Search results
Mar 24, 2015 · * Art Direction (Color) - Art Direction: Hein Heckroth; Set Decoration: Arthur Lawson * Music (Music Score of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture) - Brian Easdale Film Editing - Reginald Mills
- Best Motion Picture
- Directing
- Actor
- Actress
- Actor in A Supporting Role
- Actress in A Supporting Role
- Writing
- Music
- Film Editing
- Cinematography
All the King’s Men – Robert Rossen Productions Battleground – Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer The Heiress – Paramount A Letter to Three Wives – 20th Century-Fox Twelve O’Clock High– 20th Century-Fox
All the King’s Men – Robert Rossen Battleground – William A. Wellman The Fallen Idol – Carol Reed The Heiress – William Wyler A Letter to Three Wives– Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Broderick Crawford – All the King’s Men Kirk Douglas – Champion Gregory Peck – Twelve O’Clock High Richard Todd – The Hasty Heart John Wayne – Sands of Iwo Jima
Jeanne Crain – Pinky Olivia de Havilland – The Heiress Susan Hayward – My Foolish Heart Deborah Kerr – Edward, My Son Loretta Young – Come to the Stable
John Ireland – All the King’s Men Dean Jagger – Twelve O’Clock High Arthur Kennedy – Champion Ralph Richardson – The Heiress James Whitmore – Battleground
Ethel Barrymore – Pinky Celeste Holm – Come to the Stable Elsa Lanchester – Come to the Stable Mercedes McCambridge – All the King’s Men Ethel Waters – Pinky
Come to the Stable – Clare Boothe Luce It Happens Every Spring – Shirley W. Smith, Valentine Davies Sands of Iwo Jima – Harry Brown The Stratton Story – Douglas Morrow White Heat– Virginia Kellogg
“Baby, It’s Cold Outside” – Neptune’s Daughter – Music, Lyrics by Frank Loesser “It’s A Great Feeling” – It’s a Great Feeling – Music by Jule Styne; Lyrics by Sammy Cahn “Lavender Blue” – So Dear to My Heart – Music by Eliot Daniel; Lyrics by Larry Morey “My Foolish Heart” – My Foolish Heart – Music by Victor Young; Lyrics by Ned Washington “Throug...
All the King’s Men – Robert Parrish, Al Clark Battleground – John Dunning Champion – Harry Gerstad Sands of Iwo Jima – Richard L. Van Enger The Window– Frederic Knudtson
Battleground – Paul C. Vogel Champion – Frank Planer Come to the Stable – Joseph LaShelle The Heiress – Leo Tover Prince of Foxes– Leon Shamroy
The 21st Academy Awards were held on March 24, 1949, honoring the films of 1948. The ceremony was moved from the Shrine Auditorium to the Academy's own theater, primarily because the major Hollywood studios had withdrawn their financial support in order to address rumors that they had been trying to influence voters. [2]
Best PictureBest DirectorHamlet – Laurence Olivier for Universal ...John Huston – The Treasure of the Sierra ...Laurence Olivier – Hamlet as Hamlet ‡ Lew ...Jane Wyman – Johnny Belinda as Belinda ...Walter Huston – The Treasure of the ...Claire Trevor – Key Largo as Gaye Dawn ‡ ...The Search – Richard Schweizer and David ...The Treasure of the Sierra Madre – John ...The 21st Academy Awards Memorable Moments. Best Picture: Hamlet. Hamlet also won Academy Awards for Best Actor (Laurence Olivier), Black-and-White Art Direction-Set Decoration (Roger K. Furse and Carmen Dillon), and Black-and-White Costume Design (Roger K. Furse). The ceremony was moved from the Shrine Auditorium to the Academy's own theater ...
Art Direction (Black-and-White) - Art Direction: Hans Dreier, Walter Tyler; Interior Decoration: Sam Comer, Ray Moyer
Actor George Montgomery hosted the 21st Annual Academy Awards at the Academy Theatre on Thursday, March 24, 1949. Jane Wyman’s character in Johnny Belinda was a deaf-mute, so her Best Actress win marked the first time since the silent movie days that a performance with no lines had been honored.
Best Art Direction, Color: Hein Heckroth, Arthur Lawson; Best Art Direction, Black & White: Roger K. Furse, Carmen Dillon; Best Costume Design, Color: Dorothy Jeakins, Barbara Karinska; Best Costume Design, Black & White: Roger K. Furse; Best Sound Mixing: The Snake Pit