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Outstanding Motion Picture Prior to the Awards for 1951, no producer(s) named with nominations
THE INVADERS (a.k.a. 49TH PARALLEL) - Ortus (British), Columbia. [Produced by Michael Powell]
KINGS ROW - Warner Bros. [Produced by Hal B. Wallis]
THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS - Mercury, RKO Radio. [Produced by Orson Welles]
MRS. MINIVER (Won 6 Awards) - MGM. [Produced by Sidney Franklin]
THE PIED PIPER - 20th Century-Fox. [Produced by Nunnally Johnson]
THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES - Samuel Goldwyn Productions, RKO Radio. [Produced by Samuel Goldwyn]
RANDOM HARVEST - MGM. [Produced by Sidney Franklin]
THE TALK OF THE TOWN -Columbia. [Produced by George Stevens]
WAKE ISLAND - Paramount. [Produced by Joseph Sistrom]
YANKEE DOODLE DANDY - Warner Bros. [Produced by Jack L. Warner & Hal B. Wallis, with William Cagney]
Actor
James Cagney in YANKEE DOODLE DANDY
Ronald Colman in RANDOM HARVEST
Gary Cooper in THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES
Walter Pidgeon in MRS. MINIVER
Monty Woolley in THE PIED PIPER
Actress
Bette Davis in NOW, VOYAGER
Greer Garson in MRS. MINIVER
Katharine Hepburn in WOMAN OF THE YEAR
Rosalind Russell in MY SISTER EILEEN
Teresa Wright in THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES
Supporting Actor
William Bendix in WAKE ISLAND
Van Heflin in JOHNNY EAGER
Walter Huston in YANKEE DOODLE DANDY
Frank Morgan in TORTILLA FLAT
Henry Travers in MRS. MINIVER
Supporting Actress
Dame Gladys Cooper in NOW, VOYAGER
Agnes Moorehead in THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS
Susan Peters in RANDOM HARVEST
Dame May Whitty in MRS. MINIVER
Teresa Wright in MRS. MINIVER
Director
Michael Curtiz for YANKEE DOODLE DANDY
John V. Farrow for WAKE ISLAND
Mervyn LeRoy for RANDOM HARVEST
Sam Wood for KINGS ROW
William Wyler for MRS. MINIVER
Writing: Screenplay
Rodney Ackland & Emeric Pressburger - THE INVADERS (a.k.a. 49TH PARALLEL)
George Froeschel, James Hilton, Claudine West & Arthur Wimperis - MRS. MINIVER
Herman J. Mankiewicz & Jo Swerling - THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES
George Froeschel, Claudine West & Arthur Wimperis - RANDOM HARVEST
Sidney Buchman & Irwin Shaw - THE TALK OF THE TOWN
Writing: Original Story
Irving Berlin - HOLIDAY INN
Emeric Pressburger - THE INVADERS (a.k.a. 49TH PARALLEL)
Paul Gallico - THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES
Sidney Harmon - THE TALK OF THE TOWN
Robert Buckner - YANKEE DOODLE DANDY
Writing: Original Screenplay
Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger - ONE OF OUR AIRCRAFT IS MISSING
Frank Butler & Don Hartman - ROAD TO MOROCCO
W. R. Burnett & Frank Butler - WAKE ISLAND
George Oppenheimer - THE WAR AGAINST MRS. HADLEY
Michael Kanin & Ring Lardner, Jr. - WOMAN OF THE YEAR
