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Welcome to theOscarSite's yearly Oscars® pages
This page covers the Awards for 1945. If you wish, read my disclaimer.
Click here for information on the Awards Ceremony for this year's nominees
Use this link to go to my listing of every feature film and every person ever nominated for an Award!
Use this link to see every film nominated for an Award this year and how it ranks in nominations and Awards!
"People in Hollywood don't like me, and they've never regarded me as a good actress."-- Joan Crawford
Or use this link to view a larger version of the film.
Best Motion PicturePrior to the Awards for 1951, no producer(s) named with nominations
Scientific Or Technical Class I (Statuette) No award given for 1945.
Class II (Plaque) No award given for 1945.
Class III (Citation) Loren L. Ryder & Charles R. Daily (Paramount Studio Sound Department) - For the design, construction and use of the first dial controlled step-by-step sound channel line-up and test circuit.
Michael S. Leshing, Benjamin C. Robinson, Arthur B. Chatelain &
Robert C. Stevens (20th Century-Fox Studio), John G. Capstaff (Eastman Kodak Company) - For the 20th Century-Fox film processing machine.
Special Awards To Walter Wanger - For his six years service as President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Winner presented a Special Plaque.
To Peggy Ann Garner: Outstanding child actress of 1945. Winner presented a Miniature Statuette.
To Daniel J. Bloomberg (Republic Sound Department) - For the building of an outstanding musical scoring auditorium which provides optimum recording conditions and combines all elements of acoustic and engineering design. Winners presented Certificates.
Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award No award given for 1945.
FIRSTS · Bing Crosby was the first actor to be nominated twice for playing the same character.
· Selections of nominated songs were performed at the ceremony for the first time.
· Plaster casts were restored to bronze and gold plate.
ROLE REVERSALS · Paramount overruled Billy Wilder's choice for The Lost Weekend, José Ferrer.
· Bette Davis or Barbara Stanwyck as Mildred Pierce? They were director Michael Curtiz's first and second choices.
SINS OF OMISSION Picture: To Have and Have Not, Leave Her to Heaven, They Were Expendable Actor: Humphrey Bogart - To Have and Have Not Actress: Ingrid Bergman - Spellbound Supporting Actor: Edward G. Robinson - To Have and Have Not Supporting Actress: Lauren Bacall - To Have and Have Not Song: "How Little We Know," "It's a Grand Night for Singing," "The More I See You"
ALWAYS A BRIDESMAID... · Aside from his unsuccessful nomination for The Story of G.I. Joe, Robert Mitchum never got another shot at Oscar®.
· Perennial wisecracking favorite Eve Arden received her only Oscar® nomination for Mildred Pierce.
UNMENTIONABLES · Writer-director Billy Wilder was supposed to be on vacation when he bought 4 novels to read on the long train trip from Hollywood to New York -- one of them a bestseller about a NY alcoholic, entitled The Lost Weekend. After Wilder read it, he started it all over again, taking notes on how he was going to adapt it as his next movie. By the time the train pulled into Grand Central Station, Wilder had an outline and he called his erstwhile collaborator, Charles Brackett, in LA -- it was 6 a.m. there -- and asked him if he'd like to write with him again. Brackett consented immediately and was particularly drawn to the material -- Mrs. Brackett was an alcoholic who rarely left the house.
· Joan Crawford's ex-husband #3, Phillip Terry, played Ray Milland's brother in The Lost Weekend.
· Michael Curtiz, Warner Bros.' star director, didn't want to work with Crawford on Mildred Pierce. "She comes over here with her high-hat airs and her goddamn shoulder pads," the director complained. "Why should I waste my time directing a has-been?"
· Crawford got rid of the shoulder pads and condescended to make a screen test for Curtiz. She got the part.
· At the wrap party, Curtiz silenced the revelers and said, "When I agreed to direct Miss Crawford, I felt she was going to be stubborn as a mule and I made up my mind to be plenty hard on her. Now that I have learned how sweet she is and how professional and talented she is, I take back even thinking those things about her." After the applause, Crawford gave Curtiz a gift -- a specially designed pair of Adrian shoulder pads.
· Humorist Fred Allen wrote to Best Director nominee Alfred Hitchcock that he thought Academy Award winners should be given statuettes in their own likenesses, adding, "Should you win, think how much more distinctive it would be for you to receive a balloon-shaped statuette rather than the skinny model."
· Conspicuously absent from the Awards ceremony was Best Actress nominee Joan Crawford. She had run up a temperature of 104°, and her physician pronounced her too ill to attend. However, the studio sent photographers to her home to wait, just in case she won. Also standing by were her hairdresser and makeup man.
· Ann Blyth showed up at Grauman's in a body cast; she'd recently broken her spine. The other Mildred Pierce nominee, Eve Arden, managed to make it one piece.
· The Awards ceremony was broken into two parts: Before the broadcast portion, Jimmy Stewart hosted the presentation of the first Awards. Then Bob Hope hosted the major Awards, which was broadcast on the radio.
· Daily Variety reported, "There was an explosion of applause in the house," when Charles Boyer announced Joan Crawford's name as Best Actress. According to Crawford's daughter Christina, Joan's "health seemed to improve dramatically," and she got out of bed and prettied herself for the expected onslaught of well-wishers. Her director, Michael Curtiz, accepted her Award at Grauman's Chinese. "Miss Crawford is very, very ill," he explained. As Curtiz walked backstage, Ingrid Bergman ran to him, saying, "Oh, I'm so glad! I'm so glad!"
· Upon arriving at the Writers' Building on the Paramount lot the following day, The Lost Weekend's Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett found that the other occupants of the building had prepared a congratulatory greeting -- dozens of liquor bottles were hanging from every window.
· Riding with his wife in a limousine en route to the post-ceremony celebration, Ray Milland directed the chauffeur to drive to the bridle path on Sunset Blvd. overlooking Hollywood. An MGM talent scout had brought the actor to this spot when he first arrived in Hollywood in 1930 and told him, "It all belongs to Ramon Novarro. He is the reigning romantic star at the moment, so tonight it belongs to him." Milland stood there with his Oscar®, taking in the view of twinkling lights, and finally said, "Mr. Novarro, tonight they belong to me!"
And, of course, here's the place where I have to put the disclaimer: This page was created for my own personal use and was intended for educational and entertainment purposes only. "Oscar" and "Academy Awards" are registered trademarks of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. The "Oscar" Statuette is copyrighted by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. These pages are neither authorized nor endorsed by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. I cannot take responsibility for any errors or omissions on these pages; i.e., if you lose a bet because of something I missed, don't expect me to pay it off!
Sidebar highlights come from several sources, most notably The Academy Awards® - The Complete Unofficial History, by Gail Kinn & Jim Piazza, and Inside Oscar® - The Unofficial History of the Academy Awards®, by Mason Wiley & Damien Bona.
This page is authored by Gary Moody. If you have comments or questions about the page, please e-mail me at gary@theOscarSite.com.