Addressing some inaccuracies in the video, thanks to everyone who found them! 1961: Audrey Hepburn, Piper Laurie, Geraldine Page, Natalie Wood 1962: Bette Davis, Katharine Hepburn, Geraldine Page, Lee Remick 1981: Diane Keaton, Marsha Mason, Susan Sarandon, Meryl Streep 1995: Elisabeth Shue, Sharon Stone, Meryl Streep, Emma Thompson
Sophia Loren was the first actress to be awarded for a non english speaking performance, BUT the clip showed here is dubbed in french while Sophia of course spoke in Italian!
I admit I used to believe Vivien Leigh was overacting in Gone with the Wind until I read the book and realized Scarlett as a character is inherently a melodrama queen, and needed to be played as such. I now have enormous respect for Leigh’s performance, especially the powerful “I’ll never be hungry again” scene.
I think in general people find earlier eras of film acting to be 'overacting' because a different style of acting was more popular in general before the late 50s & early 60s. I think people kinda credit the rise of a realism style of acting (that still is the usual fave today and people are more used to realism now) with Marlon Brando in 'A Streetcar Named Desire' and then realism really kicking into high gear after. I think we kinda end up looking back and going 'why are they doing so much?' for a lot of 30s, 40s, and 50s performances when it's just a style change/preference?
@@gregmcfarnon1140absolutely not. She said that while giving a speech for her Emmy-and she said “sometimes i think im overrated”..”but not today” which was said ironically. She is a GREAT and phenomenal actress
I wonder if her connection with Weinstein has anything to do with that. Not that she isn’t a singular talent- she is, but awards are very political. Just wondering aloud, I’m not well educated on the subject. Vivian Leigh is the best role in this train of amazing performances, for me!
Olivia Colman infusing comedy into her tragic Queen Anne never ceases to amaze me. It’s such an exquisitely tuned balance. She does it in one sentence in this clip.
Hello! I'm a big cinephile, always loved movies, and if you'd like to help me grow my channel, I've just made a video of my 100 favorite movies of all time. It would be a great help if you could view and like the video, if not, thank you for your time anyway 😊 video: ua-cam.com/video/1VlYb0STwSU/v-deo.html
The way Studios used to run, they all had the same small stable of actors so the pool was smaller to choose from ( not diminishing their talent because they gave Excellent performances)
For me best performance by an actress. 1. Charlize Theron - Monster 2. Meryl Streep - Sophie's Choice 3. Kathy Bates - Misery 4. Natalie Portman - Black Swan 5. Elizabeth Taylor - Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf 6. Vivienne Leigh - Gone With A Wind 7. Cate Blanchett - Blue Jasmine 8. Jodie Foster - A silence of a lamb 9. Frances McDormand - Fargo 10. Katherine Hepburn - The Lion in Winte
Hello! I'm a big cinephile, always loved movies, and if you'd like to help me grow my channel, I've just made a video of my 100 favorite movies of all time. It would be a great help if you could view and like the video, if not, thank you for your time anyway 😊 video: ua-cam.com/video/1VlYb0STwSU/v-deo.html
Hello! I'm a big cinephile, always loved movies, and if you'd like to help me grow my channel, I've just made a video of my 100 favorite movies of all time. It would be a great help if you could view and like the video, if not, thank you for your time anyway 😊 video: ua-cam.com/video/1VlYb0STwSU/v-deo.html
Hello! I'm a big cinephile, always loved movies, and if you'd like to help me grow my channel, I've just made a video of my 100 favorite movies of all time. It would be a great help if you could view and like the video, if not, thank you for your time anyway 😊 video: ua-cam.com/video/1VlYb0STwSU/v-deo.html
I do not think you watched it. She was fantastic. One of the most memorable performances. It is not only that she mastered the accent but the emotions in her face are surreal.
@@olivka7560 only with a brain of a prepubescent teen with down syndrome considered Paltrow’s performance memorable. The only reason she won because of Harvey Weinstein influence. Cate Blanchett in “Elizabeth” or Fernanda Montenegro in “Central Station” should have won that year (1998).
I just love Renee Zellweger's performance as Judy Garland. She actually channels her, which goes beyond performance. I thought Judy Davis in 'Me and My Shadows' was the last word (and she was superb) but this was something else, purely because Renee was so un-Zellweger-like in the movie.
I haven't seen it, because I didn't think Renee could carry it off. From this clip, I think I was right. I only saw Renee, not Judy. Judy Davis killed in her version.
@@su-rv2uq I admired Renee for taking on such a demanding part, and I think she realised she could never 'be' Garland in quite the same way as Judy Davis was. So she didn't try to copy either Judy and just went with how she saw the role.
When it comes to great actresses, I was surprised that Olivia Colman voiced a phone, a villain in The Mitchell’s vs The Machines. Strange at first but she nailed it
That was the character she played. Scarlett was a spoiled, pampered young woman. She was a coquet who flirted outrageously with men when she wanted something. Did you read the book? Leigh portrayed her perfectly ... because Scarlett was annoying and outrageous.@@kenchristie9214
@@Gertyutz In A Streetcar Named Desire, was Blanche a drama queen too? Both of those performances were examples of ham acting. Especially when she was riding a horse, her inability to act came to the fore. I know Vivien is highly regarded and my favourite actress (Natalie Wood) idolised her.
@@kenchristie9214 I disagree. She was a great actress. I saw her on the NY stage in the '60's. She had a highly respected reputation for theater acting.
I was pleasantly surprised to see Song of Bernadette on here one my cousin was in this movie..my late grandfather's second cousin was Linda Darnell.. she played the vision of Mary in the field I believe. She passed away before I was born but I heard about her from my grandpa 😊..
@@fritzwalter4660 yes she was and Ty were pretty fond of her my grandpa said she was just as beautiful on the inside as she was on the outside and his dad before he passed would say the same thing..my great grandfather was only a few years older than Linda and he really had the pleasure of growing up side by side with her and regarded her like another sibling..she passed away when my mom was a school girl. but I definitely grew up hearing about her from both grandfather's. and would watch her movies with family but to others they're cinema to me no different than an old home movie to a point..I'm glad you & others like her work and she's still liked ..take care and God bless and have a wonderful day..🙂
Vivien Leigh is the most annoying actress I have watched. I didn't bother to return to watch the second half of Gone With The Wind. This propaganda film for the Klu Klux Klan would have undoubtedly been better if Selznick was able to get his first choice, Bette Davis. Also, six of us left a drive-in 30 minutes into Streetcar Named Desire because Vivien was so annoying. She has, without a doubt, the worst southern accent, and she is nowhere near is good as people claim she is.
@@pauldesert2541politics politics,Michelle didn’t deserve that oscar the same way gwenyth and emma stone didn’t,It sucks that an asian woman has never won,but couldn’t they at least have nominated a good performance from a good movie?
Sometimes losing is just a luck of the draw ... like Bette Davis in Whatever to Baby Jane losing to Anne Bancroft in The Miracle Worker. But other times, it is just doesn't make sense .... like Barbra Streisand (The Way We Were) losing to Glenda Jackson in A Touch of Class, and Glenn Close (Fatal Attraction) losing to Cher in Moonstruck.
