Nothing compares to the night of the most famous Oscars in Hollywood.

So far, 93 tournaments have been organized, and the Oscars is an unforgettable event.

In this report, which was published by the American magazine "Newsweek", Sarah Jones reviewed the most prominent records recorded in the history of the Oscars.

Most Oscar Winners

Walt Disney has received 22 Academy Awards throughout his career, the last of which was in his posthumous honor.

It will be a long time before anyone can break his record.

Most Oscar-nominated actress

Actress Meryl Streep is the one with the most Oscar nominations with 21 nominations so far.

She has won 3 Oscars in total, twice for Best Actress and once for Best Supporting Actress.

American actress Meryl Streep (social networking sites)

Longest winning speech

Academy Award winners only get 45 seconds to express their thanks, which Greer Garson didn't do in 1943, when she won Best Actress for Ms. Minnifer, giving a speech that lasted at least seven minutes.

First woman to win Best Director

In the entire history of the Oscars for Best Director, only 3 women have been nominated - Lena Wertmoeller, Jane Campion and Sofia Coppola, and fortunately, things have started to change since 2009 when Kathryn Bigelow won this award.

Longest award winning movie

The movie "Gone With the Wind", released in 1939, is one of the most famous films ever, as it holds the record for the longest film in terms of duration (3 hours and 58 minutes).

Biggest Winner in Acting Category

Anthony Hopkins, 83, won an Oscar for his role in "The Father" in 2021, to win the title from Christopher Plummer, who previously won in 2012. Hopkins later explained that frankly he did not expect to win, but rather believed The late Chadwick Boseman will be the recipient of the Best Actor award.

Veteran artist Anthony Hopkins (Getty)

The first candidate born in the 21st century

Actress Covenzane Wallis is the only 21st century Academy Award nominee.

She was only 5 years old when she was cast as Hushpuppy in the 2012 movie Beasts of the Southern Wild, and she was 9 when she was nominated.

 Shortest Role Award

Actress Beatrice Street holds the record for the shortest Oscar-winning role in history, as she only had 5 minutes and 40 seconds in the 1976 movie Network, but it was enough to secure her victory.

Most Nominated Director (Alive)

Legendary director Martin Scorsese has received more Oscar nominations than any other director among us today, with 9 nominations, but he only won the award once, in 2006 for gangster movie The Departed.

Most Nominated Actor Without Winning an Oscar

Peter O'Toole was a great actor, but he's unlucky when it comes to the Oscars, having been nominated 8 times but not winning once.

He was awarded an Honorary Academy Award by the Academy in 2003.

The first African American to win an Oscar

Hattie McDaniel made history in 1939 when she became the first black person to win an Oscar, for her role as Mamie in Gone With the Wind.

biggest success

Fantasy films don't do well at the Oscars overall, but the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy changed things when "The Return of the King" 3 won all 11 categories for which it was nominated. , including Best Picture and Best Director.

Longest running streak of nominations

Walt Disney is considered the most successful person in the history of the Academy Awards, and he also holds another record that can hardly be beat, the title of the longest consecutive Oscar nomination (22 consecutive years), and he won not only thanks to his cartoons, but also for his documentaries.

Youngest Candidate

Justin Henry, the child who starred opposite Meryl Streep and Dustin Hoffman, remains to this day the youngest Oscar nominee.

He was 7 years old when he got the role, and 8 years old when he was nominated.

First Animation Film Nomination

Animated films, including Disney masterpieces, were not among the best contenders for the Best Picture Oscar before Beauty and the Beast.

But the beautifully rendered 1991 version of the classic fairy tale changed everything, opening the door to the genre.

Oldest Winners

The oldest person to win an Oscar is 89-year-old James Ivory.

He was not nominated in the acting category, but in 2018 won the award for Best Adapted Screenplay for his work on Call Me By Your Name.

Most Hosted Oscar Awards Ceremony

Bob Hope has outperformed everyone for hosting the Academy Awards most of the time, no less than 18 times, over a span of several decades.

During the 1966 session, he received a special medal for his services to the Academy.

Shortest winning movie

When "Gravity" was nominated for Best Picture in 2014, some commentators wondered if its 91-minute duration had caused it to lose, but in fact there had been a shorter film in this category before, "Marty". (Marty) issued in 1955, which was only 90 minutes long but also won.

The first Asian woman to win Best Director

"Nomadland" director Chloe Chow made history in 2021 when she became the second woman and first Asian to win the Best Director award.

Most Nominated African American Actress

Viola Davis has received the most Oscar nominations of any black actress (4 nominations and 1 win).

But during an interview in February 2021 with Variety, she said that this number is evidence of the massive lack of opportunities available to artists with dark skin.

Most nominations without winning

Film music composer Kevin O'Connell won a 2017 Oscar for his work on Hacksaw Ridge.

Before that, he was nominated 20 times, starting in 1983, but without winning.

The first foreign film to win the award for best film

Director Bong Joon's "Parasite" is the first foreign film to win an Oscar for 2020, and it also won Best Director, Best International Feature Film and Best Original Screenplay.

Best winning movie despite getting the worst reviews

With a rating of just 33% on the review site, "Broadway Melody" won Best Film of 1929.

Most nominated family

It's The Newman Family Musical, with 86 Academy Award nominations, 45 of which were thanks to father Alfred Newman, and his sons David and Thomas continued to work after him.

The first deaf person to win an Oscar

Marlee Matlin won Best Actress in 1987. Several years later, in 2012, she wrote to Entertainment Weekly that she was still the youngest and only deaf woman to receive an Oscar in the category of Best Actress in a Leading Role.

 Most Best Director Winner

John Ford, famous for his western movies, is the most Academy Award-winning director, with 4 Best Director awards throughout his career.

First nomination for Best Superhero Movie

When "Black Panther" was released in 2018, it set records in all kinds of nominations, in addition to making billions of dollars in profits, and garnered many Oscar nominations, including Best Picture.

The only person who won without being nominated

That's an impressive record, and kind of funny.

At the Academy Awards in 1935, cinematographer Hal Mohr for The Jazz Singer did not receive a nomination, so he collected signatures for the win, thus becoming the first and only person to win in this way.

The Academy subsequently banned nominations by signatures.

Most winning actress for Best Actress

Katharine Hepburn garnered the most Best Actress awards during her career in 1933, 1967, 1968 and 1981, but you won't see any pictures of her holding an Oscar on stage because she didn't attend any ceremony.

The only candidate to have all of his films nominated

The late actor John Casal holds an impressive record, with every film he's staring in - and 5 - nominated for an Academy Award.

Unfortunately, he passed away at the age of 42, and he never had the opportunity to go any further.

The only dog ​​nominated for an Oscar for writing

When Robert Towne, screenwriter of The Legend of Tarzan, felt that the final film did not reflect his vision, he decided to disavow the script by naming his dog BH Vazak.

His name was among the 1985 Oscar nominations.