Academy Award for Best Actress
Academy Award for Best Actress
Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role is one of the Academy Awards of Merit presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) to recognize an actress who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry. Prior to the 49th Academy Awards ceremony (1977), this award was simply known as the Academy Award of Merit for Performance by an Actress. Since its inception, however, the award has commonly been referred to as the Oscar for Best Actress. While actresses are nominated for this award by Academy members who are actors and actresses themselves, winners are selected by the Academy membership as a whole.
History
Throughout the past 80 years, accounting for ties and repeat winners, AMPAS has presented a total of 81 Best Actress awards to 67 different people. Winners of this Academy Award of Merit receive the familiar Oscar statuette, depicting a gold-plated knight holding a crusader's sword and standing on a reel of film. The first recipient was Janet Gaynor, who was honored at the 1st Academy Awards ceremony (1929) for her performances in Seventh Heaven, Street Angel, and Sunrise. The most recent recipient was Marion Cotillard, who was honored at the 80th Academy Awards ceremony (2008) for her performance as legendary French chanteuse Edith Piaf in La Vie en Rose.
In the first three years of the Academy Awards, individuals such as actors and directors were nominated as the best in their categories. Then all of their work during the qualifying period (as many as three films, in some cases) was listed after the award. However, during the 3rd Academy Awards ceremony (1930), only one of those films was cited in each winner's final award, even though each of the acting winners had had two films following their names on the ballots. For the 4th Academy Awards ceremony (1931), this unwieldy and confusing system was replaced by the current system in which an actress is nominated for a specific performance in a single film. Such nominations are limited to five per year. Until the 8th Academy Awards ceremony (1936), nominations for the Best Actress award were intended to include all actresses, whether the performance was in either a leading or supporting role. At the 9th Academy Awards ceremony (1937), however, the Best Supporting Actress category was specifically introduced as a distinct award following complaints that the single Best Actress category necessarily favored leading performers with the most screen time. Nonetheless, May Robson had received a Best Actress nomination (Lady for a Day, 1933) for her performance in a clear supporting role. Currently, Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role, Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role, Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role, and Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role constitute the four Academy Awards of Merit for acting annually presented by AMPAS.
Superlatives
| Superlative | Best Actress | Best Supporting Actress | Overall | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Actress with Most Awards | Katharine Hepburn | 4 | Shelley Winters and Dianne Wiest | 2 | Katharine Hepburn | 4 |
| Actress with Most Nominations | Katharine Hepburn | 12 | Thelma Ritter | 6 | Meryl Streep | 14 |
| Actress with Most Nominations without ever winning | Deborah Kerr | 6 | Thelma Ritter | 6 | Deborah Kerr and Thelma Ritter | 6 |
| Film with Most Nominations | All About Eve; Suddenly, Last Summer; The Turning Point; Terms of Endearment; Thelma & Louise |
2 | Tom Jones | 3 | All About Eve | 4 |
| Oldest Winner | Jessica Tandy | 80 | Peggy Ashcroft | 77 | Jessica Tandy | 80 |
| Oldest Nominee | Jessica Tandy | 80 | Gloria Stuart | 87 | Gloria Stuart | 87 |
| Youngest Winner | Marlee Matlin | 21 | Tatum O'Neal | 10 | Tatum O'Neal | 10 |
| Youngest Nominee | Keisha Castle-Hughes | 13 | Tatum O'Neal | 10 | Tatum O'Neal | 10 |
Katharine Hepburn, with four wins, has more Best Actress Awards than any other actress. Eleven women have won two Best Actress Awards; in chronological order, they are Luise Rainer, Bette Davis, Olivia de Havilland, Vivien Leigh, Ingrid Bergman, Elizabeth Taylor, Glenda Jackson, Jane Fonda, Sally Field, Jodie Foster, and Hilary Swank.
Only two actresses have won this award in consecutive years: Luise Rainer (1937 and 1938) and Katharine Hepburn (1968 and 1969).
Katharine Hepburn holds the record in the Best Actress category with 12 nominations. Meryl Streep has been nominated 14 times (11 for Best Actress and 3 for Best Supporting Actress), which makes her the overall most-nominated performer in all acting categories.
There has been only one tie in the history of this category. This occurred in 1969 when Katharine Hepburn and Barbra Streisand were both given the award. Unlike the earlier 1932 tie for Best Actor, however, Hepburn and Streisand each received the exact same number of votes.