Interior Decoration (Color)
Alexander Golitzen & Jack Otterson - Art Direction, Russell A. Gausman & Ira S. Webb - Interior Decoration ARABIAN NIGHTS
Ted Smith - Art Direction, Casey Roberts - Interior Decoration CAPTAINS OF THE CLOUDS
Vincent Korda - Art Direction, Julia Heron - Interior Decoration JUNGLE BOOK
Richard Day & Joseph Wright - Art Direction, Thomas Little - Interior Decoration MY GAL SAL
Hans Dreier & Roland Anderson - Art Decoration, George Sawley - Set Decoration REAP THE WILD WIND
Interior Decoration (Black and White)
Max Parker & Mark-Lee Kirk - Art Direction, Casey Roberts - Interior Decoration GEORGE WASHINGTON SLEPT HERE
Albert S. D'Agostino - Art Direction, Al Fields & Darrell Silvera - Interior Decoration THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS
Perry Ferguson - Art Direction, Howard Bristol - Interior Decoration THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES
Cedric Gibbons & Randall Duell - Art Direction, Edwin B. Willis & Jack D. Moore - Interior Decoration RANDOM HARVEST
Boris Leven - Art Direction THE SHANGHAI GESTURE
Ralph Berger & Emile Kuri - Interior Decoration SILVER QUEEN
John B. Goodman & Jack Otterson - Art Direction, Russell A. Gausman & Edward R. Robinson - Interior Decoration THE SPOILERS
Hans Dreier & Roland Anderson - Art Direction, Sam Comer - Interior Decoration TAKE A LETTER, DARLING
Lionel Banks & Rudolph Sternad - Art Direction, Fay Babcock - Interior Decoration THE TALK OF THE TOWN
Richard Day & Joseph Wright - Art Direction, Thomas Little - Interior Decoration THIS ABOVE ALL
Cinematography (Color)
Milton Krasner, William V. Skall & W. Howard Greene - ARABIAN NIGHTS
Leon Shamroy - THE BLACK SWAN
Sol Polito - CAPTAINS OF THE CLOUDS
W. Howard Greene - JUNGLE BOOK
Victor Milner & William V. Skall - REAP THE WILD WIND
Edward Cronjager & William V. Skall - TO THE SHORES OF TRIPOLI
Cinematography (Black and White)
James Wong Howe - KINGS ROW
Stanley Cortez - THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS
Joseph Ruttenberg - MRS. MINIVER
Charles G. Clarke - MOONTIDE
Edward Cronjager - THE PIED PIPER
Rudolph Maté - THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES
John Mescall - TAKE A LETTER, DARLING
Ted Tetzlaff - THE TALK OF THE TOWN
Leon Shamroy - TEN GENTLEMEN FROM WEST POINT
Arthur C. Miller - THIS ABOVE ALL
Documentary There were 4 Awards in this category for the year.
AFRICA, PRELUDE TO VICTORY
BATTLE OF MIDWAY
COMBAT REPORT
CONQUER BY THE CLOCK: Frederic Ullman, Jr. - Producer
THE GRAIN THAT BUILT A HEMISPHERE: Walt Disney - Producer
HENRY BROWNE, FARMER
HIGH OVER THE BORDERS
HIGH STAKES IN THE EAST
INSIDE FIGHTING CHINA
IT'S EVERYBODY'S WAR
KOKODA FRONT LINE
LISTEN TO BRITAIN
LITTLE BELGIUM
LITTLE ISLES OF FREEDOM: Victor Stoloff & Edgar Loew
MOSCOW STRIKES BACK
MR. BLABBERMOUTH
MR. GARDENIA JONES
NEW SPIRIT: Walt Disney - Producer
