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Outstanding Production - First National Sound Recording - Warner Bros.-First National Studio Sound Department, Nathan Levinson, Sound Director
The 7th Academy Awards, honoring the best films for 1934, was held on February 27, 1935, at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles, California. They were hosted by Irvin S. Cobb.
Votes: 24,172. Winner - Outstanding Production Nominated - Best Director for Frank Lloyd Nominated - Best Actor for Clark Gable Nominated - Best Actor for Charles Laughton Nominated - Best Actor for Franchot Tone Nominated - Best Adapted Screenplay for Achmed Abdullah, John L. Balderston, Waldemar Young, Jules Furthman, Talbot Jennings and ...
- Outstanding Production
- Directing
- Assistant Director
- Dance Direction
- Actor
- Actress
- Writing
- Music
- Film Editing
- Cinematography
Alice Adams – RKO Radio Broadway Melody of 1936 – Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Captain Blood – Cosmopolitan David Copperfield – Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer The Informer – RKO Radio Les Miserables – 20th Century The Lives of a Bengal Lancer – Paramount A Midsummer Night’s Dream – Warner Bros. Mutiny on the Bounty – Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Naughty Marietta – Metro-Goldwy...
Captain Blood – Michael Curtiz [1,3] The Informer – John Ford The Lives of a Bengal Lancer – Henry Hathaway Mutiny on the Bounty– Frank Lloyd
David Copperfield – Joseph Newman Les Miserables – Eric Stacey The Lives of a Bengal Lancer – Clem Beauchamp, Paul Wing A Midsummer Night’s Dream – Sherry Shourds [1,3]
Busby Berkeley – “Lullaby of Broadway” and “The Words Are In My Heart” numbers – Gold Diggers of 1935 Bobby Connolly – “Latin from Manhattan” number – Go into Your Dance Bobby Connolly – “Latin from Manhattan” number – Go into Your Dance; “Playboy from Paree” number – Broadway Hostess Dave Gould – “I’ve Got a Feeling You’re Fooling” number – Broadw...
Clark Gable – Mutiny on the Bounty Charles Laughton – Mutiny on the Bounty Victor McLaglen – The Informer Paul Muni – Black Fury [1,3] Franchot Tone – Mutiny on the Bounty
Elisabeth Bergner – Escape Me Never Claudette Colbert – Private Worlds Bette Davis – Dangerous Katharine Hepburn – Alice Adams Miriam Hopkins – Becky Sharp Merle Oberon – The Dark Angel
Broadway Melody of 1936 – Moss Hart G-Men – Gregory Rogers [1,3] The Gay Deception – Don Hartman, Stephen Avery The Scoundrel– Ben Hecht, Charles MacArthur
“Cheek To Cheek” – Top Hat – Music, Lyrics by Irving Berlin “Lovely To Look At” – Roberta – Music by Jerome Kern; Lyrics by Dorothy Fields, Jimmy McHugh “Lullaby Of Broadway” – Gold Diggers of 1935– Music by Harry Warren; Lyrics by Al Dubin
David Copperfield – Robert J. Kern The Informer – George Hively Les Miserables – Barbara McLean The Lives of a Bengal Lancer – Ellsworth Hoagland A Midsummer Night’s Dream – Ralph Dawson Mutiny on the Bounty– Margaret Booth
Barbary Coast – Ray June The Crusades – Victor Milner Les Miserables – Gregg Toland A Midsummer Night’s Dream– Hal Mohr
The 7th Academy Awards | 1935. Biltmore Bowl of the Biltmore Hotel. Wednesday, February 27, 1935. ... Outstanding Production - Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Actress - Norma ...
director Mark Sandrich's Top Hat (with four nominations and no wins), one of the best Astaire/Rogers musicals ever made. director W. S. Van Dyke's Naughty Marietta (with two nominations and one win - Sound Recording), the first film matching up Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy.
7th Academy Awards Outstanding Production 1935