* Shelley Winters won for "A Patch of Blue" (1966), and not "The Poseidon Adventure" (1973). * Charles Guggenheim won 3 Best Short Documentary Oscars for "Nine from Little Rock", "The Johnston Flood", and "A Time for Justice". He also won a fourth Oscar, but in the Best Live Action Short Subject category, for "Robert Kennedy Remembered".
Also Alexander Payne also has 2 adapted screenplay wins, with Sideways and The Descendants. and Saul Zaents has 3 Best Picture Wins too, for One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest, Amadeus and The English Patient
I know, that's why I mentioned that ties were decided by the number of nominations. The ties in Supporting Actress and Editing are shown because the number of nominations are also tied!
Charles Guggenheim actually won only 3 Oscars for Documentary Short but I totally understand your confusion. In 1969, he won an Oscar for his short film "Robert Kennedy Remembered", and although it is described nowadays as a documentary, it was submitted to the "Best Live Action Short Subject" category, and it won there. It was also my bad that I added "Robert Kennedy Remembered" on the video when I meant "Nine from Little Rock", thanks for pointing it out!
I love your videos, they are very well edited and the quality is crystal clear, however sometimes the facts listed aren't exactly correct. Shelley Winters did win 2 Supporting Actress Awards, but she did not win for The Poseidon Adventure, she won for A Patch of Blue.
I've been really busy recently and these videos take a very long time to edit all by myself, unfortunately, it will always tend to have at least a few mistakes like this one. I'll pin any inaccuracies of the videos to a fixed comment, so that gives you some incentive to watch with attention and see if you can find any, hehe.
I see a mistake. Gary Rydstrom. He did win 7 Oscars, but 3 of them were for Sound Effects Editing, which back then, was a separate category. These should be separated in a different category video montage. Also there should be a tie in the Adapted Screenplay as Robert Bolt won 2 for his adaptations of Doctor Zhivago (1966, for 1965 year) and A Man for All Seasons (1967, for 1966 year)
It's deliberate. Most of the current categories didn't exist, were separate, mixed, or were under different names -- the official Academy website itself considers Best Sound records together under the extinct "Best Sound Mixing", "Best Sound Effects", "Best Sound Effects Editing", and "Best Sound Editing". If you insist on being that strict for "Best Sound" winners then it's a tie between: Mark Weingarten, James H. Mather, Al Nelson, Chris Burdon, Mark Taylor, Mac Ruth, Mark Mangini, Theo Green, Doug Hemphill, Ron Bartlett, Nicolas Becker, Jaime Baksht, Michelle Couttolenc, Carlos Cortés Navarrete and Phillip Bladh. All of them with one win either. Also, as mentioned in the description of the video, "Ties were decided by the number of nominations" -- meaning Robert Bolt has 2 wins + 1 nomination, while Michael Wilson has 2 wins + 3 nominations. 👍
@@kinochartsleo I didn't mean anything by it. When I saw the double names I just thought that it had to be the sound effects editing wins. I guess I could have mentioned that if it was me that I would have done it this way, sorry if you took differently. I realize that Sound Editing was a separate category for quite a few years, so it makes sense that now they are combined together. In regards to the writing category, I probably misheard or don't recall exactly what you mentioned in regards to nominations combining with the wins. Mea culpa.
@@patricklynch6771 No worries! I probably sounded too harsh in my answer by trying to explain it as thoroughly as possible. I'ss always welcome any corrections and questions! 👍👍
Only 3 of those Oscars were for acting (Fargo, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, and Nomadland), the fourth one was for producing Nomadland, which won best picture.
* Shelley Winters won for "A Patch of Blue" (1966), and not "The Poseidon Adventure" (1973).
* Charles Guggenheim won 3 Best Short Documentary Oscars for "Nine from Little Rock", "The Johnston Flood", and "A Time for Justice". He also won a fourth Oscar, but in the Best Live Action Short Subject category, for "Robert Kennedy Remembered".
I was going to leave a comment about that
Also Alexander Payne also has 2 adapted screenplay wins, with Sideways and The Descendants. and Saul Zaents has 3 Best Picture Wins too, for One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest, Amadeus and The English Patient
I know, that's why I mentioned that ties were decided by the number of nominations. The ties in Supporting Actress and Editing are shown because the number of nominations are also tied!
And Charles Guggenheim won 4 Oscars from 12 nominations in documentary short category! Just saw at Wikipedia!
Charles Guggenheim actually won only 3 Oscars for Documentary Short but I totally understand your confusion. In 1969, he won an Oscar for his short film "Robert Kennedy Remembered", and although it is described nowadays as a documentary, it was submitted to the "Best Live Action Short Subject" category, and it won there. It was also my bad that I added "Robert Kennedy Remembered" on the video when I meant "Nine from Little Rock", thanks for pointing it out!
I am partial to Woody Allen's writing and find Daniel Day-Lewis one of the greatest actors of all time, which of these are your favorites?
I love your videos, they are very well edited and the quality is crystal clear, however sometimes the facts listed aren't exactly correct. Shelley Winters did win 2 Supporting Actress Awards, but she did not win for The Poseidon Adventure, she won for A Patch of Blue.
I've been really busy recently and these videos take a very long time to edit all by myself, unfortunately, it will always tend to have at least a few mistakes like this one. I'll pin any inaccuracies of the videos to a fixed comment, so that gives you some incentive to watch with attention and see if you can find any, hehe.
Amazing thank You
I see a mistake. Gary Rydstrom. He did win 7 Oscars, but 3 of them were for Sound Effects Editing, which back then, was a separate category. These should be separated in a different category video montage. Also there should be a tie in the Adapted Screenplay as Robert Bolt won 2 for his adaptations of Doctor Zhivago (1966, for 1965 year) and A Man for All Seasons (1967, for 1966 year)
It's deliberate. Most of the current categories didn't exist, were separate, mixed, or were under different names -- the official Academy website itself considers Best Sound records together under the extinct "Best Sound Mixing", "Best Sound Effects", "Best Sound Effects Editing", and "Best Sound Editing". If you insist on being that strict for "Best Sound" winners then it's a tie between: Mark Weingarten, James H. Mather, Al Nelson, Chris Burdon, Mark Taylor, Mac Ruth, Mark Mangini, Theo Green, Doug Hemphill, Ron Bartlett, Nicolas Becker, Jaime Baksht, Michelle Couttolenc, Carlos Cortés Navarrete and Phillip Bladh. All of them with one win either.
Also, as mentioned in the description of the video, "Ties were decided by the number of nominations" -- meaning Robert Bolt has 2 wins + 1 nomination, while Michael Wilson has 2 wins + 3 nominations. 👍
@@kinochartsleo I didn't mean anything by it. When I saw the double names I just thought that it had to be the sound effects editing wins. I guess I could have mentioned that if it was me that I would have done it this way, sorry if you took differently. I realize that Sound Editing was a separate category for quite a few years, so it makes sense that now they are combined together. In regards to the writing category, I probably misheard or don't recall exactly what you mentioned in regards to nominations combining with the wins. Mea culpa.
@@patricklynch6771 No worries! I probably sounded too harsh in my answer by trying to explain it as thoroughly as possible. I'ss always welcome any corrections and questions! 👍👍
I think Frances McDormand won 4 Best Actress Oscars too.
Only 3 of those Oscars were for acting (Fargo, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, and Nomadland), the fourth one was for producing Nomadland, which won best picture.
No. She won 3 best actress oscar for fargo. Three billboards outside ebbeney missouri and nomaland