Screen Source presents:
72nd Annual Academy Awards
Broadcast: Sunday March 26, 2000, 6:00PM P.S.T. (live) on ABC-TV
from the Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles, California
Host: Billy Crystal
Nominations were announced
Tuesday, February 15, 2000
Winners are in red
Picture:
American Beauty
Cider House Rules, The
Green Mile, The
Insider, The
Sixth Sense, The
Actor in a Leading Role:
American Beauty - Kevin Spacey
Hurricane, The - Denzel Washington
Insider, The - Russell Crowe
Straight Story, The - Richard Farnsworth
Sweet and Lowdown - Sean Penn
Actress in a Leading Role:
American Beauty - Annette Bening
Boys Don't Cry - Hilary Swank
End of the Affair, The - Julianne Moore
Music of the Heart - Meryl Streep
Tumbleweeds - Janet McTeer
Actor in a Supporting Role:
Cider House Rules, The - Michael Caine
Green Mile, The - Duncan, Michael
Magnolia - Tom Cruise
Sixth Sense, The - Haley Joel Osment
Talented Mr. Ripley, The - Jude Law
Actress in a Supporting Role:
Being John Malkovich - Catherine Keener
Boys Don't Cry - Chloë Sevigny
Girl, Interrupted - Angelina Jolie
Sixth Sense, The - Toni Collette
Sweet and Lowdown - Samantha Morton
Director:
American Beauty - Sam Mendes
Being John Malkovich - Spike Jonze
Cider House Rules, The - Lasse Hallström
Insider, The - Michael Mann
Sixth Sense, The - M. Night Shyamalan
Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen:
American Beauty - Alan Ball
Being John Malkovich - Charlie Kaufman
Magnolia - Paul Thomas Anderson
Sixth Sense, The - M. Night Shyamalan
Topsy-Turvy - Mike Leigh
Writing, Screenplay Based on Material Previously Produced or Published:
Cider House Rules, The - John Irving
Election - Alexander Payne, Jim Taylor
Green Mile, The - Frank Darabont
Insider, The - Eric Roth, Michael Mann
Talented Mr. Ripley, The - Anthony Minghella
Cinematography:
American Beauty - Conrad L. Hall
End of the Affair, The - Roger Pratt
Insider, The - Dante Spinotti
Sleepy Hollow - Emmanuel Lubezki
Snow Falling on Cedars - Robert Richardson
Art Direction / Set Decoration:
Anna and the King - Luciana Arrighi (art director), Ian Whittaker (set decorator)
Cider House Rules, The - David Gropman (art director), Beth A. Rubino (set decorator)
Sleepy Hollow - Rick Heinrichs (art director), Peter Young (set decorator)
Talented Mr. Ripley, The - Roy Walker (art director), Bruno Cesari (set decorator)
Topsy-Turvy - Eve Stewart (art director), John Bush (set decorator)
Costume Design:
Anna and the King - Jenny Beavan
Sleepy Hollow - Colleen Atwood
Talented Mr. Ripley, The - Ann Roth, Gary Jones
Titus - Milena Canonero
Topsy-Turvy - Lindy Hemming
Sound:
Green Mile, The - Robert J. Litt, Elliot Tyson, Michael Herbick, Willie D. Burton
Insider, The - Andy Nelson, Doug Hemphill, Lee Orloff
Matrix, The - John T. Reitz, Gregg Rudloff, David E. Campbell, David Lee
Mummy, The - Leslie Shatz, Chris Carpenter, Rick Kline, Chris Munro
Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace - Gary Rydstrom, Tom Johnson, Shawn Murphy, John Midgley
Editing:
American Beauty - Tariq Anwar
Cider House Rules, The - Lisa Zeno Churgin
Insider, The - William Goldenberg, Paul Rubell, David Rosenbloom
Matrix, The - Zach Staenberg
Sixth Sense, The - Andrew Mondshein
Effects, Sound Effects Editing:
Fight Club - Ren Klyce, Richard Hymns
Matrix, The - Dane A. Davis
Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace - Ben Burtt, Tom Bellfort
Effects, Visual Effects:
Matrix, The - John Gaeta, Janek Sirrs, Steve Courtley, Jon Thum
Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace - John Knoll, Dennis Muren, Scott Squires, Rob Coleman
Stuart Little - John Dykstra, Jerome Chen, Henry Anderson, Eric Allard
Makeup:
Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me - Michèle Burke, Mike Smithson
Bicentennial Man - Greg Cannom
Life - Rick Baker
Topsy-Turvy - Christine Blundell, Trefor Proud
Music, Song:
Magnolia - Aimee Mann,
for the song "Save Me"
Music of the Heart - Diane Warren, for the song "Music Of My Heart"
South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut - Trey Parker, Marc Shaiman, for the song "Blame Canada"
Tarzan - Phil Collins, for the song "You'll Be In My Heart"
Toy Story 2 - Randy Newman, for the song "When She Loved Me"
Music, Original Score:
American Beauty - Thomas Newman
Angela's Ashes - John Williams
Cider House Rules, The - Rachel Portman
Talented Mr. Ripley, The - Gabriel Yared
Violon rouge, Le (The Red Violin) (1998) - John Corigliano
Short Films, Animated Films:
3 Misses - Paul Driessen
Humdrum - Peter Peake
My Grandmother Ironed the King's Shirts - Torill Kove
Old Man and the Sea, The - Aleksandr Petrov
When the Day Breaks - Wendy Tilby, Amanda Forbis
Short Films, Live Action:
Bror, min bror - Henrik Ruben Genz, Michael W. Horsten
Killing Joe - Norowzian, Mehdi, Steve Wax
Kleingeld - Marc-Andreas Bochert, Lins, Gabriele
Major and Minor Miracles - Marcus Olsson
My Mother Dreams the Satan's Disciples in New York - Barbara Schock, Tiehel, Tammy
Documentary, Short Subjects:
Eyewitness - Van Bork, Bert
King Gimp - Hadary, Susan Hannah, William A. Whiteford
Wildest Show in the South: The Angola Prison Rodeo, The - Soffer, Simeon, Jonathan Stack
Documentary, Features:
Buena Vista Social Club - Wim Wenders, Ulrich Felsberg
Genghis Blues - Roko Belic, Adrian Belic
On the Ropes - Nanette Burstein, Brett Morgen
One Day in September - Arthur Cohn, Kevin MacDonald
Speaking in Strings - Paola di Florio, Lilibet Foster
Foreign Language Film:
Est-ouest,
France
Himalaya - l'enfance d'un chef ,
Nepal
Solomon and Gaenor,
UK
Todo sobre mi madre (All About My Mother),
Spain
Under solen,
Sweden
Honorary Award:
Andrzej Wajda
Polish Director Andrzej Wajda has been voted an Honorary
Award by the Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences. Wajda was cited by the board as
"one of the most respected filmmakers of our time, a man whose
films have given audiences around the world an artist's view of
history, democracy and freedom, and who in so doing has
himself become a symbol of courage and hope for millions of
people in postwar Europe."
Wajda's life story touches on many events of the 20th Century.
He was a resistance fighter at 16 following the death of his
father, a cavalry officer, in the Katyn forest massacre of 1940.
After the war, he studied at the National Film School in Lodz,
graduating in 1954. He established himself as a key figure in
the new Polish cinema with his first feature film, "A Generation"
(1955), a penetrating study of the effects of war on a nation's
disillusioned youth. This film and the subsequent "Kanal"
(1957) and "Ashes and Diamonds" (1958) form a powerful
trilogy of films about the aftermath of World War II.
