Where
we last left off, we had discussed the actors who had most been rewarded at the
BAFTAs but persistently snubbed by the Oscars, and we were all a bit ticked off
on Dirk Bogarde and Mia Farrow’s behalf’s.
Now,
though, let’s investigate the actors that Oscar did in fact have something of a
crush on, even though BAFTA was far more impressed. Just like before, here are the tiebreakers:
1. If an actor received multiple nominations for
different films in the same year, that counted as less for the rankings.
2. If the actor won a BAFTA Award for one of their
performances.
3. If an actor received their nomination as a
“British Actor” rather than the more all inclusive category.
Nominated for Both Globes
and Oscars: 2 (Room at the Top, Ship of Fools)
Nominated for Just Oscar: None
Nominated for Just BAFTA: 4 (Casque d’Or, The Crucible, The Deadly Affair, Games)
Winner? 1 Oscar (Room at the Top) and 3 BAFTA’s (Casque d’Or, The Crucible, Room at the Top)
Closest She Got to Another: Most likely none…if I had to
pick one, maybe Deadly Affair?
Signoret
is one of those foreign film actors that BAFTA became obsessed with during its
early run, giving her multiple nominations for films that are little seen in
the United States even now, much less when they originally ran, so Oscar
probably didn’t notice aside from his two films that he nominated the French
leading lady for. I put Deadly Affair as most likely just because
it did quite well with BAFTA, and had a lot of Academy favorites above and below
the title (James Mason, Maximilian Schell, Sidney Lumet, Paul Dehn, Freddie
Young) and sometimes that’s what it takes to get a nomination.
9. Gene Hackman
Nominated for Both Globes
and Oscars: 2 (The French Connection, Unforgiven)
Nominated for Just Oscar: 3 (Bonnie and Clyde, I Never Sang for My Father, Mississippi Burning)
Nominated for Just BAFTA: 5 (The Poseidon Adventure, The Conversation, The French Connection II,
Night Moves, Superman)
Winner? 2 Oscars (The French Connection, Unforgiven) and 2
BAFTA’s (Dual win for French
Connection/Poseidon Adventure and Unforgiven)
Closest He Got to Another: The Conversation
Hackman
is one of only two actors to show up on our nominated but royally-missed actors
at the Globes and the BAFTAs, and what’s even more bizarre is that three of his
films at the BAFTAs (and three of his films here) didn’t get nominated. Perhaps I’m underestimating the power
of The French Connection II, since
Hackman got Globe and BAFTA nominations for both, but I feel like he had a better
shot for the Best Picture-nominated The
Conversation. The BAFTAs kept
him in favor of Dustin Hoffman in Lenny and
Art Carney in Harry and Tonto (who
inexplicably won the Oscar) and the Globes skipped Albert Finney in Murder on the Orient Express, so while
everyone had a precursor to tout, Hackman had more.
8. Sir Ralph Richardson
Nominated for Both Globes
and Oscars: 1 (Greystoke: The Legend of
Tarzan, Lord of the Apes)
Nominated for Just Oscar: 1 (The Heiress)
Nominated for Just BAFTA: 5 (The Sound Barrier, Doctor Zhivago, Khartoum, The Wrong Box, Lady
Caroline Lamb)
Winner?: No Oscars, but he won the
BAFTA for The Sound Barrier
Closest He Got to Another: Doctor Zhivago?
It
has been many, many years since I last saw Doctor
Zhivago and I have never seen Greystoke,
so the next two observations are more “on-paper” than anything else, but
considering how popular Zhivago was
with the Academy, it’s safe to assume that Richardson’s next nomination
probably would have come from that movie.
It should be noted, though, that the acting branch wasn’t wild for the
film-despite major precursors for different actors (Omar Sharif, Julie
Christie, Ralph Richardson, and Geraldine Chaplin) it only got one Oscar
nomination, and oddly for none of those four actors (it was for Tom Courtenay).
I
will also say that I wonder, had he still been alive, whether Richardson would
have been a threat for winning with Greystoke. The 1980’s were the peak of “old age”
Oscars (something we see less and less of today, particularly with more and
more people winning Honorary Oscars at the Governor’s Ball), and names like
Henry Fonda, Don Ameche, Paul Newman, Geraldine Page, and Jessica Tandy all
took home Oscars in the twilight of their careers. Had they had another speech to enjoy from the witty
Richardson, perhaps his name would have been on that list.
