1954
The winner is listed first, in CAPITAL letters.
Actor:
MARLON BRANDO in "On
The Waterfront", Humphrey Bogart in "The
Caine Mutiny", Bing Crosby in "The Country Girl",
James Mason in "A
Star Is Born", Dan O'Herlihy in "Adventures of
Robinson Crusoe"
Actress:
GRACE KELLY in "The Country Girl", Dorothy Dandridge
in "Carmen Jones", Judy Garland in "A
Star Is Born", Audrey Hepburn in "Sabrina",
Jane Wyman in "Magnificent Obsession"
Supporting Actor:
EDMOND O'BRIEN in "The Barefoot Contessa", Lee J. Cobb
in "On
The Waterfront", Karl Malden in "On
The Waterfront", Rod Steiger in "On
The Waterfront", Tom Tully in "The
Caine Mutiny"
Supporting Actress:
EVA MARIE SAINT in "On
The Waterfront", Nina Foch in "Executive Suite",
Katy Jurado in "Broken Lance", Jan Sterling in "The
High and the Mighty", Claire Trevor in "The High and
the Mighty"
Director:
ELIA KAZAN for "On
The Waterfront", Alfred Hitchcock for "Rear
Window", George Seaton for "The Country Girl",
William Wellman for "The High and the Mighty", Billy
Wilder for "Sabrina"
The
Best Picture winner (of producer Sam Spiegel), director Elia
Kazan's semi-documentary, expose, and thriller, On
The Waterfront (with twelve nominations and eight wins)
matched two other films with eight wins - but they each had
thirteen nominations:
The awards for the top winner this year included:
Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress, Best Director,
Best Story/Screenplay (Budd Schulberg), Best B/W Cinematography
(Boris Kaufman), Best B/W Art/Set Direction, and Best Film
Editing.
The low-budget, black and white Best Picture
was filmed entirely on location in Hoboken and told the gritty
story of New York dock workers, brutality, corruption, and
embroilment with a gangster union boss. It provided an expose
of union racketeering while showcasing the murder of an innocent
longshoreman. Kazan and screenwriter Budd Schulberg justified
their own naming of names (blacklisting-testimony against alleged
Communists) as friendly witnesses before the House Un-American
Activities Committee (HUAC) in the early 50s with the film's
story of an heroic longshoreman informant Terry Malloy (Marlon
Brando) who stood alone and turned witness against the corrupt
and intimidating union bosses and became a marked 'pigeon'.
The film marked a comeback for Brando, who hadn't won a Best
Actor Oscar - yet.
Losing to the Best Picture winner were these
four films:
- director George Seaton's and Clifford Odets'
backstage melodrama The Country Girl (with seven nominations
and two wins - Best Actress and Best Screenplay) about the
comeback attempt of an alcoholic singer
- Fox's light CinemaScope travelogue/romance
by director Jean Negulesco about three women romantically
involved with Italian men in Rome, Three Coins in the
Fountain (with three nominations and two wins - Best
Color Cinematography (for Milton Krasner) and Best Song,
the title song "Three Coins in the Fountain" - remarkably defeating
Judy Garland's "The Man That Got Away" in
A
Star Is Born)
- another CinemaScope film and one of the best
musical/dance films ever made by director Stanley Donen,
MGM's Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (with five nominations
and only one win - Best Musical Score) about seven fur-trapping
brothers in the Oregon Territory who gradually find wives,
starring Jane Powell and Howard Keel
- the courtroom drama about a naval mutiny based
on Herman Wouk's novel, The Caine
Mutiny (with seven nominations and no wins) from
director Edward Dmytryk
Elia Kazan, director of the dockside drama On
The Waterfront won his second (and last) Oscar,
defeating among others director Alfred Hitchcock, who was
also nominated for Rear
Window. [The famed suspense/thriller director Alfred
Hitchcock has always appeared to be discriminated against
by the Academy - he never won a Best Director Oscar
out of five tries - Rebecca
(1940), Lifeboat (1944), Spellbound (1945), Rear
Window, and Psycho
(1960). His only Best Director nomination for a
color film occurred in this year. Hitchcock resorted to
receiving an Honorary Award in 1967.]
