Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

List of posthumous Academy Award winners and nominees

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Individuals who were nominated or won an Academy Award posthumously
icon
This listneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources in this list. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "List of posthumous Academy Award winners and nominees" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(January 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Throughout the history of theAcademy Awards, several individuals have died prior to the ceremony and were posthumously nominated or have won the award following their deaths. As of2025, 64 individuals have received posthumous nominations with 79 nominations total, in competitive categories (with 3 people being nominated posthumously 3 times and 9 people twice), 29 individuals have won posthumously (William A. Horning winning twice, in 1959 and 1960), including 14 individuals in honorary categories. This list includesposthumous winners and nominees of the Academy's competitive awards, as well as posthumous recipients of its honorary awards.

Competitive awards

[edit]
NameDate of deathCeremonyFilm yearAcademy AwardFilmWinnerNotes
Marit AllenNovember 26, 200780th2007Best Costume DesignLa Vie en Rose
Howard AshmanMarch 14, 199164th1991Best Music (Song)Beauty and the BeastWon[1]
65th1992Aladdin
Joseph H. AugustSeptember 25, 194721st1948Best CinematographyPortrait of Jennie
Robert Alan AurthurNovember 20, 197852nd1979Best PictureAll That Jazz
Best Original Screenplay
Chadwick BosemanAugust 28, 202093rd2020Best ActorMa Rainey's Black Bottom[2]
Mario Cecchi GoriNovember 5, 199368th1995Best PictureIl Postino
Frank ChurchillMay 14, 194215th1942Best Music (Scoring)Bambi
Best Music (Song)
Allen DaveyMarch 5, 194618th1945Best CinematographyA Song to Remember
James DeanSeptember 30, 195528th1955Best ActorEast of Eden
29th1956Giant
Walt DisneyDecember 15, 196641st1968Best Short Film (Animated)Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery DayWon
Gail DolginOctober 7, 201084th2011Best Documentary (Short Subject)The Barber of Birmingham: Foot Soldier of the Civil Rights Movement
Gerald DuffyJune 25, 192801st1927 /1928Best Title WritingThe Private Life of Helen of Troy
Jeanne EagelsOctober 3, 192902nd1928 /1929Best ActressThe Letter
William FerrariSeptember 10, 196236th1963Best Art DirectionHow the West Was Won
Peter FinchJanuary 14, 197749th1976Best ActorNetworkWon[3]
Gil FriesenDecember 13, 201286th2013Best Documentary Feature20 Feet from StardomWon[4]
George GershwinJuly 11, 193710th1937Best Music (Song)Shall We Dance
Stuart GilmoreNovember 19, 197144th1971Best Film EditingThe Andromeda Strain
Thomas C. GoodwinDecember 11, 199265th1992Best Documentary (Short Subject)Educating PeterWon
Conrad HallJanuary 4, 200375th2002Best CinematographyRoad to PerditionWon[5]
David HallJuly 23, 196438th1965Best Art DirectionThe Greatest Story Ever Told
Dale HennesyJuly 20, 198155th1982Best Art DirectionAnnie
Bernard HerrmannDecember 24, 197549th1976Best Music (Scoring)Obsession
Taxi Driver
Gordon HollingsheadJuly 8, 195225th1952Academy Award for Best Short Subject (One-Reel)Desert Killer
Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Two-Reel)Thar She Blows!
William A. HorningMarch 2, 195931st1958Best Art DirectionGigiWon
32nd1959Ben-HurWon
North by Northwest
Sidney HowardAugust 23, 193912th1939Best Adapted ScreenplayGone with the WindWon
John HubleyFebruary 21, 197750th1977Best Short Film (Animated)A Doonesbury Special
Eiko IshiokaJanuary 21, 201285th2012Best Costume DesignMirror Mirror
Bert KalmarSeptember 18, 194724th1951Best Music (Song)The Strip
Jerome KernNovember 11, 194518th1945Best Music (Scoring)Can't Help Singing
Best Music (Song)
19th1946Centennial Summer
William KiernanNovember 19, 197346th1973Best Art DirectionThe Way We Were
Frederic KnudtsonFebruary 14, 196436th1963Best Film EditingIt's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World[6]
Albert LamorisseJune 2, 197051st1978Best Documentary (Feature)The Lovers' Wind
Heath LedgerJanuary 22, 200881st2008Best Supporting ActorThe Dark KnightWon[7]
Boris LevenOctober 11, 198659th1986Best Art DirectionThe Color of Money
Walt MartinJuly 24, 201487th2014Best Sound MixingAmerican Sniper[8]
William C. MellorApril 30, 196338th1965Best CinematographyThe Greatest Story Ever Told
Anthony MinghellaMarch 18, 200881st2008Best PictureThe Reader
James V. MonacoOctober 16, 194519th1946Best Music (Song)The Dolly Sisters
Alfred NewmanFebruary 17, 197043rd1970Best Music (Scoring)Airport
Joseph O'BrienMarch 30, 194518th1945Best Short Film (Live Action)Your National Gallery
Bridget O'ConnorSeptember 22, 201084th2011Best Adapted ScreenplayTinker Tailor Soldier Spy
Eric OrbomMay 23, 195933rd1960Best Art DirectionSpartacusWon
Arnold PerlDecember 11, 197145th1972Best Documentary (Feature)Malcolm X
Sydney PollackMay 26, 200881st2008Best PictureThe Reader
Raymond RaschDecember 23, 196445th1972Best Music (Scoring)LimelightWon[9]
Gretchen RauMarch 29, 200679th2006Best Art DirectionThe Good Shepherd
Ralph RichardsonOctober 10, 198357th1984Best Supporting ActorGreystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes
Richard H. RiedelMarch 18, 196032nd1959Best Art DirectionPillow Talk
Robbie RobertsonAugust 9, 202396th2023Best Original ScoreKillers of the Flower Moon
Larry RussellFebruary 14, 195445th1972Best Music (Scoring)LimelightWon[9]
Tess SlesingerFebruary 21, 194518th1945Best Adapted ScreenplayA Tree Grows in Brooklyn
Carol SobieskiNovember 4, 199064th1991Best Adapted ScreenplayFried Green Tomatoes
Adam SomnerNovember 27, 202498th2025Best PictureOne Battle After AnotherPending
Gile SteeleJanuary 16, 195224th1951Best Costume DesignKind Lady
The Great Caruso
25th1952The Merry Widow
Harry StradlingFebruary 14, 197042nd1969Best CinematographyHello, Dolly!
Harry W. TetrickMarch 17, 197749th1976Best SoundKing Kong
Rocky
Spencer TracyJune 10, 196740th1967Best ActorGuess Who's Coming to Dinner
Massimo TroisiJune 4, 199468th1995Best ActorIl Postino
Best Adapted Screenplay
Lamar TrottiAugust 28, 195227th1954Best WritingThere's No Business Like Show Business
Geoffrey UnsworthOctober 28, 197853rd1980Best CinematographyTessWon[10]
August WilsonOctober 2, 200589th2016Best Adapted ScreenplayFences
Robert L. WolfeFebruary 28, 198154th1981Best Film EditingOn Golden Pond
Victor YoungNovember 10, 195629th1956Best Music (Scoring)Around the World in 80 DaysWon
Best Music (Song)Written on the Wind
Sam ZimbalistNovember 4, 195832nd1959Best PictureBen-HurWon[11]

