EVERY Oscar Best Supporting Actor Winner EVER | 1936-2023
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- čas přidán 21. 04. 2023
- Highlights and clips of every single movie to ever win Best Actor in a Supporting Role at the Academy Awards, from Walter Brennan (9th), to Ke Huy Quan (95th).
EVERY Oscar Best Picture Winner: • EVERY Oscar Best Pictu...
EVERY Oscar Best Director Winner: • EVERY Oscar Best Direc...
EVERY Oscar Best Actress Winner: • EVERY Oscar Best Actre...
EVERY Oscar Best Actor Winner: • EVERY Oscar Best Actor...
EVERY Oscar Best Supporting Actress Winner: • EVERY Oscar Best Suppo...
EVERY Oscar Best Supporting Actor Winner: • EVERY Oscar Best Suppo...
EVERY Oscar Best Animated Feature Winner: • EVERY Oscar Best Anima...
2022: Ke Huy Quan (Everything Everywhere All at Once)
2021: Troy Kotsur (CODA)
2020: Daniel Kaluuya (Judas and the Black Messiah)
2019: Brad Pitt (Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood)
2018: Mahershala Ali (Green Book)
2017: Sam Rockwell (Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri)
2016: Mahershala Ali (Moonlight)
2015: Mark Rylance (Bridge of Spies)
2014: J.K. Simmons (Whiplash) -
2013: Jared Leto (Dallas Buyers Club)
2012: Christoph Waltz (Django Unchained)
2011: Christopher Plummer (Beginners)
2010: Christian Bale (The Fighter)
2009: Christoph Waltz (Inglourious Basterds)
2008: Heath Ledger (The Dark Knight)
2007: Javier Bardem (No Country for Old Men)
2006: Alan Arkin (Little Miss Sunshine)
2005: George Clooney (Syriana)
2004: Morgan Freeman (Million Dollar Baby)
2003: Tim Robbins (Mystic River)
2002: Chris Cooper (Adaptation.)
2001: Jim Broadbent (Iris)
2000: Benicio Del Toro (Traffic)
1999: Michael Caine (The Cider House Rules)
1998: James Coburn (Affliction)
1997: Robin Williams (Good Will Hunting)
1996: Cuba Gooding Jr. (Jerry Maguire)
1995: Kevin Spacey (The Usual Suspects)
1994: Martin Landau (Ed Wood)
1993: Tommy Lee Jones (The Fugitive)
1992: Gene Hackman (Unforgiven)
1991: Jack Palance (City Slickers)
1990: Joe Pesci (Goodfellas)
1989: Denzel Washington (Glory)
1988: Kevin Kline (A Fish Called Wanda)
1987: Sean Connery (The Untouchables)
1986: Michael Caine (Hannah and Her Sisters)
1985: Don Ameche (Cocoon)
1984: Haing S. Ngor (The Killing Fields)
1983: Jack Nicholson (Terms of Endearment)
1982: Louis Gossett Jr. (An Officer and a Gentleman)
1981: John Gielgud (Arthur)
1980: Timothy Hutton (Ordinary People)
1979: Melvyn Douglas (Being There)
1978: Christopher Walken (The Deer Hunter)
1977: Jason Robards (Julia)
1976: Jason Robards (All the President’s Men)
1975: George Burns (The Sunshine Boys)
1974: Robert De Niro (The Godfather: Part II)
1973: John Houseman (The Paper Chase)
1972: Joel Grey (Cabaret)
1971: Ben Johnson (The Last Picture Show)
1970: John Mills (Ryan’s Daughter)
1969: Gig Young (They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?)
1968: Jack Albertson (The Subject Was Roses)
1967: George Kennedy (Cool Hand Luke)
1966: Walter Matthau (The Fortune Cookie)
1965: Martin Balsam (A Thousand Clowns)
1964: Peter Ustinov (Topkapi)
1963: Melvyn Douglas (Hud)
1962: Ed Begley (Sweet Bird of Youth)
1961: George Chakiris (West Side Story)
1960: Peter Ustinov (Spartacus)
1959: Hugh Griffith (Ben-Hur)
1958: Burl Ives (The Big Country)
1957: Red Buttons (Sayonara)
1956: Anthony Quinn (Lust for Life)
1955: Jack Lemmon (Mister Roberts)
1954: Edmond O’Brien (The Barefoot Contessa)
1953: Frank Sinatra (From Here to Eternity)
1952: Anthony Quinn (Viva Zapata!)
