Academy Award for Best Director
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The Academy Award for Best Director is one of the awards given to directors working in the motion picture industry by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Nominations are made by Academy members in the Directing branch, while the winners are chosen by the Academy membership as a whole.[citation needed] Since the inception of this award, 58 of the 79 Oscars for Best Director were for films that also won the Oscar for Best Picture.[1]
Throughout the past 79 years, accounting for ties and repeat winners, AMPAS has presented a total of 81 Best Director awards to 59 different directors. At the 1st Academy Awards, for films released in 1927/1928, there were two directing awards -- one for "Dramatic Direction" and one for "Comedy Direction." The Comedy Direction award was eliminated the next year and, indeed, the awards have overwhelmingly favored dramatic films ever since.
The earliest years of the award are marked by inconsistency and confusion. In the Academy Awards' first year, actors and others such as cinematographers were nominated for all of their films produced during the qualifying period. However, since the directing award was for "directing" rather than "best director", it honored the director in association with only a single film -- thus Janet Gaynor has two Frank Borzage films listed after her Best Actress nomination, but only one of them earned Borzage a directing nomination. The second year, the directing award followed the others in listing all of a director's work during the qualifying period, resulting in Frank Lloyd being nominated for three of his films -- but, even more confusingly, only one of them was listed on the final award as the film for which he won. Finally, for the 1931 awards, this confusing system was replaced by the modern system in which a director is nominated for a single film.
Many revered directors have never won the award, including Robert Altman (5 nominations), Michelangelo Antonioni (1 nomination), Ingmar Bergman (3 nominations), John Cassavetes (1 nomination), Charles Chaplin (1 nomination), Federico Fellini (4 nominations), John Frankenheimer (0 nominations), Howard Hawks (1 nomination), Alfred Hitchcock (5 nominations), Stanley Kramer (3 nominations), Stanley Kubrick (4 nominations), Akira Kurosawa (1 nomination), Sergio Leone (0 nominations), Ernst Lubitsch (3 nominations), Sidney Lumet (4 nominations), David Lynch (3 nominations), Terrence Malick (1 nomination), Arthur Penn (3 nominations), Ridley Scott (3 nominations), King Vidor (5 nominations), Peter Weir (4 nominations), George Lucas (2 nominations), and Orson Welles (1 nomination). Stephen Daldry has been nominated for both of his first two feature films, a unique feat; he was unsuccessful both times.
A few films have won Best Picture without their directors being nominated, though only one since the early 1930s, Driving Miss Daisy (1989). The others are both of the winners of Best Picture-like awards in 1927/28, Sunrise and Wings, and Grand Hotel (1932). The only directing winners to win for films which did not receive a Best Picture nomination are likewise at the very beginning: Lewis Milestone, director of the lone Comedy Direction winner Two Arabian Knights, and Frank Lloyd, none of whose three 1929 directing nominees was a Best Picture nominee.
No female director has ever won this award, and only three (Jane Campion, Sofia Coppola, and Lina Wertmuller) have ever been nominated.
Six people have been nominated for both Best Actor and Best Director for the same film, but none has won both. Four won Best Director but not Best Actor - Warren Beatty (Reds), Woody Allen (Annie Hall), Kevin Costner (Dances with Wolves), and Clint Eastwood (Unforgiven and Million Dollar Baby). Two won Best Actor but not Best Director - Laurence Olivier (Hamlet) and Roberto Benigni (Life Is Beautiful).
No Best Director winning film is lost, though the nominee The Patriot is lost and nominee Sorrell and Son is incomplete. Drag (one of the films for which Frank Lloyd was nominated but did not win in 1929) has long been presumed lost, though there are rumors of its survival, possibly only on videotape, and the Vitaphone discs of its soundtrack survive. The Comedy Direction winner, Two Arabian Knights, was believed lost for many years but was preserved in the Howard Hughes archive and has been broadcast (along with another first-year nominee produced by Hughes and believed lost, The Racket) on Turner Classic Movies.
John Ford is the only director with four Best Director Oscars, followed by Frank Capra and William Wyler, with three apiece. Wyler has the most nominations, 12. Robert Altman, Clarence Brown, Alfred Hitchcock, and King Vidor are tied for the most nominations without a win, at five each.
| Category | Name | Superlative | Year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Most Awards | John Ford | 4 awards | 1952 | Awards resulted from 5 nominations. |
| Most Nominations | William Wyler | 12 nominations | 1965 | Nominations resulted in 3 awards. |
| Oldest Winner | Clint Eastwood | 74 years old | 2004 | Million Dollar Baby |
| Oldest Nominee | John Huston | 79 years old | 1985 | Prizzi's Honor |
| Youngest Winner | Norman Taurog | 32 years old | 1930/31 | Skippy |
| Youngest Nominee | John Singleton | 24 years old | 1991 | Boyz N the Hood |
Each Academy Award ceremony is listed chronologically below along with the winner of the Academy Award for Directing and the film associated with the award. In the column next to the winner of each award are the other nominees for best director. Following the Academy's practice, the films below are listed by the years of their Los Angeles qualifying run, which is usually (but not always) in the year of release; for example, the Oscar for Best Director of 1999 was announced during the award ceremony held in 2000.
In the first year only, the award was separated into Dramatic Direction and Comedy Direction.
| Year | Winner film |
Nominated |
|---|---|---|
| 1927/1928 Dramatic |
Frank Borzage – Seventh Heaven |
Herbert Brenon – Sorrell and Son King Vidor – The Crowd |
| Comedy | Lewis Milestone – Two Arabian Knights |
Charles Chaplin – The Circus Ted Wilde – Speedy |
| 1928/1929 | Frank Lloyd – The Divine Lady |
Lionel Barrymore – Madame X Harry Beaumont – The Broadway Melody Irving Cummings – In Old Arizona Frank Lloyd – Weary River and Drag Ernst Lubitsch – The Patriot |
- Oscars.org (official Academy site)
- Oscar.com (official ceremony promotional site)
- The Academy Awards Database (official site)