Honorary awards

[edit]
NameDate of deathCeremonyFilm yearAcademy AwardNotes
Robert BenjaminOctober 22, 197952nd1979Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award
Les BowieJanuary 27, 197951st1978Special Achievement Award (Visual Effects) forSuperman[12]
Theo BrownApril 30, 200282nd2009Scientific and Technical Award (Scientific and Engineering Award)[13]
Douglas FairbanksDecember 12, 193912th1939Academy Honorary Award
Chuck GasparJanuary 15, 200986th2013Scientific or Technical Award (Technical Achievement Award)[14]
Audrey HepburnJanuary 20, 199365th1992Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award[15]
Werner HopfNovember 28, 195332nd1959Scientific and Technical Award (Class II)[16]
Quincy JonesNovember 3, 202497th2024Academy Honorary Award[17]
George KraemerJanuary 18, 199365th1992Scientific and Technical Award (Scientific and Engineering Award)
John D. LowryJanuary 21, 201284th2011Scientific and Technical Award (Scientific and Engineering Award)[18]
Charles MillerN/A13th1940Scientific or Technical Award (Class I)
Jürgen NoffkeNovember 7, 201184th2011Scientific and Technical Award (Scientific and Engineering Award)[19]
Edward G. RobinsonJanuary 26, 197345th1972Academy Honorary Award[20]
Louis StankiewiczN/A54th1981Scientific or Technical Award (Technical Achievement Award)
Geoffrey H. WilliamsonJanuary 20, 199365th1992Scientific and Technical Award (Scientific and Engineering Award)

