Best Picture: "Great Expectations"; Best Director: David Lean ("Great Expectations"); Best Screenplay: "Shoe-Shine"; Best Actor: John Garfield ("Body and Soul"); Best Actress: Deborah Kerr ("Black Narcissus"); Best Supporting Actor: Richard Widmark ("Kiss of Death"); and Best Supporting Actress: Gloria Grahame ("Crossfire").
@GregNJ720 Song of the South came out on November 12th 1946. I was just wondering that since it was made so close to 1947, that that's the year it was considered to come out in?
I'm just saying because I happen to be a huge fan of the film. I'm not trying to be rude. I just know that it came out in 1946, not 1947.
@DisneyGuy1946: I didn't realize the release date, but it definitely won the award in 1947. Maybe it was not a very wide release in 1946 and/or the Academy was loser with their rules back then? Not sure :)
To me, Great Expectations should have won everything from that year.
Baseball17fan 1 year ago
Best Picture: Miracle on 34th Street
Best Director: Elia Kazan (Gentlemans Agreement)
Best Actor: Gregory Peck (Gentleman's Agreement)
Best Actress: Maureen O' Hara (Miracle on 34th Street)
Best Supporting Actor: Edmund Gwenn (Miracle on 34th Street)
Best Supporting Actor: Celeste Holm (Gentelman's Agreement)
Best Original Screenplay: Miracle on 34th Street
Best Song: Zip A Dee Do Dah (The Song of the South)
doggfacejr 1 year ago
Best Picture: Miracle on 34th Street
Best Director: Elia Kazan, Gentleman's Agreement
Best Actor: Gregory Peck, Gentleman's Agreement
Best Actress: Joan Crawford, Possessed
Best Supp Actor: Edmund Gwenn, Miracle on 34th Street
Best Supp Actress: Celeste Holm, Gentleman's Agreement
Best Original Screenplay: A Double Life
Best Original Story: Miracle on 34th Street
Best Screenplay: Gentleman's Agreement
16moviefan 1 year ago 2
Best Picture: "Great Expectations"; Best Director: David Lean ("Great Expectations"); Best Screenplay: "Shoe-Shine"; Best Actor: John Garfield ("Body and Soul"); Best Actress: Deborah Kerr ("Black Narcissus"); Best Supporting Actor: Richard Widmark ("Kiss of Death"); and Best Supporting Actress: Gloria Grahame ("Crossfire").
jckfmsincty 1 year ago 4
Best Picture: Miracle on 34th Street
Best Director: George Seaton for Miracle on 34th Street
Best Actor: Gregory Peck, Gentlemen's Agreement
Best Actress: Loretta Young, The Farmer's Daughter
Best Sup. Actor: Edmund Gwenn, Miracle on 34th Street
Best Sup. Actress: Celeste Holm, Gentlemen's Agreement
Best Original Screenplay: Monsieur Verdoux
Best Adapted Sctreenplay: Miracle on 34th Steet
Stephanie3189 1 year ago 2
Comment removed
ianlexington 1 year ago
@ianlexington: Awww, but you can't beat Sachmo!!!
GregNJ720 1 year ago
@GregNJ720 Song of the South came out on November 12th 1946. I was just wondering that since it was made so close to 1947, that that's the year it was considered to come out in?
I'm just saying because I happen to be a huge fan of the film. I'm not trying to be rude. I just know that it came out in 1946, not 1947.
DisneyGuy1946 1 year ago
@DisneyGuy1946: I didn't realize the release date, but it definitely won the award in 1947. Maybe it was not a very wide release in 1946 and/or the Academy was loser with their rules back then? Not sure :)
GregNJ720 1 year ago
@DisneyGuy1946 It probability came out in Los Angelas in 1947 because the Academy is from Hollywood.
ThomasDeCosteTV 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@ThomasDeCosteTV Oops I Meant Probably came out in Los Angelas in 1947 because the Academy is from Hollywood.
ThomasDeCosteTV 1 year ago