1951: Karl Malden (A Streetcar Named Desire)
1950: George Sanders (All About Eve)
1949: Dean Jagger (Twelve O’Clock High)
1948: Walter Huston (The Treasure of the Sierra Madre)
1947: Edmund Gwenn (Miracle on 34th Street)
1946: Harold Russell (The Best Years of Our Lives)
1945: James Dunn (A Tree Grows in Brooklyn)
1944: Barry Fitzgerald (Going My Way)
1943: Charles Coburn (The More the Merrier)
1942: Van Heflin (Johnny Eager)
1941: Donald Crisp (How Green Was My Valley)
1940: Walter Brennan (The Westerner)
1939: Thomas Mitchell (Stagecoach)
1938: Walter Brennan (Kentucky)
1937: Joseph Schildkraut (The Life of Emile Zola)
1936: Walter Brennan (Come and Get It)
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Which win was your favorite? Who should've won? Let me know in the comments!
Re: A little discussion below. The BAFTA awards for 1993 went to Ralph Fiennes and 1994 Samuel L Jackson
The 66th Academy Awards was by far the most stacked:
Tommy Lee Jones as Samuel Gerard in "The Fugitive"
Ralph Fiennes as Amon Göth in "Schindler's List"
John Malkovich as Mitch Leary in "In the Line of Fire"
Leonardo DiCaprio as Arnie Grape in "What's Eating Gilbert Grape"
Pete Postlethwaite as Giuseppe Conlon in "In the Name of the Father"
Snubs include Val Kilmer as Doc Holliday in "Tombstone", Ben Kingsley as Itzhak Stern in "Schindler's List", Sean Penn as David Kleinfeld in "Carlito's Way", certain actors in "True Romance", etc...
2 separate years. Ralph Fiennes and Tommy Lee Jones both won.
@@SUK2293 Fiennes has never won an Oscar. "The Fugitive" came out on 08/06/93, while "Schindler's List" was released on 12/15/93. Watch 14:20 of the video.
@@jp3813 My apologies. The Oscars always have a specific window so some folk get confused when it comes to award seasons, especially here in the UK when we used to get films late and end up with BAFTAs the 'next year'. And so. Tommy Lee Jones won over Ralph Fiennes? What the heck? All Best.
@@SUK2293 All the actors mentioned above have their supporters. Many claim that Kilmer should've won that year. Though most of the time, such people never bother to look up the whole list of nominees.
You're right about the "most stacked." It was an extraordinary year. The Academy managed to pick the top five. Therefore, no one was really "snubbed." You can't nominate everybody. The limit is five.
Just watched No Country for Old Men for the first time. Such an unbelievable performance 👏Well done, Bardem
RIP Walter Brennan (July 25, 1894 - September 21, 1974), aged 80
RIP Joseph Schildkraut (March 22, 1896 - January 21, 1964), aged 67
RIP Thomas Mitchell (July 11, 1892 - December 17, 1962), aged 70
RIP Donald Crisp (July 27, 1882 - May 25, 1974), aged 91
RIP Van Heflin (December 13, 1908 - July 23, 1971), aged 62
RIP Charles Coburn (June 19, 1877 - August 30, 1961), aged 84
RIP Barry Fitzgerald (March 10, 1888 - January 14, 1961), aged 72
RIP James Dunn (November 2, 1901 - September 1, 1967), aged 65
RIP Harold Russell (January 14, 1914 - January 29, 2002), aged 88
RIP Edmund Gwenn (September 26, 1877 - September 6, 1959), aged 81
RIP Walter Huston (April 5, 1883 - April 7, 1950), aged 67
RIP Dean Jagger (November 7, 1903 - February 5, 1991), aged 87
RIP George Sanders (July 3, 1906 - April 25, 1972), aged 65
RIP Karl Malden (March 22, 1912 - July 1, 2009), aged 97
RIP Anthony Quinn (April 21, 1915 - June 3, 2001), aged 86
RIP Frank Sinatra (December 12, 1915 - May 14, 1998), aged 82
RIP Edmond O'Brien (September 10, 1915 - May 9, 1985), aged 69
RIP Jack Lemmon (February 8, 1925 - June 27, 2001), aged 76
RIP Red Buttons (February 5, 1919 - July 13, 2006), aged 87
RIP Burl Ives (June 14, 1909 - April 14, 1995), aged 85
RIP Hugh Griffith (May 30, 1912 - May 14, 1980), aged 67
RIP Sir Peter Ustinov (April 16, 1921 - March 28, 2004), aged 82
RIP Ed Begley (March 25, 1901 - April 28, 1970), aged 69
RIP Melvyn Douglas (April 5, 1901 - August 4, 1981), aged 80
RIP Martin Balsam (November 4, 1919 - February 13, 1996), aged 76
RIP Walter Matthau (October 1, 1920 - July 1, 2000), aged 79
RIP George Kennedy (February 18, 1925 - February 28, 2016), aged 91
RIP Jack Albertson (June 16, 1907 - November 25, 1981), aged 74
RIP Gig Young (November 4, 1913 - October 19, 1978), aged 64
RIP Sir John Mills (February 22, 1908 - April 23, 2005), aged 97
RIP Ben Johnson (June 13, 1918 - April 8, 1996), aged 77
RIP John Houseman (September 22, 1902 - October 31, 1988), aged 86
RIP George Burns (January 20, 1896 - March 9, 1996), aged 100
RIP Jason Robards (July 26, 1922 - December 26, 2000), aged 78
RIP Sir John Gielgud (April 14, 1904 - May 21, 2000), aged 96
RIP Louis Gossett Jr. (May 27, 1936 - March 29, 2024), aged 87
RIP Haing S. Ngor (March 22, 1940 - February 25, 1996), aged 55
RIP Don Ameche (May 31, 1908 - December 6, 1993), aged 85
RIP Sir Sean Connery (August 25, 1930 - October 31, 2020), aged 90
RIP Jack Palance (February 18, 1919 - November 10, 2006), aged 87
RIP Martin Landau (June 20, 1928 - July 15, 2017), aged 89
RIP Robin Williams (July 21, 1951 - August 11, 2014), aged 63
RIP James Coburn (August 31, 1928 - November 18, 2002), aged 74
RIP Alan Arkin (March 26, 1934 - June 29, 2023), aged 89
RIP Heath Ledger (April 4, 1979 - January 22, 2008), aged 28
RIP Christopher Plummer (December 13, 1929 - February 5, 2021), aged 91
You will be remembered as legends.