7. Lord Laurence Olivier
Nominated for Both Globes
and Oscars: 3 (all
of these counts are just for acting, as clearly Olivier won nominations for
other things during his career) Richard
III, The Entertainer, Sleuth
Nominated for Just Oscar: 7 (to be fair, the bulk of
these were before the BAFTA Awards existed) Wuthering
Heights, Rebecca, Henry V, Hamlet, Othello, Marathon Man, The Boys from Brazil
Nominated for Just BAFTA: 5 (Carrie, The Prince and the Showgirl, The Devil’s Disciple, Term of
Trial, Oh! What a Lovely War)
Winner?: Olivier won one acting Oscar
for Hamlet and picked up two BAFTA’s
for Richard III and Oh! What a Lovely War
Closest He Got to Another: Carrie,
probably
This
is of course a tad bit ridiculous, as Olivier scored just as often with the
Oscars as BAFTA and he’s one of the most rewarded men in the history of the
Best Actor category. That said, of
course, he still had a relatively strong following in his native land, and
especially during the 1950’s (when Olivier wasn’t as en vogue with Oscar) he
seemed to do quite well. Carrie was my selection more because it
was one of the only films here that Oscar noticed, giving it Best Art Direction
and Costume nominations, and Olivier’s costar was Oscar winner Jennifer Jones,
so a film with two Academy favorites had to at least have been on the radar of
Oscar.
6. Peter Finch
Nominated for Both Globes
and Oscars: 2 (Sunday Bloody Sunday, Network)
Nominated for Just Oscar: None
Nominated for Just BAFTA: 5 (A Town Like Alice, Windom’s Way, The Nun’s Story, The Trials of Oscar
Wilde, No Love for Johnnie)
Winner? 1 Oscar (for Network, the only posthumous Oscar for
acting until Heath Ledger) and 5 BAFTAs (A
Town Like Alice, The Trials of Oscar Wilde, No Love for Johnnie, Sunday Bloody
Sunday, and Network)
Closest He Got to Another: Probably none-maybe The Nun’s Story?
Finch
was one of those British actors who got so big in his native country that Oscar
had to notice one time or another, and they did, late in his career. By that point, though, thanks to the
split British Actor categories, his place on this list was cemented. I’ve always been curious what would
have happened if he hadn’t died before Network. He didn’t have an Oscar, so they may
have just given him the trophy anyway (Howard Beale is a character not to be
denied), but his fellow nominees, particularly costar William Holden and Best
Picture lead Sylvester Stallone both look really strong for the win on paper if
Finch didn’t have some sympathy factor in his direction. Either way, I think that The Nun’s Story was his best shot of the
misses, not because of his performance per say, but because the film, which was
nominated for eight Oscars including Best Picture, is the only one I can
guarantee the bulk of the Academy saw in that year.
Julie Christie with fellow snubee Dirk Bogarde |
5. Julie Christie
Nominated for Both Globes
and Oscars: 2 (Darling, Away From Her)
Nominated for Just Oscar: 2 (McCabe & Mrs. Miller, Afterglow)
Nominated for Just BAFTA: 6 (Billy Liar, Doctor Zhivago, Fahrenheit 451, The Go-Between, Don’t Look
Now, Finding Neverland)
Winner? She has one Oscar and one
BAFTA, both for Darling
Closest She Got to Another: Tough call-maybe Billy Liar?
Julie
Christie is such an iconic, beautiful actress of the 1960’s (…good reference,
says Jessa), that you forget that she’s also one of Oscar’s most enduring
actresses, being one of the few performers to score a nomination in four
separate decades of her career.
It’s easier to make the argument that she came close to winning a second
Oscar or BAFTA than to say she was on-track to get another nomination with
Oscar (and quite frankly, if she was going to get another one I think it would
have been for 1975’s Shampoo over any
of the films that she got for BAFTA), but if I had to take a guess it’d be for Billy Liar. The film was a hit and made Christie a star (she would have
made it for supporting actress at Oscar, rather than lead like BAFTA, as they
didn’t have supporting yet), but if the Academy hadn’t been so enamored with Tom Jones (which took 60% of the
nominees in that category that year), Christie may have made it.
4. Shirley MacLaine
Nominated for Both Globes
and Oscars: 3 (The Apartment, Irma la Douce, Being There)
Nominated for Just Oscar: (again, for acting only) 2 (Some Came Running, The Turning Point)
Nominated for Just BAFTA: 6 (The Trouble with Harry, Ask Any Girl, What a Way to Go!, Being There, Postcards from the Edge, Steel
Magnolias)
Winner? 1 Oscar (Terms of Endearment) and 2 BAFTAs (Ask Any Girl and The Apartment)
Closest She Got to Another: Postcards from the Edge
If
you look at the Globes and BAFTA lists together, Mia Farrow is clearly the
actor who was most screwed out of an actual nomination at some point in her
career, making second place on both lists. If you look at the people Oscar actually blessed with
nominations, though, it’s hard not to feel like MacLaine was royally
snubbed. She topped the Globes list
and manages to be the highest-ranking non Brit on this list, so you have to
continually ask-what did Oscar have against MacLaine? It doesn’t seem like it would have been the politics (Marlon
Brando and Jane Fonda regularly got nominated during the same period). You don’t hear a lot about her being
particularly difficult to work with (and again, Brando was nominated).
Either
way, Postcards seems to be the
biggest miss-Diane Ladd did some interesting work in Wild at Heart, but it seems stunning that the more traditional
MacLaine didn’t make it instead.
Perhaps there was category confusion (she was lead with BAFTA, after
all)? That’s about the only thing
I can think of to explain it.
