Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role is one of the Academy Awards of Merit presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) to recognize an actor who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry. Since its inception, however, the award has commonly been referred to as the "Oscar for Best Supporting Actor". While actors are nominated for this award by Academy members who are actors and actresses themselves, winners are selected by the Academy membership as a whole. Under the system currently in place, an actor is nominated for a specific performance in a single film, and such nominations are limited to five per year.
History
Throughout the past 74 years, accounting for ties and repeat winners, AMPAS has presented a total of 74 Best Supporting Actor awards to 67 different actors. Winners of this Academy Award of Merit receive the familiar Oscar statuette, depicting a gold-plated knight holding a crusader's sword and standing on a reel of film. Prior to the 16th Academy Awards ceremony (1943), however, they received a plaque. The first recipient was Walter Brennan, who was honored at the 9th Academy Awards ceremony (1936) for his performance in Come and Get It. The most recent recipient was Christoph Waltz, who was honored at the 82nd Academy Awards ceremony (2010) for his performance in Inglourious Basterds.
Until the 8th Academy Awards ceremony (1935), nominations for the Best Actor award were intended to include all actors, whether the performance was in a leading or supporting role. At the 9th Academy Awards ceremony (1936), however, the Best Supporting Actor category was specifically introduced as a distinct award following complaints that the single Best Actor category necessarily favored leading performers with the most screen time. Nonetheless, Lionel Barrymore had received a Best Actor award (A Free Soul, 1931) and Franchot Tone a Best Actor nomination (Mutiny on the Bounty, 1935) for their performances in clear supporting roles. Currently, Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role, Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role, and Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role constitute the four Academy Awards of Merit for acting annually presented by AMPAS.
Superlatives
Walter Brennan, the winner of the inaugural award in 1936, is the only actor to win the award three times (from four nominations). Five other actors have won the award twice: Anthony Quinn, Melvyn Douglas, Michael Caine, Peter Ustinov, and Jason Robards. Robards was the only person to win consecutive Best Supporting Actor awards, for All the President's Men (1976) and Julia (1977).
Claude Rains and Arthur Kennedy share the greatest number of unsuccessful nominations, four each. The only other actors with four nominations were Walter Brennan (won three times) and Jack Nicholson (won once). Charles Bickford, Jeff Bridges, Robert Duvall, Ed Harris, and Al Pacino have each had three unsuccessful nominations.
Harold Russell was the first (and only) actor to receive two Academy Awards for the same performance when he won the Best Supporting Actor award and was also presented with an Academy Honorary Award for The Best Years of Our Lives (1946). Thanks to a voting quirk, in 1944 Barry Fitzgerald in Going My Way became the only actor nominated in both the Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor categories for the same performance, winning the latter. (Today, Academy bylaws preclude this from happening.)
Robert De Niro's 1974 win as the young Vito Corleone in The Godfather Part II is unique as the only Supporting Oscar won for playing a part previously played by a Best Actor winner (Marlon Brando in The Godfather). De Niro and Benicio del Toro (who won for Traffic) are the only winners for foreign-language performances in this category.
Although five actresses have been nominated for non-speaking supporting roles, John Mills was the only male actor to be so nominated. Mills won Best Supporting Actor for his performance as a mute brain-damaged village idiot in Ryan's Daughter (1970). (This excludes actors who were nominated for Best Actor for silent movies in the silent era.)
Heath Ledger is the only person to posthumously win an acting Oscar in a supporting role. He won the Best Supporting Actor award for his portrayal of the Joker in The Dark Knight, 2008. He is only the second person to posthumously win any acting Oscar (the other was Peter Finch, who won Best Actor for Network, 1976), and the first to win from a posthumous acting nomination (Finch was alive when his nomination was announced).
The earliest nominee in this category who is still alive is Kevin McCarthy (1951). The earliest winner in this category who is still alive is George Chakiris (1961).
Winners and nominees
Following the Academy's practice, the films below are listed by year of their Los Angeles qualifying run, which is usually (but not always) the film's year of release. For example, the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor of 1999 was announced during the award ceremony held in 2000. Winners are listed first in bold, followed by the other nominees. For a list sorted by actor names, please see List of Best Supporting Actor nominees. For a list sorted by film titles, please see List of Best Supporting Actor nominees (films).
