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  1. Best Picture - Walter Wanger, Producer Sound - 20th Century-Fox Studio Sound Department, James P. Corcoran, Sound Director; and Todd-AO Sound Department, Fred Hynes, Sound Director Come Blow Your Horn

  2. Feb 5, 2014 · BEST PICTURE. Becket – Hal B. Wallis. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb – Stanley Kubrick. Mary Poppins – Walt Disney, Bill Walsh. My Fair Lady – Jack L. Warner. Zorba the Greek – Michael Cacoyannis.

  3. The 37th Academy Awards were held on April 5, 1965, to honor film achievements of 1964. The ceremony was produced by MGM 's Joe Pasternak and hosted, for the 14th time, by Bob Hope. The Best Picture winner, George Cukor's My Fair Lady, was an adaptation of a 1956 stage musical of the same name, which was itself based on George Bernard Shaw 's ...

  4. The 36th Academy Awards, honoring the best in film for 1963, were held on April 13, 1964, hosted by Jack Lemmon at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in Santa Monica, California. This ceremony introduced the category for Best Sound Effects, with It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World being the first film to win the award.

    Best Picture
    Best Director
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    Tom Jones – John Osborne based on the ...
  5. The Best Picture winner in 1964, Warner Bros.' and director George Cukor's My Fair Lady, was about the transformative training of a rough-speaking flower girl into a lady. The enchanting musical had run for many years on the stage (in both NYC and London).

  6. Sep 9, 2022 · The 1964 Academy Awards were presented April 5, 1965 at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. Best Picture. Becket, Hal B. Wallis, producer (Paramount) Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, Stanley Kubrick, producer (Columbia)

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  8. Films with the most nominations: All About Eve (1950), Titanic (1997), and La La Land (2016) each earned 14 Academy Award nominations. Film with the highest clean sweep: The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) won all 11 Academy Awards from its 11 nominations.

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