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Post by Deleted on Aug 9, 2018 1:13:03 GMT
Past or present.
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Post by naterdawg on Aug 9, 2018 2:15:01 GMT
1. Deborah Kerr - for From Here to Eternity and The Innocents
2. Joan Bennett - for Father of the Bride
3. Elsa Lanchester - for The Bride of Frankenstein
4. Maureen O'Hara - for The Quiet Man
5. Ida Lupino - for The Hard Way
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Post by Deleted on Aug 9, 2018 9:25:19 GMT
Amy Adams
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Post by Sandman on Aug 9, 2018 18:01:17 GMT
Lena Olin for her performance in Romeo Is Bleeding. She was outstanding in it.
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Post by them1ghtyhumph on Aug 9, 2018 19:30:37 GMT
Amy Adams Olivia de Havilland- The Snake Pit Don't be greedy. Olivia won two.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 9, 2018 19:39:51 GMT
Amy Adams Olivia de Havilland- The Snake Pit Don't be greedy. Olivia won two. Damn that is true I forgot about that I have removed her name from my answer.
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Post by Archelaus on Aug 9, 2018 20:52:17 GMT
Judy Garland - A Star is Born Amy Adams Greta Garbo - Camille Lana Turner - The Bad and the Beautiful Maureen O'Hara Deborah Kerr
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Post by politicidal on Aug 9, 2018 23:33:17 GMT
Definitely Amy Adams.
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Post by bluerisk on Aug 12, 2018 16:57:32 GMT
Saoirse Ronan Amy Adams Sigourney Weaver
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Post by hi224 on Aug 12, 2018 17:15:00 GMT
Liv Ullman Sophia Loren Kirsten Dunst
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Post by marianne48 on Aug 19, 2018 6:08:58 GMT
Myrna Loy--always dependably subtle in both drama and light comedy; she never tried to show off, so she never got the attention necessary for even a single nomination.
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Post by mikef6 on Aug 19, 2018 18:54:25 GMT
Liv Ullman Sophia Loren Kirsten Dunst Sophia Loren is an Oscar winner: 1961 for La Ciociara (The Women)
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Post by mikef6 on Aug 19, 2018 19:02:53 GMT
Katy Jurado (1 nomination) Angela Lansbury (Honorary Oscar, 3 nominations) Greta Garbo (Honorary Oscar, 3 nominations) Jean Harlow (no nominations, but died way too young-who knows what the future might have held) Rosalind Russell (Honorary Oscar, 4 nominations)
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Post by hi224 on Aug 20, 2018 23:27:56 GMT
Liv Ullman Sophia Loren Kirsten Dunst Sophia Loren is an Oscar winner: 1961 for La Ciociara (The Women) whoops forgot mah badz.
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Post by hi224 on Aug 21, 2018 0:36:42 GMT
Joan Allen, should have two wins by now.
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Post by Geddy on Aug 21, 2018 0:46:09 GMT
Glenn Close. There's still hope though for her.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 21, 2018 1:08:31 GMT
Garbo should have won for Susan Lennox, Mata Hari and especially Queen Christina. Angela Lansbury deserved it for The Manchurian Candidate. Lilian Gish deserved it for The Whales of August.
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Post by dirtypillows on Aug 21, 2018 5:56:51 GMT
Bette Midler for THE ROSE - 79'. I can understand why Sally Field won for Norma Rae as her character was more inspiring, but she just didn't have the real, raw and exposed emotions, intensity or depth of range that Midler gave to her Rose. Watch both performances back to back and you can see Field acting what she doesn't really get, as opposed to Midler being what she is feeling. Pauline Kael said Midler gave the performance of the year. She is so raw in that role.
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Post by dirtypillows on Aug 21, 2018 6:05:36 GMT
1. Deborah Kerr - for From Here to Eternity and The Innocents 2. Joan Bennett - for Father of the Bride 3. Elsa Lanchester - for The Bride of Frankenstein 4. Maureen O'Hara - for The Quiet Man 5. Ida Lupino - for The Hard Way Oh, my God, Deborah Kerr was chillingly good in "The Innocents". I know there's supposed to be this great dispute as to what's really going on in this movie, but I loved the Deborah Kerr character so much that I was on her side the whole time. Ambiguity be damned. Quint and Miss Jessel were very real, and it took somebody as super sensitive and aware as Miss Giddens to know it. Though, I have to admit that when Michael Redgrave asks Deborah Kerr at the beginning of the movie... "Do you have an imagination?" Then she says, emphatically, "Oh, yes, absolutely!" , to which he then responds "That is good. I feel like the truth can only truly be understood by those who have imagination..." That line gave me chills, because it is the exact opposite of what most people think, but it is exactly the way that I think. In other words, I was NOT expecting such a line or point of view as this coming from a movie! "The Innocents" rarely goes past subtle, but it is by far the most deeply frightening movie I have ever seen and this is in no small part due to Deborah Kerr's exquisite performance. And the two child actors, especially Martin Stephens, were scarily good!
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