1930s
- 1936 Walter Brennan - Come and Get It as Swan Bostrom
- Mischa Auer - My Man Godfrey as Carlo
- Stuart Erwin - Pigskin Parade as Amos Dodd
- Basil Rathbone - Romeo and Juliet as Tybalt - Nephew to Lady Capulet
- Akim Tamiroff - The General Died at Dawn as Gen. Yang
- 1937 Joseph Schildkraut - The Life of Emile Zola as Capt. Alfred Dreyfus
- Ralph Bellamy - The Awful Truth as 'Dan' Leeson
- Thomas Mitchell - The Hurricane as Dr. Kersaint
- H. B. Warner - Lost Horizon as Chang
- Roland Young - Topper as Cosmo Topper
- 1938 Walter Brennan - Kentucky as Peter Goodwin
- 1939 Thomas Mitchell - Stagecoach as Doc Boone
- Brian Aherne - Juarez as Emperor Maximilian von Habsburg
- Harry Carey - Mr. Smith Goes to Washington as President of the Senate
- Brian Donlevy - Beau Geste as Sgt. Markoff
- Claude Rains - Mr. Smith Goes to Washington as Sen. Joseph Harrison Paine
1940s
- 1940 Walter Brennan - The Westerner as Judge Roy Bean
- Albert Basserman - Foreign Correspondent as Van Meer
- William Gargan - They Knew What They Wanted as Joe
- Jack Oakie - The Great Dictator as Benzini Napaloni (Dictator of Bacteria)
- James Stephenson - The Letter as Howard Joyce
- 1941 Donald Crisp - How Green Was My Valley as Mr. Morgan
- Walter Brennan - Sergeant York as Pastor Rosier Pile
- Charles Coburn - The Devil and Miss Jones as John P. Merrick
- James Gleason - Here Comes Mr. Jordan as Max Corkle
- Sydney Greenstreet - The Maltese Falcon as Kasper Gutman
- 1942 Van Heflin - Johnny Eager as Jeff Hartnett
- William Bendix - Wake Island as Pvt. Aloysius K. 'Smacksie' Randall
- Walter Huston - Yankee Doodle Dandy as Jerry Cohan
- Frank Morgan - Tortilla Flat as The Pirate
- Henry Travers - Mrs. Miniver as Mr. Ballard
Beginning with the 1943 awards, winners in the supporting acting categories were awarded Oscar statuettes similar to those awarded to winners in all other categories, including the leading acting categories. Prior to this, however, winners in the supporting acting categories were awarded plaques.
- 1943 Charles Coburn - The More the Merrier as Benjamin Dingle
- Charles Bickford - The Song of Bernadette as Father Peyramale
- J. Carrol Naish - Sahara as Giuseppe
- Claude Rains - Casablanca as Captain Renault
- Akim Tamiroff - For Whom the Bell Tolls as Pablo
- 1944 Barry Fitzgerald - Going My Way as Father Fitzgibbon
- Hume Cronyn - The Seventh Cross as Paul Roeder
- Claude Rains - Mr. Skeffington as Job Skeffington
- Clifton Webb - Laura as Waldo Lydecker
- Monty Woolley - Since You Went Away as Colonel William G. Smollett
- 1945 James Dunn - A Tree Grows In Brooklyn as Johnny Nolan aka The Brooklyn Thrush
- Michael Chekhov - Spellbound as Dr. Alexander 'Alex' Brulov
- John Dall - The Corn Is Green as Morgan Evans
- Robert Mitchum - The Story of G.I. Joe as Lt. / Capt. Bill Walker
- J. Carrol Naish - A Medal for Benny as Charley Martin
- 1946 Harold Russell - The Best Years of Our Lives as Homer Parrish
- Charles Coburn - The Green Years as Alexander Gow
- William Demarest - The Jolson Story as Steve Martin
- Claude Rains - Notorious as Alexander Sebastian
- Clifton Webb - The Razor's Edge as Elliott Templeton
- 1947 Edmund Gwenn - Miracle on 34th Street as Kris Kringle
- Charles Bickford - The Farmer's Daughter as Joseph Clancy (major-domo)
- Thomas Gomez - Ride the Pink Horse as Pancho
- Robert Ryan - Crossfire as Montgomery
- Richard Widmark - Kiss of Death as Tommy Udo
- 1948 Walter Huston - The Treasure of the Sierra Madre as Howard
- 1949 Dean Jagger - Twelve O'Clock High as Major Harvey Stovall
- John Ireland - All the King's Men as Jack Burden
- Arthur Kennedy - Champion as Connie Kelly
- Ralph Richardson - The Heiress as Dr. Austin Sloper
- James Whitmore - Battleground as Kinnie
1950s
- 1950 George Sanders - All About Eve as Addison De Witt
