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| [[Academy Award for Best Picture|Best motion picture of the year]]
| [[Academy Award for Best Picture|Best motion picture of the year]]
| ''' ''[[Shakespeare in Love]]'' '''
| ''' ''[[Shakespeare in Love]]'' '''
| [[David Parfitt]], [[Donna Gigliotti]], [[Harvey Weinstein]],
| [[John Madden (director)|John Madden]]
[[Edward Zwick]], and [[Marc Norman]]
|-
|-
| [[Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film|Best foreign language film]]
| [[Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film|Best foreign language film]]

Revision as of 14:12, 15 October 2006

71st
DateSunday, March 21, 1999
SiteLos Angeles County Music Center in Los Angeles, California
Hosted byWhoopi Goldberg
Preshow hostsGeena Davis
Produced byGil Cates
Television coverage
Duration4 hours, 2 minutes

The 71st Academy Awards ceremony was the last to take place at Los Angeles County Music Center, and was Whoopi Goldberg's third time hosting the Awards. It was the first time the ceremony took place on a Sunday.

The Academy Award ceremony ran extremely long, due largely to extended acceptance speeches. Notable films included Shakespeare in Love, which received 13 nominations and won 7 awards, Saving Private Ryan, which received 11 nominations and won 5 awards, and Life Is Beautiful, which received 7 nominations and won 3 (including Best Actor and Best Foreign Language Film).

News and recap

The 71st Academy Awards saw the show's first "official" pre-show, as the Academy attempted to compete with the likes of E!'s Joan Rivers and other red carpet denizens.

The show attracted 43.16 viewers a slight decline to last years audience yet a high rating compared to other ceremonies.

This was the first time that two people have been nominated for Academy Awards for playing the same person in different films - Queen Elizabeth I - played by Cate Blanchett in Elizabeth and Judi Dench in Shakespeare in Love.

Notable Quotes

The Awards

This is a breakdown of only major winners. For a complete list of nominees and winners, see: 71st Academy Awards nominees and winners.

Feature Films

Category Winner Producers/Country
Best motion picture of the year Shakespeare in Love David Parfitt, Donna Gigliotti, Harvey Weinstein,

Edward Zwick, and Marc Norman

Best foreign language film Life is Beautiful Italy
Best documentary feature The Last Days James Moll and Ken Lipper

Direction

Acting

Category Winner Movie
Best actor in a leading role Roberto Benigni Life is Beautiful
Best actress in a leading role Gwyneth Paltrow Shakespeare in Love
Best actor in a supporting role James Coburn Affliction (1997 movie)
Best actress in a supporting role Judi Dench Shakespeare in Love

Writing

Category Winner Movie
Original screenplay Marc Norman and Tom Stoppard Shakespeare in Love
Adapted screenplay Bill Condon Gods and Monsters

Honorary Oscars

Elia Kazan was awarded an Honorary Oscar for his work as a prolific director in the motion picture industry. His honor became controversial because during the 1940's, Kazan let out the names of others involved in motion pictures during the infamous House Un-American Activities Committee hearings. When Kazan was awarded the Honorary Oscar from actor Robert De Niro, many in the audience refused to clap and also sparked protests outside the auditorium.

Special Events

A special tribute was given to Oscar winner and legendary singer Frank Sinatra, who died in the previous year.

A special tribute was given to the western genre, in also to pay tribute to singing cowboys Gene Autry and Roy Rogers, whom both died in the previous year.

In Memoriam

Presented by Annette Bening. The Academy takes a moment to remember those motion picture icons that left us in the previous year: Dane Clark, special effects artist Linwood Dunn, art director George Davis, Dick O'Neill, cinematographer Charles Lang, Norman Fell, cinematographer Freddie Young, executive John Veitch, E.G. Marshall, Jeanette Nolan, director Alan J. Pakula, choreographer Jerome Robbins, composer John Addison, Susan Strasberg, Vincent Winter, screenwriter James Goldman, John Derek, Richard Kiley, Maureen O'Sullivan, Phil Hartman, Ester Rolle, Jean Marias, Binnie Barnes, Valerie Hobson, Gene Raymond, Huntz Hall, director Akira Kurosawa, Alice Faye, Robert Young and Roddy McDowell.