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American actress Winona Ryder has been recognized with multiple awards and nominations for her work in film and television. At age 23, she has been nominated for Best Supporting Actress at the 66th Academy Awards for her performance's in The Age of Innocence—making her one of the youngest artists in the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to be nominated.
McDormand is the first woman to win for acting (Best Actress for Fargo) and producing. McDormand is the first person to win for acting (Best Actress for Nomadland) and producing in the same year. Shared with Peter Spears and Dan Janvey. Ceán Chaffin Mank: Nominated Shared with Eric Roth and Douglas Urbanski. Christina Oh: Minari: Nominated ...
For her performances on television, Winslet won two Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited Series or Movie for her portrayals as a self-sacrificing mother in the HBO limited drama series Mildred Pierce (2011), and a uncompromising detective sergeant in the HBO limited crime series Mare of Easttown (2021).
7:24 p.m. Well, Glenn, you called it. Despite much anticipation for “Killers of the Flower Moon’s” Lily Gladstone becoming the first Native American to win an Oscar, a wildly emotional Emma ...
Cate Blanchett, star of the Oscar-nominated film “Tár," is poised to win her third best actress award at the 95th Academy Awards on March 12. Throughout her decades-long career, the Australian ...
EGOT, an acronym for the Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony Awards, is the designation given to people who have won all four of the major performing art awards in the United States of America. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Respectively, these awards honor outstanding achievements in television , audio recording , film , and Broadway theatre . [ 3 ]
In response to her astounding 20th Oscar nomination -- Best Actress for Florence Foster Jenkins -- the 67-year-old Hollywood icon was at a loss for words.
Only people to win both a Nobel Prize and an Oscar. George Bernard Shaw: Won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1925, and an Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay for the film Pygmalion in 1938; Bob Dylan: Won an Oscar for Best Original Song for the song "Things Have Changed" from Wonder Boys in 2000, and the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2016