@@JustinZarian Popularity for sure ... we all know the members vote for many other reasons than "specific performance" and/or merit, that's for sure. The list is endless ... and of course these, winning an Oscar doesn't mean squat, other than a title on a resume and a little more salary.
Personally, I feel Glenda Jackson was better than Streisand that year and Cher was better than Close that year… Also, Anne Bancroft absolutely deserved every bit of that Oscar for the Miracle Worker, she was better than Davies…
@@gauravw6947 I'm with you only on Bancroft who absolutely deserved the statuette (but Bette Davis was equally deserving). As her non-existent) career in the movies has proven, Cher was clearly a flash in the pan, and the only reason Babs lost was due to her unpopularity with the Hollywood establishment at the time.
@@gauravw6947 Frankly, if I’d had a ballot that year (1962), I’d have voted for Katharine Hepburn in “Long Day’s Journey Into Night,” an astonishing performance unfortunately not seen by many people.
Sorry it’s kind of a long list of favorites . There is a range of characters I like the performances for different reasons. I am going in chronological order because which I like best changes often. Claudette Colbert- It Happened One Night Ingrid Bergman- Gaslight Judy Holliday- Born Yesterday Vivien Leigh- A Streetcar Named Desire Joanne Woodward- The Three Faces of Eve Simone Signoret - Room At The Top Sophia Loren - Two Women Anne Bancroft- The Miracle Worker Patricia Neal - Hud Julie Andrews- Mary Poppins Elizabeth Taylor - Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf Barbra Streisand- Funny Girl Maggie Smith- The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie Jane Fonda - Klute Liza Minnelli- Cabaret Ellen Burstyn - Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore Sally Field- Norma Rae Meryl Streep- Sophie’s Choice Marlee Matlin - Children of A Lesser God Cher- Moonstruck Kathy Bates. - Misery Jodie Foster - The Silence of the Lambs Jessica Lange -Blue Sky Frances McDormand - Fargo Hilary Swank - Boys Don’t Cry Julia Roberts Erin Brockovich Halle Berry- Monster’s Ball Charlize Theron - Monster Marion Cotillard - La Vie en Rose Julianne Moore Still Alice Brie Larson - Room Olivia Colman - The Favorite Renee Zellweger- Judy Jessica Chastain - The Eyes of Tammy Faye Michelle Yeoh- Everything Everywhere All at Once
My choice for Best Actress Oscar: 1928-29: Maria Falconetti (The Passion of Joan of Arc) (not nominated), instead of Mary Pickford (Coquette) 1929-30: Louise Brooks (Pandora's Box) (not nominated), instead of Norma Shearer (The Divorcee) 1930-31: Marlene Dietrich (The Blue Angel) (not nominated), instead of Marie Dressler (Min and Bill) 1931-32: Marlene Dietrich (Shanghai Express) (not nominated) and/or Greta Garbo (Grand Hotel) (not nominated), instead of Helen Hayes (The Sin of Madelon Claudet) 1932-33: Greta Garbo (Queen Christina), instead of Katharine Hepburn (Morning Glory) 1935: Ginger Rogers (Top Hat) (not nominated), instead of Bette Davis (Dangerous) 1936: Carole Lombard (My Man Godfrey), instead of Luise Rainer (The Great Ziegfeld) 1937: Barbara Stanwyck (Stella Dallas) and/or Greta Garbo (Camille) and/or Irene Dunne (The Awful Truth), instead of Luise Rainer (The Good Earth) 1940: Katharine Hepburn (The Philadelphia Story) and/or Rosalind Russell (His Girl Friday) (not nominated) and/or Margaret Sullavan (The Shop Around the Corner) (not nominated), instead of Ginger Rogers (Kitty Foyle) 1942: Bette Davis (Now, Voyager) and/or Teresa Wright (The Pride of the Yankees) and/or Katharine Hepburn (Woman of the Year), instead of Greer Garson (Mrs. Miniver) 1943: Jean Arthur (The More the Merrier) and/or Ingrid Bergman (Casablanca) (not nominated), instead of Jennifer Jones (The Song of Bernadette) 1944: Barbara Stanwyck (Double Indemnity), instead of Ingrid Bergman (Gaslight) 1946: Ingrid Bergman (Notorious) (not nominated) and/or Donna Reed (It's a Wonderful Life) (not nominated), instead of Olivia de Havilland (To Each His Own) 1947: Deborah Kerr (Black Narcissus) (not nominated), instead of Loretta Young (The Farmer's Daughter) 1950: Bette Davis (All About Eve) and/or Anne Baxter (All About Eve) and/or Gloria Swanson (Sunset Blvd.), instead of Judy Holliday (Born Yesterday) 1952: Joan Crawford (Sudden Fear) and/or Debbie Reynolds (Singin' in the Rain) (not nominated), instead of Shirley Booth (Come Back, Little Sheba) 1954: Judy Garland (A Star Is Born) and/or Audrey Hepburn (Sabrina) and/or Grace Kelly (Dial M for Murder) (not nominated), instead of Grace Kelly (The Country Girl) 1955: Katharine Hepburn (Summertime) and/or Shelley Winters (The Night of the Hunter) (not nominated) and/or Marilyn Monroe (The Seven Year Itch) (not nominated), instead of Anna Magnani (The Rose Tattoo) 1956: Deborah Kerr (The King and I) and/or Carroll Baker (Baby Doll) and/or Elizabeth Taylor (Giant) (not nominated), instead of Ingrid Bergman (Anastasia) 1957: Deborah Kerr (Heaven Knows), instead of Joanne Woodward (The Three Faces of Eve) 1958: Elizabeth Taylor (Cat on a Hot Tin Roof) and/or Rosalind Russell (Auntie Mame), instead of Susan Hayward (I Want to Live!) 1959: Audrey Hepburn (The Nun's Story) and/or Marilyn Monroe (Some Like It Hot) (not nominated), instead of Simone Signoret (Room at the Top) 1960: Shirley MacLaine (The Apartment), instead of Elizabeth Taylor (BUtterfield 😎 1961: Audrey Hepburn (Breakfast at Tiffany's) and/or Piper Laurie (The Hustler) and/or Natalie Wood (Splendor in the Grass; West Side Story (not nominated)), instead of Sophia Loren (Two Women) 1962: Bette Davis (What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?) and/or Joan Crawford (What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?) (not nominated), instead of Anne Bancroft (The Miracle Worker) 1963: Natalie Wood (Love with the Proper Stranger) and/or Audrey Hepburn (Charade) (not nominated) and/or Elizabeth Taylor (Cleopatra) (not nominated), instead of Patricia Neal (Hud) 1965: Julie Andrews (The Sound of Music), instead of Julie Christie (Darling) 1967: Faye Dunaway (Bonnie and Clyde) and/or Anne Bancroft (The Graduate), instead of Katharine Hepburn (Guess Who's Coming to Dinner) 1970: Sarah Miles (Ryan's Daughter), instead of Glenda Jackson (Women in Love) 1972: Barbra Streisand (What's Up Doc?) (not nominated), instead of Liza Minnelli (Cabaret) 1973: Ellen Burstyn (The Exorcist) and/or Barbra Streisand (The Way We Were), instead of Glenda Jackson (A Touch of Class) 1974: Faye Dunaway (Chinatown) and/or Gena Rowlands (A Woman Under the Influence), instead of Ellen Burstyn (Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore) 1985: Whoopi Goldberg (The Color Purple), instead of Geraldine Page (The Trip to Bountiful) 1986: Sigourney Weaver (Aliens), instead of Marlee Matlin (Children of a Lesser God) 1987: Glenn Close (Fatal Attraction) and/or Holly Hunter (Broadcast News), instead of Cher (Moonstruck) 1988: Glenn Close (Dangerous Liaisons), instead of Jodie