PRELUDE TO WAR
THE PRICE OF VICTORY
A SHIP IS BORN
TWENTY-ONE MILES
WE REFUSE TO DIE: William C. Thomas - Producer
WHITE EAGLE
WINNING YOUR WINGS
Film Editing
Harold F. Kress - MRS. MINIVER
Daniel Mandell - THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES
Otto Meyer - THE TALK OF THE TOWN
Walter Thompson - THIS ABOVE ALL
George Amy - YANKEE DOODLE DANDY
Music: Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture
Frank Skinner - ARABIAN NIGHTS
Frank Churchill & Edward Plumb - BAMBI
Alfred Newman - THE BLACK SWAN
Dimitri Tiomkin - THE CORSICAN BROTHERS
Victor Young - FLYING TIGERS
Max Terr - THE GOLD RUSH
Roy Webb - I MARRIED A WITCH
Roy Webb - JOAN OF PARIS
Miklos Rozsa - JUNGLE BOOK
Edward Kay - KLONDIKE FURY
Max Steiner - NOW, VOYAGER
Leigh Harline - THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES
Herbert Stothart - RANDOM HARVEST
Richard Hageman - THE SHANGHAI GESTURE
Victor Young - SILVER QUEEN
Victor Young - TAKE A LETTER, DARLING
Frederick Hollander & Morris Stoloff - THE TALK OF THE TOWN
Werner Heymann - TO BE OR NOT TO BE
Music: Scoring of a Musical Picture
Edward Ward - FLYING WITH MUSIC
Roger Edens & Georgie Stoll - FOR ME AND MY GAL
Robert Emmett Dolan - HOLIDAY INN
Charles Previn & Hans J. Salter - IT STARTED WITH EVE
Walter Scharf - JOHNNY DOUGHBOY
Alfred Newman - MY GAL SAL
Ray Heindorf & Heinz Roemheld - YANKEE DOODLE DANDY
Leigh Harline - YOU WERE NEVER LOVELIER
Music: Song
Ernesto Lecuona - Music, Kim Gannon - Lyrics ALWAYS IN MY HEART "Always in My Heart"
Jerome Kern - Music, Johnny Mercer - Lyrics YOU WERE NEVER LOVELIER "Dearly Beloved"
Burton Lane - Music, Ralph Freed - Lyrics BABES ON BROADWAY "How
About You?"
Jule Styne - Music, Sammy Cahn - Lyrics YOUTH ON PARADE "It Seems I Heard that Song Before"
Harry Warren - Music, Mack Gordon - Lyrics ORCHESTRA WIVES "I've Got a Gal in Kalamazoo"
Frank Churchill - Music, Larry Morey - Lyrics BAMBI "Love is a Song"
Edward Ward - Music. Chet Forrest & Bob Wright - Lyrics FLYING WITH MUSIC "Pennies for Peppino"
Gene DePaul - Music, Don Raye - Lyrics KEEP 'EM FLYING (1941) "Pig Foot Pete" -- Universal originally attributed the song to HELLZAPOPPIN' (1942), but it did not appear in that film, so it was completely ineligible by Academy rules.
Harry Revel - Music, Mort Greene - Lyrics THE MAYOR OF 44TH STREET "There's a Breeze on Lake Louise"
Irving Berlin - Music & Lyrics HOLIDAY INN "White Christmas"
Short Subjects (Cartoons)
ALL OUT FOR V
THE BLITZ WOLF: Tex Avery - Producer
DER FUEHRER'S FACE: Walt Disney - Producer
JUKE BOX JAMBOREE: Walter Lantz - Producer
PIGS IN A POLKA: Leon Schlesinger - Producer
TULIPS SHALL GROW
Short Subjects (One-reel)
DESERT WONDERLAND
MARINES IN THE MAKING
SPEAKING OF ANIMALS AND THEIR FAMILIES
UNITED STATES MARINE BAND
Short Subjects (Two-reel)
BEYOND THE LINE OF DUTY
DON'T TALK
PRIVATE SMITH OF THE U.S.A.
