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56th Academy Awards
Date Monday, April 9, 1984
Site Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, Los Angeles
Host Johnny Carson
Producer Jack Haley, Jr.
Director Marty Pasetta
Highlights
Best Picture Terms of Endearment
TV in the United States
Network ABC
Duration 3 hours, 42 minutes
Viewership 38.0 (Nielsen ratings)
 < 55th Academy Awards 57th > 

The 56th Academy Awards were presented April 9, 1984 at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, Los Angeles. The ceremonies were presided over by Johnny Carson.

The Best Supporting Actress winner this year was unique. 4' 9" Linda Hunt won the award for her role as Billy Kwan - a male Chinese-Australian photographer - in Peter Weir's The Year of Living Dangerously, making her the first actor to win an Oscar for playing a character of the opposite sex.

Gordon Willis, a respected cinematographer most famous for his un-nominated work on The Godfather, The Godfather: Part II, and Woody Allen's Manhattan, received his first Best Cinematography nomination for Zelig.


Contents

Results

Award Winner Nominee(s)
Best Actor in a Leading Role Robert DuvallTender Mercies
Best Actor in a Supporting Role Jack NicholsonTerms of Endearment
Best Actress in a Leading Role Shirley MacLaineTerms of Endearment
Best Actress in a Supporting Role Linda HuntThe Year of Living Dangerously
Best Art Direction Fanny and Alexander – Art Direction: Anna Asp; Set Decoration: Susanne Lingheim
Best Cinematography Fanny and AlexanderSven Nykvist
Best Costume Design Fanny and AlexanderMarik Vos-Lundh
Best Director James L. BrooksTerms of Endearment
Best Documentary (Feature) He Makes Me Feel Like Dancin'Emile Ardolino, Producer
Best Documentary (Short Subject) "Flamenco at 5:15" – Cynthia Scott and Adam Symansky, Producers
  • In the Nuclear Shadow: What Can the Children Tell Us? – Vivienne Verdon-Roe and Eric Thiermann, Producers
  • Sewing WomanArthur Dong, Producer
  • Spaces: The Architecture of Paul Rudolph – Robert Eisenhardt, Producer
  • You Are Free Ihr Zent Frei – Dea Brokman and Ilene Landis, Producers
Best Film Editing The Right Stuff – Glenn Farr , Lisa Fruchtman , Stephen A. Rotter , Douglas Stewart and Tom Rolf
Best Foreign Language Film Fanny and Alexander – Sweden
Best Music (Original Score) The Right Stuff - Bill Conti
Original Song Score or Adaptation Score Yentl - Song Score by Michel Legrand, Alan Bergman and Marilyn Bergman
Best Music (Original Song) "Flashdance... What a Feeling" from FlashdanceGiorgio Moroder, Keith Forsey and Irene Cara
Best Picture Terms of EndearmentJames L. Brooks, Producer
Best Short Film (Animated) "Sundae in New York" – Jimmy Picker, Producer
Best Short Film (Dramatic Live Action) "Boys and Girls" – Janice L. Platt, Producer
  • "Goodie-Two-Shoes" – Ian Emes, Producer
  • "Overnight Sensation" – Jon N. Bloom, Producer
Best Sound The Right Stuff – Mark Berger, Thomas Scott, Randy Thom and David MacMillan
Best Sound Editing The Right Stuff – Jay Boekelheide
Best Writing (Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium) Terms of EndearmentJames L. Brooks
Best Writing (Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen) Tender MerciesHorton Foote

Out of competition

Nomination announcements

The filmmakers and studio executives were very surprised by the six Academy Award nominations for Tender Mercies, which was released ten months before the nominations were announced and had received little campaigning; the film had been exhibited in only three theaters after its release. Universal Studios had already previously sold the video rights for Tender Mercies based on their lack of confidence in the film following poor test screenings; the studio was therefore unable to redistribute Tender Mercies after the Oscar nominations were announced, and cable companies ran the film on television one week before the Academy Award ceremony.[1]

Ceremony

When screenwriter Horton Foote won a Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar for To Kill a Mockingbird, he was not present at the 1963 ceremony to collect it because he did not believe he was going to win and did not attend. As a result, Foote made sure he was present for the ceremony when he was nominated for Tender Mercies; he won that Oscar as well, this time for Best Original Screenplay.[1]

References

External links








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