George Seaton was nominated for two-Oscar winner The
Country Girl (Seaton's screenplay for the film was honored
with an Oscar for Best Screenplay). William Wellman (who
won his only Oscar for Original Story for the earliest
film version of A Star is Born (1937)), was nominated
for The High and the Mighty. [Wellman had been directing
films since 1929 including such memorable films as The
Public Enemy (1931), Nothing Sacred (1937), Beau
Geste (1939), The Ox-Bow Incident
(1943), and The Story of G.I. Joe (1945),
but he was nominated only one other time as Best Director
for Battleground (1949) - and he lost then too.] Finally,
Billy Wilder, who was also nominated for his screenplay for Sabrina,
lost the Best Director award as well. Director Stanley Donen
(always snubbed as Best Director), whose superb film Seven
Brides for Seven Brothers was nominated for Best Picture,
was missing from the Best Director nominees. [Donen finally
received an Honorary Award in 1997 -- 43 years later.]
1954 was another upset year in the Academy Awards,
particularly in the Best Actor and Actress categories, where
each favored nominee lost.
Marlon Brando's Best Actor victory (he was "a
contender" with his fourth consecutive nomination
since 1951, and first win!) was for his role as the confused,
ex-prizefighter and roughneck longshoreman Terry Malloy, a
racketeer's stooge in Elia Kazan's On
The Waterfront. The win was a surprise one (Bing Crosby
was favored), but a deserved one. His transformation from passive
dockworker to a crusader against trade-union tyranny is impressive.
Other Best Actor-nominated performers included
distinguished performances:
- Bing Crosby (with his third and final career
nomination) as an against-type, has-been alcoholic actor/singer
Frank Elgin in the depressing, realistic drama The Country
Girl, one of Crosby's four dramatic roles
- James Mason (with his first of three unsuccessful
nominations) as ruined, alcoholic actor Norman Maine in
A
Star Is Born (with six nominations and no wins).
(In a long career, Mason had only a total of three
nominations including later films Georgy Girl (1966) and The
Verdict (1982) - Mason never won an Oscar.)
- Humphrey Bogart (with his third and last career
nomination) in the memorable role as paranoid, twitchy, and
disintegrating Captain Queeg who is obsessed with cleanliness
and rolls steel ball bearings in his hand on the witness
stand in The Caine Mutiny.
[Bogart's only win, often seen as a 'payback' career
Oscar, came three years earlier for
The
African Queen (1951) - when he also competed against
Brando with his superior performance in A
Streetcar Named Desire (1951).]
- Irish actor Dan O'Herlihy (with his sole career
nomination) as castaway Robinson Crusoe in the film adaptation
of Defoe's novel in the Luis Bunuel-directed Adventures
of Robinson Crusoe (the film's sole nomination)
Crosby's co-star in The Country Girl,
Grace Kelly, was nominated (with her second consecutive nomination
- and her last career nomination) for her de-glamorized role
as his frumpy, slatternly, dowdy, embittered wife Georgie Elgin
(with horn-rimmed spectacles and a shapeless cardigan sweater),
and she won the Best Actress award - her sole win. In
her role, William Holden's interest in her destroys her husband's
(Bing Crosby) sobered, singing comeback. [Kelly probably won
the Best Actress Award because she was being rewarded for a
very versatile year - she appeared in five films in 1954: the
other three films were Dial M for Murder, Green Fire, The
Bridges at Toko-Ri and Rear
Window. Kelly had been better suited in more romantic,
sleek, and stylish roles in films such as To
Catch a Thief (1955) and High Society (1956).]