- Jeff Chandler - Broken Arrow as Cochise
- Edmund Gwenn - Mister 880 as 'Skipper' Miller
- Sam Jaffe - The Asphalt Jungle as Doc Erwin Riedenschneider
- Erich von Stroheim - Sunset Boulevard as Max von Meyerling
- 1951 Karl Malden - A Streetcar Named Desire as Harold 'Mitch' Mitchell
- 1952 Anthony Quinn - Viva Zapata! as Eufemio Zapata
- Richard Burton - My Cousin Rachel as Philip Ashley
- Arthur Hunnicutt - The Big Sky as Zeb Calloway/Narrator
- Victor McLaglen - The Quiet Man as 'Red' Will Danaher
- Jack Palance - Sudden Fear as Lester Blaine
- 1953 Frank Sinatra - From Here to Eternity as Pvt. Angelo Maggio
- Eddie Albert - Roman Holiday as Irving Radovich
- Brandon de Wilde - Shane as Joey Starrett
- Jack Palance - Shane as Jack Wilson
- Robert Strauss - Stalag 17 as Stanislas 'Animal' Kasava
- 1954 Edmond O'Brien - The Barefoot Contessa as Oscar Muldoon
- Lee J. Cobb - On the Waterfront as Johnny Friendly
- Karl Malden - On the Waterfront as Father Barry
- Rod Steiger - On the Waterfront as Charley 'the Gent' Malloy
- Tom Tully - The Caine Mutiny as Commander DeVriess
- 1955 Jack Lemmon - Mister Roberts as Ens. Frank Thurlowe Pulver
- Arthur Kennedy - Trial as Barney Castle
- Joe Mantell - Marty as Angie
- Sal Mineo - Rebel Without a Cause as John 'Plato' Crawford
- Arthur O'Connell - Picnic as Howard Bevans
- 1956 Anthony Quinn - Lust for Life as Paul Gauguin
- Don Murray - Bus Stop as Beauregard 'Bo' Decker
- Anthony Perkins - Friendly Persuasion as Josh Birdwell
- Mickey Rooney - The Bold and the Brave as Dooley
- Robert Stack - Written on the Wind as Kyle Hadley
- 1957 Red Buttons - Sayonara as Airman Joe Kelly
- 1958 Burl Ives - The Big Country as Rufus Hannassey
- Theodore Bikel - The Defiant Ones as Sheriff Max Muller
- Lee J. Cobb - The Brothers Karamazov as Fyodor Karamazov
- Arthur Kennedy - Some Came Running as Frank Hirsh
- Gig Young - Teacher's Pet as Dr. Hugo Pine
- 1959 Hugh Griffith - Ben-Hur as Sheik Ilderim
- Arthur O'Connell - Anatomy of a Murder as Parnell Emmett McCarthy
- George C. Scott - Anatomy of a Murder as Asst. State Atty. Gen. Claude Dancer
- Robert Vaughn - The Young Philadelphians as Chester A. 'Chet' Gwynn
- Ed Wynn - The Diary of Anne Frank as Albert Dussell
1960s
- 1960 Peter Ustinov - Spartacus as Lentulus Batiatus
- Peter Falk - Murder, Inc. as Abe 'Kid Twist' Reles
- Jack Kruschen - The Apartment as Dr. Dreyfuss
- Sal Mineo - Exodus as Dov Landau
- Chill Wills - The Alamo as Beekeeper
- 1962 Ed Begley - Sweet Bird of Youth as Tom 'Boss' Finley
- 1963 Melvyn Douglas - Hud as Homer Bannon
- Nick Adams - Twilight of Honor as Ben Brown
- Bobby Darin - Captain Newman, M.D. as Corporal Jim Tompkins
- Hugh Griffith - Tom Jones as Squire Western
- John Huston - The Cardinal as Cardinal Glennon
- 1964 Peter Ustinov - Topkapi as Arthur Simon Simpson
- 1965 Martin Balsam - A Thousand Clowns as Arnold Burns
- Ian Bannen - The Flight of the Phoenix as 'Ratbags' Crow
- Tom Courtenay - Doctor Zhivago as Pasha Antipov
- Michael Dunn - Ship of Fools as Carl Glocken
- Frank Finlay - Othello as Iago
- 1966 Walter Matthau - The Fortune Cookie as Willie Gingrich
- Mako - The Sand Pebbles as Po-han
- James Mason - Georgy Girl as James Leamington
- George Segal - Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? as Nick
- Robert Shaw - A Man for All Seasons as Henry VIII of England
- 1967 George Kennedy - Cool Hand Luke as Dragline
- John Cassavetes - The Dirty Dozen as Victor P. Franko
- Gene Hackman - Bonnie and Clyde as Buck Barrow
- Cecil Kellaway - Guess Who's Coming to Dinner as Monsignor Mike Ryan
- Michael J. Pollard - Bonnie and Clyde as C.W. Moss
- 1968 Jack Albertson - The Subject Was Roses as John Cleary
- Seymour Cassel - Faces as Chet
- Daniel Massey - Star! as Noel Coward