Awesome effort, thanks for your comment!
It's mad to think that the great Walter Brennan was one of the only actors to win three oscars in any acting category- along with Daniel Day-Lewis, Jack Nicholson and Meryl Streep (Katherine Hepburn won four), the only one to win best supporting actor three times, won all three in the space of five years, and won the first best supporting actor oscar in movie history. And yet most people these days don't even know his name.
His wins in 1936, 1938, and 1940 were so early and in quick succession that they're very easy to forget. It doesn't help that he was politically controversial even for his time, openly endorsing racial segregation, antisemitism, and even MLK's assassination... So yeah, he was not a good person at all but he left an important legacy for the Academy.
Also, I just found out something interesting: Brennan remained somewhat embarrassed about how he won his Oscars; in the early years of the Academy Awards, extras were given the right to vote. Brennan was popular with the Union of Film Extras, and since their numbers were overwhelming, he won every time he was nominated. His third win led to the disenfranchisement of the union from Oscar voting. Following this change, Brennan lost his fourth Best Supporting Actor nomination in 1941 for Sergeant York.
@@kinochartsleo That's fascinating. I had no idea about those facets of the man behind the performances. And that extras fact is particularly intriguing- how the times have changed! It seems likely that those factors played a part in his obscurity now.
Also, how bad is this- just read that regarding MLK's assassination, he apparently "danced a jig" upon finding out. It's obvious now why he has fell out of the public conscience.
I remember the older Brennan (Rio Bravo) but now I need to learn and see more of his history in film .For some reason I always thought he was Walter Houston in Treasure of the Sierra Madre.
Thank God I was given looks as my brean ainet gowd with naimes an placis 😁😇🪽
Frances McDormand has won three Best Actress Oscars (four in total as she also won as a producer of Nomadland) and Ingrid Bergman won two Best Actress and one Best Supporting Actress Oscars.
Damn Walter Brennan really just cleaning up in his day
Eric, so was Lionel Barrymore, brother of Ethel and John.
0:57 While most of us are too young to know who Thomas Mitchell was, there are probably a lot who are familiar with his character Billy Bailey (aka Uncle Billy) from "It's a Wonderful Life" (1946), which usually gets shown on television during the holiday season every year.
.he was the second Columbo of history, first on a scene...
Goodfellas...one of the best movies ever...RIP Ray Liotta ❤
Sad how many of these outstanding actors fall into obscurity.
2:52 Edmund Gwenn's remains were missing for YEARS until the youtube channel Hollywood Graveyard volunteered to categorize and organize the ash vaults. His remains were in an unmarked area in an urn; never claimed. He raised money and gave him a proper plaque and they celebrated in his honor at it's debut. Very heartbreaking but also heartwarming story. Was good to see that the man who played the most iconic Santa role got a proper resting place after all those years.
