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  1. On October 15, 1951, I Love Lucy debuted on CBS. On November 24, 1951, the play Gigi, starring a relatively unknown actress named Audrey Hepburn, opened on Broadway. Honorary Foreign Language Film Award. Japan – To Rashomon - voted by the Board of Governors as the most outstanding foreign language film released in the United States during 1951.

  2. 1956 Nominee Oscar. Best Film Editing. Gene Ruggiero. George Boemler. 1956 Winner Oscar. Best Music, Scoring of a Musical Picture. Robert Russell Bennett. Jay Blackton. Adolph Deutsch.

  3. Gary Cooper, Joan Fontaine, Mary Astor and Donald Crisp. Best Actor winner for Sergeant York, Best Actress winner for Suspicion, Supporting Actress winner for The Great Lie, and... Bob Hope. Host of the Academy Awards. Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell.

  4. The following list covers Academy Awards given in all categories of motion picture musical score composition, including best original and best adapted musical score, best score for a musical and for a non-musical picture, and awards for song scores. The complete list can be found by searching on "Music (Scoring)" in the Awards Database of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

  5. Official site of the Academy with history and general information on the Academy Awards, as well as photographs, events and screenings, and press releases.

  6. Official site of the Academy with history and general information on the Academy Awards, as well as photographs, events and screenings, and press releases.

  7. Alfred Newman (winner for Scoring of a Musical Picture for With a Song in My Heart), Ned Washington (Original Song winner for High Noon), Walt Disney, and Dimitri Tiomkin (winner of Music Score of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture and Original Song for High Noon)

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