Listed below are the Academy Award winners for the year 1955 (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.
Marty, Hecht and Lancaster’s Steven Productions; United Artists.
Harold Hecht, Producer.
Ernest Borgnine in
Marty, Hecht and Lancaster’s Steven Productions; United Artists.
Anna Magnani in
The Rose Tattoo, Hal Wallis Productions; Paramount.
Jack Lemmon in
Mister Roberts, Orange Production; Warner Bros.
Marty, Hecht and Lancaster’s Steven Productions; United Artists.
Delbert Mann.
(Black-and-White)
The Rose Tattoo, Hal Wallis Productions; Paramount. Art direction by
Hal Pereira and
Tambi Larsen; set decoration by
Sam Comer and
Arthur Krams.
(Color)
Picnic, Columbia. Art direction by
William Flannery and
Jo Mielziner; set decoration by
Robert Priestley.
(Black-and-White)
The Rose Tattoo, Hal Wallis Productions; Paramount.
James Wong Howe.
(Color)
(Black-and-White)
(Color)
(Feature)
Helen Keller in Her Story, Nancy Hamilton Presentation.
Nancy Hamilton, Producer.
(Short Subject)
Men Against the Arctic, Walt Disney Productions; Buena Vista. [People and Places Series]
Walt Disney, Producer.
(Music Score of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture)
(Scoring of a Musical Picture)
Oklahoma!, Rodgers & Hammerstein Pictures, Inc.; Magna Theatre Corporation.
Robert Russell Bennett,
Jay Blackton and
Adolph Deutsch.
(Song)
(Cartoons)
Speedy Gonzales, Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc.; Warner Bros. [Merrie Melodies Series]
Edward Selzer, Producer.
(One-reel)
Survival City, 20th Century-Fox. [Movietone CinemaScope Series]
Edmund Reek, Producer.
(Two-reel)
The Face of Lincoln, University of Southern California Presentation; Cavalcade Pictures, Inc.
Wilbur T. Blume, Producer.
Oklahoma!, Rodgers & Hammerstein Pictures, Inc.; Magna Theatre Corporation.
Todd-AO Sound Department,
Fred Hynes, Sound Director.
The Bridges at Toko-Ri, Perlberg-Seaton Production; Paramount.
(Motion Picture Story)
(Screenplay)
Marty, Hecht and Lancaster’s Steven Productions; United Artists.
Paddy Chayefsky.
(Story and Screenplay)
(Foreign Language Film)

To
Samurai, the Legend of Musashi. (Japan) Best Foreign Language Film first released in the United States during 1955. [ [Statuette]]
(Class I)

To the
National Carbon Co. for the development and production of a high efficiency yellow flame carbon for motion picture photography.
(Class II)

To the
Eastman Kodak Co. for Eastman Tri-X Panchromatic Negative Film.

To
Farciot Edouart,
Hal Corl and the
Paramount Studio Transparency Department for the engineering and development of a double-frame, triple-head background projector.
(Class III)

To
20th Century-Fox Studio and the
Bausch & Lomb Co. for the new combination lenses for CinemaScope Photography.

To
Walter Jolley,
Maurice Larson, and
R. H. Spies of 20th Century-Fox Studio for a spraying process which creates simulated metallic surfaces.

To
Steve Krilanovich for an improved camera dolly incorporating multi-directional steering.

To
Dave Anderson of 20th Century-Fox Studio for an improved spotlight capable of maintaining a fixed circle of light at constant intensity over varied distances.

To
Loren L. Ryder,
Charles West,
Henry Fracker, and the
Paramount Studios for a projection film index to establish proper framing for various aspect ratios.

To
Farciot Edouart,
Hal Corl and the
Paramount Studio Transparency Department for an improved dual stereopticon background projector.