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  1. Awards

    • Academy Award Outstanding Production 1939 · Nominated

    • Academy Award Actress in a Supporting Role 1939 · Winner

    • Academy Award Cinematography 1939 · Nominated

    • Academy Award Music (Scoring) 1939 · Nominated

  1. Jezebel. Jump to. 5 wins & 4 nominations. Academy Awards, USA. 1939 Nominee Oscar. Best Picture. 1939 Winner Oscar. Best Actress in a Leading Role. Bette Davis. On 19 July 2001 Steven Spielberg purchased Davis' Oscar statuette at a Christie's auction and returned it to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

  2. Academy Awards: Outstanding Production: Hal B. Wallis and Henry Blanke (for Warner Bros.) Nominated Best Actress: Bette Davis: Won Best Supporting Actress: Fay Bainter: Won Best Cinematography: Ernest Haller: Nominated Best Scoring: Max Steiner: Nominated National Board of Review Awards: Top Ten Films: 8th Place National Film Preservation Board ...

  3. Jezebel, American drama film, released in 1938, that features Bette Davis opposite Henry Fonda in an opulent antebellum romance. Davis, in an Academy Award-winning performance, portrayed Julie Marsden, the strong-willed belle whose impertinent spoiled nature wreaks havoc on her relationship with.

    • Lee Pfeiffer
  4. 6 days ago · Q: Has “Jezebel” won any awards? A: Yes, “Jezebel” won two Academy Awards, including Best Actress for Bette Davis. Q: Where was “Jezebel” filmed? A: “Jezebel” was primarily filmed in Hollywood, California. Q: How long is the movie “Jezebel”? A: The runtime of “Jezebel” is approximately 104 minutes.

    • Elissa Walton
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  6. www.imdb.com › title › tt0030287Jezebel (1938) - IMDb

    Jezebel: Directed by William Wyler. With Bette Davis, Henry Fonda, George Brent, Margaret Lindsay. In 1850s Louisiana, a free-spirited Southern belle loses her fiancé due to her stubborn vanity and pride, and vows to win him back.

    • (15K)
    • Drama, Romance
    • William Wyler
    • 1938-03-26
  7. The 11th Academy Awards. | 1939. Biltmore Bowl of the Biltmore Hotel. Thursday, February 23, 1939. Honoring movies released in 1938.

  8. Bette Davis won her second Academy Award for Best Actress for the Civil War melodrama, Jezebel (1938), which took advantage of the cultural mania over Gone with the Wind by using many of the same plot elements and beating the 1939 blockbuster to theaters. Like Gone with the Wind, Jezebel tells the s... Read full article.

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