My Picks
1939: Bert Lahr (The Wizard of OZ)
1941: Peter Lorre (The Maltese Falcon)
1943: Claude Raines (Casablanca)
1944. Edward G. Robinson (Double Indemnity)
1949: Orson Welles (The Third Man)
1951: Robert Walker (Stangers On a Train)
1954: Toshiro Mifune (The Seven Samurai)
1955: Sal Mineo (Rebel Without a Cause)
1956: James Dean (Giant)
1957; Burt Lancaster (The Sweet Smell of Success)
1960: Charles Bronson (The Magificent Seven)
1961: Jackie Gleason (The Hustler)
1962: Omar Shariff (Lawrence of Arabia)
1964: George C. Scott (Dr Strangelove)
1967: Gene Hackmsn (Bonnie and Clyde)
1968: Gene Wilder (The Producers)
1969: Jack Nicholson (Easy Rider)
1970: Chief Dan George (Little Big Man)
1972: James Caan (The Godfather)
1973: Jason Miller (The Exorcist)
1975: Robert Shaw (Jaws)
1976: Bill Duke (Car Wash)
1977: Alec Guiness (Star Wars)
1979: Robert Duvall (Apocalypse Now)
1981: Howard E. Rollins (Ragtime)
1985: Christopher Lloyd (Back To The Future)
1986: Dennis Hopper (Blue Velvet)
1987: Morgan Freeman (Street Smart)
1988; Michael Keaton (Beetlejuice)
1991: Laurence Fishburne (Boyz N The Hood)
1992: Robin Williams (Aladdin)
1993: Leonardo DiCaprio (What's Eating Gilbert Grape)
1994: Samuel L. Jackson (Pulp Fiction)
1995: Don Cheadle (Devil in a Blue Dress)
1996: William H. Macy (Fargo)
1997: Burt Reynolds (Boogie Nights)
1998: John Goodman (The Big Lebowski)
1999: Tom Cruise (Magnolia)
2001: Ben Kingsley (Sexy Beast)
2002: Christopher Walken (Catch Me If You Can)
2003: Johnny Depp (Once Upon A Time In Mexico)
2004: Thomas Haden Church (Sidewsys)
2005: Mickey Rourke (Sin City)
2006: Dimon Hounsou (Blood Diamond)
2011: Corey Stoll (Midnight In Paris)
2015: Sylvester Stallone (Creed)
2017. Willem Dafoe (The Florida Project)
2018: Adam Driver (Blackkklansman)
2021: Mike Faist (West Side Story)
The thing about Robin Williams in Aladdin is I always thought the Oscars should have created voice acting categories for Male and Female. Should have been made since The Little Mermaid.
Yes I agree Claude Raines, he holds his own with Bogart and Bergman. Not many could.
Karl Malden and Martin Balsam are two the most underrated actors of all time. Very, very talented.
So happy for Ke Huy Quan!
Are you sure it wasn't Jackie Chan?
Thank you so much for including the nominees as well!
Thank you so much!
I enjoyed your presentation of these winners, very enjoyable and a real tribute to BOTH WINNERS & NOMINEES🏆Thank You. Interesting how many of these actors won 2 Oscars or more compared to just 2 actresses for Supporting: Winters and Weist
Many thanks for these lists so well put together. Burl Ives for The Big Country and Melvyn Douglas for Hud my top picks.
What I like/respect about this video is you included all the other nominees. Many videos I watch don't😢add the extras details. I don't see it as people this actor beat but more of a nod to the other recognized nominees. It's a good reference for the films I haven't seen.
Thx for the enjoyable. 22:03 (FYI don't click to that time , it's the end) minutes
I look forward to your next video
I think I will always cry and have chills with this Glory's scene, Denzel is fabulous.
And of course Christoph Waltz, my favorite for Django and Inglorious Bastards, he's just perfect.
Jason Robards, and really every actor in "All the President's Men" is just stellar. It doesn't hurt that he looks and sound astonishingly like Ben Bradless, though that's never the most important part.
Seeing this reminded me that Harold Russell (1946) received two Oscars for the same role. He was given an honorary one and he won his second one in the regular competition all on the same night. Does anyone know of anyone else that this happened to?
Many years later Harold Russell sold one of those Oscars to raise money to pay his wife's medical bills and the Academy then changed the rules to prevent anyone else from selling their Oscars.
It's even more interesting when Laurence Olivier, his main competitor for the win, was also awarded an honorary Oscar for his acting/directing/producing of "Henry V" that very same year!
I weep at many of these scenes. That's what cinema does. I adore Anthony Quin.
Awesome job!
Robert Mitchum, John Ireland, Jeff Chandler should have won the Oscar. And Walter Brennan should have been nominated a lot more times, for Rio Bravo, for instance
John Ireland was Amateur City in All the King's Men. Besides, he was in the wrong category. Love Mitchum in G.I. Joe but James Dunn was the right choice for his shattering Johnny Nolan in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. And the incomparable George Sanders' Addison DeWitt in All About Eve is a genuine classic. Chandler was an unconvincing Cochise.
Some of these performances were...wow! They left me breathless! Particularly Christopher Walken and Robin Williams...they certainly captured the best scenes of their performances in the above clips.
I never heard of Mahershala Ali & he won twice! Either my memory is going or I haven’t been paying attention.
He is a terrific supporting actor who unfortunately haven't taken many lead parts yet, that's probably why you don't recognize him. He is going to be next Marvel's "Blade" though, I think it might be a turning point for his career in terms of public recognition.
