVORITE WIFE
 Alfred Newman - THE MARK OF ZORRO
 Victor Young - NORTHWEST MOUNTED POLICE
 Werner Heymann - ONE MILLION B.C.
 Aaron Copland - OUR TOWN
 Leigh Harline, Paul J. Smith & Ned Washington - PINOCCHIO
 Franz Waxman - REBECCA
 Miklos Rozsa - THE THIEF OF BAGDAD
 Herbert Stothart - WATERLOO BRIDGE

Music Scoring Awards (Best Score)
 Victor Young - ARISE, MY LOVE
 Cy Feuer - HIT PARADE OF 1941
 Anthony Collins - IRENE
 Aaron Copland - OUR TOWN
 Erich Wolfgang Korngold - THE SEA HAWK
 Artie Shaw - SECOND CHORUS
 Charles Previn - SPRING PARADE
 George Stoll & Roger Edens - STRIKE UP THE BAND
 Alfred Newman - TIN PAN ALLEY

Music Best Song
 Harry Warren - Music, Mack Gordon, Lyrics DOWN ARGENTINE WAY "Down Argentine Way"
 Jimmy McHugh - Music, Johnny Mercer, Lyrics YOU'LL FIND OUT "I'd Know You Anywhere"
 Chet Forrest & Bob Wright, Music & Lyrics MUSIC IN MY HEART "It's a Blue World"
 Artie Shaw - Music, Johnny Mercer, Lyrics SECOND CHORUS "Love of My Life"
 James Monaco - Music, Johnny Burke, Lyrics RHYTHM ON THE RIVER "Only Forever"
 Roger Edens & Arthur Freed, Music & Lyrics STRIKE UP THE BAND "Our Love Affair"
 Robert Stolz - Music, Gus Kahn, Lyrics SPRING PARADE "Waltzing in the Clouds"
 Leigh Harline - Music, Ned Washington - Lyrics PINOCCHIO "When You Wish Upon a Star"
 Jule Style - Music, Walter Bullock - Lyrics HIT PARADE OF 1941 "Who Am I?"

Short Subjects (Cartoons)
 THE MILKY WAY: M-G-M (Rudolph Ising Series)
 PUSS GETS THE BOOT: M-G-M (Cat and Mouse Series)
 A WILD HARE: Leon Schlesinger - Producer

Short Subjects (One-reel)
 LONDON CAN TAKE IT: Warner Bros. (Vitaphone Varieties)
 MORE ABOUT NOSTRADAMUS: M-G-M
 QUICKER 'N A WINK: Pete Smith - Producer
 SIEGE: RKO Radio (Reelism)

Short Subjects (Two-reel)
 EYES OF THE NAVY: M-G-M (Crime Doesn't Pay)
 SERVICE WITH THE COLORS: Warner Bros. (National Defense Series)
 TEDDY, THE ROUGH RIDER: Warner Bros. (Historical Featurette)

Sound Recording
 Charles Lootens - BEHIND THE NEWS
 Elmer Raguse - CAPTAIN CAUTION
 E.H. Hansen - THE GRAPES OF WRATH
 Jack Whitney - General Service - THE HOWARDS OF VIRGINIA
 John Aalberg - KITTY FOYLE
 Loren L. Ryder - NORTHWEST MOUNTED POLICE
 Thomas Moulton - OUR TOWN
 Nathan Levinson - THE SEA HAWK
 Bernard B. Brown - SPRING PARADE
 Douglas Shearer - STRIKE UP THE BAND
 John Livadary - TOO MANY HUSBANDS

Special Effects
 Fred Sersen (Photographic) & E. H. Hansen (Sound) - THE BLUE BIRD
 A. Arnold Gillespie (Photographic) & Douglas Shearer (Sound) - BOOM TOWN
 John P. Fulton (Photographic) & Bernard B. Brown & Joseph Lapis (Sound) - THE BOYS FROM SYRACUSE
 Farciot Edouart & Gordon Jennings (Photographic) No Credit Listed (Sound) - DR. CYCLOPS
 Paul Eagler (Photographic) & Thomas T. Moulton (Sound) - FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT
 John P. Fulton (Photographic), Bernard B. Brown & William Hedgecock (Sound) - THE INVISIBLE MAN RETURNS
 R. T. Layton & R.O. Binger (Photographic), Thomas T. Moulton (Sound) - THE LONG VOYAGE HOME
 Roy Seawright (Photographic) & Elmer Raguse (Sound) - ONE MILLION B.C.
 Jack Cosgrove (Photographic) & Arthur Johns (Sound) - REBECCA
 Byron Haskin (Photographic) & Nathan Levinson (Sound) - THE SEA HAWK
 Vernon L. Walker (Photographic) & John O. Aalberg (Sound) - SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON
 Lawrence Butler (Photographic) & Jack Whitney (Sound) - THE THIEF OF BAGDAD
 Farciot Edouart & Gordon Jennings (Photographic), Loren L. Ryder (Sound) - TYPHOON
 Howard J. Lydecker, William Bradford & Ellis J. Thackery (Photographic), Herbert Norsch (Sound) - WOMEN IN WAR

Scientific Or Technical
Class I (Statuette):
 Daniel Clark, Grover Laube, Charles Miller & Robert W. Stevens (20th Century-Fox Film Corporation) - For the design and construction of the 20th Century Silenced Camera.
Class II (Plaque):
No award given for 1940.
Class III (Citation):
 (Warner Bros. Studio Art Department) Anton Grot - For the design and perfection of the Warner Bros. water ripple and wave illusion machine.

