List of fictitious Academy Award winners and nominees
There have been several fictional people or people using false names nominated for actual Academy Awards, in several cases because the actual winners were blacklisted at the time. This list is current as of the 80th Academy Awards ceremony held on February 22, 2008.
Winners
Pierre Boulle
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- Despite not having written the screenplay and not even speaking English, Boulle was credited because the film's actual writers, Carl Foreman and Michael Wilson, had been blacklisted as communist sympathizers. On December 11, 1984, the Board of Governors voted posthumous Oscars to the duo.[1]
Nathan E. Douglas
- 1958 Best Writing, Story and Screenplay - Written Directly for the Screen for The Defiant Ones
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- Nedrick Young and Harold Jacob Smith co-wrote the screenplay, but Young was blacklisted and used a pseudonym for his screen credit. As an inside joke, director Stanley Kramer cast Young and Smith in bit parts as truck drivers and had their screen credit appear while they were on screen together. In 1993, AMPAS restored Young's credit for this work.
Ian McLellan Hunter
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- The name was used as a cover for blacklisted writer Dalton Trumbo.[2] On December 15, 1992, the Board of Governors voted to change the records and recognize Trumbo. Hunter's name was removed. However, Hunter's son, director Tim Hunter, refused to cede the award to Trumbo, so the Academy presented a second Academy Award.
Robert Rich
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- This was another cover for Trumbo.[2] Shortly before his death, Trumbo revealed the much-suspected truth.
Nominees
Roderick Jaynes
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- Writer-director brothers Joel and Ethan Coen have edited several of their films under this name.[3]
Donald Kaufman
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- Donald Kaufman was nominated along with his "brother" Charlie. In fact, Donald does not exist; the screenplay was written by Charlie alone. Donald was the first fictitious nominee not to be a cover for a real person. (Both appear as characters in the film.)[4]
P.H. Vazak
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- Due to his disapproval of the final filmed script, Robert Towne used his dog's name as a pseudonym instead.[4]
References
Sources