I remember him from House of Cards on Netflix.
Is the song at 8:42 part of the movie? If not, I like the Gene Pitney appreciation!
R Lee Ermey in Full Metal Jacket should have been nominated at the very least.
Ranked them
From least deserved to most deserved
It's difficult but my picks for the best: Joseph Schildkraut in the Life of Emile Zola, Van Heflin in Johnny Eager, Barry Fitzgerald in Going My Way, Walter Huston in Treasure of the Sierra Madre, George Sanders in All About Eve, Karl Malden in Streetcar, Jack Lemmon in Mister Roberts, Melvyn Douglas in Hud, Gig Young in They Shoot Horses, Ben Johnson in The Last Picture Show, John Houseman in The Paper Chase, Robert De Niro in Godfather II, John Gielgud in Arthur, Haing S Ngor in The Killing Fields, Denzel Washington in Glory, Martin Landau in Ed Wood, and Chris Cooper in Adaptation. And the worst: Red Buttons and that hambone Kevin Kline. What people see in him I will never understand.
Best..Dunn, DeNiro, Melvyn Douglas #1, Sanders, Ben Johnson, Gielgud, Landau, del Toro, Bardem, Ledger
Frank Sinatra. I can't even
Thomas Mitchell truly have the timeless persona
rest in peace alan arkin
My mega-ranking, to the worst to the best:
87º Frank Sinatra
86º George Chakiris
85º Cuba Gooding Jr
84º Jim Broadbent
83º George Clooney
82º John Houseman
81º Don Ameche
80º Dean Jagger
79º Jack Palance
78º Jared Leto
77º Michael Caine (The Cider House Rules)
76º Martin Balsam
75º Morgan Frreman
74º Jack Nicholson
73º Edmond O'Brien
72º Melvyn Douglas (Being There)
71º Red Buttons
70º Mahershala Ali (Green Book)
69º Tommy Lee Jones
68º Ed Begley
67º Jason Robards (Julia)
66º Troy Kotsur
65º Walter Brennan (Come and Get It)
64º Tim Robbins
63º Sean Connery
62º Robin Williams
61º Michael Caine (Hannah and Her Sisters)
60º Donald Crisp
59º Christopher Plummer
58º Louis Gossett Jr.
57º Chris Cooper
56º Hugh Griffith
55º Joseph Schildkraut
54º Edmund Gwenn
53º Denzel Washington
52º Anthony Quinn (Viva Zapata!)
51º Walter Brennan (Kentucky)
50º James Coburn
49º Brad Pitt
48º Jason Robards (All the President's Men)
47º Alan Arkin
46º George Kennedy
45º Christian Bale
44º John Mills
43º Anthony Quinn (Lust for Life)
42º Charles Coburn
41º Benicio Del Toro
40º Christoph Waltz (Django Unchained)
39º Van Heflin
38º Peter Ustinov (Spartacus)
37º Barry Fitzgerald
36º Joel Grey
35º Mahershala Ali (Moonlight)
34° Burl Ives
33º John Gielgud
32º Mark Rylance
31º George Burns
30º Harold Russell
29º Peter Ustinov (Topkapi)
28º Walter Brennan (The Westerner)
27º Ben Johnson
26º Thomas Mitchell
25º Timothy Hutton
24º Daniel Kaluuya
23º Walter Matthau
22º George Sanders
21º J. K. Simmons
20º Kevin Spacey
19º Gig Young
18º James Dunn
17º Jack Lemmon
16º Javier Bardem
15º Robert De Niro
14º Sam Rockwell
13º Melvyn Douglas (Hud)
12º Karl Malden
11º Kevin Kline
10º Christoph Waltz (Inglourious Bastards)
9º Ke Huy Quan
8º Jack Albertson
7º Gene Hackman
6º Walter Huston
5º Heath Ledger
4º Christopher Walken
3º Joe Pesci
2º Haing S. Ngor
1º Martin Landau
What is that song at 8:36? Can't find it anywhere searching those lyrics. Really like it.
"If I Were" by Gene Pitney
Bred Pitt was in the wrong category for Once upon A Time In Hollywood. He was clearly the lead,
My favorite is Heath Ledger. In my opinion this was the best performance ever!
The Dark Night is one of the worst films I ever saw. Typical Nolan garbage. Tim Burton's Batman was far better in every aspect.
Heath's Joker is completely superficial with no character development, highlighted with 3 inane stories of how he became The Joker.
Joaquim Pheonix's portrayal of The Joker was far superior to Heath. To give Heath is due, he did a sterling job with an appalling script.
I also have to give Christian Bale, an actor a do admire, the title of being the worst Batman.
@@kenchristie9214 Oh my goodness, such a bad, but well formed argument!
@@Sharktoplasm Two directors' films I'll never see again are Chris Nolan and Baz Lurhmann.
