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« Box Office: American Sniper Towers Above Oscar Nominees | Main | Lensing Black Faces: Why the Bradford Young Snub Stings »
Monday
Jan192015

Fairy Tales, Witches, and Oscars. An 87 Year History

Over on Twitter Alex posed an interesting question to me and I thought I'd share it with you. Is Meryl Streep the first actor to be Oscar-nominated for playing a witch, or anyone in a fairy tale for that matter? As far as I can tell the answer is "in the way that you mean, yes" and "I believe so."

Though no witches in the fairy tale or broom-riding sense have been nominated before Streep, technically a witch star turn has won an Oscar and another spell-caster has been nominated. The first would be Ruth Gordon's diabolical coven leaderbusybody in Rosemary's Baby which we discussed in worshipful detail here.  And Sir Ian McKellen was nominated for playing "Gandalf the Grey" who, being a sorcerer, is basically the male equivalent of a witch. Otherwise, no witches. The famous witches we think of when we think of the movies weren't actually nominated. No, not even the greatest of them all, Margaret Hamilton in The Wizard of Oz (1939). 

After the jump let's look back through cinema history and see how fairytale or witchy films like Into the Woods have fared at the Oscars shall we?  (This is an incomplete history. Feel free to share things I missed. Especially great witchiness.)

1930s

1938 Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was nominated for a music Oscar but they also gave Walt Disney a special Oscar (plus 7 miniature ones awwwww) for "a significant screen innovation which has charmed millions and pioneered a great new entertainment field "

1939 The Wizard of Oz won 6 Oscar nominations (including Best Picture) but only took home two statues for its music.

1940s

1942 Veronica Lake stars in I Married a Witch, but the only Oscar attention is for its score.

1946 Jean Cocteau's stunning Beauty and the Beast arrives but back then there was no foreign language film category to honor it. They were just starting to ocassionally give out honorary non-competitive foreign film wins. 

1950s

1950 Disney's Cinderella receives 3 nominations all in the music and sound categories

1951 Disney's Alice in Wonderland receives a nomination for Best Score

1952 Hans Christian Anderson, a biopic of the fairy tale author starring Danny Kaye, won 6 Oscar nominations all in music or visual categories 

1953 Disney's Peter Pan receives zilch in the way of Oscar nominations

1958 Bell Book and Candle, a romantic comedy about a witch (Kim Novak) and her man (Jimmy Stewart) nabs two nominations for costuming and art direction. The stars aren't nominated for Golden Globes either

1959 Disney's Sleeping Beauty is Best Score nominated. They don't give a special Oscar for voicing Maleficent which is really too bad

1960s

1962 The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm starring Laurence Harvey is popular with awards voters to the tune of 4 Oscar nominations and a win for Costumes. Harvey is also Globe nominated for his performance in the Comedy/Musical category. But no Oscar nod follows.

1963 Disney's Sword & The Stone, an animated King Arthur as a boy movie, receives a nomination for score - it has a wonderful magic battle in it, though

[1964 Note: If you consider Mary Poppins a witch -- she does have super powers and surely Mr Banks would call her that -- than we have had an Oscar winning witch performance. But most people don't call her a witch for whatever reason.]

1967 Camelot the musical wins 5 Oscar nominations in the sound and visual categories. Though this Lerner & Loewe musical has the sorcerer Merlyn it skips witchy Morgana

1968 Ruth Gordon won the Oscar for Supporting Actress as the leader of the coven in Rosemary's Baby. She does cast a few spells but not in the abracadabra way

1970s

1971 Angela Lansbury played a witch in Bedknobs and Broomsticks but though the film received 5 below the line nominations and won for visual effects this wasn't one of her nominated performances 

1977 Dario Argento's cult classic coven movie Suspiria. No Oscar love

1978 The Wiz reconsiders the 1939 classic as an urban fairy tale with Diana Ross as Dorothy. 4 Oscar nominations in craft categories but neither its good witch (Lena Horne) or its bad witch (Mabel King) were honored. Not even at the Globes!

1980s

1981 Helen Mirren is memorable as the witch Morgana in John Boorman's moody sexual Excalibur (1981), an R rated retelling of the King Arthur myth, but the film only received a nomination for cinematography

(1982: Over on cable TV, Shelley Duvall started her multiple award winning Fairie Tale Theater series. TV has often been kinder to fairy tale productions)

1985 Dream Child, a very upsetting look at Lewis Carroll and his Alice in Wonderland muse, wins BAFTA love and some Oscar buzz for the late Mrs. Vincent Price, Coral Browne but not much American love materializes despite an NBR top ten placement; Legend, which is fairytale like given the unicorns and fairies gets a Makeup nomination

1986 Labyrinth, that somewhat beloved Goblin King movie receives no Oscar love

1987 The Princess Bride, beloved by millions (including Missi Pyle right here) is nominated for Original Song only. It took awhile to build its fanbase, hence the so-so box office and lack of awards love at the time.