The other Best Actress nominees included:
- veteran musical-performer Judy Garland, who
was favored to win because of a return to film after four
years of personal problems, including breakdowns, attempted
suicide, drug problems, and bankruptcy. With her first of
two unsuccessful career nominations, Judy Garland played
the wife of an alcoholic - a comeback role as Esther Blodgett/Vicki
Lester in George Cukor's remake of the 1937 Fredric March/Janet
Gaynor film -
A
Star Is Born.
[Note: Garland hadn't been in a film since Summer Stock
(1950), and it would be another seven years before her
next film, Judgment at Nuremberg (1961). Her loss to
Grace Kelly sent her into another depressive tailspin. Garland
won only one Oscar - a Special Award she had received
for 1939 (presented at the 1940 Academy Awards ceremony) for "her
outstanding performance as a screen juvenile during the past
year."]
- black actress Dorothy Dandridge (with her sole Oscar
nomination) in the title role as a factory worker in Otto
Preminger's Carmen Jones (with two nominations and
no wins) - [Dandridge was the first black woman/performer
to be nominated for Best Actress]
- Jane Wyman (with her fourth and final career
nomination) as wealthy blinded woman Helen Phillips in director
Douglas Sirk's sentimental, heart-wrenching tearjerker Magnificent
Obsession (the film's sole nomination)
- Audrey Hepburn (with her second of five career
nominations) as beautiful chauffeur's daughter Sabrina Fairchild
in Billy Wilder's entertaining romantic comedy Sabrina (with
six nominations and one win - Best B/W Costume Design). [It
was Hepburn's second major starring film role. She won the
previous year for
Roman
Holiday (1953), but would never win another Oscar.]
On
The Waterfront was one of only a few films in cinematic
history that received multiple acting nominations in the
same category. [Other films with three nominees in direct
competition with each other in the same category include: Tom
Jones (1963), The Godfather
(1972), and The Godfather,
Part II (1974).]
Three out of the five nominees for Best Supporting
Actor were from the major Oscar winner of 1954, but the roles
seemed to cancel each other out and give the vote to the victor:
- Karl Malden (with his second and last career
nomination) played the concerned, liberal, militant waterfront
and neighborhood priest Father Barry
- Lee J. Cobb (with his first of two unsuccessful
career nominations) portrayed the unscrupulous, arrogant
gangster/union boss-racketeer Johnny Friendly
- Rod Steiger (with his first of three career
nominations) was in one of his best career roles as crooked,
opportunistic lawyer Charley Malloy (Marlon Brando's brother)
working for the racketeer boss
The fourth nominee was Tom Tully (with his sole
career nomination) as The Caine's skipper Captain DeVriess
(before Bogart took charge) in The Caine
Mutiny.
The upset winner in the category was Edmond O'Brien
(with his first of two career nominations - and his sole Oscar)
as flamboyant, sweaty, slimy and nervous Hollywood publicist/press
agent Oscar Muldoon who helps Humphrey Bogart promote a Spanish
dancer (the beautiful Ava Gardner) in director Joseph Mankiewicz's
trashy melodrama The Barefoot Contessa (with two nominations
and one win - Best Supporting Actor). [O'Brien would be nominated only one
other time in his career, for Seven Days in May (1964).]
In the role of a courageous young, convent-bred
daughter of a longshoreman named Edie Doyle (who becomes Marlon
Brando's devoted girlfriend at the end) in On
The Waterfront, TV and stage actress Eva Marie Saint
(with her sole career nomination - and only Oscar win for her
first screen role) won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar. It
was her debut film - and although she was a leading lady
in the film, her Best Supporting Actress nomination helped
to assure her win. [Note: Other actresses in future years who
would win similar Best Supporting Actress awards for central
starring roles include Goldie Hawn in Cactus Flower (1969),
Jessica Lange in Tootsie (1982),
Geena Davis in The Accidental
Tourist (1988), and Marisa Tomei in My Cousin Vinny
(1992).]