@@kenchristie9214 I thought Oppenheimer was very interesting
Interesting in in 1972 to see Joel Grey win despite (because of?) the three way nomination for "Godfather". No shade-he was excellent.
I'm not familiar with the specifics of this edition, but vote-splitting was most definitely essential here, otherwise, Al Pacino would have easily won. But yeah, Joel Grey is still a very good win for that year.
@kinochartsleo Typical Academy nonsense nominating Pacino as Best Supporting Actor yet he's in 2 1/2 hours of the movie & Brando is nominated for Best Actor & he's in like 1/2 hour. Pacino made the mistake of criticizing the Academy's decision. 2 others from 1972 who weren't nominated but could've been were Burt Reynolds & Ned Beatty for Deliverance.
My choice for Best Supporting Actor Oscar:
1936: Mischa Auer (My Man Godfrey), instead of Walter Brennan (Come and Get It)
1937: Ralph Bellamy (The Awful Truth), instead of Joseph Schildkraut (The Life of Emile Zola)
1938: Humphrey Bogart (Angels with Dirty Faces) (not nominated), instead of Walter Brennan (Kentucky)
1940: Jack Oakie (The Great Dictator), instead of Walter Brennan (The Westerner)
1941: Sydney Greenstreet (The Maltese Falcon), instead of Donald Crisp (How Green Was My Valley)
1942: Walter Huston (Yankee Doodle Dandy) and/or Henry Travers (Mrs. Miniver), instead of Van Heflin (Johnny Eager)
1943: Claude Rains (Casablanca), instead of Charles Coburn (The More the Merrier)
1944: Clifton Webb (Laura) and/or Edward G. Robinson (Double Indemnity) (not nominated), instead of Barry Fitzgerald (Going My Way)
1946: Claude Rains (Notorious), instead of Harold Russell (The Best Years of Our Lives)
1949: Ralph Richardson (The Heiress), instead of Dean Jagger (Twelve O'Clock High)
1952: Jack Palance (Sudden Fear) and/or Victor McLaglen (The Quiet Man) and/or Donald O'Connor (Singin' in the Rain) (not nominated), instead of Anthony Quinn (Viva Zapata!)
1954: Lee J. Cobb (On the Waterfront) and/or Karl Malden (On the Waterfront) and/or Rod Steiger (On the Waterfront), instead of Edmond O'Brien (The Barefoot Contessa)
1957: Sessue Hayakawa (The Bridge on the River Kwai) and/or Lee J. Cobb (12 Angry Men) (not nominated), instead of Red Buttons (Sayonara)
1959: George C. Scott (Anatomy of a Murder), instead of Hugh Griffith (Ben-Hur)
1961: Montgomery Clift (Judgment at Nuremberg), instead of George Chakiris (West Side Story)
1962: Omar Sharif (Lawrence of Arabia), instead of Ed Begley (Sweet Bird of Youth)
1963: Roddy McDowall (Cleopatra) (not nominated), instead of Melvyn Douglas (Hud)
1964: George C. Scott (Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb) (not nominated), instead of Peter Ustinov (Topkapi)
1965: Tom Courtenay (Doctor Zhivago), instead of Martin Balsam (A Thousand Clowns)
1967: Gene Hackman (Bonnie and Clyde) and/or John Cassavetes (The Dirty Dozen) and/or Eli Wallach (The Good, the Bad and the Ugly) (not nominated), instead of George Kennedy (Cool Hand Luke)
1968: Gene Wilder (The Producers), instead of Jack Albertson (The Subject Was Roses)
1969: Jack Nicholson (Easy Rider), instead of Gig Young (They Shoot Horses, Don't They?)
