40th Academy Awards

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40th Academy Awards
Date Wednesday, 10 April 1968
(originally scheduled for Monday, 8 April)
Site Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, Santa Monica, California, USA
Host Bob Hope
TV in the United States
Network ABC

The 40th Academy Awards honored film achievements of 1967. Originally scheduled for 8 April 1968, the awards were postponed to two days later, 10 April 1968, because of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr..

Due to the increasing rarity of black and white feature films, the awards for cinematography, art direction and costume design were combined into single categories rather than a distinction between color and monochrome.

The ultimate (surprise) winner in the Best Picture category was director Norman Jewison's engrossing thriller-murder mystery and sleeper comedy/drama film, In the Heat of the Night (with seven nominations and five wins - Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Screenplay, Best Film Editing, and Best Sound). It illustrated the racial tension, prejudice, and eventual mutual respect and camaraderie expressed between a black police detective from the North (Philadelphia) and a Southern racist, white police chief in the small Mississippi town of Sparta, where both were compelled to work together on the same homicide case.

Contents

[edit] Winners

[edit] Feature Films

Category Winner Producers/Country
Best motion picture of the year In the Heat of the Night Walter Mirisch
Best foreign language film Closely Watched Trains Flag of Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia
Best documentary feature The Anderson Platoon Pierre Schoendoerffer

[edit] Direction

Academy Award for Directing Mike Nichols The Graduate

[edit] Acting

Category Winner Movie
Best actor in a leading role Rod Steiger In the Heat of the Night
Best actress in a leading role Katharine Hepburn Guess Who's Coming to Dinner
Best actor in a supporting role George Kennedy Cool Hand Luke
Best actress in a supporting role Estelle Parsons Bonnie and Clyde

[edit] Writing

Category Winner Movie
Original screenplay William Rose Guess Who's Coming to Dinner
Adapted screenplay Stirling Silliphant In the Heat of the Night


[edit] Honorary Oscar

Producer/director Alfred Hitchcock was presented with the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award, possibly in recognition of the fact that he had been nominated for the Best Director Award five times (for Rebecca (1940), Lifeboat (1944), Spellbound (1945), Rear Window (1954), and Psycho (1960)) but had yet to win. This was Hitchcock's first and only 'Oscar'.


[edit] Trivia