STEWS DAILY FACT(s) 1. The youngest Oscar winner was Tatum - TopicsExpress



          

STEWS DAILY FACT(s) 1. The youngest Oscar winner was Tatum ONeal, who won Best Supporting Actress for Paper Moon (1973) when she was only 10 years old. Shirley Temple won the short-lived Juvenile Award at 6 years old. 2. At 82, Christopher Plummer became the oldest person to win an Academy Award. He received the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his work in Beginners (2010) opposite Ewan McGregor. 3. After winning Best Actress for Cabaret (1972), Liza Minnelli became (and still is) the only Oscar winner whose parents both earned Oscars. Her mother, Judy Garland, received an honorary award in 1939 and her father, Vincente Minnelli, won Best Director for Gigi (1958). 4. Nameplates for all potential winners are prepared ahead of time; this year, the Academy made 215 of them! 5. The first Academy Awards were presented in 1929 at a private dinner of about 270 people. It was first televised in 1953, and now the Oscars ceremony can be seen in more than 200 countries. 6. Only three women have received Best Director nominations, while Kathryn Bigelow is the lone winner for The Hurt Locker (2009). Interestingly, Bigelow beat out ex-husband James Cameron, who was nominated for the technological wonder Avatar. 7. Peter Finch (Network) and Heath Ledger (The Dark Knight) are the only actors to be awarded an Academy Award posthumously. Ledgers Oscar -- and his entire fortune -- was gifted to his young daughter, Matilda. 8. Meryl Streep has been nominated a record 18 times, winning three Best Actress Oscars -- the last for The Iron Lady (2011). 9. Katharine Hepburn won a record four Academy Awards -- all Best Actress Oscars -- the last for On Golden Pond (1981), which starred another Hollywood legend, Henry Fonda. 10. Jack Nicholson is the most-nominated male actor, receiving 12 Oscar nominations beginning with 1969s Easy Rider. His three wins tie him with Walter Brennan and Daniel Day-Lewis. 11. The first Oscars were held at the famous Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. Today, the ceremony takes place at the Dolby Theatre (around the corner from the Roosevelt), its tenth venue over the decades. 12. Ben-Hur (1959), Titanic (1997), and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) are the most successful films in Oscar history, each winning a shocking 11 Oscars. The Return of the King is the only one to win every award for which it was nominated. 13. Oscar statuettes are technically property of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. As a result, before an Academy Award winner or his estate can sell his Oscar, he must first offer to sell it to the Academy first for one dollar (yes, one dollar). This, of course, is to discourage winners from selling the award for financial gain. Oscars awarded before 1950, however, are not bound by this agreement. Orson Welless 1941 Oscar for Citizen Kane was sold at auction for over $800,000 in 2011! 14. Only three films have won all of the Big Five Academy Award categories: It Happened One Night (1934), One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest (1975), and The Silence of the Lambs (1991). The Big Five categories are: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Actress, and Best Screenplay (either adapted or original). 15. In 1940, the LA Times broke the Academys embargo and published the names of all the Oscar winners prior to the ceremony. As a result, the Academy introduced the sealed envelope tradition that is present to this day. 16. The legendary Alfred Hitchcock was nominated five times for Best Director, but never took home the Oscar. 17. Composer John Williams is the most-nominated living person, having earned 49 Oscar nominations throughout his storied career, beginning with 1967s Valley of the Dolls. 18. The longest Oscar acceptance speech ever given was five and half minutes by 1943 Best Actress winner Greer Garson (Mrs. Miniver). 19. Oscar statuettes were made from painter plaster during World War II due to metal shortages. After the war ended, these Oscars were replaced with the traditional statues. 20. Bob Hope hosted the ceremony a whopping 19 times, making him the most frequent Oscar host. 21. The first Best Actor awards was given to Emil Jannings for The Last Command and The Way of All Flesh (yes, both!). 22. At the 29th Academy Awards ceremony in 1957, the Best Foreign Language Film category was introduced. Previously, the best foreign language film was simply acknowledge with a Special Achievement Award. 23. In 1999, Cate Blanchett and Judi Dench were both nominated for playing Queen Elizabeth in Elizabeth and Shakespeare in Love. Dench won Best Supporting Actress despite only appearing in the film for a total of eight minutes. Meanwhile, Blanchett lost the Best Actress Oscar to Gwyneth Paltrow -- also for Shakespeare in Love.
Posted on: Mon, 03 Mar 2014 12:21:28 +0000

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