Best Picture Out of Africa - Sydney Pollack, producer‡ The Color Purple - Steven Spielberg, Kathleen Kennedy, Frank Marshall and Quincy Jones, producers Kiss of the Spider Woman - David Weisman, producer Prizzi's Honor - John Foreman, producer Witness - Edward S. Feldman, producer Best Director Sydney Pollack - Out of Africa‡ Héctor Babenco - Kiss of the Spider Woman John Huston - Prizzi's Honor Akira Kurosawa - Ran Peter Weir - Witness Best Actor William Hurt - Kiss of the Spider Woman as Luis Molina‡ Harrison Ford - Witness as Detective Sergeant John Book James Garner - Murphy's Romance as Murphy Jones Jack Nicholson - Prizzi's Honor as Charley Partanna Jon Voight - Runaway Train as Oscar "Manny" Manheim Best Actress Geraldine Page - The Trip to Bountiful as Carrie Watts‡ Anne Bancroft - Agnes of God as Miriam Ruth Whoopi Goldberg - The Color Purple as Celie Harris Johnson Jessica Lange - Sweet Dreams as Patsy Cline Meryl Streep - Out of Africa as Karen Blixen Best Supporting Actor Don Ameche - Cocoon as Arthur Selwyn‡ Klaus Maria Brandauer - Out of Africa as Baron Bror von Blixen-Finecke William Hickey - Prizzi's Honor as Don Corrado Prizzi Robert Loggia - Jagged Edge as Sam Ransom Eric Roberts - Runaway Train as Buck Best Supporting Actress Anjelica Huston - Prizzi's Honor as Maerose Prizzi‡ Margaret Avery - The Color Purple as Shug Avery Amy Madigan - Twice in a Lifetime as Sunny Sobel Meg Tilly - Agnes of God as Sister Agnes Oprah Winfrey - The Color Purple as Sofia Johnson Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen Witness - Screenplay by Earl W. Wallace and William Kelley; Story by William Kelley, Pamela Wallace and Earl W. Wallace‡ Back to the Future - Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale Brazil - Terry Gilliam, Tom Stoppard and Charles McKeown The Official Story - Luis Puenzo and Aída Bortnik The Purple Rose of Cairo - Woody Allen Best Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium Out of Africa - Kurt Luedtke based on the memoir by Isak Dinesen and the books Silence Will Speak by Errol Trzebinski and Isak Dinesen: The Life of a Storyteller by Judith Thurman‡ The Color Purple - Menno Meyjes based on the novel by Alice Walker Kiss of the Spider Woman - Leonard Schrader based on the novel by Manuel Puig Prizzi's Honor - Richard Condon and Janet Roach based on the novel by Richard Condon The Trip to Bountiful - Horton Foote based on his teleplay Best Foreign Language Film The Official Story (Argentina) in Spanish - Luis Puenzo‡ Angry Harvest (Federal Republic of Germany) in German - Agnieszka Holland Colonel Redl (Hungary) in German - István Szabó Three Men and a Cradle (France) in French - Coline Serreau When Father Was Away on Business (Yugoslavia) in Serbo-Croatian - Emir Kusturica Best Documentary Feature Broken Rainbow - Maria Florio and Victoria Mudd‡ The Mothers of Plaza de Mayo - Susana Muñoz and Lourdes Portillo Soldiers in Hiding - Japhet Asher The Statue of Liberty - Ken Burns and Buddy Squires Unfinished Business - Steven Okazaki Best Documentary Short Subject Witness to War: Dr. Charlie Clements - David Goodman‡ The Courage to Care - Robert H. Gardner Keats and His Nightingale: A Blind Date - Michael Crowley and James Wolpaw Making Overtures: The Story of a Community Orchestra - Barbara Willis Sweete The Wizard of the Strings - Alan Edelstein Best Live Action Short Film Molly's Pilgrim - Jeffrey D. Brown and Chris Pelzer‡ Graffiti - Dianna Costello Rainbow War - Bob Rogers Best Animated Short Film Anna & Bella - Cilia van Dijk‡ The Big Snit - Richard Condie and Michael J. F. Scott Second Class Mail - Alison Snowden Best Original Score Out of Africa - John Barry‡ Agnes of God - Georges Delerue The Color Purple - Quincy Jones, Jeremy Lubbock, Rod Temperton, Caiphus Semenya, Andraé Crouch, Chris Boardman, Jorge Calandrelli, Joel Rosenbaum, Fred Steiner, Jack Hayes, Jerry Hey and Randy Kerber Silverado - Bruce Broughton Witness - Maurice Jarre Best Original Song "Say You, Say Me" from White Nights - Music and Lyrics by Lionel Richie‡ "Miss Celie's Blues (Sister)" from The Color Purple - Music by Quincy Jones and Rod Temperton; Lyrics by Quincy Jones, Rod Temperton and Lionel Richie "The Power of Love" from Back to the Future - Music by Chris Hayes and Johnny Colla; Lyrics by Huey Lewis "Separate Lives" from White Nights - Music and Lyrics by Stephen Bishop "Surprise Surprise" from A Chorus Line - Music by Marvin Hamlisch; Lyrics by Edward Kleban Best Sound Effects Editing Back to the Future - Charles L. Campbell and Robert Rutledge‡ Ladyhawke - Robert G. Henderson and Alan Robert Murray Rambo: First Blood Part II - Frederick Brown Best Sound Out of Africa - Chris Jenkins, Gary Alexander, Larry Stensvold and Peter Handford‡ Back to the Future - Bill Varney, B. Tennyson Sebastian II, Robert Thirlwell and William B. Kaplan A Chorus Line - Donald O. Mitchell, Michael Minkler, Gerry Humphreys and Christopher Newman Ladyhawke - Les Fresholtz, Dick Alexander, Vern Poore and Bud Alper Silverado - Donald O. Mitchell, Rick Kline, Kevin O'Connell and David M. Ronne Best Art Direction Out of Africa - Art Direction: Stephen B. Grimes; Set Decoration: Josie MacAvin‡ Brazil - Art Direction: Norman Garwood; Set Decoration: Maggie Gray The Color Purple - Art Direction: J. Michael Riva and Robert W. Welch; Set Decoration: Linda DeScenna Ran - Art Direction and Set Decoration: Yoshirō Muraki and Shinobu Muraki Witness - Art Direction: Stan Jolley; Set Decoration: John H. Anderson Best Cinematography Out of Africa - David Watkin‡ The Color Purple - Allen Daviau Murphy's Romance - William A. Fraker Ran - Takao Saito, Masaharu Ueda and Asakazu Nakai Witness - John Seale Best Makeup Mask - Michael Westmore and Zoltan Elek‡ The Color Purple - Ken Chase Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins - Carl Fullerton Best Costume Design Ran - Emi Wada‡ The Color Purple - Aggie Guerard Rodgers The Journey of Natty Gann - Albert Wolsky Out of Africa - Milena Canonero Prizzi's Honor - Donfeld Best Film Editing Witness - Thom Noble‡ A Chorus Line - John Bloom Out of Africa - Fredric Steinkamp, William Steinkamp, Pembroke J. Herring and Sheldon Kahn Prizzi's Honor - Rudi Fehr and Kaja Fehr Runaway Train - Henry Richardson Best Visual Effects Cocoon - Ken Ralston, Ralph McQuarrie, Scott Farrar and David Berry‡ Return to Oz - Will Vinton, Ian Wingrove, Zoran Perisic and Michael Lloyd Young Sherlock Holmes - Dennis Muren, Kit West, John R. Ellis and David W. Allen
WOW! He has always been one of my favorite actors. What an articulate, intelligent, honest gentleman. I could listen to him speak all day long. When he passed away, we lost an incredible treasure of a person🙏😢.
Forget what other people say amen. This movie is stuck with me from childhood all the way to adulthood. Thank you so much for posting. I find this particular scene to be especially heartwarming 46:50
JFC it's frightening just how convinced all these folks were of debunked, sensationalized nonsense. Social media wasn't even invented yet but this misinformation spread like a wildfire.
Him and Peter O’Toole were one of the best English speakers like they’re at a library full of books in the background, sitting in their chairs sitting in front of the camera, with the music of harpsichord and baroque playing, telling their stories. I always vision that. I love how their language dictates exactly how we hear the British should speak. Now they’re gone and we don’t get much bestest English speaking actors like: Lee, O’Toole, Gieguld, Olivier and other people who were trained in the era of the Shakespeare language vocabularies.
I lived threw this madness. You really don't understand how many people believed this insanity or how many lives were ruined by this.....playing D&D or listening to Metal was considered probable cause by police and would get you forced to go through 'counseling'
@@LJComposer Fellowship was in Lord of the Rings... He was just a character that was part of the plot. I'm talking about the actor behind the character Christopher Lee... You got fiction and RL mixed up again, time to increase your dose of crazy pills my silly silly silly little little friend... 😥😥😥😥😥😥😥😥