1987 The Witches of Eastwick becomes a huge hit but its only nominations are for score and sound - no awards love for its unbeatable actressy trio (Cher. Pfeiffer. Sarandon) or its A list devil (Nicholson) which is strange. The Globes didn't even bite which seems unthinkable in retrospect;  Rumplestiltskin, a musical starring Amy Irving opens. It receives no awards love

1988 Willow which features a crazy battle between two witches is nominated for visual effects and sound editing

1989 Unlike many readers I'm not one of those people who is comfortable with championing voice artists for acting Oscars. But if I were to ever champion one in would have been Pat Carroll as Ursula the Sea Witch in The Little Mermaid. The film was nominated for 3 music Oscars and won two of them.

1990s

1990 Anjelica Huston stars in The Witches which is paired with her performance in The Grifters for very prestigious Best Actress prizes from the LAFCA and the NSFC. It's quite a thing to deliver your two all time best performances in a single year! Oscar can't combine performances and they opt for her con-artist turn in the latter. The film didn't receive much love at the time though BAFTA nominated it for makeup

1991 Disney's Beauty and the Beast becomes the first Animated feature to ever be nominated for Best Picture. It receives 5 other nominations, all in the music & sound categories and wins two; Meanwhile Steven Spielberg's nadir Hook wins 5 Oscar nominations in the craft categories. To date the only Peter Pan adaptation to receive Oscar love.

1993 Hocus Pocus is released which will become a fan favorite. It received no major awards love, not even at the Golden Globes

1996 The Craft, a guilty pleasure about teenage witches calls the four corners and starts to collect fans. No awards love outside of things like MTV's "Best Fight"; A high profile prestige adapation of The Crucible, which isn't technically about witches even though the pious townsfolk think it is, received only two Oscar nominations for screenplay and supporting actress Goody Procter Joan Allen... definitely not a witch but she's casting all kinds of acting magic, trust.

1997 Snow White: A Tale of Terror, which I believe was originally intended for the screen, gets shoved to TV and Sigourney Weaver nabs a Best Actress Emmy nomination for her wicked witch, the Evil Queen

1998 Ever After, a live action Cinderella film starring Drew Barrymore and Practical Magic about sister witches (Kidman & Bullock) are both fan favorites but neither gets awards love

2000s

2001 The Harry Potter series begins. Emma Watson eventually becomes a big star for her know-it-all witch Hermione but no acting awards were ever going to greet this series though technical Oscar nods do; The Lord of the Rings trilogy also begins bringing Meryl's only (?) male counterpart in Oscar-nominated spell-casting in the form of Sir Ian McKellen as Gandalf; Spirited Away, Hayao Miyazaki's masterpiece with plentiful magical creatures and one very memorable witch wins Best Animated Feature

2003 The best and best-looking film version of Peter Pan arrives for Christmas but receives no major awards love of any kind - not even in the craft categories

2004 a middlebrow dull biopic of Peter Pan's author JM Barrie called Finding Neverland gets 7 Oscar nominations and 1 win in a completely great year for cinema, proving the theory once again that great cinematic years often result in the worst Best Picture lineups. (see also 1999).

2005 Terry Gilliam's The Brothers Grimm an adventure with the fairy tale authors arrives receives zero nominations. Not even for its elaborate costumes by Gabriella Pescucci; Meanwhile Nicole Kidman stars in a big screen adaptation of Bewitched which receives 5 Razzie nominations; The Chronicles of Narnia features a bad ass Tilda Swinton as the magical snow queen and it receives 3 nominations for makeup, visual effects, and sound. It wins for makeup.

2007 Stardust features our beloved Pfeiffer as an evil witch giving one of her best late career performance. No awards love outside of the only body that pays attention to this sort of thing which is the Saturn Awards (which awarded many films on this list)

2009 Disney's The Princess and the Frog, their last traditionally animated feature, is nominated for three Oscars, animated feature and two for Original Song

2010s

2010 Tim Burton's Eyesore in Wonderland receives three nominations: costumes, art direction, visual fx winning the first two and wrecking Nathaniel's brain

2011 Red Riding Hood tries to ride the "dark reimagined fairy tales craze" but receives no Oscar love

2012 Snow White and the Huntsman nabs two nominations for costumes and visual effects. Blancanieves, a marvelous silent Spanish Snow White adaptation gets passed over for Oscar's foreign film category though it's worth noting that Maribel Verdu won the Best Actress Oscar at the Goya's (Spain's Oscars) for her role as the wicked stepmother. And the third Snow White film of the year, Mirror Mirror wins a costume design nomination; Pixar tries its hand at magical fairytales with Brave and wins Animated Feature; Eva Green, who has played plenty of witches, delivers a crazy inspired brilliant performance a witch in a film, Dark Shadows, that doesn't remotely deserve her. No award love.