Foster (The Accused) 1989: Meg Ryan (When Harry Met Sally) (not nominated), instead of Jessica Tandy (Driving Miss Daisy) 1994: Winona Ryder (Little Women), instead of Jessica Lange (Blue Sky) 1997: Kate Winslet (Titanic) and/or Judi Dench (Mrs Brown) and/or Helena Bonham Carter (The Wings of the Dove), instead of Helen Hunt (As Good as It Gets) 1998: Fernanda Montenegro (Central Station) and/or Cate Blanchett (Elizabeth), instead of Gwyneth Paltrow (Shakespeare in Love) 1999: Annette Bening (American Beauty), instead of Hilary Swank (Boys Don't Cry) 2000: Ellen Burstyn (Requiem for a Dream), instead of Julia Roberts (Erin Brockovich) 2001: Sissy Spacek (In the Bedroom) and/or Nicole Kidman (Moulin Rouge!; The Others (not nominated)) and/or Naomi Watts (Mulholland Dr.) (not nominated), instead of Halle Berry (Monster's Ball) 2005: Felicity Huffman (Transamerica) and/or Keira Knightley (Pride & Prejudice), instead of Reese Witherspoon (Walk the Line) 2009: Carey Mulligan (An Education) and/or Meryl Streep (Julie & Julia), instead of Sandra Bullock (The Blind Side) 2011: Viola Davis (The Help) and/or Rooney Mara (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) and/or Tilda Swinton (We Need to Talk About Kevin) (not nominated), instead of Meryl Streep (The Iron Lady) 2019: Scarlett Johansson (Marriage Story) and/or Saoirse Ronan (Little Women), instead of Renée Zellweger (Judy) 2020: Carey Mulligan (Promising Young Woman), instead of Frances McDormand (Nomadland)
I agree with many of these. I'm not going to list them, but I'll just mention that Glenn Close got ripped off so many times. She is excellent and deserved to win at least once. to this day it still bugs me.
Garland was a gross hag who never even should have been nominated for A Star is Born! (Except Audrey for Sabrina)Grace deserved that Oscar! Garland was a sore loser and she deserved everything that happened to her
Well you could say that certain actors like Jack Nicholson, John Wayne, John Malchovich, etc have certain innate traits they bring to their roles, but I don't think their characters are the same. Watch Diane Keaton in Reds and compare to something's gotta give.....two distinct character's. I think you feel that way cause she was cast in roles for awhile which were similar (especially some romantic comedies)
You're right. 👍 - *Louise Fletcher,* _One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest_ (1975) - *Shirley MacLaine,* _Terms of Endearment_ (1983) - *Helen Hunt,* _As Good as It Gets_ (1997)
My most memorable is Mo'nique in Precious. From a crass vulgar (and funny!) Comedian to one of the most terrifying and heartbreaking performances of all time you will never forget and winning the oscar was so well deserved!!
It was Supporting but OMG YES the scene in the social worker's office, her monologue was so unbelievably sick and twisted and disgusting but delivered BRILLIANTLY!
You produced the best video of all the actresses who won the Oscar in a Leading Role... please update until the last one which was Emma Stone in Poor Things. Thank you very much for the high quality content! ❤
Ingrid Bergman, Greer Garson, Patricia Neal and Maggie Smith...my favorites. I think Annette Benning should have won both times she was nominated, instead of Hilary Swank.
the 61 and 62 nominees are messed up- what you have for 61 is actually 62 and 62's list is from the 50s- you also had those 4 on the men's video nominated in 1995.
@@kinochartsleo There is something not right about when Anne Bancroft won - wasnt that the year Bette Davis was nominated for Whatever Happened To Baby Jane - not Joan Crawford who accepted the Oscar on behalf of Anne Bancroft who couldnt be there to annoy Bette Davis
I absolutely love The Song of Bernadette. Come Back Little Sheba was so sad . Joanne Woodward was brilliant in the Three Faces of Eve, Butterfield 8 was very sad. I can understand the frustration Patty Duke had, I was born 80% deaf, I rely on my hearing aids and lip reading.
#6, Marion Davies was a write-in for PEG O' MY HEART and #7 Myrna Loy was a write-in for THE THIN MAN ..... Members reacted against having only 3 nominees.
And for two performance that are relatively weak. The great Ziegfeld is good but Carole Lombard in My man Godfrey was my winner, maybe because I think Luise Rainer should have won best supporting actress.
@@Indomita506 honestly I don't pay too much attention on that aspect. It was the 30s, what people would have expected? But I cannot deny that almost everyone nominee actress that year were better than Luise. My favorites were Barbra Stanwyck (Stella Dallas) and Greta Garbo (Camille)
She is HEARTBREAKING in The Good Earth. A woman constantly making sacrifices for her family and getting absolutely nothing except infidelity from her husband in return … not even a “thank you.” She captures and conveys the pain so completely.
My top three. 1. Meryl S. Sophie's Choice. 2. Elizabeth T. Who's Afraid Of Virginia Wolf 3. Charlize T. Monster My bottom three. 1. Helen H. As Good As It Gets (sorry Judi Dench) 2. Julia R. Erin Brockovich (sorry Ellen Burstyn) 3. Gwyneth Paltrow (sorry other four actresses)
My Picks 1937: Barbra Stanwyck (Stella Dallas) 1938: Katherine Hepburn (Bringing Up Baby) 1940: Katherine Hepburn (The Philadelphia Story) 1943: Ingrid Bergman (Casablanca) 1944: Barbra Stanwyck (Double Indemnity) 1946: Ingrid Bergman (Notorious) 1950: Gloria Swanson (Sunset Boulevard) 1954: Judy Garland (A Star Is Born) 1958: Elizabeth Taylor (Cat On a Hot Tin Roof) 1959: Audrey Hepburn (The Nuns Story) 1960: Shirley MacLaine (The Apartment) 1961: Natalie Wood (Splendor In The Grass) 1962: Bette Davis (Whatever Happened To Baby Jane) 1967: Anne Bancroft (The Graduate) 1969; Jane Fonda (They Shoot Horses Don't They) 1972: Diana Ross (Lady Sings the Blues) 1973: Ellen Burstyn (The Exorcist) 1974: Gena Rowlands (A Woman Under the Influence) 1978: Geraldine Page (Interiors) 1981: Marsha Mason (Only When I Laugh) 1983: Meryl Streep (Silkwood) 1984: Kathleen Turner (Romancing The Stone) 1985: Whoppi Goldberg (The Color Purple) 1986: Sigourney Weaver (Aliens) 1987: Holly Hunter (Broadcast News) 1988: Glenn Close (Dangerous Liasons) 1989: Michelle Pfeiffer (The Fabulous Baker Boys) 1993: Angela Bassett (What's Love Got To Do With It) 1994: Linda Fiorentino (The Last Seduction) 1997: Pam Grier (Jackie Brown) 1998: Cate Blanchett (Elizabeth) 2000: Renee Zellweger (Nurse Betty) 2001: Nicole Kidman (The Others) 2002: Julianne Moore (Far From Heaven) 2004: Kate Winslet (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind) 2006: Jennifer Hudson (Dreamgirls) 2008: Meryl Streep (Doubt) 2009: Gabourey Sidibe (Precious) 2011: Michelle Williams (My Week With Marylyn) 2012: Naomi Watts (The Impossible) 2014: Rosamund Pike (Gone Girl) 2017: Margot Robbie (I Tonya) 2019: Saoirse Ronan (Little Women)
No one talks about how legendary Cher was already by the time she won her oscar! She cemented herself as a STAR-something that we cant find much nowadays.