Only twice have siblings been nominated for the Best Actress award during the same year: Olivia de Havilland and Joan Fontaine in 1942; and Lynn Redgrave and Vanessa Redgrave in 1967.
Only two pairs of actresses have been nominated for Best Actress for the same role: Jeanne Eagels and Bette Davis as Leslie Crosbie in The Letter (1929 and 1940), and Janet Gaynor and Judy Garland as Vicki Lester in A Star is Born (1937 and 1954). In addition, Judi Dench and Kate Winslet both received nominations (Dench for Best Actress and Winslet for Best Supporting Actress) for their portrayals of Iris Murdoch at different ages in 2001's Iris. Winslet and Gloria Stuart were also both nominated (Winslet for Best Actress and Stuart for Best Supporting Actress) for their portrayals of Rose DeWitt Bukater in Titanic (1997).
The 71st Academy Awards (1999) presented the unique case of actresses being nominated in the same year for the same character in different films. Cate Blanchett was nominated for Best Actress for playing Queen Elizabeth I of England in Elizabeth, while Judi Dench was nominated for (and won) Best Supporting Actress for playing the same character in Shakespeare in Love.
Cate Blanchett is the only actress to be nominated twice for the same role (Queen Elizabeth I), first for 1998's Elizabeth and then again for 2007's Elizabeth: The Golden Age.
Kate Winslet, at age 31, became the youngest actress to be nominated for five Academy Awards.
Halle Berry, who won in 2002 for her role in Monster's Ball, is the first and only woman of African-American descent to win the Best Actress award.[1] Only six other black actresses have been nominated: Dorothy Dandridge, Diana Ross, Cicely Tyson, Diahann Carroll, Whoopi Goldberg, and Angela Bassett.
Charlize Theron is the first and only African actress to win the Academy Award for Best Actress, for her role in Monster (2003).
Only one Asian actress has been nominated: Merle Oberon, born to an Anglo-Sri Lankan mother and father of unknown origin.
Only five actresses of Hispanic descent have been nominated for the Best Actress award but as of 2008 none has yet won: Helena Bonham Carter (1997; her mother is Spanish), Fernanda Montenegro (1998; the first Latin American actress ever nominated), Salma Hayek (2002), Catalina Sandino Moreno (2004), and Penélope Cruz (2006).
Nicole Kidman is the first and only Australian actress to win the Best Actress award (The Hours, 2003); other Australian nominees include May Robson for "Lady for a Day" (1933), Judy Davis for A Passage to India (1984), Cate Blanchett for Elizabeth (1998) and Elizabeth: The Golden Age (2007), and Naomi Watts for 21 Grams (2004).
Sophia Loren and Marion Cotillard are the only actresses to win this award for a foreign-language performance: Loren for her Italian-language performance in Two Women (1961) and Cotillard for her French-language performance in La Vie en Rose (2007).
Jane Wyman, Marlee Matlin and Holly Hunter are the only actresses in the post-silent era to receive Academy Awards for non-speaking roles. Wyman, playing a deaf-mute rape victim in Johnny Belinda (1948), was the first person in the sound era to win an acting Oscar without speaking a line of dialogue. Matlin won the award for her American sign language performance in Children of a Lesser God (1986), and Hunter for her British sign language role in The Piano (1993). Unlike Matlin, who is almost completely deaf in real life and thus does not speak a single word in the film, Hunter's narrating voice can be heard offscreen in a few scenes, especially at the end of the film.
Helen Hayes, Ingrid Bergman, Maggie Smith, Meryl Streep, and Jessica Lange have each won both Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress awards.
No Best Actress winning or nominated performance is lost, although Sadie Thompson (1928) is incomplete and missing portions have been reconstructed with stills.
There have been no posthumous winners of the award. The only posthumous nomination of a woman for any acting award was Jeanne Eagels, who was nominated for Best Actress in 1929 for The Letter. She was the first woman to be posthumously nominated for an Oscar in any category.
The earliest nominee in this category who is still alive is Luise Rainer (1936 and 1937) followed by Joan Fontaine (1941). The earliest winner in this category who is still alive is Luise Rainer (1936 and 1937) followed by Joan Fontaine (1942).