3. Dame Maggie Smith
Nominated for Both Globes
and Oscars: 2 (Room at the Top, Ship of Fools)
Nominated for Just Oscar: 2 (Othello, Travels with My Aunt)
Nominated for Just BAFTA: 6 (Young Cassidy, Death on the Nile, Quartet-though the one from
1981, not the recent one, oddly enough, A
Private Function, The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne, Tea with Mussolini)
Winner? 2 Oscars (The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, California
Suite) and 5 BAFTAs (The Prime of
Miss Jean Brodie, A Private Function, A Room with a View, The Lonely Passion of
Judith Hearne, Tea with Mussolini)
Closest She Got to Another: None of these films, but
she’s been very close before
Smith
is one of my all-time favorite actresses of any era, and you don’t get enough
chance to write about her in film anymore, so I relish the idea of doing so
here. The first really noteworthy
thing about this list is that she’s made two films with the same name (Quartet, both of which landed her a
precursor nomination and neither of which won her an Oscar nod)-can anyone
think of another actor that’s done that without it being a remake/winking
cameo?
Like
Julie Christie, it’s easier to make an argument that Smith was closer to
another Oscar win (A Room with a View,
where she was fighting it out royally with Dianne Wiest and pulled off both the
Globe and the BAFTA) than another nomination, particularly for these
films. You may recall she was
definitely in the running for The Best
Exotic Marigold Hotel, and many people (including myself) expected her to
score a nomination for that movie over Jacki Weaver in Silver Linings Playbook.
Perhaps the lack of a BAFTA nod should have been a telling sign to us
all to look elsewhere?
Delliott with his Room with a View costar Judi Dench |
2. Denholm Elliot
Nominated for Both Globes
and Oscars: 1 (A Room with a View)
Nominated for Just Oscar: None
Nominated for Just BAFTA: 6 (A Doll’s House, Saint Jack, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Trading Places, A
Private Function, Defence of the Realm)
Winner? No Oscars, though he did
pull off back-to-back-to-back wins for Trading
Places, A Private Function, and Defence
of the Realm (and A Room with a View was
his fourth in that series, which he missed for but considering the film scored
almost everywhere else, you know he was close).
Closest He Got to Another: You tell me.
The
Denholm Elliot thing escapes probably a lot of us (well, me at least)-I hadn’t
realized quite what a star the actor was in his native Britain before he
managed to land a nod for Room with a
View and become a noted supporting player in the Indiana Jones series as Marcus Brody. Raiders was the
only one of his BAFTA only films to make a major impression on the Academy, but
the series never scored an Oscar nomination for acting despite a plethora of
citations elsewhere, and one assumes that Harrison Ford or Sean Connery were
more likely to score than Elliot if they did get a nomination. His other work was very “British” (and
not in a David Lean/James Ivory sort of way), so I don’t know that he would
have gotten in for any of this latter two wins. Trading Places did
get an Oscar nomination (for score), but it’s not the sort of thing the Academy
goes for, even in the 1980’s when it would have been a hit.
1. Dame Judi Dench
Nominated for Both Globes
and Oscars: 6 (Mrs. Brown, Shakespeare in Love, Chocolat,
Iris, Mrs. Henderson Presents, Notes on a Scandal)
Nominated for Just Oscar: None
Nominated for Just BAFTA: 7 (Wetherby, A Room with a View, 84 Charing Cross Road, A Handful of Dust,
The Shipping News, My Week with Marilyn, Skyfall)
Winner? 1 Oscar (Shakespeare in Love) and 5 BAFTAs for
film (A Room with a View, A Handful of
Dust, Mrs. Brown, Shakespeare in Love, Iris)
Closest She Got to Another: The Shipping News, maybe?
Each
of these lists has been won by someone clearly at the top of the heap-someone
who is either obviously beloved by the one awards body or shamefully snubbed by
AMPAS (depending on how you want to look at it). With seven additional nominations (and two wins for those
performances), Dench is obviously that candidate, and I suspect we all knew
she’d be at the pole position.
Dench’s
career is bizarre of course because she became a major film star late, late in
her career. She’d had a long and
distinguished couple of decades in theater and television before Mrs. Brown managed to pop her onto the
international circuit (it’s worth mentioning she was a noted supporting player
in Britain for film at this time).
Had she been DAME JUDI DENCH in the eyes of the world in 1986, A Room with a View surely would have
gotten her her first Oscar nomination, but I think it’s safe to assume she came
the closest during one of her peak fame years: either The Shipping News or Skyfall,
with The Shipping News’s SAG
nomination breaking the tie for me.
With Philomena coming out in a
few weeks, she’s the only actor on this list who seems guaranteed to add to her
numbers soon-will it be for BAFTA, Oscar, or both is the question?
Those
are the top ten-what is the most surprising name on the list? Who do you think came the closest
overall to another nomination (I’m torn between Smith and MacLaine)? Who deserved another nomination the
most? And what part should they have cast Shirley MacLaine in in A Room with a View, since clearly the top three found success with it? Share in the comments!
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