Academy Award for Best Actor
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| Academy Award for Best Actor | |
|---|---|
| Awarded for | Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role |
| Country | United States |
| Presented by | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences |
| First awarded | 1929 (for performances in films released during the 1927/1928 film season) |
| Currently held by | Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln (2012) |
| Official website | www.oscars.org |
Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role is one of the Academy Awards of Merit presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) to recognize an actor who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry. Prior to the 49th Academy Awards ceremony (1976), this award was simply known as the Academy Award of Merit for Performance by an Actor. Since its inception, however, the award has commonly been referred to as the Oscar for Best Actor. While actors are nominated for this award by Academy members who are actors and actresses themselves, winners are selected by the Academy membership as a whole.
History [edit]
Throughout the past 85 years, accounting for ties and repeat winners, AMPAS has presented a total of 86 Best Actor awards to 76 different actors. Winners of this Academy Award of Merit receive the familiar Oscar statuette, depicting a gold-plated knight holding a crusader's sword and standing on a reel of film. The first recipient was Emil Jannings, who was honored at the 1st Academy Awards ceremony (1929) for his performances in The Last Command and The Way of All Flesh. The most recent recipient was Daniel Day-Lewis, who was honored at the 85th Academy Awards ceremony (2012) for his performance in Lincoln.
In the first three years of the Academy Awards, individuals such as actors and directors were nominated as the best in their categories. At that time, all of their work during the qualifying period (as many as three films, in some cases) was listed after the award. However, during the 3rd Academy Awards ceremony (1930), only one of those films was cited in each winner's final award, even though each of the acting winners had had two films following their names on the ballots. For the 4th Academy Awards ceremony (1931), this unwieldy and confusing system was replaced by the current system in which an actor is nominated for a specific performance in a single film. Such nominations are limited to five per year. Until the 8th Academy Awards ceremony (1936), nominations for the Best Actor award were intended to include all actors, whether the performance was in either a leading or supporting role. At the 9th Academy Awards ceremony (1937), however, the Best Supporting Actor category was specifically introduced as a distinct award following complaints that the single Best Actor category necessarily favored leading performers with the most screen time. Nonetheless, Lionel Barrymore had received a Best Actor award (A Free Soul, 1931) and Franchot Tone a Best Actor nomination (Mutiny on the Bounty, 1936) for their performances in what were clearly supporting roles. Currently, Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role, Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role, and Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role constitute the four Academy Awards of Merit for acting annually presented by AMPAS.
Other awards for acting [edit]
Actors have also received special awards, or Academy Honorary Awards, for acting in specific films (such as in the case of James Baskett, who received a special honorary award for Disney's Song of the South). Child actors have also been awarded the Academy Juvenile Award.
Superlatives [edit]
| Superlative | Best Actor | Best Supporting Actor | Overall | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Actor with most awards | Daniel Day-Lewis | 3 | Walter Brennan | 3 | Walter Brennan Jack Nicholson Daniel Day-Lewis |
3 |
| Actor with most nominations | Spencer Tracy Laurence Olivier |
9 | Jack Nicholson Claude Rains Arthur Kennedy Walter Brennan |
4 | Jack Nicholson | 12 |
| Actor with most nominations without ever winning |
Peter O'Toole | 8 | Claude Rains Arthur Kennedy |
4 | Peter O'Toole | 8 |
| Film with most actor nominations | Mutiny on the Bounty | 3 | On the Waterfront The Godfather The Godfather Part II |
3 | On the Waterfront The Godfather The Godfather Part II |
4 |
| Oldest winner | Henry Fonda | 76 | Christopher Plummer | 82 | Christopher Plummer | 82 |
| Oldest nominee | Richard Farnsworth | 79 | Hal Holbrook | 82 | Hal Holbrook | 82 |
| Youngest winner | Adrien Brody | 29 | Timothy Hutton | 20 | Timothy Hutton | 20 |
| Youngest nominee | Jackie Cooper | 9 | Justin Henry | 8 | Justin Henry | 8 |
Daniel Day-Lewis is the only three-time winner for the Best Actor award as well as the only non-American actor to have won more than one award. Eight other men have won the Best Actor award twice. In chronological order, they are: Spencer Tracy (1937, 1938), Fredric March (1932, 1946), Gary Cooper (1941, 1952), Marlon Brando (1954, 1972), Dustin Hoffman (1979, 1988), Tom Hanks (1993, 1994), Jack Nicholson (1975, 1997), and Sean Penn (2003, 2008). Tracy and Hanks were the only actors to win their awards in consecutive years. Furthermore, Tracy and Hanks were the same age at the time they received their Academy Awards: 37 for the first and 38 for the second.