Excluded: retrospective awards

[edit]

The list does not include people who were retrospectively honoured with an Academy Award and were dead at the time the Academy made the decision to make the retrospective award. For example: in 1993, seventeen years after his death,Dalton Trumbo was retrospectively awarded the 1953 Oscar forAcademy Award for Best Story forRoman Holiday. It had been previously awarded toIan McLellan Hunter. However, Hunter was merely a front for Trumbo, because Trumbo was on theHollywood blacklist at the time and it was impossible for his name to appear in either the film's credits or the Academy Award nomination (though it was not generally known that he was the real screenwriter). Trumbo did not die until 1976, and under normal circumstances he would have received this award in person in 1953; therefore the Academy does not consider this a posthumous award but a correction of the record.

Similarly, the Oscar for Best Screenplay (Adaptation) forThe Bridge on the River Kwai was originally awarded toPierre Boulle, but only in 1984 corrected to honor the actual screenwriters,Carl Foreman andMichael Wilson, who were blacklisted at the time and could only work on the film in secret. By the time this correction was made, both Foreman and Wilson had died, but the award does not qualify for an entry in the above list.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Ashman's partner, Bill Lauch, accepted the award on his behalf. Ashman had a total of three nominations in this category this year, for "Belle", "Be Our Guest", and "Beauty and the Beast", which he won the award for.
  2. ^Boseman is the first black actor to posthumously receive a nomination.
  3. ^Finch became the first posthumous winner in an acting category. His widow Eletha and screenwriterPaddy Chayefsky accepted the award on his behalf.
  4. ^WithMorgan Neville andCaitrin Rogers
  5. ^Conrad Hall's sonConrad W. Hall accepted the award on his behalf.
  6. ^Frederic Knudtson
  7. ^Ledger died after completing his scenes inThe Dark Knight but before the film had been completed, and a year before the nominations were announced. His father, mother and sister accepted the award on his behalf.
  8. ^Walt Martin withJohn Reitz andGregg Rudloff
  9. ^abLimelight, a1952 film, won its award in 1972 because theblacklisting ofCharlie Chaplin prevented it from being shown in Los Angeles until then. (TheAcademy subsequently changed its rules to prevent films more than two years old from receiving awards.)
  10. ^Unsworth died during the shooting ofTess, and the cinematography was completed byGhislain Cloquet. Unsworth and Cloquet were jointly nominated, successfully, for Best Cinematography.
  11. ^Zimbalist died during the filming ofBen-Hur. His widow Mary Zimbalist accepted the award on his behalf.
  12. ^"Les Bowie, Colin Chilvers, Denys Coop, Roy Field, Derek Meddings, Zoran Perisic Academy Awards Acceptance Speech".oscars.org.Margaret Herrick Library -Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences.
  13. ^Theo Brown
  14. ^Chuck GasparArchived 2014-04-26 atarchive.today
  15. ^Hepburn died eight days after the Academy voted to confer this award, but two months before the 65th Academy Awards ceremony. Her son Sean Hepburn Ferrer accepted the award on her behalf.
  16. ^Werner Hopf
  17. ^Jones died four months after the Academy voted to confer this award, but two weeks before the Governors Awards ceremony on November 17.
  18. ^John D. Lowry
  19. ^Dr. Jürgen Noffke
  20. ^Robinson died after the Academy voted to confer this award, but two months before the 45th Academy Awards ceremony. His widow Jane accepted the award on his behalf.

External links

[edit]
Combined major
Academy Awards
Acting
Directing
Film
Countries of
the nominees
Nominees demographics
Other
Combined major
awards
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_posthumous_Academy_Award_winners_and_nominees&oldid=1335280961"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp