The Best Director Academy Awards
Facts and Trivia (2)
Film Debut Nominees/Winners of Best Director Oscars:
Only six directors have won the Best Director Oscar for their film debut, while a sampling of others were nominated:
- Orson Welles for Citizen
Kane (1941) (nominated)
- Sidney Lumet for 12
Angry Men (1957) (nominated)
- Jack Clayton for Room at the Top (1959) (nominated)
- Frank Perry for David and Lisa (1962) (nominated)
- Mike Nichols for Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) (nominated)
- Warren Beatty/Buck Henry for Heaven
Can Wait (1978) (nominated)
- John Singleton for Boys N the Hood (1991) (nominated)
- Rob Marshall for Chicago
(2002) (nominated)
- Bennett Miller for Capote
(2005) (nominated)
- Paul Haggis for Crash
(2005) (nominated)
- Benh Zeitlin for Beasts of the Southern Wild
(2012) (nominated)
- Greta Gerwig for Lady Bird (2017) (nominated)
- Jordan Peele for Get Out (2017) (nominated)
Directors With Two Best Director Nominations in the Same Year:
Only three directors have received two Best Director
nominations in the same year:
Duo Directing Teams Nominated for Best Director:
Only four duo directing teams have been nominated
for Best Director in Oscars history, and only twice have the duo-directors
won:
- Jerome Robbins and Robert Wise for West
Side Story (1961) - (win) - two
Best Director Oscars were awarded to co-directors Jerome
Robbins and Robert Wise; it marked
the first time
that awards went to co-directors. The only Best Director
Oscar winner to win for the only film he ever directed
was also Jerome Robbins
- Joel and Ethan Coen for No Country for Old
Men (2007) - (win) - the first time a sibling team
had been nominated in the category, and the second directing
duo to win Best Director
- Warren Beatty and Buck Henry for Heaven Can
Wait (1978)
- Joel and Ethan Coen were again nominated as Best Director for True Grit (2010)
The Director with the Most Film Nominations in a Single Year:
Director W.S. (Woody) Van Dyke holds the single-year record for the most films to receive Oscar nominations (7):
- Van Dyke directed The Thin
Man (1934) that had four nominations (Best Picture, Best Actor,
Best Director, and Best Adaptation)
- Van Dyke directed Manhattan Melodrama (1934) that won Best Original Story
- Van Dyke directed Hide-out (1934) that was
nominated for Best Original Story
- Van Dyke directed Eskimo (1934) that won Best
Film Editing
The Director with the Most Oscar Wins For Films in the Same Year:
Director Steven Spielberg holds the record for the most Oscars wins for multiple films in the same year:
African-American (Black) Best Director Nominees/Winners:
No African-American (or black) has ever won Best
Director.
African-Americans (or blacks) nominated
as Best Director include only six individuals:
- John Singleton for Boyz N the Hood (1991) -
the first African-American to earn a Best Director nomination
- Lee Daniels for Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire (2009) - the second African-American nominated director; it was the first-ever Best Picture nominee to be directed by an African-American filmmaker
- British director Steve McQueen for Best Picture-winning 12
Years a Slave (2013) [Note: If McQueen had won Best Director,
he would have been the first black filmmaker to win
that honor] - while the film won Best Picture (and McQueen
earned a statuette as a producer), he lost the directing Oscar
- Barry Jenkins for Moonlight (2016) - co-producers
Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, and Adele Romanski were accorded the
Best Picture win, but Jenkins lost Best Director to Damien Chazelle
for La La Land (2016)
- actor turned film-maker Jordan Peele for Best
Picture-nominated Get
Out (2017) -
his solo directorial debut film; Peele also received a second
nomination (and Oscar win) for Best Original Screenplay - and became
the first African-American to earn such an Oscar. He
was also honored as the producer of the Best Picture
nominee; therefore, he became the first black
filmmaker (and the third filmmaker of all time, after Warren Beatty
and James L. Brooks) ever nominated for directing, writing,
and producing in the same year for a debut feature film
- Spike Lee for BlacKkKlansman (2018)
[Note:
Lee had been previously nominated for Best Original Screenplay
(Do the Right Thing (1989), and Best Documentary Feature (4
Little Girls (1997). He won his first Oscar, Best Adapted Screenplay
for BlacKkKlansman (2018).]
Female Directors: The
Only Winner - and the Only Ones Nominated
There have only been five female Best Director nominees:
- Italian film director Lina Wertmuller for Seven Beauties (1976, It.) - the first woman to be nominated for Best Director
- New Zealander Jane Campion for Best Picture-nominated The Piano (1993)
- American Sofia Coppola
for her Best Picture-nominated Lost
in Translation (2003) - the first American
woman nominated for Best Director and
only the third woman ever to be nominated for Best Director
- American Kathryn Bigelow for her Best Picture-nominated The
Hurt Locker (2009) - the second American
woman nominated as Best Director and only the fourth woman
nominated in the category
- American Greta Gerwig for her Best Picture-nominated Lady
Bird (2017) - the third American woman nominated as
Best Director and only the fifth woman nominated in the
category. In fact, she was also the first woman to be
nominated as Best Director for her solo directorial debut
The only female Best Director winner was
Kathryn Bigelow for Best Picture-winning The Hurt Locker
(2009).
