Listed below are the Academy Award nominations and winners for the year 1956. The
symbol appears next to the winner in each category. Click on the name of a film, person or song in the list to display more information about that film, person or song. Or, click on a year in the column on the right to display the nominations and winners from that year.
Around the World in 80 Days, The Michael Todd Co., Inc.; United Artists.
Michael Todd, Producer.
Giant, Giant Production; Warner Bros.
George Stevens and
Henry Ginsberg, Producers.
The King and I, 20th Century-Fox.
Charles Brackett, Producer.
The Ten Commandments, Motion Picture Associates, Inc.; Paramount.
Cecil B. DeMille, Producer.
James Dean in
Giant, Giant Production; Warner Bros.
Kirk Douglas in
Lust for Life, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Rock Hudson in
Giant, Giant Production; Warner Bros.
Sir Laurence Olivier in
Richard III, London Films; Lopert Films. (UK)
Carroll Baker in
Baby Doll, Newtown Production; Warner Bros.
Ingrid Bergman in
Anastasia, 20th Century-Fox.
Katharine Hepburn in
The Rainmaker, Hal Wallis Productions; Paramount.
Don Murray in
Bus Stop, 20th Century-Fox.
Anthony Quinn in
Lust for Life, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Mickey Rooney in
The Bold and the Brave, Filmakers Releasing Organization; RKO Radio.
Mildred Dunnock in
Baby Doll, Newtown Production; Warner Bros.
Mercedes McCambridge in
Giant, Giant Production; Warner Bros.
Around the World in 80 Days, The Michael Todd Co., Inc.; United Artists.
Michael Anderson.
Giant, Giant Production; Warner Bros.
George Stevens.
War and Peace, Ponti-De Laurentiis Production; Paramount. (USA, Italy)
King Vidor.
(Black-and-White)
The Magnificent Seven, Toho Production; Kingsley International Pictures. (USA, Philippines)
Takashi Matsuyama.
The Proud and Profane, Perlberg-Seaton Production; Paramount. Art direction by
Hal Pereira and
A. Earl Hedrick; set decoration by
Samuel M. Comer and
Frank R. McKelvy.
(Color)
Around the World in 80 Days, The Michael Todd Co., Inc.; United Artists. Art direction by
James W. Sullivan and
Ken Adam; set decoration by
Ross J. Dowd.
Giant, Giant Production; Warner Bros. Art direction by
Boris Leven; set decoration by
Ralph S. Hurst.
The King and I, 20th Century-Fox. Art direction by
Lyle R. Wheeler and
John DeCuir; set decoration by
Walter M. Scott and
Paul S. Fox.
The Ten Commandments, Motion Picture Associates, Inc.; Paramount. Art direction by
Hal Pereira,
Walter H. Tyler and
Albert Nozaki; set decoration by
Samuel M. Comer and
Ray Moyer.
(Black-and-White)
Baby Doll, Newtown Production; Warner Bros.
Boris Kaufman.
Stagecoach to Fury, Regal Films, Inc. Production; 20th Century-Fox.
Walter Strenge.
(Color)
Around the World in 80 Days, The Michael Todd Co., Inc.; United Artists.
Lionel Lindon.
The Ten Commandments, Motion Picture Associates, Inc.; Paramount.
Loyal Griggs.
War and Peace, Ponti-De Laurentiis Production; Paramount. (USA, Italy)
Jack Cardiff.
(Black-and-White)
The Magnificent Seven, Toho Production; Kingsley International Pictures. (USA, Philippines)
Kohei Ezaki.
The Proud and Profane, Perlberg-Seaton Production; Paramount.
Edith Head.
(Color)
Around the World in 80 Days, The Michael Todd Co., Inc.; United Artists.
Miles White.
Giant, Giant Production; Warner Bros.
Moss Mabry and
Marjorie Best.
War and Peace, Ponti-De Laurentiis Production; Paramount. (USA, Italy)
Marie De Matteis.
(Feature)
The Naked Eye, Camera Eye Pictures, Inc.; Film Representations, Inc.
Louis Clyde Stoumen, Producer.
The Silent World, Filmad-F.S.J.Y.C. Production; Columbia. (France, Italy)
Jacques-Yves Cousteau, Producer.
(Short Subject)
A City Decides, Charles Guggenheim & Associates, Inc.
The Dark Wave, 20th Century-Fox.
John Healy, Producer.
Man in Space, Walt Disney Productions; Buena Vista.
Ward Kimball, Producer.
The Brave One, King Brothers; RKO Radio.
Merrill G. White.
The Ten Commandments, Motion Picture Associates, Inc.; Paramount.
Anne Bauchens.
The Captain of Kopenick, Real-Film G.m.b.H. (West Germany)
Gyula Trebitsch and
Walter Koppel, Producers.
Gervaise, Agnes Delahaie Productions Cinematographiques & Silver Film. (France)
Annie Dorfmann, Producer.
Harp of Burma, Nikkatsu Corporation. (Japan)
Masayuki Takagi, Producer.
La Strada, Ponti-De Laurentiis Production; Trans-Lux Distributing Corporation. (Italy)
Dino De Laurentiis and
Carlo Ponti, Producers.
Qivitoq, A/S Nordisk Films Kampagni. (Denmark)
O. Dalsgaard-Olsen, Producer.
NOTE: First year of nominations; previously honored in the Honorary Award category.
(Music Score of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture)
Around the World in 80 Days, The Michael Todd Co., Inc.; United Artists.
Victor Young.
Giant, Giant Production; Warner Bros.
Dimitri Tiomkin.
The Rainmaker, Hal Wallis Productions; Paramount.
Alex North.
(Scoring of a Musical Picture)
High Society, Sol C. Siegel Production; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Johnny Green and
Saul Chaplin.
(Song)
Julie from
Julie, Arwin Productions; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Music by
