David Lean filmography

David Lean filmography

This is a list of the films David Lean has directed from 1942-1984 with the awards of which the films won and nominated.

Contents

In Which We Serve (1942)

2 Academy Award Nominations

This Happy Breed (1944)

The National Board of Review named Celia Johnson Best Actress for her portrayal of Ethel Gibbons.

Blithe Spirit (1945)

1 Academy Award Nomination

Brief Encounter (1945)

3 Academy Award Nominations

Great Expectations (1946)

5 Academy Award Nominations

Oliver Twist (1948)

1 BAFTA Nomination

The Passionate Friends (1949)

Madeleine (1950)

The Sound Barrier (1952)

2 Academy Award Nominations

5 BAFTA Nominations

Hobson's Choice (1954)

5 BAFTA Nominations

Berlin Film Festival

Summertime (1955)

2 Academy Award Nomination

2 BAFTA Nominations

The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)

8 Academy Award Nominations, 7 wins

Honored posthumously in 1984* Carl Foreman CBE and Michael Wilson posthumously awarded Oscars in 1984 because they received no screen credit

4 BAFTA Awards Nominations, 4 wins

4 Golden Globe Award Nominations, 3 wins

Lawrence of Arabia (1962)

  • Academy Awards (10 nominations, 7 wins)
    • Best Actor (Peter O'Toole; lost to Gregory Peck, To Kill a Mockingbird)
    • Best Art Direction and Set Decoration – Color (John Box, Mario Simoni and John Stoll, won)
    • Best Cinematography – Color (Freddie Young, won)
    • Best Director (David Lean, won)
    • Best Editing (Anne V. Coates, won)
    • Best Film (won)
    • Best Score – Substantially Original (Maurice Jarre, won)
    • Best Screenplay – Adapted (Robert Bolt and Michael Wilson; lost to Horton Foote, To Kill a Mockingbird)
    • Best Sound (John Cox, won)
    • Best Supporting Actor (Omar Sharif; lost to Ed Begley, Sweet Bird of Youth)
  • Golden Globe Awards (7 nominations, 4 wins)
    • Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama (Peter O'Toole; lost to Gregory Peck, To Kill a Mockingbird)
    • Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama (Anthony Quinn; lost to Gregory Peck, To Kill a Mockingbird)
    • Best Cinematography – Color (Freddie Young, won)
    • Best Director – Motion Picture (David Lean, won)
    • Best Film – Drama (won)
    • Best Score – Motion Picture (Maurice Jarre; lost to Elmer Bernstein, To Kill a Mockingbird)
    • Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture (Omar Sharif, won)

Doctor Zhivago (1965)

  • Academy Awards (10 nominations, 5 wins)
    • Best Art Direction and Set Decoration – Color (John Box, Terence Marsh and Dario Simoni, won)
    • Best Cinematography – Color (Freddie Young, won)
    • Best Costume Design – Color (Phyllis Dalton, won)
    • Best Director (David Lean; lost to Robert Wise, The Sound of Music)
    • Best Editing (Norman Savage; lost to William Reynolds, The Sound of Music)
    • Best Film (lost to The Sound of Music)
    • Best Score – Substantially Original (Maurice Jarre, won)
    • Best Screenplay – Adapted (Robert Bolt, won)
    • Best Sound (Franklin Milton and A.W. Watkins; lost to The Sound of Music)
    • Best Supporting Actor (Tom Courtenay; lost to Martin Balsam, A Thousand Clowns)
  • BAFTA Awards (3 nominations)
    • Best British Actor (Ralph Richardson; lost to Richard Burton, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?)
    • Best British Actress (Julie Christie; lost to Elizabeth Taylor, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?)
    • Best Film (David Lean; lost to Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?)
  • Golden Globe Awards (5 wins)
    • Best Actor – Drama (Omar Sharif, won)
    • Best Director – Motion Picture (David Lean, won)
    • Best Film – Drama (won)
    • Best Original Score (Maurice Jarre, won)
    • Best Screenplay – Motion Picture (Robert Bolt, won)