A number of films directed
by women have been nominated for Best Picture (without a
corresponding Best Director nomination), including:
- Randa Haines' Children
of a Lesser God (1986)
- Penny Marshall's Awakenings (1990)
- Barbra Streisand's The Prince of Tides (1991)
- Valerie
Faris' (with Jonathan Dayton) Little Miss Sunshine (2006)
- Lone Scherfig's An Education (2009)
- Lisa Cholodenko's The
Kids Are All Right (2010)
- Debra
Granik's Winter's Bone (2010)
- Greta Gerwig's Little
Women (2019)
There are only three films in Oscar history solely written, directed and produced by women, that received a Best Picture
nomination:
- The Piano (1993, NZ), d. Jane Campion
- Winter's Bone (2010), d. Debra Granik
- Little Women (2019), d. Greta Gerwig
Foreign-Born Best Director Nominees and Winners:
Note: A sampling of the most significant
foreign-born directors (that have been nominated or won) are included
here (there are many others from the UK or Central/Western
Europe - see below): Bong Joon Ho (South Korea), Pedro Almodóvar
(Spain), Roberto Benigni (Italy), Ingmar
Bergman (Sweden), Bernardo Bertolucci (Italy), Federico Fellini
(Italy), Costa-Gavras (Greece), Michael Curtiz (Austria-Hungary),
Miloš Forman
(Czech.), Yorgos Lanthimos (Greece), Lewis
Milestone (Russia), Mike Nichols (Germany), Wolfgang Petersen
(Germany), Pawel
Pawlikowski (Poland), Billy Wilder (Austria-Hungary/Poland), William
Wyler (Germany), and Fred Zinnemann (Austria-Hungary).
There
are numerous UK-born (includes NZ, and CAN) and French-born (FR)
directors that have been nominated or have won: Michel Hazanavicius
(FR), Tom Hooper, Danny Boyle, Peter Jackson (NZ), Roman Polanski
(FR, but considered himself Polish), Sam Mendes, James Cameron
(CAN), Anthony Minghella, Richard Attenborough, François
Truffaut (FR), to name just
a few.
Ang Lee was the first Asian (or non-white)
filmmaker to win Hollywood's main filmmaking honor for Brokeback
Mountain (2005). He also won Best Director for Life of Pi
(2012). He was also nominated as Best Director for Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000). Other Asian
Best Director nominees include Hiroshi Teshigahara for Woman
in the Dunes (1964), Akira Kurosawa for Ran (1985),
and M. Night Shyamalan for The Sixth Sense (1999). It
was a remarkable achievement that South Korea's Parasite
(2019) won
Best International Feature Film, Best Picture, and Best Director
for Bong Joon Ho. He was only the second Asian director
ever to win a directing Oscar, following two-time champ Ang Lee.
From 2013 to 2018, Mexican film-makers have won Oscars
for Best Director in five of the six years:
- Alfonso Cuaron, Roma (2018)
- Guillermo del Toro, The Shape of Water
(2017) - Del Toro became the third Mexican-born filmmaker
to win the award
- Alejandro Inarritu, The Revenant (2015)
- Alejandro Inarritu, Birdman (2014)
- Alfonso Cuaron, Gravity (2013)
And the consecutive string of non-Americans (6) winning
Best Director stretched from 2010 to 2015:
- Ang Lee (Taiwanese-born), Life of Pi (2012)
- Michel Hazanavicius (Fr.), The
Artist (2011)
- Tom Hooper (UK), The
King's Speech (2010)
Mexican film-maker Guillermo del Toro won his first
Best Director Oscar for the Best Picture-winning The Shape of
Water (2017), with a whopping 13 nominations. [Note: This
was del Toro's first nomination and win in the category, although
he had a number of previous nominations in other categories. For The
Shape of Water,
he also won the Best Picture Oscar as co-producer, and had been
nominated for Best Original Screenplay. He had previously been
nominated twice for another fantasy film, Pan's
Labyrinth (2006), for Best Original Screenplay and Best Foreign
Language film.]
Mexican
film-maker Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu also won his first Best Director
Oscar for the Best Picture-winning Birdman
(2014), and won Best Original Screenplay for the same film.
[Note: Inarritu had three previous Oscar nominations:
Best Foreign Language Film Amores Perros (2000, Mex.), and
Best Director/ Best Picture for Babel (2006).] The next
year, he also won Best Director for Best Picture-nominated The
Revenant (2015). He
became the
first person in 65 years and only the third ever to win back-to-back
Best Director Oscars since Joseph L. Mankiewicz's A Letter To
Three Wives (1949) and All About Eve
(1950), and
only the third in history, also after John Ford's The
Grapes Of Wrath (1940) and How Green
Was My Valley (1941).