The actors with the most nominations in this category are Spencer Tracy and Laurence Olivier, with nine each. Paul Newman, Jack Nicholson, and Peter O'Toole tie for third place with eight nominations each.
Daniel Day-Lewis, Jack Nicholson and Walter Brennan are the only actors to have won three competitive acting Oscars. Nicholson has twice won Best Actor and once won Best Supporting Actor, while Brennan's three wins all came in the Best Supporting Actor category.
Six actors have won both the Best Actor and the Best Supporting Actor awards: Jack Lemmon, Robert De Niro, Jack Nicholson, Gene Hackman, Kevin Spacey, and Denzel Washington.
There has been only one announced tie in the history of this category. In 1932, Fredric March received one more vote than Wallace Beery. Academy rules at that time considered such a close margin to be a tie, so both March and Beery received the award. Under current Academy rules, however, dual awards are given only for exact ties.
Peter Finch is the only posthumous winner of the Best Actor award, though he was alive when his nomination was announced. The only posthumously nominated performers in this category were James Dean, Spencer Tracy, and Massimo Troisi. James Dean is the only actor to be posthumously nominated twice for this category.
Life expectancy of winners [edit]
In 2001 Donald A. Redelmeier, MD, and Sheldon M. Singh, BSc published a study in the Annals of Internal Medicine in which they found:
"Winning an Academy Award was associated with a large gain in life expectancy for actors and actresses...Winning an Academy Award can increase a performer’s stature and may add to their longevity. The absolute difference in life expectancy is about equal to the societal consequence of curing all cancers in all people for all time (22, 23). Moreover, film stars who have won multiple Academy Awards have a survival advantage of 6.0 years (CI, 0.7 to 11.3 years) over performers with multiple films but no victories. Formal education is not the only way to improve health, and strict poverty is not the only way to worsen health. The main implication is that higher status may be linked to lower mortality rates even at very impressive levels of achievement."[1]
The aforementioned authors did an update to 29 March 2006 in which they found 122 more individuals and 144 more deaths since their first publication. Their unadjusted analysis showed a smaller survival advantage of 3.6 years for winners compared to their fellow nominees and costars in the films in which their performance garnered them their award.[2] However, in a 2006 published study by Marie-Pierre Sylvestre, MSc, Ella Huszti, MSc, and James A. Hanley, PhD, the authors found:
"The statistical method used to derive this statistically significant difference gave winners an unfair advantage because it credited an Oscar winner's years of life before winning toward survival subsequent to winning. When the authors of the current article reanalyzed the data using methods that avoided this "immortal time" bias, the survival advantage was closer to 1 year and was not statistically significant. The bias in Redelmeier and Singh's study is not limited to longevity comparisons of persons who reach different ranks within their profession."[3]
Winners and nominees [edit]
Following the Academy's practice, the films below are listed by year of their Los Angeles qualifying run, which is usually (but not always) the film's year of release.
For the first six ceremonies, the eligibility period spanned two calendar years. For example, the 2nd Academy Awards presented on April 3, 1930, recognized films that were released between August 1, 1928 and July 31, 1929. Starting with the 7th Academy Awards, held in 1935, the period of eligibility became the full previous calendar year from January 1 to December 31.
Winners are listed first in colored row, followed by the other nominees.