2013: Oz the Great and Powerful, running with the "Wicked" craze from Broadway retells Oz before Dorothy arrives. Michelle Williams and Mila Kunis played the witches but the film wasn't Oscar loved; Frozen, also capitalizings on the absence of a big screen "Wicked" mashes basically adapts that too, only pretends to be a very very loose retelling of Hans Christian Anderson's The Snow Queen (good luck recognizing it!). Queen Elsa, she of the magical ice powers, helps the film win both of its Oscar nominations for Best Song and Best Animated Film

2014 Into the Woods receives 3 nominations for costumes, production design, and that doubly-historic acting nod for Streep, her 19th breaking the previous record of 18, also held by Streep; Maleficent, another witchy movie, receives 1 for costume design.

2015 Kenneth Branagh's new live-action version of Cinderella hits theaters. We shall see.

2016 Wicked the movie musical directed by Stephen Daldry is slated to arrive. HA! We'll believe it when we see it. We're not that gullible. If it ever does get made perhaps this'll be a chance for the first witchy Best Actress nomination? 

 

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Reader Comments (36)

An impressive collection of witchy creatures. Veronica Lake's Jennifer in I Married a Witch is such a wonderful creation it seems incredible now that she received zero award recognition for it especially since she was at her peak when it was made.

I love Excalibur. There's so much to like in the movie. Boorman creates what seems a very authentic fantastical mood greatly assisted by both Helen Mirren and Nicol Williamson who spark off each other so well as Morgana and Merlin. I wonder if the fact that they loathed each other off camera added a special spark to their scenes.

I don't think the film received any Oscar attention but Barbara Steele played a decidely unfriendly witch in the 1960 film Black Sunday.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered Commenterjoel6

Witches be crazy.

Who doesn't love a good witch? The evil ones in particular are so much fun. Ursula, Anjelica Huston, Fairuza Balk, etc... love them all.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterSad man

"Hook is the only Peter Pan adaptation to receive Oscar attention." That blows my mind. It is the WORST.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterDusty

yep. only Meryl could get nominated for playing a witch. I think Tony-nominated role (Vanessa Williams) + Sondheim makes the role more prestige than a witch in another film, plus it's Streep. the "Witches Rap" about her greens is cult-favorite thing amongst musical theatre fans.
this means we can stop saying "the Academy will never go for that because it's too fantasy". maybe they will !

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterNina

Anjelica Huston as Eva Ernst will always be my favorite witch. If it were up to me, I very well may have given her Best Supporting Actress for The Witches and Best Actress for The Grifters.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterMike M.

The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm. '62 Winner Best Costume (Color) Oscar. 3 other nominations: Art Direction, Cinematography, Music. Stop action. Great Cast.

Magic Flute ('75-directed by Bergman) nominated for costumes.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterHenry

Naysayers can suck it, my favorite witch will probably always be Bette Midler in Hocus Pocus. Nostalgia, okay!

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterPhilip H.

Nicole Kidman as Marisa (The Golden Compass), Emma Thompson (Angels in America), Cate Blanchett (Lord of the Rings), Tilda Swinton (Orlando), Ellen Burstyn (Resurrection), Patricia Arquette (Medium), Bette Davis (herself)

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterEllsworth

Tangled (2010), nominated for Best Song Oscar.
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008), nominated for 13 Oscars, including two for acting. Won three, none for acting.
Enchanted (2007), nominated for Best Song Oscar x 3.
Pan's Labyrinth (2006), six nods, three wins.
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (2005), three nods, one win.
The Princess Pride (1987), nominated for Best Song Oscar.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterPaul Outlaw

Bride, that is.

And while I'm at it, let me note that Tilda is featured in two on my list, once as a witch.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterPaul Outlaw

Please remember she won her third for playing a witch.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterPeggy Sue

Streepp sorta played a witch in The Devil Wears Prada.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered Commenterbrandz

How about Ruth Gordon in Rosemary's Baby?

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterStéphane

Stephane -- we mention her twice!

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterNathanielR

I'm surprised no one has mentioned TFE favorite Death Becomes Her yet.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterJan

@Ellsworth: Eva Green was actually the one who played a witch in The Golden Compass.