Mexican film director Alfonso Cuarón was nominated
for the first time as Best Director in 2013 and won the Oscar
for Gravity
(2013). He was the
first Mexican-born director to win Best Director. He also received
a Best Director Oscar for Roma (2018, Mex./US), voted the
Best Foreign Language Film. With his Best Director win for Roma
(2018), Cuarón became the first person to win Best Director
for directing a foreign-language film. In fact, Cuaron received a
total of four individual nominations (with two wins): Best Original
Screenplay, Best Director (win), Best Cinematography (win), and Best
Picture for Roma
(2018) -
thereby tying the record of most decorated Oscar nominee ever, with
previous nominees Orson Welles (for Citizen
Kane (1941)) and Warren Beatty (twice for Reds (1981) and Heaven
Can Wait (1978).
In 2012, German-born directorial nominee Michael
Haneke was nominated as Best Director for Amour
(2012, Austria).
Frenchman Michel Hazanavicius won for The Artist (2011).
In 2006, Alejandro González Iñárritu
was the first Mexican director nominated for the top prize
for Babel (2006). French film director Michel Hazanavicius
was nominated for The Artist (2011). In
the year 2006, the Mexican directing troika of Alejandro González
Iñárritu,
Guillermo del Toro and Alfonso Cuaron took a combined 16 nominations
for their films Babel (2006) (with seven nominations), Pan's
Labyrinth (2006) (with six nominations) and Children of
Men (2006) (with three nominations), respectively.
For the 2004 awards, Brazilian-born Fernando Meirelles
was nominated as Best Director for City of God (2002) (aka Cidade
de Deus).
The first Canadian to win Best Director was James
Cameron, for Titanic (1997).
In 1987, all five of the Best Director nominees were
foreign-born:
- Bernardo Bertolucci (Italy) - the winner
- Lasse Hallstrom (Sweden)
- Norman Jewison (Canada)
- Adrian Lyne (British)
- John Boorman (British)
Matching Best Picture and Best Director Nominees:
Up until recently, it was very
rare for all the Best Picture
nominees and Best Director nominees to directly correspond. It only
happened five times in Oscar history when there were only 5 nominees
for both Best Picture and Best Director. As of 2009, when the
Best Picture list was expanded to 10 nominees, it wasn't as remarkable
an occurrence:
- 1957
- 1964
- 1981
- 2005
- 2008
- 2009 - the first year with 10 Best Picture nominees
- 2010
- 2011
- 2013
- 2016
- 2017
- 2019
Best Director and Best Picture Correlations:
There is a direct correlation between the Best Picture
and Director awards. Usually, the film voted Best Picture has
been directed by the person named (or at least nominated) as
Best Director. In a number of cases, however, the Best
Picture win went to one film and Best Director went to another
even though the helmer of the big winner was nominated.
Of the 92 films (through the year
2019) that have been awarded Best Picture, 65 have also been awarded
Best Director. About a quarter of the time, however, in Academy
history, the Best Picture and Best Director winners have been for different films.
The Oscars (through the year 2019) have split Best Picture and Best
Director 26 times: see years 2018, 2016, 2015, 2013, 2012,
2005, 2002, 2000, 1998, 1989, 1981, 1972, 1967, 1956, 1952, 1951,
1949, 1948, 1940, 1937, 1936, 1935, 1931/32, 1930/31, 1928/29, 1927/28
(two Best Director co-winners didn't win Best Picture).
In the first ten years of Oscar awards, seven of the
first 10 Best Picture winners didn't include any honor for
the directors beyond a nomination. [The exceptions were in the years
1929/30, 1932/33, and 1934, when the Academy honored the director
as Best Director for a corresponding Best Picture.]