- Jack Wild - Oliver! as The Artful Dodger
- Gene Wilder - The Producers as Leo Bloom
- 1969 Gig Young - They Shoot Horses, Don't They? as Rocky
- Rupert Crosse - The Reivers as Ned
- Elliott Gould - Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice as Ted Henderson
- Jack Nicholson - Easy Rider as George Hanson
- Anthony Quayle - Anne of the Thousand Days as Cardinal Wolsey
1970s
- 1970 John Mills - Ryan's Daughter as Michael
- Richard S. Castellano - Lovers and Other Strangers as Frank Vecchio
- Chief Dan George - Little Big Man as Old Lodge Skins
- Gene Hackman - I Never Sang for My Father as Gene Garrison
- John Marley - Love Story as Phil Cavalleri
- 1971 Ben Johnson - The Last Picture Show as Sam the Lion
- Jeff Bridges - The Last Picture Show as Duane Jackson
- Leonard Frey - Fiddler on the Roof as Motel Kamzoil
- Richard Jaeckel - Sometimes a Great Notion as Joe Ben Stamper
- Roy Scheider - The French Connection as Detective Buddy 'Cloudy' Russo
- 1972 Joel Grey - Cabaret as Master of Ceremonies
- 1973 John Houseman - The Paper Chase as Charles W. Kingsfield Jr.
- Vincent Gardenia - Bang the Drum Slowly as Dutch Schnell
- Jack Gilford - Save the Tiger as Phil Greene
- Jason Miller - The Exorcist as Father Damien Karras
- Randy Quaid - The Last Detail as Larry Meadows
- 1974 Robert De Niro - The Godfather Part II as Vito Corleone
- 1975 George Burns - The Sunshine Boys as Al Lewis
- 1976 Jason Robards - All the President's Men as Ben Bradlee
- 1977 Jason Robards - Julia as Dashiell Hammett
- 1978 Christopher Walken - The Deer Hunter as Nikonar 'Nick' Chevotarevich
- Bruce Dern - Coming Home as Captain Bob Hyde
- Richard Farnsworth - Comes a Horseman as Dodger
- John Hurt - Midnight Express as Max
- Jack Warden - Heaven Can Wait as Max Corkle
- 1979 Melvyn Douglas - Being There as Benjamin Turnbull Rand
1980s
- 1980 Timothy Hutton - Ordinary People as Conrad Jarrett
- 1981 John Gielgud - Arthur as Hobson
- 1982 Louis Gossett, Jr. - An Officer and a Gentleman as Gunnery Sergeant Emil Foley
- Charles Durning - The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas as Governor
- John Lithgow - The World According to Garp as Roberta Muldoon
- James Mason - The Verdict as Ed Concannon
- Robert Preston - Victor Victoria as Carroll 'Toddy' Todd
- 1983 Jack Nicholson - Terms of Endearment as Garrett Breedlove
- 1984 Haing S. Ngor - The Killing Fields as Dith Pran
- Adolph Caesar - A Soldier's Story as Sergeant Waters
- John Malkovich - Places in the Heart as Mr. Will
- Pat Morita - The Karate Kid as Mr. Kesuke Miyagi
- Ralph Richardson - Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes as The Sixth Earl of Greystoke (posthumous nomination)
- 1985 Don Ameche - Cocoon as Arthur Selwyn
- Klaus Maria Brandauer - Out of Africa as Baron Bror von Blixen-Finecke
- William Hickey - Prizzi's Honor as Don Corrado Prizzi
- Robert Loggia - Jagged Edge as Sam Ransom
- Eric Roberts - Runaway Train as Buck
- 1986 Michael Caine - Hannah and Her Sisters as Elliot
- 1987 Sean Connery - The Untouchables as Jim Malone
- 1988 Kevin Kline - A Fish Called Wanda as Otto West
- 1989 Denzel Washington - Glory as Pvt. Silas Trip
1990s
- 1992 Gene Hackman - Unforgiven as Little Bill Daggett
- Jaye Davidson - The Crying Game as Dil
- Jack Nicholson - A Few Good Men as Col. Nathan R. Jessep
- Al Pacino - Glengarry Glen Ross as Ricky Roma
- David Paymer - Mr. Saturday Night as Stan
2000s
International presence
As the Academy Awards are based in the United States and are centered on the Hollywood film industry, the majority of Academy Award winners have been Americans. Nonetheless, there is significant international presence at the awards, as evidenced by the following list of winners of the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.
