Who's the Diane Warren of Every Category?
Monday, December 4, 2023 at 10:00AM
Cláudio Alves in Amy Adams, Bruno Delbonnel, Diane Warren, Glenn Close, Jacqueline West, Mary Zophres, Mike Leigh, Oscar Trivia, Oscars (23), Paul Thomas Anderson, Peter Weir, Thomas Newman

by Cláudio Alves

Another year, another Diane Warren campaign to finally get herself that Oscar. She's already got an Honorary Award, but the competitive prize eludes her. This year, the songwriter's best bets are Flamin' Hot and 80 for Brady, though Warren also penned an original tune for My Big Fat Greek Wedding 3. After she got a in for the virtually unreleased Tell It Like a Woman, anything's possible.

This got me thinking about the other people the Academy nominated constantly without ever giving them the win. Who's the Diane Warren in the categories beyond Best Original Song? Trying to answer that question, I dove deep into Oscar history, counting who's the most honored person who never won their respective race for gold. I focused on feature films and living artists, those who still have a chance to win or increase their record. Like Warren, some names are back in contention this season. From Picture to Documentary, here they are...

 

BEST PICTURE

KATHLEEN KENNEDY
8 nominations 

Since Lincoln, most of Kathleen Kennedy's time has been taken up with Star Wars projects. Indeed, her last Spielberg collaboration was The BFG. No wonder she hasn't returned to the race since 2012 and is unlikely to do so in the immediate future. Looking at her upcoming projects is to despair at the state of cinema today, nostalgia above all else.

 

BEST DIRECTOR


PETER WEIR
4 nominations + 2 other nods in Picture and Original Screenplay

Though Weir has not directed a film since 2010's The Way Back, there's still hope he'll come back with a final project. Last year, he won an Honorary Academy Award. So, like Diane Warren, he's technically an Oscar winner.

 

THE ACTING AWARDS

GLENN CLOSE
8 nominations

Here's where the situation gets difficult to delineate. Glenn Close is the most nominated performer without an Oscar, but she's not the most nominated person for Best Actress or Best Supporting Actress without that specific award. Doing that same cumulative count, the most nominated male actors are in a four-way tie, each with a quartet of nominations. They're Willem Dafoe, Ed Harris, Bradley Cooper, and Warren Beatty. The Maestro star will surely get his fifth nod this year, and the same could be said of Dafoe, leaving the other two behind. Beatty has a Best Director Oscar, however.

 

BEST ACTRESS

JUDI DENCH
5 nominations + 3 Best Supporting Actress nods, 1 win 

Since I'm only counting artists that are still alive and can possibly win their category, Dench is here alone, Kerr absent. Of course, the thespian already has a trophy for Shakespeare in Love, and she may yet up her record in the lead race. Though declining eyesight has kept her from working as much as before, this English national treasure is still an Oscar darling whenever she shows up.

 

BEST ACTOR

WARREN BEATTY
4 nominations + 4 Best Picture, 3 Original Screenplay, 1 Adapted Screenplay nods + 2 Best Director nods, 1 win


MICHAEL CAINE
4 nominations + 2 Best Supporting Actor nods, wins

As mentioned previously, Beatty has a Best Director Academy Award from Reds. Though his last major project, Rules Don't Apply, was a critical and commercial flop, it's not hard to imagine some glorious swan song earning him a final go at the Best Actor Oscar. Michael Caine is said to be retiring, but he starred in The Great Escaper just this year. He may still deliver one more leading man turn. That said, like Beatty, he's also an Oscar winner, having earned two Best Supporting Actor statuettes for Hannah and Her Sisters and The Cider House Rules.

 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

AMY ADAMS
5 nominations + 1 Best Actress nod 

Per IMDB, Amy Adams has four upcoming projects. One's a miniseries, and two are lead roles – Marielle Heller's Nightbitch and Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris' The Invite. She'll presumably play supporting in Adam McKay's serial killer movie Average Height, Average Build. Let's hope this marks a professional upswing since, lately, Amy Adams' filmography has been nothing if not a string of disappointments.

 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

ROBERT DUVALL
4 nominations + 3 Best Actor nods, 1 win 

JEFF BRIDGES
4 nominations + 3 Best Actor nods, 1 win


AL PACINO
4 nominations + 5 Best Actor nods, 1 win

Four living actors have been nominated in the Supporting category and never won. However, they're all Oscar victors in lead. As far as the likeliest to return to the race, Pacino seems to be the one, having a slew of projects on the line. Duvall has Ed Harris' The Ploughmen, and Bridges is battling cancer. Hopefully, he'll recover and return to the screen.

 

THE WRITING AWARDS 

MIKE LEIGH
5 nominations + 2 Best Director nods


PAUL THOMAS ANDERSON
5 nominations + 3 Best Picture & 3 Best Director nods

Once again, this is a difficult one. Cumulatively, Leigh and PTA are the most nominated writers without a single win. However, Leigh's also the most nominated person in Original Screenplay sans victory. Amazingly, Best Adapted Screenplay has no real Diane Warren equivalent. No one alive has achieved more than two nominations in the category without winning. And the number of people at two nods is too big to feel significant.