Here are some examples
in more recent years (from 1967 onwards):
- 1967: director Norman Jewison's In
the Heat of the Night (1967) won Best Picture, but
Mike Nichols won Best Director for
The Graduate (1967)
- 1972: Francis Ford Coppola's multi-award winning
The Godfather (1972)
took Best Picture, while Bob Fosse won Best Director for Cabaret
(1972) (Cabaret won eight Academy Awards a
record for the most Oscars won by a movie that didn't win Best
Picture)
- 1981: director Hugh Hudson's Chariots of Fire
(1981)
won Best Picture, but Warren Beatty won Best Director for Reds
(1981)
- 1989: director Bruce Beresford's Driving Miss
Daisy (1989) won Best Picture, while Oliver Stone won Best
Director for Born
on the Fourth of July (1989)
- 1998: director John Madden's Shakespeare in
Love (1998) won Best Picture, but Steven Spielberg
won Best Director for
Saving Private Ryan (1998)
- 2000: director Ridley Scott's Gladiator (2000) won
Best Picture, but Steven Soderbergh won Best Director for Traffic
(2000)
- 2002: director Rob Marshall's Chicago (2002) won
Best Picture, but Roman Polanski won Best Director for The
Pianist (2002)
- 2005: director Paul Haggis' Crash (2005) won
Best Picture, but Ang Lee won Best Director for Brokeback
Mountain (2005)
- 2012: un-nominated director Ben Affleck's Argo
(2012) won
Best Picture, but Ang Lee won Best Director for Life of Pi
(2012)
- 2013: director Steve McQueen's 12 Years a Slave
(2013) won
Best Picture, but Alfonso Cuaron won Best Director for Gravity
(2013)
- 2015: director Tom McCarthy's Spotlight
(2015) won Best Picture, but Alejandro Iñárritu won Best
Director for The Revenant (2015)
- 2016: director Barry Jenkins' Moonlight
(2016) won Best Picture, but Damien Chazelle won Best Director for La
La Land (2016)
- 2018: director Peter Farrelly's Green
Book (2018) won Best Picture, but Alfonso Cuaron won Best
Director for Roma (2018)
It has often happened that a Best Director
winner is not also honored with a simultaneous Best Picture win,
especially in regards to John Ford and George Stevens. John Ford
won Best Director three times even though his film lost the big
prize, and George Stevens had the same shock twice:
The Only Best Picture-Winning Films Without Best Director Nominations:
It is very rare for a film to win the Best Picture
Oscar while omitting the film's director from the Best Director
nominations - this has happened only five times:
- 1927/28: Wings
(1927/28), the Best Picture winner, was directed by un-nominated
William Wellman, while the Best Director
award went to Frank Borzage for Seventh
Heaven (1927/28)
- 1931/32: Grand
Hotel (1931/32), the Best Picture winner, was directed
by un-nominated Edmund Goulding, while
the Best Director award went to Frank Borzage
for Bad
Girl (1931/32)
- 1989: Driving
Miss Daisy (1989), the Best Picture winner, was directed by
un-nominated Bruce Beresford, while the Best Director award went
to Oliver Stone for Born on the Fourth of
July (1989)
- 2012: Argo (2012), the Best Picture winner,
was directed by un-nominated Ben Affleck, while
the Best Director award went to Ang Lee for Life of Pi (2012)
- 2018: Green Book (2018), the Best Picture
winner, was directed by un-nominated Peter Farrelly, while the
Best Director award went to Alfonso Cuarón for Roma (2018,
Mex.)
The Only Films to Win Best Director Without a Best Picture Nomination:
- Two Arabian Knights (1927/28), not nominated for Best Picture, but Lewis Milestone won Best Director (Comedy)
- The Divine Lady (1928/29), not nominated for Best Picture, but Frank Lloyd won Best Director
The Most Best Picture Nominations: William Wyler -
the Winning-est Best Picture Director
Up until 2015, William Wyler held the record for
the most nominations
and wins for his films in all categories: 127 nominations
and 39 awards. Half of the nominations he received were in the
major categories of Best Picture, Acting, and Directing. With
his Best Picture nomination for Bridge of Spies (2015),
Spielberg's films have now earned 128 nominations, the most of
any director of all time, passing up William Wyler (127).
William Wyler holds the record for directing more
Best Picture nominees (13) and more Best Picture winners (3) than
anyone else. His 13 Best Picture-nominated and winning films (marked
with *) were:
Wyler also has 12 Best Director nominations, and
3 awards. There is much overlap with the above list.
His 12 Best
Director-nominated and winning films (marked with *) were:
Director Statistics
|
Director
|
Number of Films Nominated for Best Picture
|
Number of Films Awarded Best Picture
|
Best Director Nominations
|
Best Director Awards
|
William Wyler |
13
|
3
|
12
|
3
|
Steven Spielberg |
11
|
1
|
7
|
2
|
John Ford |
9
|
1
|
5
|
4
|
Martin Scorsese |
8
|
1
|
9
|
1
|
Mervyn LeRoy |
8
|
0
|
1
|
0
|
Frank Capra |
7
|
2
|
6
|
3
|
George Cukor |
7
|
1
|
5
|
1
|
Henry King |
7
|
0
|
2
|
0
|
George Stevens |
7
|
0
|
5
|
2
|
David Lean |
6
|
2
|
7
|
2
|
Fred Zinnemann |
6
|
2
|
7
|
2
|
Michael Curtiz |
6
|
1
|
4
|
1
|
Sam Wood |
6
|
0
|
2
|
0
|
Billy Wilder |
5
|
2
|
8
|
2
|
Francis Ford Coppola |
5
|
2
|
4
|
1
|
Norman Jewison |
5
|
1
|
3
|
0
|
Leo McCarey |
5
|
1
|
3
|
2
|
Lewis Milestone |
5
|
1
|
3
|
2
|
Ernst Lubitsch |
5
|
0
|
3
|
0
|
Clint Eastwood |
4
|
2
|
4
|
2
|
Elia Kazan |
4
|
2
|
5
|
2
|
Joel/Ethan Coen |
4
|
1
|
3
|
1
|
Victor Fleming |
4
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
Alfred Hitchcock |
4
|
1
|
5
|
0
|
Joseph L. Mankiewicz |
4
|
1
|
4
|
2
|
William Wellman |
4
|
1
|
3
|
0
|
Frank Borzage |
4
|
0
|
2
|
2
|
John Huston |
4
|
0
|
5
|
1
|
Henry Koster |
4
|
0
|
1
|
0
|
Stanley Kramer |
4
|
0
|
3
|
0
|
Ang Lee |
4
|
0
|
3
|
2
|
Sidney Lumet |
4
|
0
|
4
|
0
|
W.S. Van Dyke |
4
|
0
|
2
|
0
|
Frank Lloyd |
3
|
2
|
5
|
2
|
Vincente Minnelli |
3
|
2
|
2
|
1
|
Robert Wise |
3
|
2
|
3
|
2
|
Oliver Stone |
3
|
1
|
3
|
2
|
Robert Altman |
3
|
0
|
5
|
0
|
Stanley Kubrick |
3
|
0
|
4
|
0
|
Mike Nichols |
3
|
0
|
4
|
1
|
Peter Weir |
3
|
0
|
4
|
0
|
Milos Forman |
2
|
2
|
3
|
2
|
Clarence Brown |
2
|
0
|
5
|
0
|
King Vidor |
2
|
0
|
5
|
0
|
Federico Fellini |
0
|
0
|
4
|
0
|
Directors with the Most Consecutive Best Picture
Nominations:
7 Consecutive Years: William Wyler
4 Consecutive Years: Frank Capra
Directors with the Most Acting Nominations and Acting
Awards:
William Wyler directed more nominated and winning
acting performances (36 and 14, respectively - not counting Honorary
Awards), than anyone in history (see below).
