1976
The winner is listed first, in CAPITAL letters.
Actor:
PETER FINCH in "Network", Robert
De Niro in "Taxi
Driver", Giancarlo Giannini in "Seven Beauties",
William Holden in "Network",
Sylvester Stallone in "Rocky"
Actress:
FAYE DUNAWAY in "Network",
Marie-Christine Barrault in "Cousin Cousine", Talia
Shire in "Rocky", Sissy Spacek
in "Carrie", Liv Ullmann in "Face to Face"
Supporting Actor:
JASON ROBARDS in "All the President's Men", Ned Beatty
in "Network", Burgess Meredith
in "Rocky", Laurence Olivier
in "Marathon Man", Burt Young
in "Rocky"
Supporting Actress:
BEATRICE STRAIGHT in "Network",
Jane Alexander in "All the President's Men", Jodie
Foster in "Taxi
Driver", Lee Grant in "Voyage of the Damned",
Piper Laurie in "Carrie"
Director:
JOHN G. AVILDSEN for "Rocky",
Ingmar Bergman for "Face to Face", Sidney Lumet for "Network",
Alan J. Pakula for "All the President's Men", Lina
Wertmuller for "Seven Beauties"
The
Bi-Centennial year brought five solid and original films into
competition with each other for Best Picture.
The ultimate winner was the underdog, low-budget,
simplistic, feel-good boxing film, John Avildsen's and UA's Rocky (with
ten nominations and three wins - including Best Picture, Best
Director and Best Film Editing). It was the first in the endless
series of sequels about a down-and-out young club fighter -
'the Italian Stallion' from South Philadelphia slums, who seeks
self-respect, fame, and the American dream (of 'going the distance').
With
its Cinderella story, it was the first sports film to
win the Best Picture award. [Note: This upbeat boxing/prize-fighting
genre film followed the conventions of previous films including The
Champ (1931/32), Golden Boy (1939), Champion
(1949), and Somebody Up There Likes Me (1956).]
It was shot from an original script by its unknown,
unemployed, struggling break-out star Sylvester Stallone. [With
Stallone's nominations for Best Actor and Best Original Screenplay,
he joined only two others in Academy history with the same
pair of honors in the same year: Charlie Chaplin (for The
Great Dictator (1940)), and Orson Welles (for Citizen
Kane (1941)).]
Other Best Picture nominees included:
- Sidney Lumet's black comedy and biting,
prophetic social satire about mass media in America, Network (with ten nominations
and four wins - Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Supporting
Actress, and Paddy Chayefsky's Best Screenplay) - a satirical
indictment of the world of commercial television. This film
that was an indictment of the entire industry, dominated
the acting nominations. [This was director Sidney Lumet's
third nomination without a win, and Chayefsky's third Oscar
- Chayefsky's other two Oscars were Screenplay awards for Marty
(1955) and The
Hospital (1971).]
- Alan J. Pakula's and producer Robert Redford's All
the President's Men (with eight nominations and four
wins - Best Supporting Actor, Best Screenplay, Best Art
Direction/Set Decoration, and Best Sound), that was a complete
rehashing of the Watergate scandal, presenting it as a gripping,
conspiracy docu-drama and political thriller, while following Washington
Post reporters
Bob Woodward (Robert Redford) and Carl Bernstein (Dustin
Hoffman) as the investigators of the scandal
- Martin Scorsese's Taxi
Driver, (with four nominations and no wins!,
and no recognition for its director) about an alienated,
cab driver (and war veteran) named Travis Bickle (Robert
De Niro) who unleashed his own internal violence upon
the city; the film was noted for the lead actor's monologue
before a mirror while rehearsing a planned assassination: "You
talkin' to me? You talkin' to me? You talkin' to me?
Then who the hell else are you talking...you talkin'
to me?"
- Hal Ashby's Bound for Glory (with six
nominations and two wins - Best Cinematography for Haskell
Wexler and Best Original Score Adaptation), a biopic film
about the life of folk singer-composer and labor organizer
Woodie Guthrie as he rode the rails during the Depression
years
Two directors of Best Picture nominees, Martin
Scorsese and Hal Ashby, were not nominated for Best Director.