joan fontaine should have won the oscar in 1940 for rebecca, i think they just gave her the oscar in 1941 as a makeup for not giving it to her, for her better performance the year before
Trust me, many of those actors and actresses being awarded Oscars for less deserving performances is nothing more than compensation for losing for their more deserving performances.
Not one comment about Janet Gaynor, the first actress to win and win for 3 great performances, Sunrise, Seventh Heaven, and Street Angel. Is it because they were Silent movies made in the 1920s? How soon this generation forgets great actresses from the past. Yet if you mention Clark Gable, Gary Cooper, even Rudolph Valentino, actors who have been dead for decades, most of today's generation know who they were.
I think you did something wrong with Sophia Loren. She was the first actress to win the Oscar for an interpretation entirely in non-English language (Italian as well as the first actor to win for an interpretation in non-English language Roberto Benigni, a strange record perhaps the Italian language is much appreciated). However, in the video you choose she and Pavan do not speak Italian but they do speak French. I think you took a piece of the French dubbed version and not the original italian movie.
My opinion ,and this is about the movies i have seen, are the 5 best acting performance 1) Kathy Bates 2) Charlize Theron 3) Louise Fletcher 4) Hilary Swank (Million Dollar Baby) 5) Jodie Foster (Silence of...)
Addressing some inaccuracies in the video, thanks to everyone who found them!
1961: Audrey Hepburn, Piper Laurie, Geraldine Page, Natalie Wood
1962: Bette Davis, Katharine Hepburn, Geraldine Page, Lee Remick
1981: Diane Keaton, Marsha Mason, Susan Sarandon, Meryl Streep
1995: Elisabeth Shue, Sharon Stone, Meryl Streep, Emma Thompson
1994 Jodie Foster, Miranda Richardson, Winona Ryder, Susan Sarandon.
Sophia Loren was the first actress to be awarded for a non english speaking performance, BUT the clip showed here is dubbed in french while Sophia of course spoke in Italian!
@@matildecottone non, la première fut Anna Magnani
Area and ta😅à😅a AA rtrereysàLàlll3ele3😊😊la😮
Katharine Hepburn? Really? The woman who invented overacting and had the acting range of a rock won an Oscar?
I admit I used to believe Vivien Leigh was overacting in Gone with the Wind until I read the book and realized Scarlett as a character is inherently a melodrama queen, and needed to be played as such. I now have enormous respect for Leigh’s performance, especially the powerful “I’ll never be hungry again” scene.
I agree with you. She was a gifted, beautiful and highly versatile actor. Her performance in A Streetcar Named Desire was painful in its authenticity.
I think in general people find earlier eras of film acting to be 'overacting' because a different style of acting was more popular in general before the late 50s & early 60s. I think people kinda credit the rise of a realism style of acting (that still is the usual fave today and people are more used to realism now) with Marlon Brando in 'A Streetcar Named Desire' and then realism really kicking into high gear after. I think we kinda end up looking back and going 'why are they doing so much?' for a lot of 30s, 40s, and 50s performances when it's just a style change/preference?
Watch Carol Burnett's impression though. It's pretty spot on.
I've seen that film countless times and she played Scarlett exactly correctly. What an odd comment.
movies,,,kept me sane for years and years,,i turn 82 this year and i still love the movies,,thank you,;)
How many times Meryl Streep is nominated, unbelievable.
I loved it when Meryl said, "Sometimes even I think I'm overrated."
@@akrenwinkle Well I couldn't agree with her more. She's the most over-rated actor of all time, male or female.
@@gregmcfarnon1140absolutely not. She said that while giving a speech for her Emmy-and she said “sometimes i think im overrated”..”but not today” which was said ironically. She is a GREAT and phenomenal actress
Meryl Streep is the g. o. a. t.
I wonder if her connection with Weinstein has anything to do with that. Not that she isn’t a singular talent- she is, but awards are very political. Just wondering aloud, I’m not well educated on the subject.
Vivian Leigh is the best role in this train of amazing performances, for me!
Kathy Bates was magnificent in Misery!! Well deserved Oscar
Excelent 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Olivia Colman infusing comedy into her tragic Queen Anne never ceases to amaze me. It’s such an exquisitely tuned balance. She does it in one sentence in this clip.
Hello! I'm a big cinephile, always loved movies, and if you'd like to help me grow my channel, I've just made a video of my 100 favorite movies of all time. It would be a great help if you could view and like the video, if not, thank you for your time anyway 😊 video: ua-cam.com/video/1VlYb0STwSU/v-deo.html
Holly Hunter was simply amazing in “the piano”
Is she the badass lady from succession season 2?
Wish Ellen Burstyn got the award for Requiem for a dream. She was outstanding.
Beyond outstanding!
100%. Julia Roberts was great in EB, but Ellen Burstyn was beyond superb in Requiem.
Gwyneth, Julia, and Sandra did not deserve their wins given the nominees. So sad.
Ellen burstyn should've won for The Exorcist and Requiem for a dream ❤
from 1938 to 1946 Bette Davis and Greer Garson held the reigns, both being nominated 5 consecutive times with that span of years
The way Studios used to run, they all had the same small stable of actors so the pool was smaller to choose from ( not diminishing their talent because they gave Excellent performances)
For me best performance by an actress.
1. Charlize Theron - Monster
2. Meryl Streep - Sophie's Choice
3. Kathy Bates - Misery
4. Natalie Portman - Black Swan
5. Elizabeth Taylor - Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf
6. Vivienne Leigh - Gone With A Wind
7. Cate Blanchett - Blue Jasmine
8. Jodie Foster - A silence of a lamb
9. Frances McDormand - Fargo
10. Katherine Hepburn - The Lion in Winte
Excelent list 👍👏👏👏👏👏
Shirley MacLaine indeed deserves her Oscar for that timelessly powerful scene in Terms Of Endearment.
And putting up with Debra Winger.
Shirley MacLaine deserves also an Oscar for THE APARTMENT and THE CHILDREN'S HOUR.
There were so many.
Hello! I'm a big cinephile, always loved movies, and if you'd like to help me grow my channel, I've just made a video of my 100 favorite movies of all time. It would be a great help if you could view and like the video, if not, thank you for your time anyway 😊 video: ua-cam.com/video/1VlYb0STwSU/v-deo.html
I love Julie Andrews as Mary Poppins. I didn’t even know that the Disney movie won various awards
You didn't, really?😮
Hello! I'm a big cinephile, always loved movies, and if you'd like to help me grow my channel, I've just made a video of my 100 favorite movies of all time. It would be a great help if you could view and like the video, if not, thank you for your time anyway 😊 video: ua-cam.com/video/1VlYb0STwSU/v-deo.html
Julie should have won for My Fair Lady if WB gave her the role instead of Audrey Hepburn. She should have won for Victor Victoria too.