Special Awards
 Bob Hope - In recognition of his unselfish services to the Motion Picture Industry. Winner presented a Special Silver Plaque.
 Colonel Nathan Levinson - For his outstanding service to the industry and the Army during the past nine years, which has made possible the present efficient mobilization of the motion picture industry facilities for the production of Army Training Films. Winner presented a Statuette.

Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award
No award given for 1940.

FIRSTS
· FDR was the first US president to formally address the Awards ceremony.
· David O. Selznick's back-to-back Best Picture wins was a first for a producer.
· Rebecca was Alfred Hitchcock's first American-made film and his first Best Director nomination.
· The Great Dictator's Charlie Chaplin was the first performer to be simultaneously nominated for Best Picture and Best Screenplay.
· American audiences were introduced to carrot-chomping dandy Bugs Bunny.
· Walter Brennan won the first Oscar® trifecta. It wasn't matched until Katharine Hepburn won her third for Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967).

RULE CHANGES
· "Original Screenplay" added.
· Interior Decoration divided into separate Black and White and Color categories.
· The Academy finally agreed to sealed envelopes. No more leaking before Awards night.

ROLE REVERSALS
· Laurence Olivier won the role of Max de Winter in Rebecca only after William Powell and Ronald Colman took a pass.
· Ginger Rogers always bristled at the mention of Katharine Hepburn, feeling she should have been offered more of Hepburn's roles. She got her revenge when Hepburn turned down Rogers's Oscar®-winning part in Kitty Foyle. Hepburn later told reporters, "I was offered Kitty Foyle and I didn't want to play a soap opera about a shopgirl." Hepburn added, "Ginger was wonderful, she's enormously talented and she deserved the Oscar. As for me, prizes are nothing. My prize is my work."

SINS OF OMISSION
Picture: His Girl Friday, My Favorite Wife, Waterloo Bridge, The Shop Around the Corner
Actor: Cary Grant in His Girl Friday and The Philadelphia Story
Actress: Rosalind Russell - His Girl Friday, Margaret Sullavan - The Shop Around the Corner
Song: "I Concentrate on You," "I Hear Music," "See What the Boys in the Back Room Will Have"

ALWAYS A BRIDESMAID... Hitchcock didn't win Best Director this year -- or any other, despite five more nominations. He received a Thalberg in 1968.

UNMENTIONABLES
· Jimmy Stewart's Oscar® was considered a gold-plated apology for his being robbed of the award for last year's Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.
· Academy president Walter Wanger presented emcee Bob Hope with a special humaniarian award during the ceremony. Genuinely moved, Hope was speechless, finally saying, "I don't feel a bit funny. It's a kick -- it's a beautiful thing."
· The Academy was proud that it had obtained the highly regarded British war correspondent Quentin Reynolds to give out the writing Awards. Reynolds had produced a one-reel short nominee, London Can Take It. After it had lost to Pete Smith's demonstration of high-speed photography, Quicker'n a Wink, Reynolds used the dais to give his acceptance speech anyway. He said he understood "why Hollywood and the Academy had engaged Mr. Price and Mr. Waterhouse to count the ballots. No one in the movie colony could count to up to 12,000. Yes, there are a couple of producers who could count that high -- but not in English."
· Original Story winner Benjamin Glazer revealed that John S. Toldy, his collaborator on the story for Arise, My Love, was a pseudonym. Glazer added that "Toldy" was currently in Nazi Germany and he could not risk jeopardizing his partner's life by divulging his true identity to the guests at the Biltmore. (See Hans Székely)
· Best Screenplay winner Donald Ogden Stewart stammered, "I envy the boys who get the Technical Awards. They don't have to get nervously drunk before. There has been so much niceness here tonight, that I am happy to say that I am entirely -- and solely -- responsible for the success of The Philadelphia Story."
· Frank Capra called the nominated directors to the podium to shake hands for jobs well done. They were all there, except John Ford -- who had written that he and Henry Fonda would be in a boat off the coast of Mexico "for as long as the fish are biting." While the losing directors crawled back to their tables, Capra had to have been remembering his own humiliation seven years earlier.
· Prior to the announcement of the Best Picture Award, none of the nominated films had won more than one Oscar®, so last-minute bets were made right up to the opening of the envelope.
· As Walter Brennan was receiving his unexpected third Award for Best Supporting Actor, nominee and favorite Jack Oakie told friends that Brennan won because the extras always voted for him out of loyalty since he had come from their ranks.
· After the Awards, Fox studio flacks told the press that in the past seven months Jane Darwell had worked at the studio for 21 weeks and an additional month on loan-out to Warners. Zanuck personally called her on the day after the Awards to offer her a co-starring role in Private Nurse.
· The filming of The Letter was laced with irony. The previous year, director William Wyler had sent his lover, Bette Davis, an ultimatum letter: either drop her husband and marry him or it was over. She didn't write back.
· Ginger Rogers's joined-at-the-hip relationship with her domineering mom, Lela, proved eternal. They're buried side by side at Oakwood Memorial Park. The grave of Ginger's longtime screen partner, Fred Astaire, is just yards away.


And, of course, here's the place where I have to put the disclaimer: This page was created for my own personal use and was intended for educational and entertainment purposes only. "Oscar" and "Academy Awards" are registered trademarks of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. The "Oscar" Statuette is copyrighted by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. These pages are neither authorized nor endorsed by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. I cannot take responsibility for any errors or omissions on these pages; i.e., if you lose a bet because of something I missed, don't expect me to pay it off!

Sidebar highlights come from several sources, most notably The Academy Awards® - The Complete Unofficial History, by Gail Kinn & Jim Piazza, and Inside Oscar® - The Unofficial History of the Academy Awards®, by Mason Wiley & Damien Bona.

This page is authored by Gary Moody. If you have comments or questions about the page, please e-mail me at gary@theOscarSite.com.