giovedì 29 novembre 2012

Mickey in Technicolor: Walt Disney's 1st Academy Award... SEE THE VIDEO... IT'S A REAL MILESTONE

Mickey in Technicolor
Walt Disney's 1st Academy Award... 
SEE THE VIDEO... IT'S A REAL MILESTONE


 Walt with his best friend Mickey

At the 5th Academy Awards Ceremony in 1932, Walt Disney received his first Academy Award for the "creation of Mickey Mouse" and, for that night he produced a short animated film  especially created to be shown at the Academy Award Banquet, never ment to be seen by the general public. Parade of the Award Nominees, that was the title of the short film, become a real milestone and  Mickey Mouse become one of the most important cartoon characters ever created, and also the first glimpse of Mickey and the gang in Technicolor. The short film is a small parade of the nominees for best actor and actress.




Mickey Mouse - Parade of the Award Nominees - 1932

CLICK THE LINK BELOW TO SEE THE SHORT ANIMATED FILM 


Walt Disney also won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film with "Flowers and Trees" included in the Silly Symphonies.

 Walt Disney with his first Oscar

Flowers and Trees

Walt Disney and his wife Lillian, receiving the Oscar for the creation of Mickey Mouse

Disney @ the Hollywood Walk of Fame

Walt has two stars in two categories, TV and Film, respectively 6747 Hollywood Blvd. and 7021 Hollywood Blvd.
Mickey has one star at 6925 Hollywood Blvd.


 Stay tuned... Uncleoscar

mercoledì 28 novembre 2012

The 5th Academy Award…1932



The 5th Academy Award…1932

Hosted by Conrad Nagel almost eighty years ago, on november 18th 1932 at the Ambassador Hotel, Los Angeles, the 5th Academy Awards night was about to start.
The American drama film Grand Hotel, starring Greta Garbo, Lionel and John Barrymore and Joan Crawford, remained the only Best Picture Academy Award winner in history, to be nominated just in one category.
Wallace Beery (“The Champ”) and Fredric March (“Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde”) shared the recognition for Best Actor.


Wallace Beery and Fredric March, with 1931 Oscar winner Lionel Barrymore and 1932 Academy President Conrad Nagel

The Academy Award for Best Actress went to Helen Hayes for her important role in The Sin of Madelon Claudet, an American drama film adapted from the play The Lullaby by Edward Knoblock.

 Director Frank Borzage, Helen Hayes, and Fredric Marc 


Here is the complete list of 1932’ Nominees and Winners:
Bold indicates Winner

Actor
  • Wallace Beery in "The Champ"
  • Alfred Lunt in "The Guardsman"
  • Fredric March in "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde"
Actress
  • Marie Dressler in "Emma"
  • Lynn Fontanne in "The Guardsman"
  • Helen Hayes in "The Sin of Madelon Claudet"
Art Direction
  • "À Nous la Liberté" Lazare Meerson
  • "Arrowsmith" Richard Day
  • "Transatlantic" Gordon Wiles
Cinematography
  • "Arrowsmith" Ray June
  • "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" Karl Struss
  • "Shanghai Express" Lee Garmes
Directing
  • "Bad Girl" Frank Borzage
  • "The Champ" King Vidor
  • "Shanghai Express" Josef Von Sternberg
Outstanding Production
  • "Arrowsmith" Samuel Goldwyn Productions
  • "Bad Girl" Fox
  • "The Champ" Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
  • "Five Star Final" First National
  • "Grand Hotel" Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
  • "One Hour with You" Paramount Publix
  • "Shanghai Express" Paramount Publix
  • "The Smiling Lieutenant" Paramount Publix
Short Subject (Cartoon)
  • "Flowers and Trees" Walt Disney, Producer
  • "It's Got Me Again" Leon Schlesinger, Producer
  • "Mickey's Orphans" Walt Disney, Producer
Short Subject (Comedy)
  • "The Loud Mouth" Mack Sennett, Producer
  • "The Music Box" Hal Roach, Producer
  • "Scratch-As-Catch-Can" RKO Radio
Short Subject (Novelty)
  • "Screen Souvenirs" Paramount Publix
  • "Swing High" Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
  • "Wrestling Swordfish" Mack Sennett, Producer
Sound Recording
  • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studio Sound Department
  • Paramount Publix Studio Sound Department
  • RKO Radio Studio Sound Department
  • Warner Bros.-First National Studio Sound Department
Writing (Adaptation)
  • "Arrowsmith" Sidney Howard
  • "Bad Girl" Edwin Burke
  • "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" Percy Heath, Samuel Hoffenstein
Writing (Original Story)
  • "The Champ" Frances Marion
  • "Lady and Gent" Grover Jones, William Slavens McNutt
  • "The Star Witness" Lucien Hubbard
  • "What Price Hollywood?" Adela Rogers St. Johns, Jane Murfin