My mother is 70 years old this year, she often watches this movie again, and those times I see her cry. A very good movie.
Hello! I'm a big cinephile, always loved movies, and if you'd like to help me grow my channel, I've just made a video of my 100 favorite movies of all time. It would be a great help if you could view and like the video, if not, thank you for your time anyway 😊 video: ua-cam.com/video/1VlYb0STwSU/v-deo.html
Which movie?
Which one?
Shrek @@Gertyutz
Shirley MacLaine’s hospital meltdown will always be at the top for me. Brilliant scene
A lot of the nominated performances seem to be of hysterical women.
I think all of the performances are of passionate women
Gwyneth Paltrow’s win for “Shakespeare in Love” is a joke
I do not think you watched it. She was fantastic. One of the most memorable performances. It is not only that she mastered the accent but the emotions in her face are surreal.
@@olivka7560 only with a brain of a prepubescent teen with down syndrome considered Paltrow’s performance memorable. The only reason she won because of Harvey Weinstein influence. Cate Blanchett in “Elizabeth” or Fernanda Montenegro in “Central Station” should have won that year (1998).
@@olivka7560 ????
@@olivka7560 she was good, nobody said the opposite but Cate Blanchett (Elizabeth) and Fernanda Montenegro (Central Station) are better
@@olivka7560She couldn't win against a mountain of talent like Cate Blanchett.
I just love Renee Zellweger's performance as Judy Garland. She actually channels her, which goes beyond performance. I thought Judy Davis in 'Me and My Shadows' was the last word (and she was superb) but this was something else, purely because Renee was so un-Zellweger-like in the movie.
I haven't seen it, because I didn't think Renee could carry it off. From this clip, I think I was right. I only saw Renee, not Judy. Judy Davis killed in her version.
@@su-rv2uq I admired Renee for taking on such a demanding part, and I think she realised she could never 'be' Garland in quite the same way as Judy Davis was. So she didn't try to copy either Judy and just went with how she saw the role.
When it comes to great actresses, I was surprised that Olivia Colman voiced a phone, a villain in The Mitchell’s vs The Machines. Strange at first but she nailed it
Love the clips for each performance. Great job!
OMG! The incredible Vivien Leigh as Scarlett O'Hara ❤😍
I thought it was incredible that someone could be so bad and win an academy award. She was so annoying, I couldn't watch the second half.
That was the character she played. Scarlett was a spoiled, pampered young woman. She was a coquet who flirted outrageously with men when she wanted something. Did you read the book? Leigh portrayed her perfectly ... because Scarlett was annoying and outrageous.@@kenchristie9214
@@kenchristie9214 Scarlett was a drama queen, and Leigh played her perfectly.
@@Gertyutz In A Streetcar Named Desire, was Blanche a drama queen too? Both of those performances were examples of ham acting.
Especially when she was riding a horse, her inability to act came to the fore. I know Vivien is highly regarded and my favourite actress (Natalie Wood) idolised her.
@@kenchristie9214 I disagree. She was a great actress. I saw her on the NY stage in the '60's. She had a highly respected reputation for theater acting.
I was pleasantly surprised to see Song of Bernadette on here one my cousin was in this movie..my late grandfather's second cousin was Linda Darnell.. she played the vision of Mary in the field I believe.
She passed away before I was born but I heard about her from my grandpa 😊..
She was a really beauty and was in classics like MY DARLING CLEMENTINE and THE MARK OF ZORRO.
@@fritzwalter4660 yes she was and Ty were pretty fond of her my grandpa said she was just as beautiful on the inside as she was on the outside and his dad before he passed would say the same thing..my great grandfather was only a few years older than Linda and he really had the pleasure of growing up side by side with her and regarded her like another sibling..she passed away when my mom was a school girl.
but I definitely grew up hearing about her from both grandfather's.
and would watch her movies with family but to others they're cinema to me no different than an old home movie to a point..I'm glad you & others like her work and she's still liked ..take care and God bless and have a wonderful day..🙂
No womder Vivian Leigh is regarded as one of the top actresses of all time, shes simply magnetic on screen especially in streetcar
Vivien Leigh is the most annoying actress I have watched. I didn't bother to return to watch the second half of Gone With The Wind.
This propaganda film for the Klu Klux Klan would have undoubtedly been better if Selznick was able to get his first choice, Bette Davis.
Also, six of us left a drive-in 30 minutes into Streetcar Named Desire because Vivien was so annoying.
She has, without a doubt, the worst southern accent, and she is nowhere near is good as people claim she is.
Frances McDormand is a league of her own! Four f*cking Oscars!!! Three as an actress, one as a producer.
she is great for sure but even she doesnt match Katharine Hepburns 4 in Leading Actress
Some rare and wonderful clips there as well as memorable performances. Thank you very much.
Michelle Yeoh is really making history with her extraordinary performance❤❤
Yes, she is. But Blanchett deserved it.
@@eldiran2 keep coping
@@pauldesert2541politics politics,Michelle didn’t deserve that oscar the same way gwenyth and emma stone didn’t,It sucks that an asian woman has never won,but couldn’t they at least have nominated a good performance from a good movie?
@@chunli6197 Why, no. She won the Oscar for an extraordinary performance in an extraordinary movie.
@@chunli6197 Boohoo. Stay pressed! Michelle Yeoh deserved the Oscar.
The 50s and 60s best actress winners is a lot better list then best picture and generally more forward looking.
Sometimes losing is just a luck of the draw ... like Bette Davis in Whatever to Baby Jane losing to Anne Bancroft in The Miracle Worker. But other times, it is just doesn't make sense .... like Barbra Streisand (The Way We Were) losing to Glenda Jackson in A Touch of Class, and Glenn Close (Fatal Attraction) losing to Cher in Moonstruck.
I’d say those two you mention are examples of either the classic case of being ‘overdue’ or other cases of popularity winning out.
@@JustinZarian Popularity for sure ... we all know the members vote for many other reasons than "specific performance" and/or merit, that's for sure. The list is endless ... and of course these, winning an Oscar doesn't mean squat, other than a title on a resume and a little more salary.
Personally, I feel Glenda Jackson was better than Streisand that year and Cher was better than Close that year… Also, Anne Bancroft absolutely deserved every bit of that Oscar for the Miracle Worker, she was better than Davies…
@@gauravw6947 I'm with you only on Bancroft who absolutely deserved the statuette (but Bette Davis was equally deserving). As her non-existent) career in the movies has proven, Cher was clearly a flash in the pan, and the only reason Babs lost was due to her unpopularity with the Hollywood establishment at the time.
@@gauravw6947 Frankly, if I’d had a ballot that year (1962), I’d have voted for Katharine Hepburn in “Long Day’s Journey Into Night,” an astonishing performance unfortunately not seen by many people.
Thank you for this wonderful compilation. Makes me want to see many of the performances I missed.
