Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay


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The Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay is the Academy Award for the best screenplay not based upon previously published material. It was created in 1940 as a separate writing award from the Academy Award for Best Story. Beginning with the Oscars for 1957, the two categories were combined to honor only the screenplay.

See also the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, a similar award for screenplays that are adaptations of pre-existing material.

Superlatives

Woody Allen has the most nominations in this category with 16, and the most awards with 3 (for Annie Hall, Hannah and Her Sisters, and Midnight in Paris). Paddy Chayefsky has also won three screenwriting Oscars: two for Original Screenplay (The Hospital and Network) and one for Adapted Screenplay (Marty).

Woody Allen also holds the record as the oldest winner (76) for Midnight in Paris.[1] Ben Affleck is the youngest winner (25) for Good Will Hunting, co-written with Matt Damon (27).

Richard Schweizer was the first to win for a foreign-language film, Marie-Louise. Other winners for a non-English screenplay include Albert Lamorisse, Pietro Germi, Claude Lelouch, Pedro Almodóvar, Bong Joon-ho and Han Jin-won. Lamorisse is additionally the only person to win or even be nominated for Best Original Screenplay for a short film (The Red Balloon, 1956).[2]

Muriel Box (The Seventh Veil) was the first woman to win in this category; she shared the award with her husband, Sydney Box. The Boxes are also the first of two married couples to win in this category; Earl W. Wallace and Pamela Wallace (Witness) are the others.

In 1996, Joel Coen and Ethan Coen became the only siblings to win in this category (for Fargo).[3] Francis Ford Coppola (Patton, 1970) [4] and Sofia Coppola (Lost in Translation, 2003) are the only father-daughter pair to win.[5]

Preston Sturges was nominated for two different films in the same year (1944): Hail the Conquering Hero and The Miracle of Morgan's Creek. Oliver Stone achieved the same distinction in 1986, for Platoon and Salvador. Maurice Richlin and Stanley Shapiro were nominated in 1959 for both Operation Petticoat and Pillow Talk and won for the latter.

Jordan Peele became the first and only African-American to win in this category for 2017's Get Out.[6]

Bong Joon-ho and Han Jin-won became the first Asian writers to win either Screenplay award, for 2019's Parasite.[7][8]

Winners and nominees

Winners are listed first in colored row, followed by the other nominees.

1940s

Orson Welles co-won the award for Citizen Kane in 1942.
Herman J. Mankiewicz, co-winner of the second award in this category (for Citizen Kane).

1950s

Screenwriter and director Billy Wilder received two awards in this category in collaboration with others—one for Sunset Boulevard and one for The Apartment.
Budd Schulberg won for On the Waterfront (1954)
William Inge earned this award in 1961 for Splendor in the Grass.

1960s

Claude Lelouch won for A Man and a Woman (1966)
William Rose (center right) won for Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1968)
Mel Brooks won in 1969 for 1968's The Producers.
William Goldman, winner in 1969 for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

1970s

Francis Ford Coppola, co-winner of the 1970 award for Patton.
Paddy Chayefsky garnered two solo wins The Hospital (1971) and Network (1976)
The screenwriter of Chinatown, Robert Towne, received this award.
Woody Allen earned three Original Screenplay Oscars, for Annie Hall (along with Marshall Brickman), Hannah and Her Sisters, and Midnight in Paris. He has received sixteen nominations total, the most of any writer.
Steve Tesich received the award in 1979 for Breaking Away.

1980s

Bo Goldman won for Melvin and Howard (1980).
John Patrick Shanley won for Moonstruck (1987).

1990s

Jane Campion won for The Piano in 1993.
Quentin Tarantino won twice for Pulp Fiction (1994), and Django Unchained (2012)
Writer-director pair the Coen brothers won for Fargo (1996)
Ben Affleck, co-winner for Good Will Hunting (1997)
Matt Damon also received the award for Good Will Hunting.

2000s

Pedro Almodóvar won for Talk to Her (2002)
Sofia Coppola won for 2003's Lost in Translation.
Charlie Kaufman won for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
Diablo Cody won for 2007's Juno.
Dustin Lance Black won for 2008's Milk.

2010s

Spike Jonze won for 2013's Her.
Tom McCarthy won for Spotlight (2015)
Kenneth Lonergan won for Manchester by the Sea (2016).
Jordan Peele became the first African-American to win with Get Out (2017)
Bong Joon-ho won for Parasite (2019), co-written with Han Jin-won.

2020s

Multiple wins and nominations

Age superlatives

Diversity of nominees/winners

See also

  • Academy Award for Best Story
  • Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay
  • BAFTA Award for Best Original Screenplay
  • Independent Spirit Award for Best Screenplay
  • Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Screenplay
  • List of Big Five Academy Award winners and nominees
  • Writers Guild of America Award for Best Original Screenplay

Notes

  1. ^ Best Original Screenplay was consolidated in 1948 for a singular Best Screenplay award. The winner was The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, adapted from the novel of same name.
  2. ^ In 1958, Nedrick Young was blacklisted and writing under the pseudonym Nathan E. Douglas. The Academy's Board of Governors voted in 1993 to restore Young's nomination and award.

References

  1. ^ Will this year's Oscar nominations break any records?
  2. ^ Writing Winners: 1957 Oscars
  3. ^ "Sling Blade" and "Fargo" winning Writing Oscars®-official YouTube channel
  4. ^ M*A*S*H and Patton Win Writing Awards: 1970 Oscars
  5. ^ Sofia Coppola winning Best Original Screenplay-Oscars on YouTube
  6. ^ "Get Out" wins Best Original Screenplay-Oscars on YouTube
  7. ^ Oscars: Bong Joon Ho's 'Parasite' Wins South Korea's First Oscar|Hollywood Reporter
  8. ^ Joyce Eng (2020-02-07). "'Parasite's' Bong Joon Ho and Han Jin Won would be the first Asian writers to win an Oscar – GoldDerby". Goldderby.com. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
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