2nd Academy Awards
The 2nd Academy Awards ceremony, presented by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS), honored the best films released between August 1, 1928, and July 31, 1929. They were held on April 3, 1930, at an awards banquet in the Cocoanut Grove of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles.
2nd Academy Awards | |
---|---|
Date | April 3, 1930 |
Site | Ambassador Hotel, Los Angeles, California |
Hosted by | William C. DeMille |
Highlights | |
Best Picture | The Broadway Melody |
Most awards | Seven films each received one award. No film received more than one award at this ceremony. |
Most nominations | In Old Arizona and The Patriot (5) |
Radio coverage began with this ceremony, with a local broadcast by KNX, Los Angeles.[1]
As the ceremony was being held more than eight months after the end of the eligibility period, it was decided that the 3rd Academy Awards would be held in November 1930, so as to bring the awards ceremony closer to the relevant time period. As a result, 1930 was the only calendar year in which two Academy Awards ceremonies were held.
The second ceremony included a number of changes over the first. Most importantly, it was the first presentation for which the winners were not announced in advance. Additionally, the number of award categories was reduced from twelve to seven.
The 2nd Academy Awards is unique in being the only occasion where there were no official nominees. Subsequent research by AMPAS has resulted in a list of unofficial or de facto nominees, based on records of which films were evaluated by the judges.
Mary Pickford, a founding member of AMPAS and the wife of its first president, lobbied to be considered for the Best Actress award, inviting the judges over for tea at her home,[2] while other actresses who were considered for the same award were not made aware of their consideration.[3]
The Divine Lady is the only film to ever win the Best Director award without receiving a Best Picture nomination, excluding the first year in which there was an award for Best Director (Comedy Picture).
This is the only year in which no film won more than one Oscar. The Broadway Melody became the second of seven films (Wings, Grand Hotel, Cavalcade, Hamlet, The Sound of Music, and Titanic are the others) to win Best Picture without a writing nomination, and the first of three to win Best Picture and nothing else (Grand Hotel and Mutiny on the Bounty are the others).
Academy Awards of Merit
Winners are listed first, highlighted in boldface and indicated with a double-dagger (
Honorary awards
No Honorary Academy Awards – then called Special Awards – were conferred at the 2nd Academy Awards ceremony.
Multiple nominations and awards
The following 9 films received multiple nominations:
|
No film received multiple awards at this ceremony. This is the only year to date in which no movie won more than one Oscar.
|
- Most Awards:[upper-alpha 1] One Award – The Bridge of San Luis Rey, The Broadway Melody, Coquette, The Divine Lady, In Old Arizona, The Patriot, and White Shadows in the South Seas
- Most Nominations: Five Nominations – In Old Arizona and The Patriot
Changes to Academy Awards
Beginning with the 2nd Academy Awards (1928–1929), the following changes were made by AMPAS.
- Award categories were reduced from twelve to seven:
- The awards for Best Director (Comedy Picture) and Best Director (Dramatic Picture) were merged into a single Best Director award.
- The award for Best Engineering Effects was discontinued.
- The award for Best Unique and Artistic Picture was discontinued.
- The awards for Best Writing (Adaptation) and Best Writing (Original Story) were merged into a single Best Writing award.
- The award for Best Writing (Title Writing) was discontinued.
Notable awards and nominations
In Old Arizona and The Patriot – with five nominations each – tied the record for the film receiving the most Academy Award nominations. This record was set by 7th Heaven at the 1st Academy Awards (1927–1928). One year later, at the 3rd Academy Awards (1929–1930), the record was broken by The Love Parade, which garnered six nominations. The current record for the film receiving the most Academy Award nominations – with fourteen nominations apiece – is held by All About Eve (1950), Titanic (1997), and La La Land (2016). This record has stood for 70 years.
See also
References
- Notes
- At the 2nd Academy Awards (1928–1929), no film received more than one award. Seven films each received one Academy Award of Merit. To date, this result has never been repeated in subsequent Academy Awards ceremonies.
- Citations
- Dunning, John (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio (Revised ed.). New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
The Academy Awards Show.
- Whitfield, Eileen (1997). Pickford: The Woman Who Made Hollywood. Lexington, Ky.: University Press of Kentucky. p. 263. ISBN 978-0-8131-2045-4. OCLC 37465308.
- White, Michael (April 28, 1972). "The Actress and the Four-Letter Cliche". The Guardian. London. p. 13.
As the elder sister in Broadway Melody she got an Oscar nomination, which in all honesty she doesn't recall at all. 'So many people have said it that it must be true.'