Directors with Most Acting Nominations
|
Directors with Most Acting Awards
|
36 - William Wyler |
14 - William Wyler |
24 - Elia Kazan |
9 - Elia Kazan |
22 - Martin Scorsese |
7 - Woody Allen |
21 - George Cukor |
6 - Fred Zinnemann |
20 - Fred Zinnemann |
5 - John Ford |
18 - Woody Allen |
5 - Martin Scorsese |
18 - Sidney Lumet |
5 - Clint Eastwood |
18 - Mike Nichols |
5 - George Cukor |
18 - George Stevens |
4 - Jonathan Demme |
17 - Billy Wilder |
4 - Victor Fleming |
16 - Stanley Kramer |
4 - John Huston |
15 - John Huston |
4 - Sidney Lumet |
|
4 - Hal Ashby |
|
4 - James L. Brooks |
William Wyler holds the record for directing
performers to 36 acting nominations, with 14 performance Oscars
(in a lead or supporting role):
- Elia Kazan directed 24 actors/actresses to Academy
Award nominations with 9 performers proceeding on to win Academy
Awards (James Dunn in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945),
Celeste Holm in Gentleman's Agreement (1947), Karl Malden,
Vivien Leigh, and Kim Hunter in A
Streetcar Named Desire (1951),
Anthony Quinn in Viva Zapata! (1952), Marlon Brando and
Eva Marie Saint in On
the Waterfront (1954), and Jo Van
Fleet in East
of Eden (1955)).
- Martin Scorsese directed 22 nominated performers
to 5 Oscars (Ellen Burstyn in Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore
(1974), Robert DeNiro in Raging
Bull (1980), Paul Newman in The
Color of Money (1986), Joe Pesci in GoodFellas
(1990), and Cate
Blanchett in The Aviator (2004)).
- George Cukor directed 21 nominated actors/actresses
who went on to win 5 Oscars (James Stewart in The
Philadelphia Story (1940), Ingrid Bergman in Gaslight
(1944), Ronald Colman
in A Double Life (1947), Judy Holliday in Born Yesterday
(1950),
and Rex Harrison in My
Fair Lady (1964)).
- Fred Zinnemann directed 20 nominated performers
to 6 Oscars (Gary Cooper in
High Noon (1952), Frank Sinatra and Donna Reed in From
Here to Eternity (1953), Paul Scofield in A Man
for All Seasons (1966), and Vanessa Redgrave and Jason
Robards in Julia
(1977)).
- Woody Allen directed 18 nominated performers to
7 Oscar wins (Diane Keaton in Annie
Hall (1977), Michael Caine
and Dianne Wiest in Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), Dianne
Wiest in Bullets Over Broadway (1994), Mira Sorvino in Mighty
Aphrodite (1995), Penelope Cruz in Vicky Cristina Barcelona
(2008), and
Cate Blanchett in Blue Jasmine (2013)).
To date, Taylor Hackford is the only director to
have directed two black actors to Oscar-winning performances:
Louis Gossett Jr. in An Officer and a Gentleman (1982) and
Jamie Foxx in Ray
(2004). And Martin Ritt was also the only one
to direct four black performers to four nominations in three
films: The
Great White Hope (1970) (James Earl Jones, Lead), Sounder
(1972) (Cicely Tyson and Paul Winfield, Leads), and Cross
Creek (1983) (Alfre Woodard, Supporting).
The only acting performance in an Alfred Hitchcock-directed
film to win an Oscar was Joan Fontaine in Suspicion (1941),
in the role of harried wife Lina McLaidlaw, opposite Cary Grant.
The only Academy Award-winning performance in a Stanley Kubrick-directed
film was Peter Ustinov, who won the Best Supporting Actor Award
(his first Oscar win) for his role as slave trader Lentulus Batiatus
in Spartacus (1960).
