18th Academy Awards

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18th Academy Awards
DateMarch 7, 1946
SiteGrauman's Chinese Theatre, Hollywood, California, USA
Hosted byJames Stewart
Bob Hope
Highlights
Best PictureThe Lost Weekend
Most awardsThe Lost Weekend (4)
Most nominationsThe Bells of St. Mary's (8)

The 18th Academy Awards was the first such ceremony after World War II. As a result, the ceremony featured more glamour than had been present during the war. Plaster statuettes that had been given out during the war years were replaced with bronze statuettes with gold plating. Despite this, director Billy Wilder's grim and socially significant drama The Lost Weekend took the top honors. It became the first film to win both the Academy Award for Best Picture and the Palme d'Or. Joan Crawford was absent, claiming she had pneumonia (although it was said it was because she was sure she would not win the Oscar for Best Actress for Mildred Pierce). As it turned out, she did win, and the award was delivered to her while in bed that night.[1]

This was the first year in which every film nominated for Best Picture won at least one Oscar, and also the first time that a sequel (The Bells of St. Mary's) had been nominated for Best Picture.

Awards[]

Charles Brackett; Best Picture winner and Best Screenplay co-winner
Billy Wilder (right); Best Director winner and Best Screenplay co-winner
Ray Milland; Best Actor winner
Joan Crawford; Best Actress winner
James Dunn; Best Supporting Actor winner
Anne Revere; Best Supporting Actress winner
Richard Rodgers; Best Original Song co-winner
Oscar Hammerstein II; Best Original Song co-winner
Peggy Ann Garner; Juvenile Academy Award recipient

Nominations announced on January 27, 1946. Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface.[2]

Best Motion Picture Best Director
  • The Lost WeekendCharles Brackett for Paramount Picturesdouble-dagger
    • Anchors AweighJoe Pasternak for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
    • The Bells of St. Mary'sLeo McCarey for RKO Radio Pictures
    • Mildred PierceJerry Wald for Warner Bros.
    • SpellboundDavid O. Selznick for United Artists
Best Actor Best Actress
  • Joan Crawford – Mildred Pierce as Mildred Pierce Beragondouble-dagger
Best Supporting Actor Best Supporting Actress
  • Anne Revere – National Velvet as Mrs Araminty Browndouble-dagger
    • Eve Arden – Mildred Pierce as Ida Corwin
    • Ann Blyth – Mildred Pierce as Veda Pierce Forrester
    • Angela Lansbury – The Picture of Dorian Gray as Sibyl Vane
    • Joan Lorring – The Corn Is Green as Bessie Watty
Best Original Screenplay Best Screenplay
  • The Lost Weekend – Charles Brackett and Billy Wilder from The Lost Weekend by Charles R. Jacksondouble-dagger
    • Mildred Pierce – Ranald MacDougall from Mildred Pierce by James M. Cain
    • Pride of the Marines – Albert Maltz from Al Schmid, Marine by Roger Butterfield
    • The Story of G.I. Joe – Leopold Atlas, Guy Endore and Philip Stevenson from Brave Men and Here Is Your War by Ernie Pyle
    • A Tree Grows in Brooklyn – Frank Davis and Tess Slesinger (posthumous nomination) from A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith
Best Motion Picture Story Best Documentary Feature
Best Documentary Short Subject Best Live Action Short Subject, One-Reel
  • Stairway to Light – Herbert Moulton and Jerry Breslerdouble-dagger
    • Along the Rainbow Trail – Edmund Reek
    • Screen Snapshots' 25th Anniversary – Ralph Staub
    • Story of a Dog – Gordon Hollingshead
    • White Rhapsody – Grantland Rice
    • Your National Gallery – Joseph O'Brien (posthumous nomination) and Thomas Mead
Best Live Action Short Subject, Two-Reel Best Short Subject – Cartoons
  • Star in the Night – Gordon Hollingsheaddouble-dagger
    • A Gun in His Hand – Chester Franklin
    • The Jury Goes Round 'N' Round – Jules White
    • The Little Witch – George Templeton
Best Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture Best Scoring of a Musical Picture
Best Original Song Best Sound Recording
Best Art Direction – Interior Decoration, Black-and-White Best Art Direction – Interior Decoration, Color
  • Blood on the Sun – Art Direction: Wiard Ihnen; Interior Decoration: A. Roland Fieldsdouble-dagger
  • Frenchman's Creek – Art Direction: Hans Dreier and Ernst Fegté; Interior Decoration: Samuel M. Comer
    • Leave Her to Heaven – Art Direction: Lyle R. Wheeler and Maurice Ransford; Interior Decoration: Thomas Little
    • National Velvet – Art Direction: Cedric Gibbons and Urie McCleary; Interior Decoration: Edwin B. Willis and Mildred Griffiths
    • San Antonio – Art Direction: Ted Smith; Interior Decoration: Jack McConaghy
    • A Thousand and One Nights – Art Direction: Stephen Goosson and Rudolph Sternad; Interior Decoration: Frank Tuttle
Best Cinematography, Black-and-White Best Cinematography, Color
  • The Picture of Dorian Gray – Harry Stradlingdouble-dagger
    • The Keys of the Kingdom – Arthur C. Miller
    • The Lost Weekend – John F. Seitz
    • Mildred Pierce – Ernest Haller
    • Spellbound – George Barnes
  • Leave Her to Heaven – Leon Shamroydouble-dagger
Best Film Editing Best Special Effects

Academy Honorary Award[]

  • Walter Wanger "for his six years service as President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences".
  • The House I Live In tolerance short subject; produced by Frank Ross and Mervyn LeRoy; directed by Mervyn LeRoy; screenplay by Albert Maltz; song "The House I Live In", music by Earl Robinson, lyrics by Lewis Allan; starring Frank Sinatra; released by RKO Radio.
  • Republic Studio, Daniel J. Bloomberg and the Republic Sound Department "for the building of an outstanding musical scoring auditorium which provides optimum recording conditions and combines all elements of acoustic and engineering design.

Academy Juvenile Award[]

  • Peggy Ann Garner

Presenters[]

  • Ingrid Bergman (Presenter: Best Actor)
  • Charles Boyer (Presenter: Best Actress)
  • Frank Capra (Presenter: Best Film Editing, Best Sound Recording and Best Special Effects)
  • Bette Davis (Presenter: Writing Awards)
  • Y. Frank Freeman (Presenter: Short Subject Awards)
  • D. W. Griffith (Presenter: Best Cinematography)
  • Van Heflin (Presenter: Best Supporting Actress and Best Supporting Actor)
  • Eric Johnston (Presenter: Best Picture)
  • George Murphy (Presenter: Honorary Award to Peggy Ann Garner)
  • Donald Nelson (Presenter: Honorary Awards)
  • Ginger Rogers (Presenter: Best Art Direction)
  • Cesar Romero and Peter Viertel (Presenters: Show Introduction)
  • William Wyler (Presenter: Best Director)

Performers[]

  • Kathryn Grayson
  • Dick Haymes
  • Dinah Shore
  • Frank Sinatra

Multiple nominations and awards[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Miller, Julie (September 26, 2012). "The Academy Award That Joan Crawford Accepted In Bed Sells; Can You Guess for How Much?". Vanity Fair. Condé Nast. Retrieved May 21, 2019.
  2. ^ "The 18th Academy Awards (1946) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved 2011-08-16.
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