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Acting Nomina-tions Acting Awards Best Actor Best Actress Best Supporting Actor Best Supporting Actress Best Picture; 1936: 9th: My Man Godfrey: 6 0 4 0 William Powell: Carole Lombard: Mischa Auer: Alice Brady: Not Nominated 1942: 15th: Mrs. Miniver: 12 6 5 2 Walter Pidgeon: Greer Garson: Henry Travers: Teresa Wright: Winner: May Whitty: 1943 ...
38% of films employed 0 or 1 woman in the roles considered, 23% employed 2 women, 28% employed 3 to 5 women, and 10% employed 6 to 9 women. A New York Times article stated that only 15% of the top films in 2013 had women for a lead acting role. [7]
McDormand is the first woman to win for acting (Best Actress for Fargo) and producing. McDormand is the first person to win for acting (Best Actress for Nomadland) and producing in the same year. Shared with Peter Spears and Dan Janvey. Ceán Chaffin Mank: Nominated Shared with Eric Roth and Douglas Urbanski. Christina Oh: Minari: Nominated ...
Sacha Baron Cohen nailed it in "Borat 2," Elisabeth Moss was incredible in "The Invisible Man," and Chadwick Boseman could win a posthumous Oscar.
Many roles that are given to women make them either dependent on the male counterpart or limits their role. Another characteristic of their role placement is that women are twice as likely to have a life-related role rather than a work-related role. Hollywood rarely chooses to have women be the all-powerful boss or to even have a successful career.
Anna Hathaway is set to star in her third Christopher Nolan movie, and she recently told Women’s Wear Daily that “it makes me feel like I’m doing something right.” Hathaway made her Nolan ...
The first film to win two acting awards was It Happened One Night (1934), which won Best Actor and Best Actress at the 7th Academy Awards. The most recent film to win at least two acting awards was Oppenheimer (2023), which won Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor at the 96th Academy Awards.
It shouldn't have to be said but: Women are great! Movies couldn’t and shouldn’t be made without women in the rooms where the decisions are made. Luckily for us, that problem is increasingly ...