The Most Best Director Nominations - Without a Single
Win:
- Clarence Brown - 6 Best Director nominations (from
1929/30 - 1946)
- King Vidor - 5 Best Director nominations (from 1927/8
- 1956)
- Alfred Hitchcock - 5 Best Director nominations (from
1940 - 1960)
- Robert Altman - 5 Best Director nominations (from
1970 - 2001)
- Martin Scorsese - he had 5 Best Director nominations (from 1980-2004) without a win, and then won with his 6th nomination for The Departed (2006)
Films with Only a Best Director Nomination: (* denotes win)
- Speedy (1927/28) (comedy, Ted Wilde), Sorrel and Son (1927/28) (drama, Herbert Brenon), Two Arabian Knights (1927/28) (comedy, Lewis Milestone*)
- Drag (1928/29) (Frank Lloyd)
- Hallelujah! (1929/30) (King Vidor)
- The Inn of the Sixth Happiness (1958) (Mark Robson)
- Woman in the Dunes (1964) (Hiroshi Teshigahara) (also Best Foreign Language Film nominee)
- Alice's Restaurant (1969) (Arthur Penn)
- Fellini Satyricon (1970) (Federico Fellini)
- Blue Velvet (1986) (David Lynch)
- The Last Temptation of Christ (1988) (Martin Scorsese)
- Short Cuts (1993) (Robert Altman)
- Mulholland Dr. (2001) (David Lynch)
Nominees for Best Actor and Best Director for the Same Film:
Eight individuals have been nominated for both Best Actor and Best Director for the same film. Two were nominees twice. No one yet has won both awards. (Four won Best Director but not Best Actor. Two won Best Actor but not Best Director. Three lost both nominations.)
- Orson Welles, Citizen Kane (1941) - nominated for Best Actor and Director (didn't win either)
- Sir Laurence Olivier, Hamlet (1948), nominated for Best Director, won Best Actor
- Woody Allen, Annie Hall (1977) - nominated for Best Actor, won Best Director
- Warren Beatty, Heaven Can Wait (1978), nominated for Best Actor and Best Director (didn't win either)
- Warren Beatty, Reds (1981) - nominated for
Best Actor, won Best Director
- Kenneth Branagh, Henry V (1989) - nominated
for Best Actor and Best Director (didn't win either)
- Kevin Costner, Dances With Wolves (1990) -
nominated for Best Actor, won Best Director
- Clint Eastwood, Unforgiven
(1992) - nominated for Best Actor, won Best Director
- Roberto Benigni, Life is Beautiful (1998, It.) - nominated for Best Director, won Best Actor
- Clint Eastwood, Million Dollar Baby (2004) - nominated
for Best Actor, won Best Director
The only two actors/performers that ever directed themselves
(without winning Best Director) to win a competitive Best Actor Academy Award were:
- British actor Sir Laurence Olivier
for Hamlet (1948) as the title character, the year's Best Picture (he received two
other self-directed actor nominations for Henry V (1946) and Richard III (1956))
- Italian actor Roberto Benigni, the director
of Life is Beautiful (1998, It.) for his role as Guido, the Best Foreign Language Film
of the year
Multiple Wins: Actors, Directors, Writers and Producers
Eight directors have accomplished
the 'hat trick' of triple Oscar wins for Producing, Directing,
and Writing in a single
year:
- Leo McCarey for Going My Way (1944) - McCarey
was the first person to win Oscars for Directing and Writing
- Billy Wilder for The Apartment
(1960) - Wilder was the first person to win
Oscars for Directing, Writing, and Best Picture [Note: This
wouldn't have been possible before 1951, when the Best Picture
Award went to the studio rather than individual producers.]
- Francis Ford Coppola for The Godfather, Part 2 (1974)
- James L. Brooks for Terms
of Endearment (1983)
- Peter Jackson for The Lord of the Rings: The Return
of the King (2003)
- Joel and Ethan Coen for No Country for Old Men (2007)
- Alejandro Gonzalez Innaritu for Birdman
or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (2014)
- Bong Joon Ho for Parasite (2019)
Warren Beatty and George Clooney are the only two
people to have competitive nominations in the Picture, Director,
Screenplay and Acting (Actor or Supporting) categories:
- Warren Beatty
Picture (Bonnie and Clyde (1967), Heaven
Can Wait, (1978), Reds (1981), Bugsy (1991))
Director (Heaven Can Wait (1978), Reds (1981))
Screenplay (Shampoo (1975), Heaven Can Wait (1978), Reds
(1981), Bulworth (1998))
Acting (Bonnie and Clyde (1967), Heaven
Can Wait (1978), Reds (1981), Bugsy (1991))
- George Clooney
Picture (Argo (2012))
Director (Good Night, and Good Luck (2005))
Screenplay (Good Night, and Good Luck (2005), The Ides
of March (2011))
Acting (Syriana (2005), Michael Clayton (2007), Up
in the Air (2009), The Descendants (2011))
For Individual Nominations For the Same Film in the
Same Year:
Warren
Beatty
received four nominations for Producing, Acting, Directing, and Writing for
the same film in one year:
- Heaven Can Wait (1978)
- Reds (1981) (with a win for Best Director)
[Note: It could be strongly argued that Orson Welles
also received four similar nominations for
Citizen Kane (1941).