- Australia: Heath Ledger
- Austria: Joseph Schildkraut, Christoph Waltz
- Cambodia: Haing S. Ngor
- Mexico: Anthony Quinn
- Puerto Rico: Benicio del Toro
- Republic of Ireland: Barry Fitzgerald
- Spain: Javier Bardem
- United Kingdom: Jim Broadbent, Michael Caine, Sean Connery, Donald Crisp, John Gielgud, Hugh Griffith, Edmund Gwenn, John Mills, George Sanders, and Peter Ustinov
There have been two years when none of the four top acting awards went to an American:
See also
- List of Best Supporting Actor winners by age at win
- List of nominees for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor (by actor)
External links
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor |
|
1936–1940 |
Walter Brennan (1936) · Joseph Schildkraut (1937) · Walter Brennan (1938) · Thomas Mitchell (1939) · Walter Brennan (1940)
|
|
1941–1960 |
Donald Crisp (1941) · Van Heflin (1942) · Charles Coburn (1943) · Barry Fitzgerald (1944) · James Dunn (1945) · Harold Russell (1946) · Edmund Gwenn (1947) · Walter Huston (1948) · Dean Jagger (1949) · George Sanders (1950) · Karl Malden (1951) · Anthony Quinn (1952) · Frank Sinatra (1953) · Edmond O'Brien (1954) · Jack Lemmon (1955) · Anthony Quinn (1956) · Red Buttons (1957) · Burl Ives (1958) · Hugh Griffith (1959) · Peter Ustinov (1960)
|
|
1961–1980 |
|
|
1981–2000 |
|
|
2001–present |
|
|
Complete list · · (1941–1960) · (1961–1980) · (1981–2000) · (2001–present)
|
|
Academy Awards |
|
Book · Category · Portal · History of film |
|
Merit
awards |
Best Picture · Best Director · Best Leading Actor · Best Leading Actress · Best Adapted Screenplay · Best Original Screenplay · Best Supporting Actor · Best Supporting Actress · Best Animated Feature · Best Art Direction · Best Cinematography · Best Costume Design · Best Documentary Feature · Best Documentary Short Subject · Best Film Editing · Best Foreign Language Film (Winners and nominees) · Best Makeup · Best Original Score · Best Original Song · Best Animated Short Film · Best Live Action Short Film · Best Sound Mixing · Best Sound Editing · Best Visual Effects
|
|
Special
awards |
Academy Honorary Award · Special Achievement Academy Award · Academy Scientific and Technical Award · Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award · Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award · Gordon E. Sawyer Award
|
|
Retired
awards |
Best Assistant Director · Best Dance Direction · Best Director of a Comedy Picture · Best Engineering Effects · Best Short Subject, Two-reel · Best Short Subject, Color · Best Short Subject, Novelty · Best Original Story · Best Title Writing · Best Unique and Artistic Quality of Production · Academy Juvenile Award
|
|
Award
ceremonies |
1928 · 1929 · 1930 · 1931 · 1932 · 1933 · 1934 · 1935 · 1936 · 1937 · 1938 · 1939 · 1940 · 1941 · 1942 · 1943 · 1944 · 1945 · 1946 · 1947 · 1948 · 1949 · 1950 · 1951 · 1952 · 1953 · 1954 · 1955 · 1956 · 1957 · 1958 · 1959 · 1960 · 1961 · 1962 · 1963 · 1964 · 1965 · 1966 · 1967 · 1968 · 1969 · 1970 · 1971 · 1972 · 1973 · 1974 · 1975 · 1976 · 1977 · 1978 · 1979 · 1980 · 1981 · 1982 · 1983 · 1984 · 1985 · 1986 · 1987 · 1988 · 1989 · 1990 · 1991 · 1992 · 1993 · 1994 · 1995 · 1996 · 1997 · 1998 · 1999 · 2000 · 2001 · 2002 · 2003 · 2004 · 2005 · 2006 · 2007 · 2008 · 2009 · 2010
|
|
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) · Records · Oscar season |
|