The other Best Supporting Actress nominees were:
- Nina Foch (with her sole career nomination)
as chic, but grief-stricken secretary Erica Martin in director
Robert Wise's Executive Suite (with four nominations
and no wins)
- Mexican-born actress Katy Jurado (with her
sole career nomination) as Senora Devereaux (Spencer Tracy's
Comanche wife) in Broken Lance (with two nominations
and one win - Best Motion Picture Story) [Jurado was more
memorable in
High
Noon (1952) but un-nominated]
- and two co-stars of director William Wellman's The
High and the Mighty (with six nominations and one win
- Best Dramatic Score) - a suspenseful airline drama with
John Wayne as the airline pilot: Jan Sterling (with her
sole career nomination) as mail-order bride and plane passenger
Sally McKee and Claire Trevor (with her third and last
career nomination) as aging, jaded, and bitter beauty May
Hoist
The Best Color Costume Design Oscar was presented
to Sanzo Wada for Gate of Hell - this marked the first Japanese-made
film to win a competitive award.
To compensate for the fact that screen legend
Greta Garbo had never received a competitive Best Actress Oscar,
she was belatedly presented with a special Honorary statue "for
her unforgettable screen performances" - thirteen years
after her retirement from her last film, Two-Faced Woman.
[Garbo had four career nominations for exceptional definitive
roles including Anna Christie (1929-30) and Romance
(1929-30), Camille (1936) and Ninotchka
(1939).]
Another Honorary Award was presented to the versatile,
red-haired comic Danny Kaye, for "his unique talents,
his service to the Academy, the motion picture industry, and
the American people." He never even received a nomination
throughout his entire film career, that was marked by such
great films as Wonder Man (1945), The Kid From Brooklyn
(1946), The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (1947), Hans
Christian Andersen (1952), Knock on Wood (1954),
and The Court Jester (1956).
Oscar Snubs and Omissions:
While Hitchcock was nominated as Best Director
for Rear
Window, the film should have also been nominated for
Best Picture, replacing inferior films such as: Three Coins
in the Fountain, The Caine Mutiny,
and The Country Girl.
Three stars of Rear
Window (with four nominations, and none for acting),
James Stewart (as 'Jeff' Jefferies), Grace Kelly (as Lisa
Carol Fremont), and Thelma Ritter (as Stella) were not nominated
(the studio - Paramount - promoted Kelly in its other film The
Country Girl instead).
Another better candidate for Best Picture which
wasn't nominated was George Cukor's A
Star Is Born, due in part to Warner Bros.' decision
to ignore the film during Academy promotions. Director Nicholas
Ray's independent, odd cult Western Johnny Guitar with
Sterling Hayden, Joan Crawford and Mercedes McCambridge in
lead roles, was entirely unnominated.
Two other films that deserved more recognition
included Douglas Sirk's melodramatic Magnificent Obsession with
Jane Wyman (who received a Best Actress nomination, the film's sole honor)
and Rock Hudson, and John Huston's quirky adventure comedy Beat
the Devil (without nominations) with Humphrey Bogart.
And why wasn't Fred MacMurray nominated (he was
never nominated in his entire career) instead of Tom Tully,
for his stronger performance as cynical troublemaker Captain
Keefer in The Caine Mutiny?
And Charles Laughton was neglected for his role as Henry Horatio
Hobson in David Lean's un-nominated British comedy Hobson's
Choice. Judy Holliday failed to receive a nomination for
her role as Gladys Glover in another Gordon-Kanin-Cukor comedy/satire It
Should Happen to You (a film with only one nomination -
Best Costume Design) - she co-starred with Jack Lemmon in his
film debut.
American-born Composer Larry Adler (blacklisted
and self-exiled in England) saw his nominated score for Genevieve credited
to conductor-arranger Muir Matheson. (The Academy would correct
the nomination in 1986.) And the great choreographer Michael
Kidd (with no career nominations), responsible for the high-stepping
and dancing in Best Picture-nominated Seven Brides for Seven
Brothers, finally was given some recognition by a special
Honorary Award in 1996 presented by the Academy.
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