1920s [edit]
| Year | Actor | Film | Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1927/28 (1st) |
|||
| Emil Jannings | The Last Command The Way of All Flesh |
Grand Duke Sergius Alexander August Schilling |
|
| Richard Barthelmess | The Noose The Patent Leather Kid |
Nickie Elkins Patent Leather Kid |
|
| 1928/29 |
|||
| Warner Baxter | In Old Arizona | The Cisco Kid | |
| George Bancroft | Thunderbolt | Thunderbolt Jim Lang | |
| Chester Morris | Alibi | Chick Williams (No. 1065) | |
| Paul Muni | The Valiant | James Dyke | |
| Lewis Stone | The Patriot | Count Pahlen |
1930s [edit]
1940s [edit]
1950s [edit]
1960s [edit]
1970s [edit]
1980s [edit]
1990s [edit]
2000s [edit]
2010s [edit]
| Year | Actor | Film | Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 (83rd) |
|||
| Colin Firth | The King's Speech | King George VI | |
| Javier Bardem | Biutiful | Uxbal | |
| Jeff Bridges | True Grit | Rooster Cogburn | |
| Jesse Eisenberg | The Social Network | Mark Zuckerberg | |
| James Franco | 127 Hours | Aron Ralston | |
| 2011 (84th) |
|||
| Jean Dujardin | The Artist | George Valentin | |
| Demián Bichir | A Better Life | Carlos Galindo | |
| George Clooney | The Descendants | Matt King | |
| Gary Oldman | Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy | George Smiley | |
| Brad Pitt | Moneyball | Billy Beane | |
| 2012 (85th) |
|||
| Daniel Day-Lewis | Lincoln | Abraham Lincoln | |
| Bradley Cooper | Silver Linings Playbook | Patrick "Pat" Solitano, Jr. | |
| Hugh Jackman | Les Misérables | Jean Valjean | |
| Joaquin Phoenix | The Master | Freddie Quell | |
| Denzel Washington | Flight | Captain William "Whip" Whitaker |
Multiple awards for Best Actor [edit]
3 awards
- Daniel Day-Lewis
2 awards
- Marlon Brando
- Gary Cooper
- Tom Hanks
- Dustin Hoffman
- Fredric March
- Jack Nicholson
- Sean Penn
- Spencer Tracy
Multiple nominations for Best Actor [edit]
9 nominations
- Laurence Olivier
- Spencer Tracy
8 nominations
- Paul Newman
- Jack Nicholson
- Peter O'Toole
7 nominations
- Marlon Brando
- Dustin Hoffman
- Jack Lemmon
6 nominations
- Richard Burton
5 nominations
- Gary Cooper
- Daniel Day-Lewis
- Robert De Niro
- Tom Hanks
- Fredric March
- Paul Muni
- Al Pacino
- Gregory Peck
- Sean Penn
- James Stewart
4 nominations
- Warren Beatty
- Charles Boyer
- Michael Caine
- Albert Finney
- Burt Lancaster
- Denzel Washington
3 nominations
- Humphrey Bogart
- Jeff Bridges
- James Cagney
- Montgomery Clift
- George Clooney
- Ronald Colman
- Bing Crosby
- Russell Crowe
- Johnny Depp
- Kirk Douglas
- Robert Duvall
- Morgan Freeman
- Clark Gable
- William Holden
- Anthony Hopkins
- William Hurt
- Charles Laughton
- Marcello Mastroianni
- Jon Voight
- Robin Williams
2 nominations
- Alan Arkin
- Javier Bardem
- Nicolas Cage
- Tom Cruise
- James Dean
- Leonardo DiCaprio
- Richard Dreyfuss
- Clint Eastwood
- José Ferrer
- Peter Finch
- Colin Firth
- Henry Fonda
- Cary Grant
- Alec Guinness
- Gene Hackman
- Richard Harris
- Rex Harrison
- Leslie Howard
- Walter Huston
- Ben Kingsley
- Walter Matthau
- Robert Montgomery
- Nick Nolte
- Joaquin Phoenix
- Walter Pidgeon
- Brad Pitt
- Sidney Poitier
- Anthony Quinn
- Mickey Rooney
- Geoffrey Rush
- Maximilian Schell
- George C. Scott
- Peter Sellers
- Will Smith
- Rod Steiger
- John Travolta
- John Wayne
Multiple awards for Best Actor & Best Supporting Actor combined [edit]
3 awards
- Walter Brennan