They were replaced with two foreign-language film directors:
- Ingmar Bergman for Face to Face (with
two nominations and no wins) - originally a film made for
a four-part Swedish television series
- female Italian director/writer Lina Wertmuller
for the excellent dark comedy, the film classic Seven
Beauties (with four nominations - one was Best Foreign
Language Film) about a small-time Italian (Naples) crook
who has seven unattractive sisters to support. [Wertmuller
was the first woman ever nominated for a Best Director
Oscar. No woman has ever won the Best Director Oscar. Wertmuller's
film was also defeated in the foreign-language category by Black
and White in Color.]
Performers with nominations for their roles in Network won
three of the year's acting Oscars - Peter Finch, Faye Dunaway,
and Beatrice Straight. [It became only the second time
in Academy history that a film had won three acting trophies.
This same accomplishment hadn't occurred since three performers
won three acting awards in A
Streetcar Named Desire (1951) - Vivien Leigh with a
Best Actress award, and Karl Malden and Kim Hunter with the
two Best Supporting awards.]
British actor Peter Finch (with his second nomination
and sole win) was awarded the Best Actor Oscar for his
role as crazed, suicidal, UBS network anchor-man and fired
'mad prophet of the airwaves' Howard Beale in Network -
memorable for his immortal line: "I'm as mad as hell and
I'm not gonna take this anymore."
Finch's award was presented post-humously (he died on January
14, 1977, shortly before the awards ceremony). He was the fourth actor
to be honored with a posthumous nomination (to date) and the first and only posthumous
winner for Best Actor (at that time) - later supplemented with
Heath Ledger's posthumous nominaton and win for Best Supporting
Actor for The Dark Knight
(2008).
[Others with posthumous nominations - but without
awards - were Jeanne Eagels for The Letter (1928-29),
James Dean for East of Eden (1955) and Giant
(1956), Spencer Tracy for Guess Who's Coming to Dinner
(1967), Ralph Richardson for Greystoke: The Legend
of Tarzan (1984), Massimo Troisi for Il Postino (1995).]
The other four nominees in the Best Actor category
included:
- William Holden (with his third and final career
nomination), Finch's co-star in the role of sardonic
network news chief Max Schumacher in Network. [He had won
only once, for Stalag 17 (1953) and was also nominated
for his role in Sunset
Boulevard (1950).] It is possible that Finch's heart
attack and death prompted a sympathy vote - otherwise, Holden
might have won another Best Actor Oscar
- Robert De Niro (with his second nomination)
in a mesmerizing and forceful performance as Travis Bickle,
a disturbed Vietnam-era vet whose cab driving in New York
City and a romantic rejection by a blonde political campaign
worker (Cybill Shepherd) help unleash his violence in a bloody
crusade in Taxi
Driver
- Sylvester Stallone as Rocky Balboa in Rocky -
a 30-year old club fighter who went the distance with world
heavyweight champion Apollo Creed in Philadelphia
- Italian actor Giancarlo Giannini (with his
sole nomination) as Pasqualino Settebellezze - a small-time
fascist Italy gangster and his struggle for survival in a
WW II Nazi POW camp in the Best Director-nominated war/comedy
film Seven Beauties. [Only a very few Italian actors
have been nominated - but have not won - for roles in Italian
films - Giannini, Marcello Mastroianni (nominated in 1962,
1977, and 1987), and Massimo Troisi (in 1995).]
Faye Dunaway (with her third nomination and first win)
won the Best Actress award for her role as Diane Christensen
- the icy, power-hungry, ratings-obsessed, ruthless and heartless
USB programming executive and career-woman (who falls for boss
William Holden) in Network.
[Dunaway had twice been nominated as Best Actress for Bonnie
and Clyde (1967) and Chinatown
(1974).]
Competitors in the Best Actress category included
two foreign-language performances (a first!):
- Liv Ullmann (with her second nomination) as
Dr. Jenny Isaksson - a psychiatrist who slowly experiences
a nervous breakdown in Bergman's Face to Face
- Marie-Christine Barrault (with her sole nomination)
as Marthe (one of a pair of cousins who fall in love) in
the French comedy Cousin, Cousine (remade as Cousins
(1989))
- Talia Shire (with her second nomination) as
plain-Jane salesclerk Adrian - Rocky's shy, repressed girlfriend
in Rocky
- Sissy Spacek (with her first nomination) as
Carrie White - a repressed, telekinetic high school student
who wreaks vengeance on her schoolmates in Brian De Palma's
first major hit based on Stephen King's novel titled Carrie (with
two nominations and no wins)
The award in the Best Supporting Actor category
was presented to Jason Robards Jr. (with his first of two consecutive
Oscar wins) for his performance as encouraging Washington
Post editor Ben Bradlee who supports the pursuit of the
Watergate story in All the President's Men.