Leith Stevens; lyrics by
Tom Adair.
True Love from
High Society, Sol C. Siegel Production; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Music and lyrics by
Cole Porter.
(Cartoons)
Gerald McBoing-Boing on Planet Moo, UPA (United Productions of America); Columbia. [Jolly Frolics Series]
Stephen Bosustow, Producer.
The Jay Walker, UPA (United Productions of America); Columbia. [UPA Special Series]
Stephen Bosustow, Producer.
Mister Magoo’s Puddle Jumper, UPA (United Productions of America); Columbia. [Mister Magoo Series]
Stephen Bosustow, Producer.
(One-reel)
Crashing the Water Barrier, Warner Bros. [The Sports Parade Series]
Konstantin Kalser, Producer.
I Never Forget a Face, Warner Bros. [Warner Specials Series]
Robert Youngson, Producer.
Time Stood Still, Warner Bros. [Scope Gems Series]
Cedric Francis, Producer.
(Two-reel)
The Bespoke Overcoat, Romulus Films; George K. Arthur-Go Pictures, Inc. (UK)
Romulus Films.
Cow Dog, Walt Disney Productions; Buena Vista.
Larry Lansburgh, Producer.
The Dark Wave, 20th Century-Fox.
John Healy, Producer.
Samoa, Walt Disney Productions; Buena Vista. [People and Places Series]
Walt Disney, Producer.
The Ten Commandments, Motion Picture Associates, Inc.; Paramount.
John Fulton.
(Motion Picture Story)
The Brave One, King Brothers; RKO Radio.
Dalton Trumbo.
[NOTE: The name of the writer credited with authorship, “Robert Rich,” turned out to be an alias. Two decades later, the mystery was officially solved and the Academy statuette went (on May 2, 1975, presented by then-Academy president Walter Mirisch) to its rightful owner, screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, blacklisted in 1956 by the industry for political affiliations.]
High Society, Allied Artists.
Edward Bernds and
Elwood Ullman.
[NOTE: The authors of this Bowery Boys quickie respectfully withdrew their own names and the nomination, aware that voters had probably mistaken their film with a 1956 MGM release with the same title written by John Patrick and starring Bing Crosby, Grace Kelly and Frank Sinatra. (Even so, MGM’s High Society would only have been eligible for adapted screenplay.) This nomination was not included in the final ballot.]
The Proud and the Beautiful, La Compagnie Industrielle Commerciale Cinematographique; Kingsley International Pictures. (France, Mexico)
Jean Paul Sartre.
Umberto D., Rizzoli-De Sica-Amato Production; Harrison & Davidson. (Italy)
Cesare Zavattini.
(Screenplay—Adapted)
Baby Doll, Newtown Production; Warner Bros.
Tennessee Williams.
Friendly Persuasion, Allied Artists.
Michael Wilson.
[NOTE: Early in 1956, the name of screenwriter Michael Wilson (a former Oscar winner) had been deleted from the credits of Friendly Persuasion by Allied Artists, the film’s distributor, based on a 1952 agreement between the Screen Writers Guild and various production companies. That agreement gave studios the right to omit from the screen the name of any individual who had failed to clear himself before a duly constituted legislative committee of Congress if accused of Communist affiliations, as was the case with Wilson at the time. The Academy, in the awkward position of possibly conferring its highest honor on someone whose name had been omitted from screen credit, revised its bylaws at a special February 6, 1957, meeting. That revision, in essence, allowed that in such cases, the achievement itself could be eligible for nomination, but the specific writer would not be. (The bylaw was repealed by the Academy as “unworkable” on January 12, 1959.) This nomination was not included in the final ballot. In 2002 The Academy’s Board of Governors reinstated the nomination.]
Giant, Giant Production; Warner Bros.
Fred Guiol and
Ivan Moffat.
(Screenplay—Original)
The Bold and the Brave, Filmakers Releasing Organization; RKO Radio.
Robert Lewin.
Julie, Arwin Productions; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Andrew L. Stone.
La Strada, Ponti-De Laurentiis Production; Trans-Lux Distributing Corporation. (Italy)
Federico Fellini and
Tullio Pinelli.
The Ladykillers, Ealing Studios, Ltd.; Continental Distributing, Inc. (UK)
William Rose.
The Red Balloon, Films Montsouris; Lopert Films. (France)
Albert Lamorisse.

To
Eddie Cantor for distinguished service to the film industry. [ [Statuette]]
NOTE: The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award was first presented in 1956.
(Class III)

To
Richard H. Ranger of Rangertone, Inc., for the development of a synchronous recording and reproducing system for quarter-inch magnetic tape.

To
Ted Hirsch,
Carl Hauge and
Edward Reichard of Consolidated Film Industries for an automatic scene counter for laboratory projection rooms.

To the
Technical Departments of Paramount Pictures Corp. for the engineering and development of the Paramount light-weight horizontal-movement VistVision camera.

To
Roy C. Stewart and Sons of Stewart-Trans Lux Corp.,
Dr. C. R. Daily and the
Transparency Department of Paramount Pictures Corp. for the engineering and development of the HiTrans and Para-HiTrans rear projection screens.