Sorry it’s kind of a long list of favorites . There is a range of characters I like the performances for different reasons.
I am going in chronological order because which I like best changes often.
Claudette Colbert- It Happened One Night
Ingrid Bergman- Gaslight
Judy Holliday- Born Yesterday
Vivien Leigh- A Streetcar Named Desire
Joanne Woodward- The Three Faces of Eve
Simone Signoret - Room At The Top
Sophia Loren - Two Women
Anne Bancroft- The Miracle Worker
Patricia Neal - Hud
Julie Andrews- Mary Poppins
Elizabeth Taylor - Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf
Barbra Streisand- Funny Girl
Maggie Smith- The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
Jane Fonda - Klute
Liza Minnelli- Cabaret
Ellen Burstyn - Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore
Sally Field- Norma Rae
Meryl Streep- Sophie’s Choice
Marlee Matlin - Children of A Lesser God
Cher- Moonstruck
Kathy Bates. - Misery
Jodie Foster - The Silence of the Lambs
Jessica Lange -Blue Sky
Frances McDormand - Fargo
Hilary Swank - Boys Don’t Cry
Julia Roberts Erin Brockovich
Halle Berry- Monster’s Ball
Charlize Theron - Monster
Marion Cotillard - La Vie en Rose
Julianne Moore Still Alice
Brie Larson - Room
Olivia Colman - The Favorite
Renee Zellweger- Judy
Jessica Chastain - The Eyes of Tammy Faye
Michelle Yeoh- Everything Everywhere All at Once
Why are the other nominees blurred in some places, i.e. 1961
My choice for Best Actress Oscar:
1928-29: Maria Falconetti (The Passion of Joan of Arc) (not nominated), instead of Mary Pickford (Coquette)
1929-30: Louise Brooks (Pandora's Box) (not nominated), instead of Norma Shearer (The Divorcee)
1930-31: Marlene Dietrich (The Blue Angel) (not nominated), instead of Marie Dressler (Min and Bill)
1931-32: Marlene Dietrich (Shanghai Express) (not nominated) and/or Greta Garbo (Grand Hotel) (not nominated), instead of Helen Hayes (The Sin of Madelon Claudet)
1932-33: Greta Garbo (Queen Christina), instead of Katharine Hepburn (Morning Glory)
1935: Ginger Rogers (Top Hat) (not nominated), instead of Bette Davis (Dangerous)
1936: Carole Lombard (My Man Godfrey), instead of Luise Rainer (The Great Ziegfeld)
1937: Barbara Stanwyck (Stella Dallas) and/or Greta Garbo (Camille) and/or Irene Dunne (The Awful Truth), instead of Luise Rainer (The Good Earth)
1940: Katharine Hepburn (The Philadelphia Story) and/or Rosalind Russell (His Girl Friday) (not nominated) and/or Margaret Sullavan (The Shop Around the Corner) (not nominated), instead of Ginger Rogers (Kitty Foyle)
1942: Bette Davis (Now, Voyager) and/or Teresa Wright (The Pride of the Yankees) and/or Katharine Hepburn (Woman of the Year), instead of Greer Garson (Mrs. Miniver)
1943: Jean Arthur (The More the Merrier) and/or Ingrid Bergman (Casablanca) (not nominated), instead of Jennifer Jones (The Song of Bernadette)
1944: Barbara Stanwyck (Double Indemnity), instead of Ingrid Bergman (Gaslight)
1946: Ingrid Bergman (Notorious) (not nominated) and/or Donna Reed (It's a Wonderful Life) (not nominated), instead of Olivia de Havilland (To Each His Own)
1947: Deborah Kerr (Black Narcissus) (not nominated), instead of Loretta Young (The Farmer's Daughter)
1950: Bette Davis (All About Eve) and/or Anne Baxter (All About Eve) and/or Gloria Swanson (Sunset Blvd.), instead of Judy Holliday (Born Yesterday)
1952: Joan Crawford (Sudden Fear) and/or Debbie Reynolds (Singin' in the Rain) (not nominated), instead of Shirley Booth (Come Back, Little Sheba)
1954: Judy Garland (A Star Is Born) and/or Audrey Hepburn (Sabrina) and/or Grace Kelly (Dial M for Murder) (not nominated), instead of Grace Kelly (The Country Girl)
1955: Katharine Hepburn (Summertime) and/or Shelley Winters (The Night of the Hunter) (not nominated) and/or Marilyn Monroe (The Seven Year Itch) (not nominated), instead of Anna Magnani (The Rose Tattoo)
1956: Deborah Kerr (The King and I) and/or Carroll Baker (Baby Doll) and/or Elizabeth Taylor (Giant) (not nominated), instead of Ingrid Bergman (Anastasia)
1957: Deborah Kerr (Heaven Knows), instead of Joanne Woodward (The Three Faces of Eve)
1958: Elizabeth Taylor (Cat on a Hot Tin Roof) and/or Rosalind Russell (Auntie Mame), instead of Susan Hayward (I Want to Live!)
1959: Audrey Hepburn (The Nun's Story) and/or Marilyn Monroe (Some Like It Hot) (not nominated), instead of Simone Signoret (Room at the Top)
1960: Shirley MacLaine (The Apartment), instead of Elizabeth Taylor (BUtterfield 😎
1961: Audrey Hepburn (Breakfast at Tiffany's) and/or Piper Laurie (The Hustler) and/or Natalie Wood (Splendor in the Grass; West Side Story (not nominated)), instead of Sophia Loren (Two Women)
1962: Bette Davis (What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?) and/or Joan Crawford (What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?) (not nominated), instead of Anne Bancroft (The Miracle Worker)
1963: Natalie Wood (Love with the Proper Stranger) and/or Audrey Hepburn (Charade) (not nominated) and/or Elizabeth Taylor (Cleopatra) (not nominated), instead of Patricia Neal (Hud)
1965: Julie Andrews (The Sound of Music), instead of Julie Christie (Darling)
1967: Faye Dunaway (Bonnie and Clyde) and/or Anne Bancroft (The Graduate), instead of Katharine Hepburn (Guess Who's Coming to Dinner)
1970: Sarah Miles (Ryan's Daughter), instead of Glenda Jackson (Women in Love)
1972: Barbra Streisand (What's Up Doc?) (not nominated), instead of Liza Minnelli (Cabaret)
1973: Ellen Burstyn (The Exorcist) and/or Barbra Streisand (The Way We Were), instead of Glenda Jackson (A Touch of Class)
1974: Faye Dunaway (Chinatown) and/or Gena Rowlands (A Woman Under the Influence), instead of Ellen Burstyn (Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore)
1985: Whoopi Goldberg (The Color Purple), instead of Geraldine Page (The Trip to Bountiful)
1986: Sigourney Weaver (Aliens), instead of Marlee Matlin (Children of a Lesser God)
1987: Glenn Close (Fatal Attraction) and/or Holly Hunter (Broadcast News), instead of Cher (Moonstruck)
1988: Glenn Close (Dangerous Liaisons), instead of Jodie Foster (The Accused)
1989: Meg Ryan (When Harry Met Sally) (not nominated), instead of Jessica Tandy (Driving Miss Daisy)
1994: Winona Ryder (Little Women), instead of Jessica Lange (Blue Sky)
1997: Kate Winslet (Titanic) and/or Judi Dench (Mrs Brown) and/or Helena Bonham Carter (The Wings of the Dove), instead of Helen Hunt (As Good as It Gets)
1998: Fernanda Montenegro (Central Station) and/or Cate Blanchett (Elizabeth), instead of Gwyneth Paltrow (Shakespeare in Love)
1999: Annette Bening (American Beauty), instead of Hilary Swank (Boys Don't Cry)
2000: Ellen Burstyn (Requiem for a Dream), instead of Julia Roberts (Erin Brockovich)
2001: Sissy Spacek (In the Bedroom) and/or Nicole Kidman (Moulin Rouge!; The Others (not nominated)) and/or Naomi Watts (Mulholland Dr.) (not nominated), instead of Halle Berry (Monster's Ball)
2005: Felicity Huffman (Transamerica) and/or Keira Knightley (Pride & Prejudice), instead of Reese Witherspoon (Walk the Line)
2009: Carey Mulligan (An Education) and/or Meryl Streep (Julie & Julia), instead of Sandra Bullock (The Blind Side)
2011: Viola Davis (The Help) and/or Rooney Mara (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) and/or Tilda Swinton (We Need to Talk About Kevin) (not nominated), instead of Meryl Streep (The Iron Lady)
2019: Scarlett Johansson (Marriage Story) and/or Saoirse Ronan (Little Women), instead of Renée Zellweger (Judy)
2020: Carey Mulligan (Promising Young Woman), instead of Frances McDormand (Nomadland)
Yes! Three Oscars for Glenn Close now, please! Hahaha
For me 2009 Carey Mulligan for An Education
I agree with many of these. I'm not going to list them, but I'll just mention that Glenn Close got ripped off so many times. She is excellent and deserved to win at least once. to this day it still bugs me.
