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Each year actors and actresses compete for the major awards to recognize excellence in the field of acting. In the history of cinema and film awards, 10 actors and 11 actresses have won the five awards generally considered to be the most important annual awards given for the big screen (the Academy Award, the BAFTA Award, the Golden Globe Award, the Screen Actors Guild Award and the Critics' Choice Award).[1] Daniel Day-Lewis is the only person to achieve this feat twice.
Criteria
[edit]The actor must have been nominated by all five organisations for one performance in one movie. The actor must then win all five of them competitively. A win is still counted if different organisations consider it to be a leading or supporting role, as long as the actor still wins the award.
Awards
[edit]For the purposes of this page, only the main award in each category is considered the award. The exception to this is obviously the Golden Globe with its division between "Musical or Comedy" and "Drama". Awards that do not count include the Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Cast for the purposes of a SAG win, nor the BAFTA Rising Star Award for the purposes of the BAFTA. For the Critics' Choice Award, only the Best Actor/Actress/Supporting Actor/Supporting Actress categories are considered, not the periphery awards such as "Best Actor in an Action Movie" or "Best Actress in a Comedy".
Lead Actor
[edit]As of the end of 2013, six men have won all five awards in the lead actor category (with Daniel Day-Lewis doing so twice) and a further five winning four awards.
In the following list, the victories are written in bold with gold background; others listed are the winners in the categories they did not win.
Trivia
- Adrien Brody and Denzel Washington are the only actors to win the Lead Actor Oscar without winning a single preceeding award.
- Since the introduction of the SAG and CCA in 1994 and 1995 respectively, only in the year 2000 has no man won more than two of the five acting awards.
Lead Actress
[edit]As of the end of 2013, six women have won all five awards in the lead actress category and a further three winning four awards.
In the following list, the victories are written in bold with gold background; others listed are the winners in the categories they did not win.
Supporting Actor
[edit]As of the end of 2013, four men have won all five awards in the supporting actor category and a further four winning four awards.
In the following list, the victories are written in bold with gold background; others listed are the winners in the categories they did not win.
Supporting Actress
[edit]As of the end of 2013, five women have won all five awards in the supporting actor category and a further four winning four awards.
In the following list, the victories are written in bold with gold background; others listed are the winners in the categories they did not win.
- Dianne Wiest won the Oscar, SAG and Golden Globe for Bullets Over Broadway, losing the BAFTA to Kristin Scott Thomas. The CCA didn't exist.
- Mira Sorvino won the Golden Globe, CCA and Oscar for The Mighty Aphrodite, losing the BAFTA and SAG to Kate Winslet for Sense and Sensibility.
- Kim Basinger won the SAG, Golden Globe and Oscar for LA Confidential, losing the BAFTA to Sigourney Weaver and the CCA to Joan Cusack.
- Cate Blanchett won the Oscar, BAFTA and SAG for The Aviator, losing the CCA to Virginia Madsen and the Golden Globe to Natalie Portman in Closer.
- Rachel Weisz won the Oscar, Golden Globe and SAG for The Constant Gardner, losing the CCA to Amy Adams (Junebug) and Michelle Williams (Brokeback Mountain), and the BAFTA to Thandie Newton for Crash.
- Lupita Nyong'o won the Oscar, SAG and CCA for 12 Years A Slave, losing the Golden Globe and BAFTA to Jennifer Lawrence for American Hustle.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Jack Nicholson was not nominated for the BAFTA.
- ^ a b Neither Matthew McConaughey nor Jared Leto were nominated for BAFTAs.
- ^ Roberto Benigni was not nominated for a Golden Globe in either category.
- ^ Daniel Day-Lewis' win at the Critics' Choice Awards was a tie with Jack Nicholson for About Schmidt.
- ^ While Kate Winslet won the Academy and BAFTA Awards for Best Leading Actress, she won the Golden Globe, Screen Actors Guild and Critics' Choice Awards for Best Supporting Actress.
- ^ Charlize Theron competed in the 2004 BAFTA Awards because Monster was released that year in the UK.
- ^ Hilary Swank was not nominated for the BAFTA.
- ^ a b Sandra Bullock's win at the Critics' Choice Awards was a tie with Meryl Streep for Julie & Julia.
- ^ Sandra Bullock was not nominated for the BAFTA.
- ^ While Benicio del Toro won the Academy, BAFTA and Golden Globe Awards for Best Supporting Actor, he won the Screen Actors Guild Award in for Best Leading Actor.
- ^ Angelina Jolie was not nominated for the BAFTA.
- ^ Jennifer Connelly was nominated for Best Leading Actress at the 2001 Screen Actors Guild Awards, which was won by Halle Berry for Monster's Ball.
- ^ Catherine Zeta-Jones was nominated for Golden Globe in the Lead Actress - Musical or Comedy category, which was won by her co-star Renee Zellwegger.
- ^ Melissa Leo was not nominated for the BAFTA.
References
[edit]- ^ "Film awards season's main events". BBC News. 15 January 2007. Retrieved 5 March 2011.