Frances McDormand Could Be First Woman Nominated for Best Picture and Acting Oscars

Clayton Davis
·3 min read

Frances McDormand could make history for women at the Oscars.

The 63-year-old actor has received raves for her performance in ā€œNomadlandā€ from ChloĆ© Zhao, landing her in contention for her sixth acting nomination after winning two best actress Oscars (1996’s ā€œFargoā€ and 2018’s ā€œThree Billboards outside Ebbing, Missouriā€). McDormand is also one of the credited producers on the film and is poised to be a double nominee this year as a producer and an acting nominee, which would be the first for a woman in Academy Awards history.

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ā€œNomadlandā€ tells the story of Fern (McDormand), a woman who, during the Great Recession, decides to live as a modern-day nomad.

In the midst of another competitive best actress race, McDormand could join a list of just five performers who have won three acting Oscars: Ingrid Bergman, Walter Brennan, Daniel Day-Lewis, Jack Nicholson and Meryl Streep. Katherine Hepburn has won the most acting Oscars of all time with four.

What’s interesting McDormand’s potential nominations as a producer and acting nominee in the same year is how many men have achieved this feat on multiple occasions. Oscar-winner Warren Beatty has done it four times (1968’s ā€œBonnie and Clyde,ā€ 1978’s ā€œHeaven Can Wait,ā€ 1981’s ā€œRedsā€ and 1991’s ā€œBugsyā€). Clint Eastwood accomplished this with 1992’s ā€œUnforgivenā€ and 2004’s ā€œMillion Dollar Baby.ā€ Both times, he was also nominated as a director, for which he won both times, along with best picture. Eight-time nominee Bradley Cooper also achieved this twice with 2014’s ā€œAmerican Sniperā€ and 2018’s ā€œA Star is Born.ā€

While this would be a milestone, two female acting nominees have been nominated as producers in the best picture category in the 92 years of the Academy, though for different films than their acting nods: Barbra Streisand (won for 1968’s ā€œFunny Girlā€ in lead actress and nominated for 1991’s ā€œThe Prince of Tidesā€ as a producer) and Oprah Winfrey (nominated for 1986’s ā€œThe Color Purpleā€ in supporting actress and 2014’s ā€œSelmaā€ as a producer). Margot Robbie, who nearly achieved the distinction with 2017’s ā€œI, Tonyaā€ after being nominated for best actress but missed out on the best picture nomination, could also join Babs and Oprah if her film ā€œPromising Young Womanā€ makes the cut in the top category. Robbie is a producer on the Emerald Fennell film, which also stars Oscar hopeful Carey Mulligan.

Other recent actors-turned-producers include Kevin Costner (1990’s ā€œDances with Wolvesā€), Leonardo DiCaprio (2013’s ā€œThe Wolf of Wall Streetā€), Brad Pitt (2011’s ā€œMoneyballā€) and Denzel Washington (2016’s ā€œFencesā€). Washington could also become the most nominated Black producer in history this year with ā€œMa Rainey’s Black Bottomā€ with only two total nominations in the category. If nominated for best actress, Viola Davis, who stars in ā€œMa Rainey,ā€ could be the most nominated Black woman in Academy history with four total nominations.

Director ChloĆ© Zhao could also make history as the most nominated woman in a single ceremony if she garners Oscar attention for producing, directing, writing and editing. Only 14 films nominated for best picture have been directed by women beginning with 1986’s ā€œChildren of a Lesser Godā€ from Randa Haines and most recently, 2019’s ā€œLittle Womenā€ from Greta Gerwig.

Visit THE AWARDS HUB to see the full list of contenders by category.

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