37th Academy Awards
37th Academy Awards | |
---|---|
Date | April 5, 1965 |
Site | Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in Santa Monica, California |
Host | Bob Hope |
Producer | Joe Pasternak |
Director | Richard Dunlap |
Highlights | |
Best Picture | My Fair Lady |
Most awards | My Fair Lady (8) |
Most nominations | Mary Poppins (13) |
TV in the United States | |
Network | ABC |
The 37th Academy Awards honored film achievements of 1964. For the first time, an award was presented in the field of makeup. None of the four acting awards went to American actors, something not repeated until the 80th Academy Awards were awarded for 2007.
The Best Picture winner of 1964, director George Cukor's My Fair Lady, was about the transformative training of a rough-speaking flower girl into a lady. The musical had run for many years on the stage (in both NYC and London). Audrey Hepburn, the female lead of the film, was controversially not nominated for Best Actress. The unpopularity of her replacement of Julie Andrews - the stage actress from the original play (and ironically the Best Actress winner of the year) - as well as the revelation that her singing performance was dubbed by Marni Nixon were seen as the main reasons for the snub.
The producer of the ceremony was MGM film producer Joe Pasternak. The master of ceremonies was Bob Hope making it his 14th time hosting the show. The awards show was star-studded with many top celebrities participating, including an appearance by Judy Garland, who sang a medley of Cole Porter songs in tribute to the composer, who died in October 1964.
This year marked the only time in Oscar history where 3 films got 12 or more nominations. Becket and My Fair Lady both with 12 nominations and Mary Poppins with 13. This marked the first year since the inception of the Supporting Actor and Actress categories wherein the acting Oscars were all won by non-American actors.
Contents
Awards
Winners are listed first and highlighted with boldface[1][2]
Academy Honorary Award
Presenters and performers
Presenters
- Elizabeth Ashley and Macdonald Carey (Presenters: Art Direction Awards)
- Fred Astaire (Presenter: Best Original Song)
- Claudia Cardinale, Angie Dickinson, and Steve McQueen (Presenter: Sound Awards)
- Richard Chamberlain and Vince Edwards (Presenters: Best Film Editing)
- Joan Crawford (Presenter: Best Director)
- Alain Delon (Presenter: Best Visual Effects)
- Jimmy Durante and Martha Raye (Presenters: Documentary Awards)
- Anthony Franciosa (Presenter: Scientific and Technical Awards)
- Greer Garson and Dick Van Dyke (Presenters: Best Costume Design)
- Rex Harrison (Presenter: Best Foreign Language Film)
- Audrey Hepburn (Presenter: Best Actor)
- Rock Hudson and Jean Simmons (Presenter: Best Cinematography)
- Gene Kelly (Presenter: Judy Garland Performance)
- Deborah Kerr (Presenter: Writing Awards)
- Angela Lansbury (Presenter: Best Supporting Actor)
- Karl Malden (Presenter: Best Supporting Actress)
- Merle Oberon (Presenter: Short Subjects Awards)
- Gregory Peck (Presenter: Best Picture)
- Sidney Poitier (Presenter: Best Actress)
- Debbie Reynolds (Presenter: Music Awards)
- Rosalind Russell (Presenter: Honorary Award to William Tuttle)
Performers
- Judy Garland (Cole Porter Medley)
- Jack Jones ("Where Love Has Gone" from Where Love Has Gone)
- The New Christy Minstrels ("Chim Chim Cher-ee" from Mary Poppins)
- Patti Page ("Hush… Hush, Sweet Charlotte" from Hush… Hush, Sweet Charlotte
- Andy Williams ("Dear Heart" from Dear Heart)
- Nancy Wilson ("My Kind of Town" from Robin and the 7 Hoods)
Multiple nominations and awards
These films had multiple nominations:
|
The following films received multiple awards.
|
See also
- 22nd Golden Globe Awards
- 1964 in film
- 7th Grammy Awards
- 16th Primetime Emmy Awards
- 17th Primetime Emmy Awards
- 18th British Academy Film Awards
- 19th Tony Awards
References
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ The Official Academy Awards® Database