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  1. Memorable Moments. Karl Malden. Supporting Actor for A Streetcar Named Desire, with Claire Trevor and Danny Kaye. Humphrey Bogart. Best Actor winner for The African Queen, with presenter Claire Trevor. Vivien Leigh. Accepting her Best Actress award for A Streetcar Named Desire from Harry Cohn in London, England. View More Memorable Moments.

  2. It is the theme song of the 1952 multiple Academy Award-winning movie High Noon (and titled onscreen as such in the film's opening credits as sung by popular country music singer and actor Tex Ritter), with its tune repeated throughout the film. It was awarded the 1952 Academy Award for Best Original Song, [1] and was performed that night for ...

    • Best Motion Picture
    • Directing
    • Actor
    • Actress
    • Actor in A Supporting Role
    • Actress in A Supporting Role
    • Writing
    • Music
    • Film Editing
    • Cinematography

    The Greatest Show on Earth – Cecil B. DeMille High Noon – Stanley Kramer Ivanhoe – Pandro S. Berman Moulin Rouge – Romulus Films The Quiet Man– John Ford, Merian C. Cooper

    Five Fingers – Joseph L. Mankiewicz The Greatest Show on Earth – Cecil B. DeMille High Noon – Fred Zinnemann Moulin Rouge – John Huston The Quiet Man– John Ford

    Marlon Brando – Viva Zapata! Gary Cooper – High Noon Kirk Douglas – The Bad and the Beautiful José Ferrer – Moulin Rouge Alec Guinness – The Lavender Hill Mob

    Shirley Booth – Come Back, Little Sheba Joan Crawford – Sudden Fear Bette Davis – The Star Julie Harris – The Member of the Wedding Susan Hayward – With a Song in My Heart

    Richard Burton – My Cousin Rachel Arthur Hunnicutt – The Big Sky Victor McLaglen – The Quiet Man Jack Palance – Sudden Fear Anthony Quinn – Viva Zapata!

    Gloria Grahame – The Bad and the Beautiful Jean Hagen – Singin’ in the Rain Colette Marchand – Moulin Rouge Terry Moore – Come Back, Little Sheba Thelma Ritter – With a Song in My Heart

    The Greatest Show on Earth – Fredric M. Frank, Theodore St. John, Frank Cavett My Son John – Leo McCarey The Narrow Margin – Martin Goldsmith, Jack Leonard The Pride of St. Louis – Guy Trosper The Sniper– Edna Anhalt, Edward Anhalt

    “Am I In Love” – Son of Paleface – Music, Lyrics by Jack Brooks “Because You’re Mine” – Because You’re Mine – Music by Nicholas Brodszky; Lyrics by Sammy Cahn “High Noon (Do Not Forsake Me, Oh My Darlin’)” – High Noon – Music by Dimitri Tiomkin; Lyrics by Ned Washington “Thumbelina” – Hans Christian Andersen – Music, Lyrics by Frank Loesser “Zing A...

    Come Back, Little Sheba – Warren Low Flat Top – William Austin The Greatest Show on Earth – Anne Bauchens High Noon – Elmo Williams, Harry Gerstad Moulin Rouge– Ralph Kemplen

    The Bad and the Beautiful – Robert Surtees The Big Sky – Russell Harlan My Cousin Rachel – Joseph LaShelle Navajo – Virgil E. Miller Sudden Fear– Charles B. Lang, Jr.

  3. Film Length. 10,504ft (13 reels) On the night of the annual New York newspapermen's ball, singer Jane Froman is honored as "the most courageous entertainer of the year." As Jane sings, John Burn, who is sitting at her table, remembers her rise to fame: In the mid-1930s, Jane rushes into a Cincinnati radio station to audition for a job.

    • Walter Lang, Jerry Bryan, Hal Klein
    • Susan Hayward
  4. The 24th Academy Awards were held on March 20, 1952, honoring the films of 1951. The ceremony was hosted by Danny Kaye . An American in Paris and A Place in the Sun each received six Oscars, splitting Best Picture and Best Director, respectively. A Streetcar Named Desire won four Oscars, including three of the four acting awards for which it ...

    Best Motion Picture
    Best Director
    An American in Paris – Arthur Freed for ...
    George Stevens – A Place in the Sun ‡ ...
    Humphrey Bogart – The African Queen as ...
    Vivien Leigh – A Streetcar Named Desire ...
    Karl Malden – A Streetcar Named Desire as ...
    Kim Hunter – A Streetcar Named Desire as ...
    An American in Paris – Alan Jay Lerner ‡ ...
    A Place in the Sun – Michael Wilson and ...
  5. 26th →. The 25th Academy Awards were held on March 19, 1953 at the RKO Pantages Theatre in Hollywood, and the NBC International Theatre in New York City, to honor the films of 1952. It was the first Oscars ceremony to be televised, [ 1] the first ceremony to be held in Hollywood and New York simultaneously, and the only year in which the New ...

  6. In the film, Debbie Reynolds drives the same jalopy used by Mickey Rooney in the Andy Hardy movies. Afterward: Jean Hagen was nominated for the 1952 “Best Supporting Actress” Academy Award for “Singin’ in the Rain”, and Lennie Hayton was nominated for “Best Scoring of a Musical Picture”. Neither person won an Oscar.

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