 

BEST EDITING

WILLIAM STEINKAMP
3 nominations

 
FRANK J. URIOSTE
3 nominations 


RICHARD FRANCIS-BRUCE
3 nominations


STEVEN ROSENBLUM
3 nominations


JAY CASSIDY
3 nominations


HANK CORWIN
3 nominations 

So, there are a lot of editors in the 3-nomination range. Steinkamp's latest projects haven't been especially auspicious, so he's not a likely returnee to the Oscar race. Urioste is retired, but leaving him out felt wrong since he could still make a comeback. Francis-Bruce's next film is Caroline Zelder's Summer Gold, his first film since the end of the 50 Shades of Grey trilogy. Rosenblum has been on a "This Had Oscar Buzz" trajectory lately, cutting such titles as Birth of a Nation and Woman Walks Ahead. His upcoming gig is Nick Vallelonga's Heigl-Travolta romcom That's Amore. This year, Jay Cassidy assembled the old-school courtroom theatrics of The Burial, but that movie seems to have been all but forgotten as we head into the heart of the season. As for Hank Corwin, he just edited Gareth Edwards' The Creator, a title that'll probably feature in the Visual Effects race.

 

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

CALEB DESCHANEL
6 nominations 


BRUNO DELBONNEL
6 nominations 

After a calamitous tenure as Academy President, Deschanel hasn't done much. Currently, the DP is in production of Wildwood, Travis Knight's next stop-motion feature. Delbonnel, on the other hand, is busy with TV work. Both feel like eventual winners if they can land the right project.

 

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN

SARAH GREENWOOD & KATIE SPENCER
6 nominations

 

NATHAN CROWLEY
6 nominations 

All three of these artists are likely nominees this season. Greenwood and Spencer are the dream team behind Barbie's pink world, while Nathan Crowley left Christopher Nolan to work on Wonka. It'd be cruel bad luck if Oppenheimer, the first of the director's films he didn't design since 2002, took the prize instead.

 

BEST COSTUME DESIGN

JACQUELINE WEST
4 nominations 


MARY ZOPHRES
4 nominations

West is a potential nominee this year with Killers of the Flower Moon, and she'll surely return next season with the Dune sequel. However, Zophres's next nomination seems more elusive, as her only upcoming project is Greg Berlanti's Project Artemis, which is now in post-production.

 

BEST MAKEUP & HAIRSTYLING

ALDO SIGNORETTI
4 nominations

Signoretti reached this record just last year and could up it with Ferrari, his 100th screen credit. He's the man responsible for transforming Adam Driver into Enzo Ferrari, after all. Furthermore, the Italian artist is scheduled to work on an upcoming Van Gogh biopic. With his penchant for awards-friendly features, he's bound to be a factor in future races. However, even if nominated, this year's Oscar will probably be out of reach.

 

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS

DANIEL SUDICK
13 nominations 

This Marvel man is eligible again this season with Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 and will later return with Blade, whenever that finally gets released. Still, considering the MCU's persistent inability to win this category, he might never take home Hollywood's most coveted trophy.

 

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE

THOMAS NEWMAN
14 nominations + 1 Best Original Song nod 

Part of the illustrious and Oscar-beloved Newman family, the composer could be in contention again with Elemental. Say what you want about that flick, but the score is beautiful beyond belief, a standout achievement amid a muddled messy movie.

 

BEST SOUND

GREG P. RUSSELL
16 nominations

Russell is always working so he'll likely be back. Unless, of course, the Academy rejects him after having already disqualified him from contention. In 2016, he was nominated for the 17th time for 13 Hours, but the nomination was rescinded for violating Academy campaign regulation. AMPAS hasn't welcomed him back into the race since then.

If one where to only count Sound Editing nominations, as I initially did, then Wylie Stateman is the biggest loser here. However, since the Sound categories have been merged back together, Russell holds the record. Indeed, he's the most nominated individual without a single win.

 

BEST INTERNATIONAL FILM

ISRAEL
10 nominations 

Despite general frustration with the rule, the Academy never awards any individual in the Best International Film race. The country is the nominee, though the director accepts the trophy on Oscar night if the picture happens to win. That means I had to count on countries, and the most nominated one is Israel. As you may already know, the most submitted country to never even score a nomination is Portugal, but that's a matter for another time, another write-up.

 

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE

CHRIS SANDERS
3 nominations 

 

RON CLEMENTS
3 nominations 


DEAN DEBLOIS
3 nominations


TRAVIS KNIGHT
3 nominations 


TOMM MOORE
3 nominations

Ron Clements is one of those people who'd have been an Oscar winner already if the Best Animated Feature category had been implemented sooner. With The Great Mouse Detective, The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, and Hercules under his belt, he should have a couple of statuettes already. DeBlois is currently developing live-action projects, so he's not likely to return so soon, while Chris Sanders is coming back to animation after a brief stint as a live-action director. Travis Knight has Wildwood on the horizon, and Tomm Moore will surely be nominated again for some Cartoon Saloon delight.

 

BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

SIGNE BYRGE SØRENSEN
3 nominations + 1 Best Animated Feature nod


WIM WENDERS
3 nominations

As a prolific documentary producer, Sørensen will probably be nominated again someday. That said, her next big project is Joshua Oppenheimer's musical about the end of humanity, starring Tilda Swinton and Michael Shannon. On the other hand, Wim Wenders keeps alternating between fiction and non-fiction, releasing two such titles this year. On the narrative front, there's the Cannes Best Actor winner Perfect Days. And then, there's Anselm, another 3-D extravaganza intent on exploring the work of Anselm Kiefer and the sound of time.

 

Which of these Oscarless artists do you think will get the award first? More importantly, who are you rooting for?

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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