1963
The winner is listed first, in CAPITAL letters.
Filmsite's
Greatest Films of 1963
Best Picture
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TOM JONES (1963, UK)
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America, America (1963)
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Cleopatra (1963)
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How the West Was Won (1962)
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Lilies of the Field (1963)
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Actor:
SIDNEY POITIER in "Lilies of the Field", Albert Finney
in "Tom Jones", Richard Harris in "This Sporting
Life", Rex Harrison in "Cleopatra", Paul Newman
in "Hud"
Actress:
PATRICIA NEAL in "Hud", Leslie
Caron in "The L-Shaped Room", Shirley MacLaine in "Irma
La Douce", Rachel Roberts in "This Sporting Life",
Natalie Wood in "Love with the Proper Stranger"
Supporting Actor:
MELVYN DOUGLAS in "Hud", Nick
Adams in "Twilight of Honor", Bobby Darin in "Captain
Newman, M.D.", Hugh Griffith in "Tom Jones", John
Huston in "The Cardinal"
Supporting Actress:
MARGARET RUTHERFORD in "The V.I.P.s", Diane Cilento
in "Tom Jones", Edith Evans in "Tom Jones",
Joyce Redman in "Tom Jones", Lilia Skala in "Lilies
of the Field"
Director:
TONY RICHARDSON for "Tom Jones", Federico Fellini for "8
1/2", Elia Kazan for
"America, America", Otto Preminger for "The Cardinal",
Martin Ritt for "Hud"
For
the second time in Academy Awards history, fifteen years after
the first British film won the Best Picture award (Laurence
Olivier's Hamlet (1948)), another British-made film
won the top award. The honored film was Tom Jones -
Tony Richardson's bawdy, raucous adaptation of the Henry Fielding
classic satire of 18th century England about an amorous playboy.
The romantic comedy film garnered ten Oscar nominations, more
than any other film in the competition. And it became the highest-grossing foreign-made
film distributed in the US (up to that time). In fact, the
year was a good one for British films and actors - 27 nominations
(with 20 nominations in acting categories).
But the uninhibited, historical adventure-sex
comedy romp Tom Jones won only four Oscars -
Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay (John
Osborne), and Best Musical Score (John Addison). It was rare
for a comedy to win the top honor. Remarkably, its film editor
(Tony Gibbs), inventive cinematographer (Walter Lassally) and
costume designer weren't even nominated, even though the film
deserved honors for its trick photography, wink-at-the-camera
attitude, dynamic editing, and costuming.
Tom Jones is the only picture in
Academy history with three Best Supporting Actress nominees.
Although five of the cast were nominated for acting awards
(Finney, Griffith, Cilento, Evans, and Redman), none won. Throughout
Academy history, it set a record as the only film to
receive five Oscar nominations for its acting performances
- and then lose in all instances. Other films with five
acting nominations that won one Oscar include: All
About Eve (1950), Bonnie and
Clyde (1967), and The Godfather,
Part II (1974). Network (1976) was
also nominated for five acting slots - and won three.
The Best Picture winner's weak competitors included:
- 20th Century Fox's expensive, bank-rupting
debacle - director Joseph L. Mankiewicz's multi-million dollar,
four-hour historical epic Cleopatra (with nine nominations
and four Oscars - Best Color Cinematography, Best Color Art
Direction/Set Decoration, Best Color Costume Design, and
Best Special Visual Effects) starring Elizabeth Taylor as
the Queen of Egypt, Richard Burton as Marc Antony, and Rex
Harrison as Caesar. At $44 million, it was the most expensive
film ever made (to date), and it turned out to be one of
the greatest commercial disasters in film history;
it was also the longest Best Picture nominee in Academy history
(a running time of 242 minutes)
- producer/director Elia Kazan's semi-autobiographical
film about a young Greek immigrant, America, America (with
four nominations and only one win - Best B/W Art Direction/Set
Decoration)
- the expansive, star-filled, three-camera Cinerama
epic western chronicling the westward progress of three generations
of one family, How the West Was Won (with three directors
- Henry Hathaway, John Ford, and George Marshall - eight
nominations and three awards - Best Story and Screenplay,
Best Sound, and Best Film Editing)
- director Ralph Nelson's second film based
on William E. Barrett's novel, Lilies of the Field (with
five nominations and one win) about a light-hearted, itinerant
black laborer who assisted five E. German refugee nuns in
building a chapel and learning English
Only two of the nominated Best Picture
directors were also nominated for Best Director - Kazan
and Richardson. Joseph Mankiewicz, director of Best Picture
nominee Cleopatra, was curiously absent from the list
of Best Director nominees. Conversely, Martin Ritt was Best
Director-nominated for Hud, but
his film about the death of the Texas frontier was not considered
as one of the year's Best Picture nominees.