Although Wajda has proven himself over the last four decades a
versatile and prolific director, turning out romantic films,
comedies, epics and dramas, he periodically returns to themes
of war that echo his obsession with the futility of heroism and
the bitter aftermath of combat. Some of these films include
"Lotna" (1959), "Ashes" (1965), and "Landscape after
Battle"(1970).
A battle of a different sort was waged in 1982, after Wajda's
controversial "Man of Iron" (1981) was submitted to the
Academy for consideration for Best Foreign Language Film.
"Man of Iron," a sequel to "Man of Marble" (1977), chronicled
the development of the Solidarity Movement in Poland and
featured footage of Solidarity leader Lech Walesa. The Polish
Government belatedly tried to withdraw the film from contention,
but the Academy, arguing that the voting process had already
begun, refused to drop it and the film was eventually nominated.
Emblematic of Wajda's later career is "Korczak" (1990), one of
the most important European pictures about the Holocaust. It is
a moving drama of the legendary pediatrician and educator who
wrote under the pen name Janusz Korczak, and who fought a
valiant but ultimately tragic battle to protect the 200 children in
his care from the horrors of the Warsaw ghetto and deportation
to the Treblinka death camp. The film was hailed as "not only
one of the great Holocaust films, but a great film, period."
Wajda's filmography lists 44 films he directed, including three
that have been nominated by the Academy for Best Foreign
Language Film: "Land of Promise" in 1975, "The Maids of
Wilko" in 1979 and "Man of Iron." Wajda has never received an
Oscar.
Honorary Awards in the form of Oscar statuettes, according to
Academy rules, may be awarded for "exceptional distinction in
lifetime achievement, exceptional contributions to the state of
motion picture arts and sciences, or for outstanding service to
the Academy." Previous honorees include Michelangelo
Antonioni, Fred Astaire, Greta Garbo, Kirk Douglas, Buster
Keaton, Akira Kurosawa, Satyajit Ray and Orson Welles.
Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award:
Warren Beatty
"In discussing this Award for Warren, our governors stressed
his passion for film, for getting it just right," said Academy
President Robert Rehme, "and his courage in producing pictures
that many other producers might have considered too
dangerous to try."
Beatty is the only person to be nominated for producer, director,
writer and actor on a film, "and he did it twice," Rehme said.
Beatty received those four nominations for "Heaven Can Wait"
in 1978 and again in 1981 for "Reds." (Orson Welles was
nominated in the writing, directing and acting categories for
"Citizen Kane," and also produced that Best Picture nominee,
but in 1941 Best Picture nominations were credited to the
production company.)
"Warren's is an illustrious career of distinguished films and the
Academy could not celebrate a more deserving honoree than
this artist extraordinaire," said Cinematographers Branch
Governor Conrad Hall. Throughout his career, Beatty has been
recognized by the Academy for his work as a producer. Of nine
films Beatty has produced, he received nominations for Best
Picture for four of them, "Bonnie and Clyde," "Heaven Can
Wait," "Reds" and "Bugsy." He has received ten additional
nominations in other categories. In 1967, he was nominated as
an actor for "Bonnie and Clyde," a film which also received a
Best Picture nod. In 1975, Beatty produced "Shampoo" and
was nominated for its screenplay. Three years later Beatty
received his four nominations for "Heaven Can Wait," and
duplicated that feat in 1981 with "Reds," for which he received
the Oscar for directing. In 1991, in addition to his Best Picture
nod, he was nominated for actor in a leading role for "Bugsy"
and in 1998, the Academy once again recognized Beatty with a
writing nomination for "Bulworth."
Beatty's producing credits also include "Dick Tracy" and "Love
Affair," in which he starred opposite his real-life wife Annette
Bening.
Gordon E. Sawyer Award:
Roderick T. Ryan
A 40-year veteran of Eastman Kodak, Dr. Ryan served for many years as regional
director of engineering services and retired in 1986. He
began his career as a World War II naval photographer and was
one of the cameramen who photographed the atomic bomb tests
at Bikini Atoll. Ryan received his Doctorate in communications
from the University of Southern California.
