Listed below are the Academy Award winners for the year 1967 (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.
In the Heat of the Night, Mirisch Corporation Production; United Artists.
Walter Mirisch, Producer.
Rod Steiger in
In the Heat of the Night, Mirisch Corporation Production; United Artists.
George Kennedy in
Cool Hand Luke, Jalem Production; Warner Bros.-Seven Arts.
Estelle Parsons in
Bonnie and Clyde, Tatira-Hiller Production; Warner Bros.-Seven Arts.
The Graduate, Mike Nichols-Lawrence Turman Production; Embassy Pictures Corporation.
Mike Nichols.
Camelot, Warner Bros.-Seven Arts. Art direction by
John Truscott and
Edward Carrere; set decoration by
John W. Brown.
Bonnie and Clyde, Tatira-Hiller Production; Warner Bros.-Seven Arts.
Burnett Guffey.
Camelot, Warner Bros.-Seven Arts.
John Truscott.
(Feature)
The Anderson Platoon, French Broadcasting System. (France)
Pierre Schoendoerffer, Producer.
(Short Subject)
The Redwoods, King Screen Productions.
Mark Harris and
Trevor Greenwood, Producers.
In the Heat of the Night, Mirisch Corporation Production; United Artists.
Hal Ashby.
Closely Watched Trains, Barrandov Film Studios Production. (Czechoslovakia)
(Original Music Score)
Thoroughly Modern Millie, Ross Hunter-Universal Production; Universal.
Elmer Bernstein.
(Scoring of Music—adaptation or treatment)
Camelot, Warner Bros.-Seven Arts.
Alfred Newman and
Ken Darby.
(Song)
Talk to the Animals from
Doctor Dolittle, Apjac Productions; 20th Century-Fox. Music and lyrics by
Leslie Bricusse.
(Cartoons)
The Box, Murakami-Wolf Films; Brandon Films, Inc.
Fred Wolf, Producer.
(Live Action)
A Place to Stand, T.D.F. Production for The Ontario Department of Economics and Development; Columbia. (Canada)
Christopher Chapman, Producer.
The Dirty Dozen, MKH Productions, Ltd.; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. (UK, USA)
John Poyner.
Doctor Dolittle, Apjac Productions; 20th Century-Fox.
L. B. Abbott.
(Screenplay—based on material from another medium)
In the Heat of the Night, Mirisch Corporation Production; United Artists.
Stirling Silliphant.
(Story and Screenplay—written directly for the screen)

To
Arthur Freed for distinguished service to the Academy and the production of six top-rated Awards telecasts. [ [Statuette]]
(Class III)

To the
Electro-Optical Division of Kollmorgen Corporation for the design and development of a series of Motion Picture Projection Lenses.

To
Panavision, Incorporated, for a Variable Speed Motor for Motion Picture Cameras.

To
Fred R. Wilson of the Samuel Goldwyn Studio Sound Department for an Audio Level Clamper.

To
Waldon O. Watson and the
Universal City Studio Sound Department for new concepts in the design of a Music Scoring Stage.