However, it should be noted that Welles' Mercury Theatre and
the RKO Radio Pictures production company (producer Welles) were
credited with the Best Picture/Production nomination, not Welles
as an individual.]
For Roma (2018, Mex./US), Alfonso Cuaron
also received a total of four individual nominations: Best Original
Screenplay, Best Director, Best Cinematography, and Best Picture
- thereby tying the record of most decorated Oscar nominee ever
for the same film in the same year, with the two previous nominees
Orson Welles (for Citizen
Kane (1941)) and Warren Beatty (twice for Reds (1981) and Heaven
Can Wait (1978).]
In addition to Beatty (Welles, and Cuaron), one
individual has been nominated for Acting, Producing, and Writing for
the same film:
In addition to Beatty (Welles, and Cuaron), two
individuals have been nominated simultaneously for Acting, Directing,
and Writing for
the same film:
Actors That Won Their First Oscar as Best Director (Not as Performer):
Most of the following actors won their first Oscars as directors rather than as performers (except for Redford and
Gibson, all were actors also nominated for their self-directed work):
- Woody Allen, Annie Hall (1977) - won Best Director (his first Oscar win) -
Allen became the first Oscar-winning director to win an Academy Award for
a film he starred in
- Robert Redford, Ordinary People (1980) - not nominated as Best Actor, won
Best Director (his first Oscar win)
- Warren Beatty, Reds (1981) - won Best Director (his first Oscar win)
- Kevin Costner, Dances With Wolves (1990) -
won Best Director (his first Oscar win)
- Clint Eastwood, Unforgiven
(1992) - won Best Director (his first Oscar win)
- Mel Gibson, Braveheart (1995) - not nominated as Best Actor, won Best Director (his first Oscar win)
Related Winners: Three-Generation Oscar-Winning
Families
- The Hustons were the first family
with three generations of Oscar winners (they became the the only grandfather-granddaughter
ever to win Academy Awards):
- The Coppolas were the second family with
three generations of Oscar winners (they became the only father-daughter-nephew
grouping to ever win Academy Awards):
- 1st Generation: Carmine
Coppola (2 nominations with 1 win) won Best Original Score
for The
Godfather Part II (1974)
- 2nd Generation: Son Francis Ford Coppola (14
nominations with 5 wins) had his first win for Best
Original Screenplay for Patton (1970)
- 3rd Generation: Granddaughter Sofia Coppola
won Best Original Screenplay for Lost in Translation (2003)
Further connections could be made for the Coppolas,
combining for a family total of 24 nominations (number of nominations
for each are in parentheses):
- 1st GENERATION
- Carmine Coppola (2 nominations with 1 win) won
Best Original Score for The
Godfather Part II (1974)
- 2nd GENERATION
- Francis Ford Coppola (14 nominations
with 5 wins) -
Best Original Screenplay winner for Patton
(1970),
then Best Adapted Screenplay winner for The
Godfather (1972), and Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Picture
and Best Director winner for The
Godfather Part II (1974) - he was the son of composer
Carmine Coppola and Italia Coppola
- Talia Shire (2 nominations with 0 wins) -
she was the daughter of composer Carmine Coppola and Italia Coppola
- 3rd GENERATION
- Sofia Coppola (3 nominations
with 1 win), Best Original Screenplay winner for Lost in Translation
(2003) -
she was the daughter of director Francis Ford Coppola and Eleanor
Coppola
- Nicolas Cage (2 nominations
with 1 win), Best Actor winner for Leaving Las Vegas (1995) -
he was the son of August Coppola (a brother of director Francis
Ford Coppola) and dancer/choreographer Joy Vogelsang
- Roman Coppola (1 nomination with 0 wins)
- the sixth member of the Coppola clan to receive a nomination, for
Best Original Screenplay for Moonrise Kingdom (2012) -
he was the son of Francis Ford Coppola, brother of Sofia, and
grand-son of Carmine, the nephew of Talia Shire, and cousin of
Nicolas Cage
Siblings Warren Beatty (Best Director for Reds
(1981))
and Shirley MacLaine (Best Actress for Terms
of Endearment (1983)) were also related Oscar winners.
Best Actress Nominees/Winners Who Were Directed by Husbands:
- Joanne Woodward was nominated as Best Actress
for Rachel Rachel (1968), a Best Picture-nominated film directed
by her husband Paul Newman.
- Susan Sarandon won the Best Actress Oscar for Dead
Man Walking (1995) (directed by her Best Director-nominated
husband (unofficial live-in) Tim Robbins). She became the first star
to win in a film directed by a spouse. Robbins did not win
Best Director.
- Otherwise, it would be Frances
McDormand who also won the Best Actress Oscar for Fargo
(1996), directed by her spouse, nominated husband Joel Coen. McDormand's
brother-in-law, Ethan Coen, was the film's producer.