Other movies not mentioned yet: The Princess & the Frog, which actually got Oscar nominations. Also, Diahann Carroll and Debbi Morgan play witchy characters in Eve's Bayou, which was sadly overlooked by Oscar.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered Commenterthefilmjunkie

That's an astonishing list, Nat.
I think at the very least Meryl is the first "open" witch to be nominated. *lol*
Not disguised as a Nanny or whatever (Prime Minister).
Two things I'm sure I'm in a minority: I love Hook and prefer by far Bedknobs and Broomsticks over Mary Poppins.
I think Mary Poppins is more of a fairy than a witch, though Glinda is always the good witch in Oz, not a fairy, so....
Well, I stand by my first point. *gg*

And yes, Lisle should make that list, too. Fabulous witch!

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterSonja

Bell, Book and Candle is a fun film. When I saw it was nominated for Art Direction, it was interesting to me because Vertigo, also starring Stewart and Novak of course, was up for the same award in the same year. Bell was also nominated for Costumes as Nathaniel said, but Edith Head wasn't nominated for Vertigo. It would have been cool to have Bell and Vertigo nominated in two categories together.

I don't really like Horror films, but Suspiria is one of my favourites of the genre, as well as Rosemary's Baby of course. Perhaps I have a thing about Horror films with witches in them.

Another Horror film I love is The Witchfinder General. Although of course, there's no real witches in it!

Lastly, I'm with Philip H on Hocus Pocus. The Sanderson Sisters rock!

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterRobMiles

Please, Peggy Sue, show some respect! She did not win her third for playing a witch.... she played the Devil (and she was not wearing Prada).

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterJosé

It's Andersen, not Anderson, please

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterLuis

You relish the opportunity to celebrate 1990 as the year Hollywood showcased Anjelica Huston as a leading lady. Yet fail to followup with why she never took with them completely or the public. And what film projects from the 90's outside The Addams Family franchise deserved more industry and public attention. And contrasting that with the eventual winner who continues to maintain Streep-level relevancy for a character actress. Although both of them are character actresses. For those who see Huston as simply better overall for reasons beyond her control Hollywood never took her seriously as the focal point.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered Commenter3rtful

I like to pretend Mary Poppins exists within the same version of England as the Harry Potter series.
When she's flies off, she's just going back to the wizarding world.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterJustin

I can see Mary Poppins teaching a class in Umbrella Floating Technique at Hogwarts.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterHenry

One thing I've always wondered about with Meryl Streep's claim that she was offered 3 roles as a witch when she turned 40 was: which witch roles were they? Angelica Houston was in the Witches in 1990, around when Streep was 40, so maybe that was one of them. What do you think were the other two? I wonder if Hocus Pocus was in there too. Would Streep have been Oscar worthy in them? Probably.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterJames

/3rtful -- i don't see a failure on my part there, sorry. This article is not about Anjelica Huston's career.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterNATHANIEL R

So has anyone played witches more often than Michelle Pfeiffer, Nicole Kidman and Eva Green?

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterPaul Outlaw

3rtful, because this post wasn't about Anjelica Huston's career?

What an exhausting list! Good grief. This will come in handy research at a later date, I am sure.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterGlenn

Nathaniel you write often about certain persons and never fully explore some of the things you touch on with frequency. I want to encourage you to write a piece on her. I thought my writing was less abrasive. Since meeting you in person I thought it would humanize me more here.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered Commenter3rtful

Does Pan's Labyrinth count?

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterEli B

And Carrie wasn't a witch, but she was definitely packing a dark-sided witchery punch.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterEli B

I know she isn't film, but my favorite witch will always be Agnes Moorehead.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterHenry

"won nominations" needs be erased from awards season lingo

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterZach

Wow these discussion threads have been getting weird lately. Talk about witches.

Angela Lansbury makes her best run at Julie Andrews movie musical status with Bedknobs and Broomsticks and that movie remains criminally underrated and underseen.

January 19, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterHayden W.

Aw, man, I love "The Craft". I saw it when I was 10 and was so disappointed when my friends and I would try to "call the towers" and all that crap and realized we still had no powers.

January 20, 2015 | Unregistered Commenterjakey

Interesting piece. I never would have thought of Ruth Gordon as a witch butt it's true; she was funny and scary in Rosemary's Baby. Ruth Gordon to Meryl Streep is a nice through line.

February 1, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterJono

Hi!
I was wondering if you'd like to check out this 9mins short film about witches, and maybe share it on your blog if it's to your liking!
https://vimeo.com/97365268
Thanks

July 31, 2015 | Unregistered Commentertheheadlessbeki
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