1970: Chief Dan George (Little Big Man) and/or Robert Duvall (M*A*S*H) (not nominated), instead of John Mills (Ryan's Daughter)
1971: Jeff Bridges (The Last Picture Show) and/or Roy Scheider (The French Connection), instead of Ben Johnson (The Last Picture Show)
1972: Al Pacino (The Godfather) and/or James Caan (The Godfather) and/or Robert Duvall (The Godfather), instead of Joel Grey (Cabaret)
1973: Max von Sydow (The Exorcist) (not nominated), instead of John Houseman (The Paper Chase)
1975: John Cazale (Dog Day Afternoon) (not nominated), instead of George Burns (The Sunshine Boys)
1976: Ned Beatty (Network) and/or Laurence Olivier (Marathon Man) and/or Robert Duvall (Network) (not nominated), instead of Jason Robards (All the President's Men)
1977: Alec Guinness (Star Wars), instead of Jason Robards (Julia)
1979: Robert Duvall (Apocalypse Now) and/or Mickey Rooney (The Black Stallion) and/or Marlon Brando (Apocalypse Now) (not nominated), instead of Melvyn Douglas (Being There)
1980: Joe Pesci (Raging Bull), instead of Timothy Hutton (Ordinary People)
1981: Jack Nicholson (Reds), instead of John Gielgud (Arthur)
1982: James Mason (The Verdict), instead of Louis Gossett Jr. (An Officer and a Gentleman)
1984: John Malkovich (Places in the Heart) and/or Pat Morita (The Karate Kid) and/or James Woods (Once Upon a Time in America) (not nominated), instead of Haing S. Ngor (The Killing Fields)
1985: Christopher Lloyd (Back to the Future) (not nominated) and/or Danny Glover (The Color Purple) (not nominated), instead of Don Ameche (Cocoon)
1986: Willem Dafoe (Platoon) and/or Dennis Hopper (Hoosiers; Blue Velvet (not nominated)), instead of Michael Caine (Hannah and Her Sisters)
1988: River Phoenix (Running on Empty) and/or Alan Rickman (Die Hard) (not nominated) and/or Willem Dafoe (Mississippi Burning) (not nominated), instead of Kevin Kline (A Fish Called Wanda)
1991: Tommy Lee Jones (JFK) and/or Ben Kingsley (Bugsy) and/or John Goodman (Barton Fink) (not nominated), instead of Jack Palance (City Slickers)
1993: Ralph Fiennes (Schindler's List) and/or Leonardo DiCaprio (What's Eating Gilbert Grape) and/or Pete Postlethwaite (In the Name of the Father), instead of Tommy Lee Jones (The Fugitive)
1994: Samuel L. Jackson (Pulp Fiction) and/or Gary Oldman (Léon: The Professional) (not nominated), instead of Martin Landau (Ed Wood)
1996: William H. Macy (Fargo) and/or Edward Norton (Primal Fear) and/or Steve Buscemi (Fargo) (not nominated), instead of Cuba Gooding Jr. (Jerry Maguire)
1998: Ed Harris (The Truman Show) and/or Billy Bob Thornton (A Simple Plan) and/or John Goodman (The Big Lebowski) (not nominated), instead of James Coburn (Affliction)
1999: Tom Cruise (Magnolia) and/or Michael Clarke Duncan (The Green Mile) and/or Haley Joel Osment (The Sixth Sense), instead of Michael Caine (The Cider House Rules)
2000: Joaquin Phoenix (Gladiator) and/or Willem Dafoe (Shadow of the Vampire) and/or Albert Finney (Erin Brockovich), instead of Benicio Del Toro (Traffic)
2001: Ian McKellen (The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring) and/or Ben Kingsley (Sexy Beast) and/or Steve Buscemi (Ghost World) (not nominated), instead of Jim Broadbent (Iris)
2005: Jake Gyllenhaal (Brokeback Mountain) and/or Paul Giamatti (Cinderella Man) and/or William Hurt (A History of Violence), instead of George Clooney (Syriana)
2015: Tom Hardy (The Revenant), instead of Mark Rylance (Bridge of Spies)
2016: Dev Patel (Lion) and/or Jeff Bridges (Hell or High Water) and/or Michael Shannon (Nocturnal Animals), instead of Mahershala Ali (Moonlight)
Other snubs in the '94 Oscars were Ben Kingsley (Schindler's List), Val Kilmer (Tombstone), Sean Penn (Carlito's Way), and certain actors in True Romance.
1987 Lance Henrikson "Near Dark"
If you want to see Walter Brennan in a different role check out the period musical Centennial Summer (1946). He plays an inventor and father of four (with two grown daughters Jeannie Crain and Linda Darnell) in the late 1800's. Definitely different than his more familar western characters.
Wow Walter Brennan three Oscars als supporting actor really great actor
What is the song at 8:38 ???
What's the song in 8:40?
I don't know which catagory has the best winners. This or the lead actor catagory. Robert Downey Jr. will be in good company in a few weeks.
Walter Houston , Sean Connery , Joe Pesci & Leonardo DiCaprio are my top favs even tho Leo didnt win for BSA
soooooo many good performances. I can't name just 1. But here's my top 5:
1-Walter Huston - TREASURE OF SIERRA MADRE. I've watched that film 4 times and it's a great character study. Love his performance.
2- Christopher Walken - THE DEER HUNTER. The first time I saw the film, I wanted to crawl under my theatre seat watching the Russian Roulette sequences. So Powerful.
3-Christian Bale - THE FIGHTER. The shocking physical transformation was part of the deal, but the performance is Outstanding.
4-Tim Hutton - ORDINARY PEOPLE. The tragedy of being a mother's "other" child. The scene's between him and MTM are just heart-aching.
5-Mahershala Ali - MOONLIGHT. If ever you could be a drug dealer and have a positive image.
PS: would have been nice to have the actual soundtrack from RYAN'S DAUGHTER - Mills performance is solely expressions that are reactions to the events around him. Still tho, a good presentation. Thanks for the memories.