The Best Actor winner was 37 year-old Sidney
Poitier (with his second nomination and first and only Oscar
win in his career) as a Southern ex-GI and footloose vagabond/handyman
named Homer Smith, who helped five bewildered German refugee
nuns (from behind the Iron Curtain) build a chapel in the Arizona
desert and learn English, in Lilies of the Field.
[Note: His Oscar was the first major leading role Oscar
won by an African-American (or black) actor. He became the first African-American
(or black) to win a competitive Oscar in a leading role, although
some regard Denzel Washington's Best Actor win for Training
Day (2001) as the first, because Poitier was of Jamaican
heritage. He had been previously nominated as Best Actor for The
Defiant Ones (1958). It has been speculated that Poitier
may have won the award because there was protest at the time
by conservative moralizers that the other front-running stars
(Finney and Newman) were in bawdy roles.]
Other Best Actor nominees included the following:
- Albert Finney (with his first of five unsuccessful
career nominations) in the Best Picture winner Tom Jones as
the lusty, earthy, adopted (illegitimate son of a servant),
young country squire named Tom who is both mischievious and
a female charmer in 18th-century England
- Rex Harrison (with his first of two consecutive
nominations) as Julius Caesar in Cleopatra
- Richard Harris (with his first of two unsuccessful
career nominations) as a coal miner who becomes a professional
rugby player in British director Lindsay Anderson's first
feature film, This Sporting Life (with two nominations
and no wins)
- Paul Newman (with his third nomination)
as the title character Hud Bannon - an amoral but charming
Texas anti-hero/scoundrel who advances on the housekeeper
(Patricia Neal) in Martin Ritt's contemporary adult western, Hud (with
seven nominations and three wins - Best Actress, Best Supporting
Actor, and Best B/W Cinematography)
The Best Actress winner was Patricia Neal (with
her first of two career nominations - and her sole Oscar win)
as Alma Brown - an earthy, sexy, but bruised and world-weary
hired housekeeper (who rejects the amorous advances of her
employer's son Paul Newman) in Paramount's modern western Hud.
Some suspected that Neal's win was a 'sympathy' vote for her
long list of personal tragedies, including a nervous breakdown.
Other Best Actress nominees were:
- Leslie Caron (with her second and last unsuccessful
career nomination) as Jane Fosset - a young pregnant French
girl in a rooming house in director Bryan Forbes' filmThe
L-Shaped Room (the film's sole nomination)
- Shirley MacLaine (with her third of five career
nominations) in the title role as a French Parisian prostitute
in Billy Wilder's Irma La Douce (with three nominations
and one win - Best Music Score - Andre Previn)
- British actress Rachel Roberts (with her sole
nomination) as Richard Harris' widowed landlady Mrs. Hammond
in This Sporting Life
- Natalie Wood (with her third and last unsuccessful
career nomination) as young Manhattan working girl Angie
Rossini (and the pregnant girlfriend of co-star Steve McQueen
after a one-night stand) in director Robert Mulligan's Love
with the Proper Stranger (with five nominations and no
wins)
[A sidenote: Rachel Roberts was married to Cleopatra-nominated
Rex Harrison at the time of her nomination, making them the
second acting couple to both receive nominations for
roles in the same year. The first husband/wife to
be nominated in the same year were Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne,
nominated for The Guardsman (1931/2), Richard Burton
and Elizabeth Taylor nominated for Who's
Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), Frank Sinatra,
nominated for From Here to Eternity
(1953) and Ava Gardner for Mogambo (1953),
and Charles Laughton and Elsa Lanchester both nominated for Witness
for the Prosecution (1957).]
The winner in the Best Supporting Actor category
was Melvyn Douglas as Homer Bannon - the honest, tough, aging
Texas patriarch of a cattle ranch (and father of Paul Newman)
in Hud.