Ryan's Daughter (1970)

  • Academy Awards (4 nominations, 2 wins)
    • Best Actress (Sarah Miles; lost to Glenda Jackson, Women in Love)
    • Best Cinematography (Freddie Young, won)
    • Best Sound (John Bramall and Gordon K. McCallum; lost to Patton)
    • Best Supporting Actor (John Mills, won)
  • BAFTA Awards (10 nominations)
    • Best Actress (Sarah Miles; lost to Katharine Ross, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here)
    • Best Art Direction (Stephen B. Grimes; lost to Mario Garbuglia, Waterloo)
    • Best Cinematography (Freddie Young; lost to Conrad L. Hall, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid)
    • Best Costume Design (Jocelyn Rickards; lost to Maria De Matteis, Waterloo)
    • Best Director (David Lean; lost to George Roy Hill, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid)
    • Best Film (lost to Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid)
    • Best Film Editing (Norman Savage; lost to John C. Howard and Richard C. Meyer, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid)
    • Best Sound Track (Gordon K. McCallum and Winston Ryder; lost to Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid)
    • Best Supporting Actor (John Mills; lost to Colin Welland, Kes)
    • Best Supporting Actress (Evin Crowley; lost to Susannah York, They Shoot Horses, Don't They?)
  • Golden Globe Awards (3 nominations, 1 win)
    • Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama (Sarah Miles; lost to Ali MacGraw, Love Story)
    • Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture (John Mills, won)
    • Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture (Trevor Howard; lost to John Mills, Ryan's Daughter)

A Passage to India (1984)

Academy Awards (11 nominations, 2 wins)

  1. Best Actress (Judy Davis; lost to Sally Field, Places in the Heart)
  2. Best Art Direction-Set Decoration (John Box and Hugh Scaife; lost to Patrizia von Brandenstein and Karel Cerný, Amadeus)
  3. Best Cinematography (Ernest Day; lost to Chris Menges, The Killing Fields)
  4. Best Costume Design (Judy Moorcroft; lost to Theodor Pistek, Amadeus)
  5. Best Director (David Lean; lost to Milos Forman, Amadeus)
  6. Best Editing (David Lean, nominated)
  7. Best Film (lost to Amadeus)
  8. Best Original Score (Maurice Jarre, won)
  9. Best Screenplay – Adapted (David Lean, lost to Peter Shaffer, Amadeus)
  10. Best Sound (Michael A. Carter, Graham V. Hartstone, Nicolas Le Messurier and John W. Mitchell; lost to Amadeus)
  11. Best Supporting Actress (Peggy Ashcroft, won)

BAFTA Awards (9 nominations, 1 win)

  1. Best Actor (Victor Banerjee, nominated)
  2. Best Actor (James Fox, nominated)
  3. Best Actress (Peggy Ashcroft, won)
  4. Best Cinematography (Ernest Day, nominated)
  5. Best Costume Design (Judy Moorcroft, nominated)
  6. Best Film (nominated)
  7. Best Production Design (John Box, nominated)
  8. Best Score (Maurice Jarre, nominated)
  9. Best Screenplay – Adapted (David Lean, nominated)

Golden Globe Awards (5 nominations, 3 wins)

  1. Best Director – Motion Picture (David Lean, nominated)
  2. Best Foreign Film (England, won)
  3. Best Original Score – Motion Picture (Maurice Jarre, won)
  4. Best Screenplay – Motion Picture (David Lean, nominated)
  5. Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture (Peggy Ashcroft, won)
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
George Stevens
for Giant
Academy Award for Best Director
1957
for The Bridge on the River Kwai
Succeeded by
Vincente Minnelli
for Gigi
Preceded by
Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins
for West Side Story
Academy Award for Best Director
1962
for Lawrence of Arabia
Succeeded by
Tony Richardson
for Tom Jones

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