Epic
Jack Palance was nominated in 52 and 53. Is that the longest time between nominations (1953 -> 1991)? I think I heard Judd Hirsch might have broken that record this year (Ordinary People 1980 and Some film this year).
I would do the math myself but I've had a gummy edible and let's be honest....
MATH IS HARD!!!!!😁
Judd Hirsch broke Henry Fonda’s 41 year record (set in 1982), earning his second supporting nomination for “The Fabelmans” 42 years after his bid for “Ordinary People!”
My apologies I'm texting in real time but I'm shocked that Red Buttons win over Brando. That win would be engraved on my tombstone. Well done Red well done
For me, fave wins are Joel Grey in Cabaret & Edmund Gwenn for Miracle on 34th street ..
-Edward Norton should win for Primal Fear instead of Cuba Gooding Jr -Albert Finny for Erin Brokovich instead of Benecio
-Djimon Hounsou for Blood Diamond instead
Agree, Ed Norton was brilliant in Primal Fear
Yes Albert Finney for Erin Brockovich should have won. Saw it couple of weeks ago great foil for Julia.
Wait!? Joaquin didn’t win for Gladiator?!! I always thought he did 🤯
How did Al Pacino for The Godfather and James Mason for The Verdict not win. Shame that Jack Warden never won.
Pacino was the lead in the Godfather but was nominated wrongly in the supporting category. Warden was a much more interesting actor in his youth before he was ever nominated for anything. In The Bachelor Party (1957) he does a baseball riff from a barstool which is a masterpiece and a lesson in naturalistic acting.
Graham Green should have won
Brennan was embarressed by these Oscar wins because some of his friends were in the academy, always voting for him; I didn't see the other two, but I'm SURE he deserved the Oscar for "The Westerner". 😊
THE ACCEPTANCE SPEECH BY KE HUY QUAN TO HIS MUM MADE CRY BUCKETS OF TEARS FROM BEING THE LITTLE KID IN INDIANA JONES TO BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN 2023 BEST FILM IT WAS MAGICAL
1993's Oscar for TLJ is one gigantic abomination of this award as a whole, by all due respect
I agree. Don't really get it, especially considering Ralph Fiennes' performance in Schindler's List.
Val Kilmer should’ve won for Tombstone
Toshirô Mifune for Seven Samurai
Michael Keaton for Beetlejuice
James Earl Jones for Field of Dreams
Djimon Hounsou for Blood Diamond
RDJ for Tropic Thunder
Yeah they’re wrong most of the time lol
RDJ would’ve won it most years for Tropic Thunder but he was up against Ledger’s Joker portrayal on top of Ledger’s untimely death. He never stood a chance really
Heath Ledger tutta la vita,manca tantissimo ♥️
1993 should have been Ralph Fiennes for
who the hell is Chill Will?
Heavy set character actor. Made many movies and was in a couple of tv series, one called "The Rounders" in the 60s
I'm not saying that Walter Brennan didn't deserve three Oscars but during that time Extra's were allowed to vote. Brennan got his start as an extra and they changed the rules after his third win so that extras couldn't vote any more.
He was also an incredible racist who danced a celebratory jig after Martin Luther King was assassinated. He did this in front of an entire Hollywood crew while making a film. Check this out in Wikipedia if you don't believe it.
I had never heard this about Waiter Brennan am going to Wikipedia now. Worked with John Wayne so that figures.
John Wayne was kind of an enigma, an ultra conservative yet tolerant of many liberal Democrats and their ideas. I never remember him as being a racist (although he wasn't crazy about Jews). He was tolerant of homosexuals and his political views were varied. Just a complex guy all around. I can still enjoy most of his movies when they pop up on TV.
「如果有來生,我還是會選擇和你報稅,開洗衣店」
Let's go Ke Huy Quan!
And now the Oscar goes to Robert Downey Jr.
And ladies and gentlemans 2023 Oscar goes to Robert Downey JR for the best supporting actor…
Gentlemen*
1972, how tf has that happened then 😂. Pacino one of the best acting performances ever in the Godfather, only nominated in Supporting and doesn’t even win over a clown movie
Too bad Basil Rathbone didn't win one of those three Walter Brennan Oscars.
1980 most rightful.
1996 most undeserved.
Jared Leto win didn't age well 😂
How so? Not a terrible pick in the slightest. Weird guy but did an amazing job in that movie.
Seems to me that, with the exclusion of Edmund Gwenn, Ben Johnson and Walter Houston, all a male actor has to do on screen is to be as nasty, violent and disgusting has he-l and he'll be nominated and perhaps win BSA.
Walter Brennen is EXTREMELY over rated.
He doesn't act.
He just reads lines in that irritating voice.
It’s funny how the Troy Kotsur scene had me like 😆 then the Ke Huy Quan scene had me like 😭😭😭
Jared Leto win didn't age well 😂