35th Academy Awards

35th Academy Awards
35th Academy Awards
Date April 8, 1963
Site Santa Monica Civic Auditorium
Host Frank Sinatra
Producer Arthur Freed
Director Richard Dunlap
Highlights
Best Picture Lawrence of Arabia
Most awards Lawrence of Arabia (7)
Most nominations Lawrence of Arabia (10)
TV in the United States
Network ABC
 < 34th Academy Awards 36th > 

The 35th Academy Awards, honoring the best in film for 1962, were held on April 8, 1963 at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in Santa Monica, California. They were hosted by Frank Sinatra.

The year was noted for Patty Duke won for Best Supporting Actress from The Miracle Worker which at the time Duke was 16 years old, making her the youngest Oscar winner for acting category.

Contents

Awards

Winners are listed first and highlighted with boldface[1]

Best Picture Best Director
Best Actor Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Best Supporting Actress
Best Original Screenplay Best Adapted Screenplay
Best Foreign Language Film
Best Documentary Feature Best Documentary Short
  • Black Fox
    • Alvorada
Best Live Action Short Best Animated Short
  • The Hole
    • Icarus Montgolfier Wright
    • Now Hear This
    • Self Defense ... for Cowards
    • Symposium on Popular Songs
Best Original Score Best Adaptation or Treatment Score
Best Original Song Best Sound Recording
Best Art Direction, Black and White Best Art Direction, Color
Best Cinematography, Black and White Best Cinematography, Color
Best Costume Design, Black and White Best Costume Design, Color
Best Film Editing Best Visual Effects

Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award

Trivia

  • "Host Frank Sinatra nearly missed the show because he forgot his parking sticker and was turned away from the arrivals area by security guards. He had to park his own car elsewhere and run to the auditorium, barely arriving in time."[1]
  • Joan Crawford was infuriated when Bette Davis was nominated for an Oscar and she was overlooked. She contacted the Best Actress nominees who were unable to attend the ceremonies and offered to accept the award on their behalf should they win. When Anne Bancroft was declared the winner for The Miracle Worker, Crawford triumphantly pushed her way past Davis and swept onstage to pick up the trophy. Davis later commented, "It would have meant a million more dollars to our film if I had won. Joan was thrilled I hadn't."[2]
  • Patty Duke, the winner of Best Supporting Actress, received two feat. The first was for her portrayal as a blind, deaf and somewhat mute 7 years old girl Helen Keller remaining as the first actor to be won acting award at Oscar with a non-speaking role in nearly 14 years since the first actor which achieve this feat, Jane Wyman for Johnny Belinda in 1948. For her role, Duke did not have dialogue other than grunts, and can only sign in near the end of the film. This feat was achieved again by John Mills for his non-speaking role in Ryan's Daughter in 1970, 8 years later.
  • The second was because Duke was at the time was 16 years old, she became the youngest ever actor to won Oscar's acting award, broke the record that previously held by Janet Gaynor in the first Academy Award in 1927, as Gaynor was 22 years old when she won the Oscar. However, this feat later broke by Tatum O'Neal, which earned her Oscar for acting category at 10 years old, becoming the youngest actor ever to won a competitive Oscar, as of 2011.

Presenters

Performers

Multiple nominations and awards

These films had multiple nominations:

  • 10 nominations: Lawrence of Arabia
  • 8 nominations: To Kill a Mockingbird
  • 7 nominations: Mutiny on the Bounty
  • 6 nominations: The Music Man
  • 5 nominations: Days of Wine and Roses, The Longest Day, The Miracle Worker, What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
  • 4 nominations: Birdman of Alcatraz, The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm
  • 3 nominations: Divorce, Italian Style, Gypsy, Sweet Bird of Youth, That Touch of Mink
  • 2 nominations: The Manchurian Candidate, Bon Voyage!, David and Lisa, Freud, Two for the Seesaw

The following films received multiple awards.

  • 7 wins: Lawrence of Arabia
  • 3 wins: To Kill a Mockingbird
  • 2 wins: The Longest Day, The Miracle Worker

References

  1. ^ "The 35th Academy Awards (1963) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. http://www.oscars.org/awards/academyawards/legacy/ceremony/35th-winners.html. Retrieved 2011-08-23. 
  2. ^ Mother Goddam: The Story of the Career of Bette Davis by Whitney Stine, with a running commentary by Bette Davis, Hawthorn Books, Inc., 1974, ISBN 0-8015-5184-6, pp. 296-297

External links


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