- Daniel Day-Lewis
- Jack Nicholson
2 awards
- Marlon Brando
- Michael Caine
- Gary Cooper
- Robert De Niro
- Melvyn Douglas
- Gene Hackman
- Tom Hanks
- Dustin Hoffman
- Jack Lemmon
- Fredic March
- Sean Penn
- Anthony Quinn
- Jason Robards
- Kevin Spacey
- Spencer Tracy
- Peter Ustinov
- Christoph Waltz
- Denzel Washington
International presence [edit]
The awards are overwhelmingly American, though the following non-US actors have won an Academy Award for Best Actor:
- Australia: Peter Finch (born in the United Kingdom), Geoffrey Rush, Russell Crowe (born in New Zealand)
- Austria: Paul Muni
- The Bahamas: Sidney Poitier (born in the United States to Bahamian parents and spent his childhood in the Bahamas)
- France: Jean Dujardin
- Germany: Emil Jannings (a Swiss-born German who adopted Austrian citizenship two years before he died)
- Hungary: Paul Lukas
- Italy: Roberto Benigni
- Puerto Rico: José Ferrer
- Russia: Yul Brynner
- Switzerland: Maximilian Schell (a Swiss citizen born in Austria)
- United Kingdom: George Arliss, Charles Laughton, Victor McLaglen, Robert Donat, Ray Milland, Ronald Colman, Laurence Olivier, Alec Guinness, David Niven, Rex Harrison, Paul Scofield, Ben Kingsley, Daniel Day-Lewis (3 awards), Jeremy Irons, Anthony Hopkins, Colin Firth
There have been two years in which all four of the top acting Academy Awards were presented to non-Americans.
- At the 37th Academy Awards (1964), the winners were Rex Harrison (British), Julie Andrews (British), Peter Ustinov (British), and Lila Kedrova (Russian-born French).
- At the 80th Academy Awards (2007), the winners were Daniel Day-Lewis (British), Marion Cotillard (French), Javier Bardem (Spanish), and Tilda Swinton (British).
See also [edit]
- List of Best Actor winners by age
- List of nominees for the Academy Award for Best Actor (by actor)
- List of actors nominated for Academy Awards for foreign language performances
- List of actors nominated for two Academy Awards in the same year
- List of actors with two or more Academy Awards in acting categories
- List of actors who have won an Academy Award, a BAFTA Award, a Golden Globe, a SAG, and a Critic's Choice Award for a single performance
- List of Big Five Academy Award winners and nominees
- List of superlative Academy Award winners and nominees
- Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
- Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
- Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
- Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role
- BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
References [edit]
- ^ Redelmeier, Donald A. & Singh, Sheldon M. (15 May 2001), "Survival in Academy Award–Winning Actors and Actresses", Annals of Internal Medicine: 961, retrieved 14 Jan 2009
- ^ Redelmeier, Donald A. & Singh, Sheldon M. (5 Sep 2006), "Reanalysis of Survival of Oscar Winners", Annals of Internal Medicine: 392, retrieved 14 Jan 2009
- ^ Sylvestre, Marie-Pierre, Huszti, Ella & Hanley, James A. (5 Sep 2006), "Do Oscar Winners Live Longer than Less Successful Peers? A Reanalysis of the Evidence", Annals of Internal Medicine: 361, retrieved 14 Jan 2009
External links [edit]
- Oscars.org (official Academy site)
- Oscar.com (official ceremony promotional site)
- The Academy Awards Database (official site)
- Complete Downloadable List of Academy Award Nominees
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