Other wives nominated
for films made by their director husbands:
- Melina Mercouri, nominated for Best Actress for Never
on Sunday (1960), was directed by nominated husband Jules Dassin (both lost)
- Gena Rowlands, nominated for Best Actress for A
Woman Under the Influence (1974), was directed by nominated husband John
Cassavetes (both lost)
- Julie Andrews, nominated for Best Actress for Victor/Victoria
(1982), was directed by unnominated husband Blake Edwards (Andrews lost)
Diane Keaton, nominated for Best Actress for Best Director-winning Woody Allen's Annie Hall (1977), won the Oscar - although romantically linked to Woody Allen, she was never married to him.
To date, no female directors have had their starring
husbands receive an Oscar nod.
An Anomaly:
Seven out of the first eleven Best Director Oscars were
won by men named Frank: Frank Borzage, Frank Lloyd, and Frank Capra.
Youngest and Oldest Best Directors:
Nominees and Winners
Note: The calculated time is from date of birth to
the date of either (1) the nominations announcement, or (2) the
date of the awards ceremony.
Youngest Best Director Nominee
|
Youngest Best Director Winner
|
Oldest Best Director Nominee
|
Oldest Best Director Winner
|
|
|
|
|
24 years (and
44 days)
John Singleton for Boyz N the Hood (1991) |
32 years (and 39 days)
Damien Chazelle for La La Land (2016) |
79 years (and 184 days)
John Huston for Prizzi's Honor (1985) |
74 years (and 272 days)
Clint Eastwood for Million Dollar Baby (2004) |
Runner-Ups:
26 years (and 279 days)
Orson Welles for Citizen
Kane
29 years (and 66 days)
Kenneth Branagh for Henry
V (1989)
29 years (and 113 days)
Claude Lelouch for A Man and a Woman (1966)
29 years (and 193 days)
M. Night Shyamalan for The Sixth Sense (1999)
29 years (and 281 days)
George Lucas for American Graffiti (1973)
30 years (and 88 days)
Benh Zeitlin for Beasts of the Southern Wild (2012)
30 years (and 95 days)
Jason Reitman for Juno (2007)
30 years (and 116 days)
Spike Jonze for Being John Malkovich (1999)
31 years (and 65 days)
Steven Spielberg for Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)
[Note: the youngest woman
ever to earn a nomination, 32-year old Sofia Coppola for Lost
in Translation (2003).] |
Runner-Ups:
32 years (and 260 days)
Norman Taurog for Skippy (1930/31)
33 years (and 228 days)
Lewis Milestone for Two Arabian Nights (1927/28)
34 years (and 238 days)
Sam Mendes for American Beauty (1999)
35 years (and 23 days)
Frank Borzage for 7th Heaven (1927/28)
35 years (and 36 days)
Lewis Milestone for All
Quiet on the Western Front (1929/30)
35 years (and 313 days)
Tony Richardson for Tom Jones (1963)
36 years (and 1 day)
Francis Ford Coppola for The
Godfather, Part II (1974)
36 years (and 51 days)
Delbert Mann for Marty (1955)
36 years (and 66 days)
Kevin Costner for Dances With Wolves (1990)
36 years (and 156 days)
Mike Nichols for The
Graduate (1967) |
Runner-Ups:
78 years (and 193 days)
Charles Crichton for A Fish Called
Wanda (1988)
76 years (and 357 days)
Robert Altman for Gosford
Park (2001)
76 years (and 318 days)
David Lean for A Passage to India (1984)
76 years (and 237 days)
Clint Eastwood for Letters From Iwo Jima (2006)
76 years (and 54 days)
Woody Allen for Midnight in Paris (2011)
75 years (and 319 days)
Akira Kurosawa for Ran (1985)
74 years (and 239 days)
Clint Eastwood for Million Dollar Baby (2004)
73 years (and 241 days)
Clint Eastwood for Mystic River (2003)
71 years (and 181 days)
Cecil B. DeMille for The Greatest Show on Earth (1952)
|
Runner-Ups:
69 years (and 217 days)
Roman Polanski for The Pianist (2002)
65 years (and 272 days)
George Cukor for My
Fair Lady (1964)
64 years (and 100 days)
Martin Scorsese for The Departed (2006)
62 years (and 302 days)
Clint Eastwood for Unforgiven (1992)
62 years (and 105 days)
Carol Reed for Oliver! (1968)
59 years (and 346 days)
Fred Zinnemann for A Man For All Seasons (1966)
59 years (and 225 days)
Richard Attenborough for Gandhi (1982)
59 years (and 46 days)
John Ford for The
Quiet Man (1952)
58 years (and 124 days)
Ang Lee for Life of Pi (2012)
58 years (and 100 days)
Kathryn Bigelow for The Hurt Locker (2009)
|
With two nominations for Best Director, for Juno
(2007) and Up in the Air (2009), 32
year-old Jason Reitman became the youngest filmmaker
to have received two Oscar nominations for Best Director. |