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Disney received three more Honorary Academy Awards, one in 1939 [8] and two in 1942. [10] At the 26th Academy Awards (1954), Disney won the Academy Award in all four categories in which he was nominated: Best Short Subject (Cartoon), Best Short Subject (Two-reel), Best Documentary (Feature), and Best Documentary (Short Subject).
Any awards. Walt Disney received record 10 awards in the eight consecutive years from 1931/32 through 1939. Eight (listed below) are for Short Subject (Cartoon), and two were Special Awards: one for the creation of Mickey Mouse, and one recognizing the innovation of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
However, with 22 wins from 59 nominations, Walt Disney is the most decorated Oscar winner in history. Movie producer Walt Disney with the four Oscar awards he won in a single night. George Silk ...
When Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day was released in 1968, it earned Disney an Academy Award in the Short Subject (Cartoon) category, awarded posthumously. [151] After Disney's death, his studios continued to produce live-action films prolifically while the quality of their animated films was allowed to languish.
Nominations resulted in 3 awards Note : Walt Disney is the highest-earning individual with wins and nominations in any category in the Academy Awards, with fifty-nine nominations and twenty-two Oscar wins (as well as four Honorary Awards), including a record four in one year.
It was the third film to receive five acting nominations. Its eight awards matched the record set by Gone with the Wind in 1939. Walt Disney won four awards, a record to this day for most Oscars won by a single person in the same year (the record was tied by Bong Joon Ho at the 92nd Academy Awards [1] [a]).
Films screened in Los Angeles between August 1, 1931, and July 31, 1932, were eligible to receive awards. [1] Walt Disney created a short animated film for the banquet, Parade of the Award Nominees. [2] Grand Hotel became the only Best Picture winner to be nominated for Best Picture and nothing else. [3]
Nichols was the first EGOT winner to win the Grammy as their first award, the first winner to have won multiple awards for directing (an Oscar, several Tonys, and two Emmys) . When counting all awards won—not just the first of each type—Nichols has the longest timespan of awards among EGOT winners, at 51 years. Academy Awards: