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Monte Cristo Award † Meryl Streep: Won [225] Film Society of Lincoln Center: 2008 Chaplin Award Gala Tribute † Meryl Streep: Won [226] Florida Film Critics Circle: 2002: Best Supporting Actress: Adaptation: Won [227] 2019 Best Cast: Little Women: Won [228] George Eastman Museum: 1999 George Eastman Award † Meryl Streep: Won [229] Georgia ...
For her work on television, Streep won three Primetime Emmy Awards including for her roles in the miniseries Holocaust (1978) and Angels in America (2003). She also took roles in the HBO drama series Big Little Lies (2019) and the Hulu comedy-mystery series Only Murders in the Building (2023–24).
Six have won exactly three acting Academy Awards: Daniel Day-Lewis (three Best Actor awards), Frances McDormand (three Best Actress awards), Meryl Streep (two Best Actress awards and one Best Supporting Actress award), Jack Nicholson (two Best Actor awards and one Best Supporting Actor award), [5] Ingrid Bergman (two Best Actress awards and one ...
While Meryl Streep holds the title of most nominated actress, legendary leading lady Katharine Hepburn boasts the win record, having won four Oscars over her six-decade career.
Meryl Streep introduced the icon award recipient, Cher, with whom she starred in the 1984 film “Silkwood.” ... SZA took home three awards in the R&B categories and her song “Kill Bill” won ...
February 2012: Meryl Streep thanks Don Gummer in Oscars acceptance speech. At the 84th Academy Awards in February 2012, Streep was awarded her third Oscar for her role in “The Iron Lady.”
She won the award the following year for playing a troubled wife in the top-grossing drama Kramer vs. Kramer (1979). [7] In 1978, Streep played a German, "Aryan" woman married to a Jewish man in Nazi Germany in the television miniseries Holocaust, which earned her a Primetime Emmy Award. [8] Streep established herself as a leading Hollywood ...
Kramer vs. Kramer received a leading 9 nominations at the 52nd Academy Awards, including Best Supporting Actor (for Henry) and Best Supporting Actress (for Alexander and Streep), and won a leading 5 awards – Best Picture, Best Director (for Benton), Best Actor (for Hoffman), Best Supporting Actress (for Streep) and Best Adapted Screenplay.