Sunday, April 08, 2007

The epic "Lawrence of Arabia"

1963 - Seven Oscars including the #1 award for Best Picture went to Lawrence of Arabia (Sam Spiegel, producer) at the 35th Annual Academy Awards at Santa Monica’s Civic Auditorium (Los Angeles). The epic production earned Oscars for David Lean (Best Director); Freddie Young (Best Cinematography/Color); John Box, John Stoll, & Dario Simoni (Best Art Direction/Set Decoration/Color); John Cox with Shepperton SSD (Best Sound); Anne V. Coates (Best Film Editing); Maurice Jarre (Best Music/Score - Substantially Original). Ol’ Blue Eyes hosted the festivities honoring the films of 1962 (including the film Sinatra starred in, The Manchurian Candidate.)
Other notable flicks of that year including some award winners, and some not: Taras Bulba, Mutiny on the Bounty, Walk on the Wild Side, The Longest Day, The Music Man, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, Birdman of Alcatraz. Those that won the top awards other than Lawrence of Arabia were To Kill a Mockingbird (Best Actor - Gregory Peck; Best Art Direction/Set Decoration/Black-and-White - Alexander Golitzen, Henry Bumstead, Oliver Emert; Best Writing/Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium - Horton Foote); The Miracle Worker (Best Actress - Anne Bancroft, Best Supporting Actress - Patty Duke) ; Sweet Bird of Youth (Best Supporting Actor - Ed Begley); and Days of Wine and Roses [title song] (Best Music/Song: - Henry Mancini (music), Johnny Mercer lyrics).

The REAL T E Lawrence


Omar Shariff also starred in the movie.

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