In 1981, the Academy honored Ryan with a "Scientific and
Engineering Award" for a film processor specially designed for
visual effects as used by optical houses. In 1990, the Academy
celebrated Ryan again with a "Medal of Commendation" for
"outstanding service and dedication in upholding the high
standards of the Academy."
Throughout his career, Ryan has been honored with many
awards. The Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers
(SMPTE) gave Ryan, a Life Fellow of the Society, two special
commendations. An active member of the organization, Ryan
served as a governor, treasurer, vice president of photoscience
and vice president of motion picture affairs. Ryan also is a
Fellow of the British Kinematograph Sound and Television
Society.
Established in 1981, the Sawyer Award is "presented to an
individual in the motion picture industry whose technological
contributions have brought credit to the industry." It is named
in honor of the veteran sound director who died earlier that year.
Ryan is the 14th recipient. The American Society of Cinematographers selected Ryan as
an Honorary Member, a special tribute limited to only a few
non-cinematographers, including George Eastman, Thomas
Edison, Walt Disney, Neil Armstrong and Gregory Peck. Ryan,
who has written numerous books and textbooks that are
recognized within the industry as authoritative sources, is
featured in Who's Who in Engineering and Who's Who in
Technology.
Scientific and Technical Awards are given for devices, methods,
formulas, discoveries or inventions of special and outstanding
value to the arts and sciences of motion pictures and that also
have a proven history of use in the motion picture industry.
Awards may be granted in any of three classifications:
Academy Award of Merit (Oscar statuette), for basic
achievements that have a definite influence upon the
advancement of the industry; Scientific and Engineering Award
(Academy plaque), for those achievements that exhibit a high
level of engineering and are important to the progress of the
industry; and Technical Achievement Award (Academy
certificate), for those accomplishments that contribute to the
progress of the industry.
Scientific and Engineering Awards (Academy Plaques):
Fritz Gabriel Bauer; for the concept, design and engineering of the Moviecam Superlight 35mm Motion Picture Camera.
Huw Gwyllyn, Karl Lynch and MarkCrabtree; for the design and development of the AMS/Neve-Logic Digital Film Console for motion picture sound mixing.
James Moultrie, Mike Salter and Mark Craig Gerchman; for the mechanical (Moultrie) and the optical design (Salter/Gerchman) of the Cooke S4 Range of Fixed Focal Length Lenses for 35mm motion picture photography.
Iain Neil, Rick Gelbard and Panavision; for the optical (Neil) and the mechanical design (Gelbard) and for the development (Panavision) of the Millennium Camera System viewfinder.
Nick Phillips; for the design and development of the three-axis Libra III remote control camera head.
Marlowe A. Pichel; for development of the process for manufacturing Electro-Formed Metal Reflectors which, when combined with the DC Short Arc Xenon Lamp, became the worldwide standard for motion picture projection systems.
L. Ron Schmidt; for the concept, design and engineering of the Linear Loop Film Projectors.
Nat Tiffen (Tiffen Manufacturing Corporation); for the production of high-quality, durable, laminated color filters for motion picture photography.
Technical Achievement Awards (Academy Certificates):
Leslie Drever; for the design and development of the Light Wave microphone windscreens and isolation mounts from Light Wave Systems.
Vivienne Dyer and Chris Woolf; for the design and development of the Rycote Microphone Windshield Modular System.
Richard C. Sehlin, Mitchell J. Bogdanowicz and Mary L. Schmoeger of Eastman Kodak; for the concept (Sehlin), the design and development (Bogdanowicz/Schmoeger) of the Eastman Lamphouse Modification Filters.
Hoyt H. Yeatman Jr. (Dream Quest Images) and John C.Brewer (Eastman Kodak); for the identification and diagnosis leading to the elimination of the 'red fringe' artifact in traveling matte composite photography.
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Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
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