@@peabuddie I really thought she’d finally get one for The Wife
Garland was a gross hag who never even should have been nominated for A Star is Born! (Except Audrey for Sabrina)Grace deserved that Oscar! Garland was a sore loser and she deserved everything that happened to her
Gweneth Paltrow over Cate Blanchett was the worst win 🙏
Yeah true! Gweneth didn't deserved to win
Meh, Judy Holiday over Gloria Swanson, Bette Davis and Anne Baxter is even worse.
I agree Cate was brilliant in Elizabeth, over the years people said Cate should have won.
@@giovannyespinoza6013 You mean Anne Baxter.
@@fritzwalter4660 yeah, I made a mistake
The problem I have with Diane Keaton is she plays the same character with every movie she makes.
My thoughts exactly. Whenever I see her, I think: "Ah, here we go again: Diana Keaton starring as Diane Keaton."
She was never a great actress, true. But Woody Allen had made a quantum leap with "Annie Hall", and Keaton had perfected her ditzy waif character.
Pretty much. Rootless, self deprecating, goofy.
Well you could say that certain actors like Jack Nicholson, John Wayne, John Malchovich, etc have certain innate traits they bring to their roles, but I don't think their characters are the same. Watch Diane Keaton in Reds and compare to something's gotta give.....two distinct character's.
I think you feel that way cause she was cast in roles for awhile which were similar (especially some romantic comedies)
No one has been robbed as much as Cate Blanchett, three Oscars to be exact
I really had no idea Reese Witherspoon won an Oscar and Best Actress being the one she won is amazing!
Don't know if this was mentioned before but each time Jack Nicholson won his Oscar so did the leading actress in the film
You're right. 👍
- *Louise Fletcher,* _One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest_ (1975)
- *Shirley MacLaine,* _Terms of Endearment_ (1983)
- *Helen Hunt,* _As Good as It Gets_ (1997)
Nunca vou perdoar a Fernanda Montenegro ter perdido esse Oscar de 1998😠😓
Cierto, su actuacion fue impecable
So many great actresses up against each other they all deserve it
Can anyone tell me why the nominees are sometimes blurred?
Todos os filmes que eu vi cuja atriz venceu o Oscar são maneiros, logo tenho de ver os restantes.
My most memorable is Mo'nique in Precious. From a crass vulgar (and funny!) Comedian to one of the most terrifying and heartbreaking performances of all time you will never forget and winning the oscar was so well deserved!!
yes yes yes but in Supporting
It was Supporting but OMG YES the scene in the social worker's office, her monologue was so unbelievably sick and twisted and disgusting but delivered BRILLIANTLY!
Still my top wins were (not in particular order)
1. Marion Cotillard
2. Charlize Theron
3. Nicole Kidman
4. Cate Blanchett
Fantastic list 🎉
You produced the best video of all the actresses who won the Oscar in a Leading Role... please update until the last one which was Emma Stone in Poor Things.
Thank you very much for the high quality content! ❤
And the winner is… PALOMA DIAMOND
Ingrid Bergman, Greer Garson, Patricia Neal and Maggie Smith...my favorites. I think Annette Benning should have won both times she was nominated, instead of Hilary Swank.
Watched it all twice and will watch again. Please leave it up!
The song of Bernadette reduced me to tears the first time I watched it
Best wins..Page, Bancroft, Bette Davis #2, Christie, Hilary Swank #1, both Viv, Liz #2, Booth, both Sally Field, Neal
Worse.. Helen Hunt, Paltrow, Witherspoon, Bullock, Zellweger, Glenda #2, Holliday
Julia Roberts vencendo Ellen Burstyn foi uma piada.
10:31 Our favorite Head Gryffindor House And Transfiguration Professor won this award back in 1969.
the 61 and 62 nominees are messed up- what you have for 61 is actually 62 and 62's list is from the 50s- you also had those 4 on the men's video nominated in 1995.
Thanks! This is actually really helpful since I intend to run this yearly. I'll correct everything you mentioned for the next year. 😊
@@kinochartsleo There is something not right about when Anne Bancroft won - wasnt that the year Bette Davis was nominated for Whatever Happened To Baby Jane - not Joan Crawford who accepted the Oscar on behalf of Anne Bancroft who couldnt be there to annoy Bette Davis
@@kinochartsleo I love this wonderful labor of love but it was Bette Davis not Crawford nominated in 1962
22:36 Olivia Colmans performance was funny and amazing
These are very well done. A suggestion? Maybe break some new ground and do BEST SCREENPLAY since writers are so often overlooked.
Don't worry, I will soon!
These were so well done.
Great collection here. Thank you!
I absolutely love The Song of Bernadette. Come Back Little Sheba was so sad . Joanne Woodward was brilliant in the Three Faces of Eve, Butterfield 8 was very sad. I can understand the frustration Patty Duke had, I was born 80% deaf, I rely on my hearing aids and lip reading.
Why were some fellow nominees blanked out? Happened with about half a dozen segments. Anybody know?
Oscar eu não te perdoo por não dar a estatueta pra DIVA Fernanda Montenegro em 1999
#6, Marion Davies was a write-in for PEG O' MY HEART and #7 Myrna Loy was a write-in for THE THIN MAN ..... Members reacted against having only 3 nominees.
Audrey Hepbum You are more wonderful than anyone else for me. She is everything that beauty is all about pure, kind, I love you very much.
My Top 3:
Portman, BS;
Cottiard, LVER;
Taylor, WAOVW in no particular order!
