25th_Academy_Awards

25th Academy Awards

25th Academy Awards

Award ceremony for films of 1952


The 25th Academy Awards were held on March 19, 1953 at the RKO Pantages Theatre in Hollywood, and the NBC International Theatre in New York City, to honor the films of 1952. It was the first Oscars ceremony to be televised,[1] the first ceremony to be held in Hollywood and New York simultaneously, and the only year in which the New York ceremonies were held in the NBC International Theatre on Columbus Circle, which was shortly thereafter demolished and replaced by the New York Coliseum.[2][3]

Quick Facts Date, Site ...

This ceremony was the first to be broadcast on television; the Academy, long resistant of television, paid NBC $100,000 to televise the event.[4][5]

Winners and nominees

Cecil B. DeMille; Best Picture winner
John Ford; Best Director winner
Gary Cooper; Best Actor winner
Shirley Booth; Best Actress winner
Anthony Quinn; Best Supporting Actor winner
Gloria Grahame; Best Supporting Actress winner
Cedric Gibbons; Best Art Direction, Black-and-White co-winner
Elmo Williams; Best Film Editing co-winner

Awards

Nominees were announced on February 9, 1953. Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface.[6]

More information Best Motion Picture, Best Director ...

Academy Honorary Awards

Best Foreign Language Film

Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award

Multiple nominations and awards

Presenters and performers

Presenters

More information Name, Role ...

Performers

More information Name, Role ...

Ceremony information

Broadcast

The 25th Academy Awards ceremony was the first to be broadcast on television:[1] For the first time in history, a television audience estimated at 40,000,000 persons[7] will watch the movie industry's biggest show. It will mark the TV debut for scores of the biggest names in moviedom.

The telecast was prompted by the need to finance the bi-coastal ceremony. When three of the film studios refused to provide their customary financial support, the RCA Victor Division of the Radio Corporation of America agreed to pay AMPAS $100,000 (one source reported $250,000[8]) as a sponsorship fee. NBC telecast the bicoastal ceremony over its 64-station television network and on its 174-station radio system.[5] The Armed Forces Radio Service recorded the proceedings for later broadcast.[5]

The show was broadcast from 10:30 p.m. to 12:15 a.m. EST (7:30 p.m. to 9:15 p.m. PST),[9][10][11] switching back and forth from host Bob Hope on the West Coast to Conrad Nagel on the East Coast. The late start was made to accommodate those nominees who were performing that night on the Broadway stage.[11]

The technology used for television at the time meant that Bob Hope had to wear a blue dress shirt with his formal dinner jacket;[12] the traditional white shirt would have been too bright.

Notable achievements

The year saw a major upset when the heavily favored High Noon lost Best Picture to Cecil B. DeMille's The Greatest Show on Earth, eventually considered among the worst films to have won the award.[13][14] Today, it ranks #94 on Rotten Tomatoes' list of the 95 films to win Best Picture, ahead of only The Broadway Melody.[15]

Although it only received two nominations, Singin' in the Rain went on to be named as the greatest American musical film of all time and in the 2007 American Film Institute updated list as the fifth greatest American film of all time, while High Noon ranked twenty-seventh on the same list.

The Bad and the Beautiful won five Oscars, the most wins ever for a film not nominated for Best Picture. It was also the second—and, to date, last—Academy Awards in which a film not nominated for Best Picture received the most awards of the evening, excluding years where there were ties for the most wins.

Until Spotlight won only Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay at the 88th Academy Awards, this was the last year in which the Best Picture winner won just two total Oscars. It was also the second of three years to date in which two films not nominated for Best Picture received more nominations than the winner (The Bad and the Beautiful and Hans Christian Andersen, both with six). This occurred again at the 79th Academy Awards.

Shirley Booth was the last person born in the 19th century to win an Oscar in a Leading Role, and the first woman in her 50s to win Best Actress, at the age of 54 (the second woman in her 50s to win, Julianne Moore, was also 54 when she won at the 87th Academy Awards).

John Ford's fourth win for Best Director set a record for the most wins in this category that remains unmatched to this day. For the first time since the introduction of Supporting Actor and Actress awards in 1936, Best Picture, Best Director, and all four acting Oscars were awarded to six different films. This has happened only three times since, at the 29th Academy Awards for 1956, the 78th for 2005, and the 85th for 2012.

See also


References and footnotes

  1. Bacon, James (March 19, 1953). "TV Will Carry Film Awards Show Tonight". The Fresno Bee. Associated Press.
  2. International Theatre Archived 2009-08-17 at the Wayback Machine, from cinematreasures.org
  3. The convention center was subsequently demolished when the Time Warner Center was built.
  4. Wallechinsky, David; Wallace, Irving (1975). The People's Almanac. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc. p. 839. ISBN 0-385-04060-1.
  5. Pryor, Thomas M. (March 20, 1953). "Movie 'Oscar' Won by 'Greatest Show'". The New York Times. Vol. 102, no. 34754. p. 25.
  6. "The 25th Academy Awards (1953) Nominees and Winners". Oscars.org (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences). Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved August 20, 2011.
  7. The actual audience was 34 million, according to "The Oscars". Time. March 30, 1953. Archived from the original on December 22, 2008.
  8. The sponsorship fee was $250,000, per "The Oscars". Time. March 30, 1953. Archived from the original on December 22, 2008.
  9. "Of Local Origin". The New York Times. Vol. 102, no. 34753. March 19, 1953. p. 34.
  10. Wiley, Mason; Bona, Damien (1996). Inside Oscar: the unofficial history of the Academy Awards (10. anniversary rev. ed., with new chapters on the winners, heartbreaks, and behind-the-scenes surprises ed.). New York, NY: Ballantine Books. p. 228. ISBN 978-0-345-40053-6.
  11. Doherty, Thomas (March 26, 2022). ""TV – That's Where Movies Go When They Die": Rewatching the First Televised Oscars". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved December 21, 2023.
  12. "The Oscars". Time. March 30, 1953. Archived from the original on December 22, 2008.
  13. "'Chicago' and 'Oliver!' Among "Worst" Oscar Winners". Imdb.com. Archived from the original on June 10, 2013. Retrieved July 28, 2012.
  14. "The worst Oscar winners!". Rediff.com movies. March 1, 2005. Archived from the original on February 14, 2012. Retrieved July 28, 2012.

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