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  2. Best Picture - Francis Ford Coppola, Producer; Gary Kurtz, Co-Producer Writing (Story and Screenplay--based on factual material or material not previously published or produced) - George Lucas, Gloria Katz, Willard Huyck

  3. 47th →. The 46th Academy Awards were presented on Tuesday, April 2, 1974, at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles, California. The ceremonies were presided over by Burt Reynolds, Diana Ross, John Huston, and David Niven. The Sting won 7 awards, including Best Picture and Best Director for George Roy Hill.

    Best Picture
    Best Director
    The Sting – Tony Bill, Julia Phillips and ...
    George Roy Hill – The Sting‡ George Lucas ...
    Jack Lemmon – Save the Tiger as Harry ...
    Glenda Jackson – A Touch of Class as ...
    John Houseman – The Paper Chase as ...
    Tatum O'Neal – Paper Moon as Addie ...
    The Sting – David S. Ward‡ American ...
    The Exorcist – William Peter Blatty based ...
    • Best Picture
    • Directing
    • Actor
    • Actress
    • Actor in A Supporting Role
    • Actress in A Supporting Role
    • Writing
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    Chinatown – Robert Evans The Conversation – Francis Ford Coppola, Fred Roos The Godfather Part II – Francis Ford Coppola, Gray Frederickson, Fred Roos Lenny – Marvin Worth The Towering Inferno– Irwin Allen

    Chinatown – Roman Polanski Day for Night – Francois Truffaut The Godfather Part II – Francis Ford Coppola Lenny – Bob Fosse A Woman under the Influence– John Cassavetes

    Art Carney – Harry and Tonto Albert Finney – Murder on the Orient Express Dustin Hoffman – Lenny Jack Nicholson – Chinatown Al Pacino – The Godfather Part II

    Ellen Burstyn – Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore Diahann Carroll – Claudine Faye Dunaway – Chinatown Valerie Perrine – Lenny Gena Rowlands – A Woman under the Influence

    Fred Astaire – The Towering Inferno Jeff Bridges – Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Robert De Niro – The Godfather Part II Michael V. Gazzo – The Godfather Part II Lee Strasberg – The Godfather Part II

    Ingrid Bergman – Murder on the Orient Express Valentina Cortese – Day for Night Madeline Kahn – Blazing Saddles Diane Ladd – Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore Talia Shire – The Godfather Part II

    Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore – Robert Getchell Chinatown – Robert Towne The Conversation – Francis Ford Coppola Day for Night – Francois Truffaut, Jean-Louis Richard, Suzanne Schiffman Harry and Tonto– Paul Mazursky, Josh Greenfeld

    “Benji’s Theme (I Feel Love)” – Benji – Music by Euel Box; Lyrics by Betty Box “Blazing Saddles” – Blazing Saddles – Music by John Morris; Lyrics by Mel Brooks “Little Prince” – The Little Prince – Music by Frederick Loewe; Lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner “We May Never Love Like This Again” – The Towering Inferno – Music, Lyrics by Al Kasha, Joel Hirschh...

    Blazing Saddles – John C. Howard, Danford Greene Chinatown – Sam O’Steen Earthquake – Dorothy Spencer The Longest Yard – Michael Luciano The Towering Inferno– Harold F. Kress, Carl Kress

    Chinatown – John A. Alonzo Earthquake – Philip Lathrop Lenny – Bruce Surtees Murder on the Orient Express – Geoffrey Unsworth The Towering Inferno– Fred Koenekamp, Joseph Biroc

  4. Nov 24, 2009 · Elizabeth Taylor presenting the Best Picture Oscar® for "The Sting" to Producers Tony Bill, Michael Phillips and Julia Phillips at the 46th Academy Awards® in 1974.

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    • Oscars
  5. The 46th Academy Awards Memorable Moments. Best Picture: The Sting. The Sting also won Academy Awards for Art Direction-Set Decoration (Henry Bumstead and James Payne), Costume Design (Edith Head), Directing (George Roy Hill), Film Editing (William Reynolds), Music – Scoring, Original Song Score and/or Adaptation (Marvin Hamlisch), and ...

  6. With his new honors in 1974, he would add three more awards: Best Picture (as producer), Best Director, and Best Screenplay Adaptation (again shared with Mario Puzo). It was an unprecedented win for Coppola - three Oscars for writing, producing, and directing the same film.]

  7. Mar 1, 2014 · By 1974, Katharine Hepburn had won three lead actress Academy Awards, for 1933’s “Morning Glory,” 1967’s “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner” and 1968’s “The Lion in Winter” and had been nominated...