70th Academy Awards | ||||
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Date | Monday, March 23, 1998 | |||
Site | Shrine Auditorium Los Angeles, California |
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Host | Billy Crystal | |||
Producer | Gil Cates | |||
Director | Louis J. Horvitz | |||
Highlights | ||||
Best Picture | Titanic | |||
Most awards | Titanic (11) | |||
Most nominations | Titanic (14) | |||
TV in the United States | ||||
Network | ABC | |||
Duration | 3 hours, 47 minutes | |||
Viewership | 57.25 million 35.32 (Nielsen ratings) |
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The 70th Academy Awards were noted for their high ratings and the 11 wins obtained by the Best Picture Titanic. Billy Crystal hosted the ceremony for the sixth time, and received an Emmy award for his performance.
Titanic dominated the evening picking up 11 awards out of 14 nominations.[1] The film tied with the most awards nominated with All About Eve and tied with the most awards won with Ben-Hur. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King would also match that record in 2004.[2]
Due to the popularity of Titanic, which was the #2 movie at the box office at the time,[3] the show earned its highest ratings ever in history based on audience size (57.25 million).[4]
Other notable films were As Good as It Gets, which received seven nominations and two awards, including Best Actor[5] and Best Actress[6] and Good Will Hunting, which received nine nominations and also won two awards.[7]
Contents |
Winners are listed first and highlighted with boldface[8]
The following sixteen films received multiple nominations:
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The following four films received multiple awards:
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Presented by Whoopi Goldberg. The Academy takes a special moment to remember those involved with motion pictures that died in the previous year. Those that were featured: Lloyd Bridges, Richard Jaeckel, composer Saul Chaplin, cinematographer Stanley Cortez, William Hickey, screenwriter Paul Jarrico, screenwriter Dorothy Kingsley, hairstylist Sydney Guilaroff, editor William H. Reynolds, Billie Dove, oceanographic filmmaker Jacques Cousteau, Stubby Kaye, Red Skelton, producer Dawn Steel, Toshirō Mifune, Brian Keith, Chris Farley, executive Leo Jaffe, director Samuel Fuller, Burgess Meredith, J. T. Walsh, Robert Mitchum and James Stewart.