Liza what a Preformace baci x
7th Heaven, one of my moms favorites, mine too
thank you All were winners for excellence towards there craft
l like olivia de havilland
I love Greer Garsons voice
Michelle Yeoh my queen
how Louise Raine won the two oscars is beyond me
And for two performance that are relatively weak. The great Ziegfeld is good but Carole Lombard in My man Godfrey was my winner, maybe because I think Luise Rainer should have won best supporting actress.
And for playing a Chinese woman
@@Indomita506 honestly I don't pay too much attention on that aspect. It was the 30s, what people would have expected? But I cannot deny that almost everyone nominee actress that year were better than Luise. My favorites were Barbra Stanwyck (Stella Dallas) and Greta Garbo (Camille)
She is HEARTBREAKING in The Good Earth. A woman constantly making sacrifices for her family and getting absolutely nothing except infidelity from her husband in return … not even a “thank you.” She captures and conveys the pain so completely.
I've never watched The Favourite, but THAT scene with Olivia is EVERYTHING I need to do it.
My top three. 1. Meryl S. Sophie's Choice. 2. Elizabeth T. Who's Afraid Of Virginia Wolf 3. Charlize T. Monster My bottom three. 1. Helen H. As Good As It Gets (sorry Judi Dench) 2. Julia R. Erin Brockovich (sorry Ellen Burstyn) 3. Gwyneth Paltrow (sorry other four actresses)
My Picks
1937: Barbra Stanwyck (Stella Dallas)
1938: Katherine Hepburn (Bringing Up Baby)
1940: Katherine Hepburn (The Philadelphia Story)
1943: Ingrid Bergman (Casablanca)
1944: Barbra Stanwyck (Double Indemnity)
1946: Ingrid Bergman (Notorious)
1950: Gloria Swanson (Sunset Boulevard)
1954: Judy Garland (A Star Is Born)
1958: Elizabeth Taylor (Cat On a Hot Tin Roof)
1959: Audrey Hepburn (The Nuns Story)
1960: Shirley MacLaine (The Apartment)
1961: Natalie Wood (Splendor In The Grass)
1962: Bette Davis (Whatever Happened To Baby Jane)
1967: Anne Bancroft (The Graduate)
1969; Jane Fonda (They Shoot Horses Don't They)
1972: Diana Ross (Lady Sings the Blues)
1973: Ellen Burstyn (The Exorcist)
1974: Gena Rowlands (A Woman Under the Influence)
1978: Geraldine Page (Interiors)
1981: Marsha Mason (Only When I Laugh)
1983: Meryl Streep (Silkwood)
1984: Kathleen Turner (Romancing The Stone)
1985: Whoppi Goldberg (The Color Purple)
1986: Sigourney Weaver (Aliens)
1987: Holly Hunter (Broadcast News)
1988: Glenn Close (Dangerous Liasons)
1989: Michelle Pfeiffer (The Fabulous Baker Boys)
1993: Angela Bassett (What's Love Got To Do With It)
1994: Linda Fiorentino (The Last Seduction)
1997: Pam Grier (Jackie Brown)
1998: Cate Blanchett (Elizabeth)
2000: Renee Zellweger (Nurse Betty)
2001: Nicole Kidman (The Others)
2002: Julianne Moore (Far From Heaven)
2004: Kate Winslet (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind)
2006: Jennifer Hudson (Dreamgirls)
2008: Meryl Streep (Doubt)
2009: Gabourey Sidibe (Precious)
2011: Michelle Williams (My Week With Marylyn)
2012: Naomi Watts (The Impossible)
2014: Rosamund Pike (Gone Girl)
2017: Margot Robbie (I Tonya)
2019: Saoirse Ronan (Little Women)
Sophia Loren was amazing in Two Women
I recently watched Judy and Renee absolutely kills it as Judy Garland, honestly one of the best performances I’ve ever seen, so powerful
This is boffo! I love the list of other nominees in the corner.
Thanks x 100,000!
In 2005, Kim Basinger should have been nominated for the role of "Marion" in The Door in the Floor.
Kathy Bates is the best! ❤️❤️❤️
No one talks about how legendary Cher was already by the time she won her oscar!
She cemented herself as a STAR-something that we cant find much nowadays.
Kate Winslet deserved it long time ago. The Reader is not even her best performance, though is outstanding.
revolutionary road is her best performance for me
I miss Judy Garland - 1939 ( The Wizard of Oz)
She won a special Julvenile Award for it.
Vivien will always be the greatest actress and most beautiful woman in my opinion
joan fontaine should have won the oscar in 1940 for rebecca, i think they just gave her the oscar in 1941 as a makeup for not giving it to her, for her better performance the year before
AMEN AMEN, AND AMEN 21:24 21:25
Trust me, many of those actors and actresses being awarded Oscars for less deserving performances is nothing more than compensation for losing for their more deserving performances.
Not one comment about Janet Gaynor, the first actress to win and win for 3 great performances, Sunrise, Seventh Heaven, and Street Angel. Is it because they were Silent movies made in the 1920s? How soon this generation forgets great actresses from the past. Yet if you mention Clark Gable, Gary Cooper, even Rudolph Valentino, actors who have been dead for decades, most of today's generation know who they were.
Elizabeth Taylor was stunning
What about Dr Zhivago,Fiddler on the Roof
" open your eyes....how dare you!!"
This the best scene of all time
some years were easy to win with just one nomination - also is meryl streep on every nomination list from 1979?
Norma Shearer, Norma Shearer, Norma Shearer, etc. At least she won one. Glenn Close, anyone?
I think you did something wrong with Sophia Loren. She was the first actress to win the Oscar for an interpretation entirely in non-English language (Italian as well as the first actor to win for an interpretation in non-English language Roberto Benigni, a strange record perhaps the Italian language is much appreciated). However, in the video you choose she and Pavan do not speak Italian but they do speak French. I think you took a piece of the French dubbed version and not the original italian movie.
Well noticed, I will fix the clip with original Italian audio when I upload this again next year!
"It Happened One Night" is still hilarious.
My opinion ,and this is about the movies i have seen, are the 5 best acting performance
1) Kathy Bates
2) Charlize Theron
3) Louise Fletcher
4) Hilary Swank (Million Dollar Baby)
5) Jodie Foster (Silence of...)
Why are some of these missing the other nominees in the lower right hand corner?
Meryl Street FTW. Nominated sooooo many times.
98 true winner was Fernanda Montenegro
Colbert ushered in Real screen acting. She thoroughly deserved her Oscar.
Why were the other nominees blurred in the year 1962 when Anne Bancroft won?!
My favorites: elizabeth taylor, sophia loren, katy bates, meryl streep, jodie foster, charlize theron, julia roberts, hilary swank .........
In order to win Oscar you need sheer talent and luck.
And you really need talent to write stupid comment like this. Yeah, of course you need talent to win Oscar and you need luck so they vote for you
You said talent and luck
A lot of luck.
only Gwyneth Paltrow doesn't need talent to win an oscar
Mostly luck.
Vivien Leigh 👏👏👏👏🙌🙌🙌
Wheres Mary Steenburgen & Lupita Ñongo awardings?
Son de reparto
Joan Crawford
Audrey Hepburn
Kate Winslet
Natalie Portman
❤❤❤❤