Two Rocky co-stars
were Best Supporting Actor nominees:
- Burt Young (with his sole nomination) as Paulie
- Rocky's friend and the brother of Rocky's girlfriend Adrian
- Burgess Meredith (with his second and final
unsuccessful nomination, a consecutive one) as Mickey, the
boxer's crotchety manager
The other two Best Supporting Actor nominees
were:
- Ned Beatty (with his sole nomination) as Arthur
Jensen - the angry chairman of the board of the United Broadcasting
System (UBS) in Network
- Laurence Olivier (with his ninth of ten career
nominations) as the crazed, sadistic Nazi dentist Szell in Marathon
Man (the film's sole nomination).
[Note: Olivier's nomination tied him with Spencer Tracy
for the most acting nominations in Oscar history up to that
time.]
Many of the same films previously described also
produced Best Supporting Actress nominees - most of whom were
nominated for minor cameo roles.
The Best Supporting Actress winner was dark-horse
stage and TV star Beatrice Straight (with her sole career nomination)
in the short role as Louise Schumacher - William Holden's deserted,
neglected and spurned wife struggling to maintain her dignity
in Network.
[Straight's screen role, which was composed
of two scenes and lasted six minutes (and eight seconds)
of screen time, contained fewer on-screen script lines
- 18 - than any other acting nominee in awards history.]
The Best Supporting Actress nominees included
four other competing actresses:
- Piper Laurie (with her second of three unsuccessful
nominations) as the title character's religiously-fanatical
mother Margaret White in Carrie. [Laurie's last previous
acting nomination, that she also lost, was for a film role
15 years earlier - a record - as Paul Newman's crippled girlfriend
Sarah in The Hustler (1961).]
- Lee Grant (with her fourth and last nomination)
as German-Jewish refugee Lili Rosen seeking refuge in Cuba
in director Stuart Rosenberg's Voyage of the Damned (with
three nominations and no wins)
- Jane Alexander (with her second nomination)
as the informant Book-keeper in All the President's Men
- Jodie Foster (with her first nomination) as
12 year-old runaway and prostitute Iris Steensman in Taxi
Driver
The Omen (with only two nominations -
both for Jerry Goldsmith for Best Song and Best Score) became
the first horror film to receive a Best Score Oscar.
In this same year, Goldsmith was competing against Bernard
Herrmann, who had two post-humous Best Score nominations for Obsession and Taxi
Driver. [Herrmann had five Best Score career nominations,
and only won once, for The Devil and Daniel Webster (1941),
in the same year that he was nominated for Citizen
Kane (1941).] Barbra Streisand's Oscar win for Best
Song ("Evergreen") for A Star is Born made
her the first Oscar-winning actress to receive an award for
music. She had won her sole Oscar for Best Actress for Funny
Girl (1968).
Oscar Snubs and Omissions:
Director Martin Ritt's The Front (with
a single unsuccessful nomination for Walter Bernstein's Best
Screenplay) starred Woody Allen as 'front' Howard Price for
his blacklisted TV writer and friend, and Zero Mostel as TV
star Hecky Brown. Martin Scorsese, the director of the ultimately
Oscar-less Taxi
Driver was un-nominated as Best Director, a major snub.
And Harvey Keitel was overlooked for his role as the long-haired,
detestable pimp of 12-year old hooker Iris (Jodie Foster).
Both Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman were not
nominated in the acting category for their believable work
in All the President's Men. John Wayne was neglected
in the Oscar nominations for his role as aging, cancer-stricken
legendary gunfighter John Bernard Brooks, as was Lauren Bacall
as stern and compassionate widow and boardinghouse owner Bond
Rogers in Don Siegel's The Shootist. Audrey Hepburn
was bypassed in the nominations for her performance as Maid
Marian in Richard Lester's Robin and Marian, opposite
Sean Connery as a mature Robin Hood. And Shelley Winters was
passed over for a nomination in her role as the quintessential
Jewish mother Mrs. Lapinsky in Paul Mazursky's un-nominated
comedy Next Stop, Greenwich Village.
Although The Outlaw Josey Wales had one
nomination (for Jerry Fielding's score), it lacked nominations
for Clint Eastwood's screenplay, direction, and starring role
as the title character, for Best Picture, and for Chief Dan
George's role as displaced, old Native American Lone Waite.
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