Other Best Supporting Actor nominees were:
- Nick Adams (with his sole nomination)
as Ben Brown on trial and accused of murder in director Boris
Sagal's Twilight of Honor (with two nominations and
no wins)
- teen pop idol Bobby Darin (with his sole career
nomination) as Corporal Jim Tompkins - a shell-shocked, guilt-ridden,
cowardly GI (and patient of Gregory Peck's) in director David
Miller's Captain Newman, M.D. (with three nominations
and no wins)
- John Huston (with his sole unsuccessful acting
nomination) in the title role as Boston Cardinal Glennon
in Otto Preminger's director-nominated The Cardinal (with
six nominations and no wins) about the trials of a young
priest to become a cardinal
- Hugh Griffith (with his second career nomination)
as lusty Squire Western - Sophie Western's (Susannah York)
rich father in Tom Jones
All of the nominees in the Best Supporting Actress
category were non-Americans. Four of the five supporting actresses
were British.
The Best Supporting Actress winner was 72 year-old
character actress Margaret Rutherford (with her sole nomination
- and Oscar win) as the confused Duchess of Brighton - a delayed
and dotty airplane passenger stranded at the fog-bound London
airport (with Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor) in director
Anthony Asquith's The V.I.P.s. [Rutherford was more
deserving of a nomination for her performance as Madame Arcati
in Blithe Spirit (1945). The V.I.P.s was the first film
after Cleopatra to again pair Richard Burton and Liz
Taylor.]
Then, the three co-stars in Tom Jones were
given the other supporting actress nominations (a record):
- Dame Edith Evans (with her first of three
unsuccessful career nominations) as the intrepid Aunt Miss
Western
- Australian-born actress Diane Cilento (with
her sole nomination) as the gatekeeper's wild daughter Molly
Seagrim
- Joyce Redman (with her first of two unsuccessful
career nominations) as the sexy and seductive Mrs. Waters/Jenny
Jones (she starred in the famous, best-remembered, erotic
eating scene with Finney)
The last Best Supporting Actress nominee was
German actress Lilia Skala (with her sole nomination in her
film debut) for her role as Mother Maria - the Mother Superior
of the nunnery in Lilies of the Field.
Oscar Snubs and Omissions:
The WWII POW film The Great Escape (with
only one nomination, for Best Film Editing) was overlooked
in many areas: Best Picture, Best Director (John Sturges),
Best Actor (Steve McQueen), Best Film Score (Elmer Bernstein),
Best Supporting Actor (Donald Pleasance), and Best Cinematography.
Director Terence Young should have been nominated
as Best Director for the first James Bond spy film: Dr.
No (1962) (premiering in London in late 1962 but opening
in the US in 1963) -- and Sean Connery should have been nominated
for his lead role as agent 007.
The Best Story and Screenplay Oscar went to How
the West Was Won, when it should have gone to one of
the other stronger nominees, such as Federico Fellini's 8
1/2, Elia Kazan's America, America, The Four
Days of Naples (1962), or Love With the Proper Stranger.
Federico Fellini's Italian film 8 1/2 -
with five nominations (a followup film to La Dolce Vita
(1960, It.)), won awards for Best Black & White Costume
Design and Best Foreign Language Film, and was only the third foreign
language film to be nominated for Best Director. However, Marcelo
Mastroianni's key role as Guido Anselmni was un-nominated.
A few other films might have given Tom Jones some
competition, if they had been nominated for Best Picture
and/or for some of the other awards categories:
- Hud (with seven
nominations and three wins - Best Actress, Best Supporting
Actor, and Best B/W Cinematography)
- Alfred Hitchcock's The
Birds (with only one unsuccessful nomination
for Special Visual Effects)
- The Haunting (with no nominations)
- The L-Shaped Room (with a sole unsuccessful
nomination for Leslie Caron)
- Bye Bye Birdie (with only two unsuccessful
nominations for Best Score and Best Sound)
- The Leopard (with one unsuccessful
nomination for Best Costume Design)
- Jason and the Argonauts (with no nominations)
- director Samuel Fuller's Shock Corridor (with
no nominations)
- Jerry Lewis' The Nutty Professor (with
no nominations)
Jerry Lewis was un-nominated for his role as
a buck-toothed professor named Julius Kelp - a Dr. Jekyll/Mr.
Hyde character in The Nutty Professor. Although Stanley
Kramer's over-done It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World had
six Oscar nominations, two performers were unjustly disregarded:
British comedian Terry Thomas, and Ethel Merman as a tough
mother-in-law.
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