One of the most remarkable Awards given during that night has been the Special Award or Honorary Award to Walt Disney.
The Honorary Award was created to honor actors, producers, directors and other important personalities for their significant achievements and contributions to the motion picture industry. After Warner Bros and Charlie Chaplin, respectively in 1927 and 1928, Walt Disney received the award "for the creation of Mickey Mouse."
That year Disney won for Short Subject (Cartoon) with "Flowers and Trees" , the very first commercially released film to be produced in the full-color three-strip Technicolor process.

Silly Symphony 1932 - Walt Disney

stay tuned... for more Disney...
Uncle Oscar

giovedì 8 novembre 2012

Bram Stoker's Dracula


Bram Stoker's Dracula

Google celebrating Stoker

 
 
Dracula' first edition

Celebrating today Mr Stoker's birthday, november 8 1847.
We remember the great novelist with his most famous gothic novel, Dracula.
In 1922, Murnau, the amazing german director, brought to the big screen the novel without permission naming it Nosferatu.
In 1931 Ted Browning directed Bela Lugosi in the first version of "Dracula", based again on Stoker's novel.
In 1992, 70 years after Browning's movie, Francis Ford Coppola directed "Bram Stoker's Dracula", and the movie had a huge success, also thanks to the amazing cast, including Gary Oldman, Antony Hopkins, Monica Bellucci, Winona Ryder and Keanu Reeves. The movie won three Oscars: 
Best Makeup (Greg Cannom, Michèle Burke, Matthew W. Mungle) , Best Costume Design (Eiko Ishioka) and Best Sound Effects Editing (Tom C. McCarthy, David E. Stone). The movie was nominated for four  Academy Awards, including Best Art Direction/Set Decoration. 

 Gary Oldman as Dracula


The Poster in 1992

mercoledì 7 novembre 2012

Luise Rainer: I'm 102, I won 2 Academy Awards and I'm holding the Oscar for 74 years

Luise Rainer: I'm 102, I won 2 Academy Awards and I'm holding the Oscar for 74 years



Born January 12, 1910, she is almost 103 years old and she is a record woman talking about Oscars!!! Mrs Rainer was born in Germany, and she was discovered by Max Reinhardt, one of the most famous and influent Austrian Directors. While acting in Austria and Germany with Reinhard, sha had been noticed by MGM talent scouts, in 1934/35 she moved to US and she signed a contract with MGM for several years. 
L.B. Mayer chose Luise Rainer to replace actress Myrna Loy for her first American role in "Escapade", starring Academy Award nominated actor William Powell.
The next year Rainer acted in the MGM musical "the Great Ziegfeld".
Rainer played the role of Anna Held, Ziegfeld forst wife, she acted again with William Powell (Florenz Ziegfeld) and also Myrna Loy (Billie Burke, Ziegfeld second wife). The movie had a great success and it was the first musical for which one of its cast members won an Academy Award. 
The movie was nominated in seven categories (Art Direction, Directing, Film Editing and Original Screenplay), like Cimarron in 1931, and won 3 Oscars: Academy Award for Best Picture (MGM Hunt Stromberg), Best Actress Luise Rainer and the Academy Award for Best Dance Direction (Seymour Felix "A Pretty Girl Is Like a Melody").