Sound Recording
Bernard B. Brown - ARABIAN NIGHTS
Sam Slyfield - BAMBI
Daniel J. Bloomberg - FLYING TIGERS
Jack Whitney (Sound Service Inc.) FRIENDLY ENEMIES
James Fields (RCA Sound) THE GOLD RUSH
Douglas Shearer - MRS. MINIVER
Steve Dunn - ONCE UPON A HONEYMOON
Thomas Moulton - THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES
Loren L. Ryder - ROAD TO MOROCCO
E. H. Hansen - THIS ABOVE ALL
Nathan Levinson - YANKEE DOODLE DANDY
John Livadary - YOU WERE NEVER LOVELIER
Special Effects
Fred Sersen (Photographic), Roger Heman & George Leverett (Sound) THE BLACK SWAN
Byron Haskin (Photographic) Nathan Levinson (Sound) DESPERATE JOURNEY
Howard Lydecker (Photographic), Daniel J. Bloomberg (Sound) FLYING TIGERS
John Fulton (Photographic), Bernard B. Brown (Sound) INVISIBLE AGENT
Lawrence Butler (Photographic), William H. Wilmarth (Sound) JUNGLE BOOK
A. Arnold Gillespie & Warren Newcombe (Photographic), Douglas Shearer (Sound) MRS. MINIVER
Vernon L. Walker (Photographic), James G. Stewart (Sound) THE NAVY COMES THROUGH
Ronald Neame (Photographic), C.C. Stevens (Sound) ONE OF OUR AIRCRAFT IS MISSING
Jack Cosgrove & Ray Binger (Photographic), Thomas T. Moulton (Sound) THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES
Farciot Edouart, Gordon Jennings & William L. Pereira (Photographic), Louis Mesenkop (Sound) REAP THE WILD WIND
Scientific Or Technical
Class I (Statuette):
No award given for 1942.
Class II (Plaque):
Carroll Clark & F. Thomas Thompson (RKO Radio Studio Art and Miniature Departments) - For the design and construction of a moving cloud
and horizon machine.
Daniel B. Clark (20th Century-Fox Film Corporation) - For the development of a lens calibration system and the application of this system to exposure control in cinematography.
Class III (Citation):
Robert Henderson (Paramount Studio Engineering and Transparency Departments) - For the design and construction of adjustable light bridges and screen frames for transparency process photography.
Daniel J. Bloomberg (Republic Studio Sound Department) - For the design and application to motion picture production of a device for marking action negative for pre-selection purposes.
Special Awards
Charles Boyer - For his progressive cultural achievement in establishing the French Research Foundation in Los Angeles as a source of reference for the Hollywood Motion Picture Industry. Winner presented a Certificate.
Sir Noël Coward - For his outstanding production achievement in IN WHICH WE SERVE. Winner presented a Certificate.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer - For its achievement in representing the American Way of Life in the production of the Andy Hardy series of films. Winner presented a Certificate.
Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award
Sidney Franklin
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| FIRSTS
· Greer Garson's acceptance speech was the longest on record, nearly six minutes.
· Mrs. Miniver was the first film to earn 5 acting nominations.
· Mrs. Miniver becomes the first film since My Man Godfrey (1936) to secure nominations in all 4 acting categories.
· The Invaders was the first Best Picture nomination for a British-made film.
· James Cagney was the first actor to win an Oscar® for a musical role.
· Woman of the Year was Katharine Hepburn's first movie with Spencer Tracy, who got top billing.
· The statuettes were delegated to plaster in a symbolic gesture to the war effort. Wartime winners had them replaced with the standard bronze-filled model in 1946.
RULE CHANGES
· "Scoring of a Dramatic Picture" becomes "Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture."
SINS OF OMISSION
Picture: Sullivan's Travels, To Be or Not to Be, The Palm Beach Story, Now, Voyager
Actor: Joseph Cotten - The Magnificent Ambersons, Joel McCrea - Sullivan's Travels
Actress: Carole Lombard (posthumous) - To Be or Not to Be
Song: "At Last," "I Don't Want to Walk Without You," "I Remember You," "Moonlight Becomes You," "Tangerine," "I Had the Craziest Dream"
ALWAYS A BRIDESMAID...
Agnes Moorehead lost for what was considered her finest performance in The Magnificent Ambersons. She would strike out three more times: Mrs. Parkington (1944), Johnny Belinda (1948), and Hush... Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964).
UNMENTIONABLES
· Jack Warner premeired Yankee Doodle Dandy in May with a flag-waving benefit at New York's Hollywood Theatre. The best seats went for $25,000. From this one showing, he made $5,750,000 for the U.S. Treasury. He didn't do poorly himself either; the George M. Cohan biopix became the studio's top grosser.
· Yankee Doodle Dandy was Cagney's last movie as a contract actor at Warner Bros. He made headlines by forming his own production group with his brother -- who had produced Yankee Doodle Dandy -- and President Roosevelt personally requested that Cagney perform some of the numbers from the film for his birthday party.
· Hollywood's Hays Office objected to the Germans being referred to as "bloody bastards" in Noël Coward's In Which We Serve. The New Yorker observed, "Regarding Noël Coward's difficulties with the the Hays Office over several earthy words in the sound track of his new war film, we can only say that we sympathize with the poor bastard."
· On December 7, the Academy moved the eligibility deadline from January 12 back to December 31. MGM was able to rush Greer Garson's Random Harvest into one of it L.A. theatres to meet the deadline, but In Which We Serve, with no big studio backing, was stuck with its early January Hollywood premiere and was, consequently, not eligible for consideration for 1942.
· RKO cut Orson Welles's The Magnificent Ambersons from its original two-and-a-half hour running time down to 88 minutes and released it on a double bill with Lupe Velez's Mexican Spitfire. So much for Hollywood's wunderkind.
· Teresa Wright received a Supporting Actress nomination for her first film in 1941, The Little Foxes, with Bette Davis. By 1942, she was one of Hollywood's most sought after actresses. Prior to Pride of the Yankees, she played an ingenue in Mrs. Miniver and upcoming was Alfred Hitchcock's Shadow of a Doubt, shortchanged out of the 1942 Oscar® race by the same timetable switch that had knocked out In Which We Serve. Her two nominations for the year duplicated Fay Bainter's double-nom for 1938.
· With fellow Warners star John Garfield, Bette Davis organized a non-profit coffee-and-doughnuts nightclub for servicemen in Southern California. The two of them talked dozens of personalities into participating in the Hollywood Canteen -- the soldiers loved being served refreshments by Marlene Dietrich, dancing with Joan Crawford and gawking at Humphrey Bogart doing the dishes.
· Although born in Ireland, Greer Garson was now 100% American. One columnist wrote, "Garson, grateful for everything this land has brought her, says she doesn't want to do anything but stay here and make movies, and sell war bonds between pictures." She did do at least one other thing -- she fell in love with Richard Ney, the actor who had played her son in Mrs. Miniver. At 24, Ney was nine years younger than Garson, and the image of Mrs. Miniver in a passionate embrace with her offspring proved too tempting for journalists.
· The Coconut Grove was packed with celebrants, foreign diplomats, military officials and government representatives. The Hollywood Reporter complained, "Never in the history of Academy dinners was there such a compression of tables and people. It was almost impossible to get through the aisles and, with tables stacked up as far as the bandstand, there wasn't a foot of space on the dance floor."
· The ceremony opened with Jeanette MacDonald singing every possible verse of "The Star-Spangled Banner." Marine Pvt. Tyrone Power and army Pvt. Alan Ladd brought out the colors.
· Irving Berlin presented the Best Song Award to himself. "It's someone I've known a good many years," the presenter said. "He's a nice kid and I think he deserves it."
· Best Director William Wyler's wife accepted his Award. She told the audience that Lt. Col. Wyler was busy filming a bombing raid over Germany.
· To compensate for the eligibility deadline switcheroo, the Academy gave Noël Coward a Special Award for In Which We Serve.
· In its second year, the Documentary category swelled to 25 nominees in order to acknowledge every foreign ally, every military branch, and every studio that had ever produced a documentary.
· After Gary Cooper announced James Cagney's win for Best Actor, Cagney bounded to the dais amid whistles and cheers. One person commented, "You don't have to be from MGM to win."
· Cagney ended his acceptance speech with Cohan's famous line, "My mother thanks you, my father thanks you, my sister thanks you, and I thank you."
· Bob Hope closed the evening with, "Don't forget to tip your waiters. You never know who is on your draft board."
· Mary Pickford was so disgusted with being seated in the back of the room, "in Arizona" as she put it, that she promptly resigned from the Academy because "the big studios buy up blocks of reservations and squeeze everybody else out."
· In no time, Hollywoodites started "remembering" that Greer Garson bored everyone for over an hour and her "I am practically unprepared" speech became a Hollywood legend.
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