1963 (36th Annual Awards)
Winners Only
Listed below are the Academy Award winners for the year 1963 (non-winning nominations have been omitted from this list). Click on the name of a film, person or song in the list to display more information about that film, person or song Or, click on a year in the column on the right to display the winners from that year.
Best Picture
Tom Jones, Woodfall Production; United Artists-Lopert Pictures. (UK) Tony Richardson, Producer.
Best Actor
Sidney Poitier in Lilies of the Field, Rainbow Productions; United Artists.
Best Actress
Patricia Neal in Hud, Salem-Dover Production; Paramount.
Actor in a Supporting Role
Melvyn Douglas in Hud, Salem-Dover Production; Paramount.
Actress in a Supporting Role
Margaret Rutherford in The V.I.P.s, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. (UK)
Directing
Tom Jones, Woodfall Production; United Artists-Lopert Pictures. (UK) Tony Richardson.
Art Direction-Set Decoration
(Black-and-White)
America America, Athena Enterprises Production; Warner Bros. Gene Callahan.
(Color)
Cleopatra, 20th Century-Fox, Ltd.-MCL Films S.A.-WALWA Films S.A. Production; 20th Century-Fox. (Switzerland, UK, USA) Art direction by John DeCuir, Jack Martin Smith, Hilyard Brown, Herman Blumenthal, Elven Webb, Maurice Pelling and Boris Juraga; set decoration by Walter M. Scott, Paul S. Fox and Ray Moyer.
Cinematography
(Black-and-White)
Hud, Salem-Dover Production; Paramount. James Wong Howe.
(Color)
Cleopatra, 20th Century-Fox, Ltd.-MCL Films S.A.-WALWA Films S.A. Production; 20th Century-Fox. (Switzerland, UK, USA) Leon Shamroy.
Costume Design
(Black-and-White)
Federico Fellini’s 8-1/2, Cineriz Production; Embassy Pictures Corporation. (Italy, France) Piero Gherardi.
(Color)
Cleopatra, 20th Century-Fox, Ltd.-MCL Films S.A.-WALWA Films S.A. Production; 20th Century-Fox. (Switzerland, UK, USA) Irene Sharaff, Vittorio Nino Novarese and Renie.
Documentary
(Feature)
Robert Frost: A Lover’s Quarrel with the World, WGBH Educational Foundation; Holt, Reinhart and Winston, Inc. Robert Hughes, Producer.
(Short Subject)
Chagall, Auerbach Film Enterprises, Ltd.-Flag Films; Union Films. (France) Simon Schiffrin, Producer.
Film Editing
How the West Was Won, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer & Cinerama; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Harold F. Kress.
Foreign Language Film
Federico Fellini’s 8-1/2, Cineriz Production; Embassy Pictures Corporation. (Italy, France)
Music
(Music Score—substantially original)
Tom Jones, Woodfall Production; United Artists-Lopert Pictures. (UK) John Addison.
(Scoring of Music—adaptation or treatment)
Irma La Douce, Mirisch-Phalanx Production; United Artists. Andre Previn.
(Song)
Call Me Irresponsible from Papa’s Delicate Condition, Amro Productions; Paramount. Music by James Van Heusen; lyrics by Sammy Cahn.
Short Subjects
(Cartoons)
The Critic, Pintoff-Crossbow Productions; Columbia. Ernest Pintoff, Producer.
(Live Action)
An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge, Films Du Centaure-Filmartic; Cappagariff-Janus Films. (France) Paul de Roubaix and Marcel Ichac, Producers.
Sound
How the West Was Won, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer & Cinerama; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studio Sound Department, Franklin E. Milton, Sound Director.
Sound Effects
It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, Casey Production; United Artists. Walter G. Elliott.
Special Effects
Cleopatra, 20th Century-Fox, Ltd.-MCL Films S.A.-WALWA Films S.A. Production; 20th Century-Fox. (Switzerland, UK, USA) Emil Kosa, Jr.
Writing
(Screenplay—based on material from another medium)
Tom Jones, Woodfall Production; United Artists-Lopert Pictures. (UK) John Osborne.
(Story and Screenplay—written directly for the screen)
How the West Was Won, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer & Cinerama; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. James R. Webb.
Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award
Scientific or Technical Award
(Class III)
To Douglas G. Shearer and A. Arnold Gillespie of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios for the engineering of an improved Background Process Projection System.