The Great Ziegfeld




After the famous telephone scene in The Great Ziegfel, Reiner's nickname  has been “The Viennese Teardrop”.


 1937 Oscars: Rainer between Paul Muni (The Story of Louis Pasteur) and Frank Capra ( Mr. Deeds Goes to Town)

One of the most famous quotes of Mrs Rainer after winning two Oscars was :"No one in Europe had never heard of it. I didn`t know what it was, it didn`t mean anything to me."   



The next year Rainer was nominated again and won another Academy Award for her role in "The Good Earth" co-starred with Academy Award winner (in the same year) Paul Muni. Having worked so hard, Rainer succeeded in expressing more than anybody else the poor Chinese girl, and despite few words to say she has been able to transfer a deep realism on the screen.
After acting in few movies more she left Hollywood to go back to Europe in the 40's. She celebrate her Centenary in London in 2010 and  she has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6300, Hollywood Boulevard.
In few months she'll be 103.

martedì 6 novembre 2012

Uncleoscar congratulates President Obama

4 years more... Yes you can again

My personal Skyfall Night

Sooooo Happy!!! Gonna blog soo about it...

Stay Tuned
Uncleoscar

The 4th Academy Award: 1931 a year of records

The 4th Academy Award: 1931 a year of records

 Director Norman Taurog with his nephew Jackie Cooper, both nominated in 1931.
I'd like to start by describing why it has been defined "a year of records"... well let me tell you that it was pretty easier to reach a record since the Oscars were established only three years before... 
That year "Cimarron" was the first Western movie to ever win Best Picture (the second will be "Dances with Wolves" in 1990, directed by Kevin Costner), and also the first movie reaching the highest number of nominations, with a total of 7, winning 3 Awards for Outstanding Production (RKO), Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Art Director.  

 From "Cimarron" (Richard Dix and Irene Dunne)

Furthermore in 1931 actor Jackie Cooper, that fell asleep during the ceremony, born in 1922, at the age of 9, was the youngest actor receiving a nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role, for the movie "Skippy". It was only in 1979 when Justin Henry was nominated for "Kramer vs. Kramer", at the age of 8, that Cooped was surpassed, even if Henry was nominated in another category, Best Actor in a Supporting Role.
Jackie Cooper was the nephew of Director Norman Taurog, who won the Academy Award for Best Director for "Skippy", becoming the youngest person to win the Award. Both Taurog and Cooper have a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, respectively Vine Street 1600 and 1507. 

 Marie Dressler ("Min and Bill") and Lionel Barrymore ("A Free Soul") with their Statuette

In 1931 John Barrymore and Lionel Barrymore, both members of the Barrymore Family (grandfather and grand-uncle of Drew Barrymore) starred in two Nominated Movies, respectively "Svengali" and "A free soul", and Lionel won the Oscar for Best Actor that year.
The award for Best Actress in a Leading Role went to Marie Dressler for "Min and Bill", co-star with Wallace Beery, one of the highest paid actors before Clark Gable. From 1900 Dressler has been one of the most influent actresses; she worked with Chaplin, Mabel Normand and Irving Thalberg.
Dressler was honoured in 1960 with a Star at 1731, Vine Street for her contribution to the motion picture industry. Talking about records, "Cimarron" and "A Free Soul" were the first two movies to receive multiple acting nominations.
"The Dawn patrol", directed by the amazing Howard Hawks and starring Douglas Fairbanks Jr. won the Academy Award for Best Story (future Original Screenplay award). "Tabu, a Story of the South Seas", directed by Academy Award winning Murnau (Sunrise) won the Award for Best Cinematography, thanks to the great job of Floyd Crosby (Cinematography for "High Noon", 1952). Unfortunately Murnau died one week after the premiere of "Tabu" on March 18, 1931.
Morocco, a movie  by Josef von Sternberg, starring Gary Cooper, Marlene Dietrich and Adolph Menjou (nominated for Best Actor the same year for "The Front Page") was nominated for four Academy Awards, but didn't succeed despite great actors and the great and future director of "Der Blaue Engel", also starring Marlene Dietrich.
That year the Ceremony was held at the Biltmore hotel, and hosted by Lawrence Grant, and for that occasion President Herbert Hoover sent Vice President Charles Curtis to attend the ceremony (Source: Oscars.org).

The 4th Academy Awards banquet held at the Sala D’Oro in the Biltmore Hotel 
(Source: Oscars.org)

That year were celebrated also for the first time the Scientific and Technical Award, during a dinner ceremony separated from the annual telecast. Those were Special Award for scientific or technical achievements and conferred by vote of the Academy Board of Governors.

The Biltmore Hotel in the 30's 


 And today... still a milestone 



lunedì 5 novembre 2012

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey




Hey Mr. Bilbo where are you off to? 
I'm going on an adventure...






 Watch the trailer here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ViUNm30ADEA




 Watch the trailer here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ViUNm30ADEA

Academy Awards through the years: The Location

The Location: Academy Awards through the years 


STEP 1
May 16, 1929... the Oscars had just begun...
The Location was the Blossom Room of the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel and for the occasion, a huge banquet was set up for an audience of about 270 people, and a guest ticket of 5$.

The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel 1929

 From that day on the Ceremony has changed ten Locations, choosing Theatres instead of Hotels.

STEP 2
From 1930 to 1943 the Oscars locations have been the Ambassador Hotel and the Biltmore Hotel.

 Cocoanut Grove at the Ambassador

The Ambassador Hotel was famous for the Cocoanut Grove nightclub, unfortunately demolished in 2005. 

STEP 3
 Biltmore Hotel

Biltmore Bowl
"Legend has it that MGM art director Cedric Gibbons, who was in attendance, immediately grabbed a linen Biltmore napkin and sketched the design for the Oscar statue on it. Eight Oscar ceremonies were held in the Biltmore Bowl during the Academy's early years of 1931, 1935–39, and 1941-42. In 1977 Bob Hope hosted the Academy's 50th Anniversary banquet in the same room." (Source: Wikipedia)

STEP 4 & 5


The Grauman's Chinese Theatre
 
From 1944 to 1946 Oscars' new home was Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood Blvd. and afterfrom 1947 to 1948 it has been the Shrine Auditorium.

 Shrine Auditorium

In 1949, and just for that year, the Oscars found a new home which was The Academy Award Theater (the future Kodak theatre).

The Academy award Theatre in 1949, Best Movie Hamlet

STEP 6
The Pantages Theatre:1950–1960

 The Pantages Theatre


STEP 7 & 8
From 1961 to 1968 they moved to the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, and from 1969 to 1987 to the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, Los Angeles Music Center.

 Santa Monica Civic Auditorium 
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion
From 1988 to 2001the Oscars Alternated again between the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion and the Shrine Auditorium.

STEP 9
And at the end from 2002 to 2012 at the Dolby Theatre,(the Kodak Theatre) in 2012 the Kodak changed again name in Hollywood and Highland Center (2012).


 The Kodak Theatre, today's Hollywood and Highland Center


Check out from Google Maps all the Academy Awards Venues


A: The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel
B: The Cocoanut Grove at the Ambassador
C: The Biltmore Hotel
D: The Grauman's Chinese Theatre
E: The Shrine Auditorium
F: The Pantages Theatre
G:The Santa Monica Civic Auditorium
H:The Dorothy Chandler Pavilion 
I: The Kodak Theatre 
 
For more infos:

http://timelines.latimes.com/academy-awards/