Winners and nominees
Following the Academy's practice, the films below are listed by year of their Los Angeles qualifying run, which is usually (but not always) the film's year of release. For example, the Oscar for Best Actress of 1999 was announced during the award ceremony held in 2000. Winners are listed first in bold, followed by the other nominees.
1920s
- 1927–1928 Janet Gaynor - Seventh Heaven as Diane, Street Angel as Angela, and Sunrise as The Wife - Indre
- Louise Dresser - A Ship Comes In as Mrs. Pleznik
- Gloria Swanson - Sadie Thompson as Sadie Thompson
- 1928–1929 Mary Pickford - Coquette as Norma Besant
- Ruth Chatterton - Madame X as Jacqueline Floriot
- Betty Compson - The Barker as Carrie
- Jeanne Eagels - The Letter as Leslie Crosbie (posthumous nomination)
- Corinne Griffith - The Divine Lady as Lady Emma Hart Hamilton
- Bessie Love - The Broadway Melody as Hank Mahoney
1930s
- 1929–1930 Norma Shearer - The Divorcee as Jerry Bernard Martin
- Nancy Carroll - The Devil's Holiday as Hallie Hobart
- Ruth Chatterton - Sarah and Son as Sarah Storm
- Greta Garbo - Anna Christie as Anna Christie and Romance as Madame Rita Cavallini
- Norma Shearer - Their Own Desire as Lucia 'Lally' Marlett
- Gloria Swanson - The Trespasser as Marion Donnell
- 1930–1931 Marie Dressler - Min and Bill as Min Divot, Inkeeper
- Marlene Dietrich - Morocco as Mademoiselle Amy Jolly
- Irene Dunne - Cimarron as Sabra Cravat
- Ann Harding - Holiday as Linda Seton
- Norma Shearer - A Free Soul as Jan Ashe
- 1931–1932 Helen Hayes - The Sin of Madelon Claudet as Madelon Claudet
- Marie Dressler - Emma as Emma Thatcher Smith
- Lynn Fontanne - The Guardsman as The Actress
- 1932–1933 Katharine Hepburn - Morning Glory as Eva Lovelace
- May Robson - Lady for a Day as Apple Annie
- Diana Wynyard - Cavalcade as Jane Marryot
- 1934 Claudette Colbert - It Happened One Night as Ellie Andrews
- Grace Moore - One Night of Love as Mary Barrett
- Norma Shearer - The Barretts of Wimpole Street as Elizabeth Barrett
- 1935 Bette Davis - Dangerous as Joyce Heath
- Elisabeth Bergner - Escape Me Never as Gemma Jones
- Claudette Colbert - Private Worlds as Dr. Jane Everest
- Katharine Hepburn - Alice Adams as Alice Adams
- Miriam Hopkins - Becky Sharp as Becky Sharp
- Merle Oberon - The Dark Angel as Kitty Vane
- 1936 Luise Rainer - The Great Ziegfeld as Anna Held
- Irene Dunne - Theodora Goes Wild as Theodora Lynn
- Gladys George - Valiant Is the Word for Carrie as Carrie Snyder
- Carole Lombard - My Man Godfrey as Irene Bullock
- Norma Shearer - Romeo and Juliet as Juliet - Daughter to Capulet
- 1937 Luise Rainer - The Good Earth as O-Lan
- Irene Dunne - The Awful Truth as Lucy Warriner
- Greta Garbo - Camille as Marguerite Gautier
- Janet Gaynor - A Star Is Born as Esther Victoria Blodgett, aka Vicki Lester
- Barbara Stanwyck - Stella Dallas as Stella Martin 'Stell' Dallas
- 1938 Bette Davis - Jezebel as Julie Marsden
- Fay Bainter - White Banners as Hannah Parmalee
- Wendy Hiller - Pygmalion as Eliza Doolittle
- Norma Shearer - Marie Antoinette as Marie Antoinette
- Margaret Sullavan - Three Comrades as Patricia 'Pat' Hollmann
- 1939 Vivien Leigh - Gone with the Wind as Scarlett O'Hara
- Bette Davis - Dark Victory as Judith Traherne
- Irene Dunne - Love Affair as Terry McKay
- Greta Garbo - Ninotchka as Nina Yakushova 'Ninotchka' Ivanoff
- Greer Garson - Goodbye, Mr. Chips as Katherine
1940s
- 1940 Ginger Rogers - Kitty Foyle as Kitty Foyle
- Bette Davis - The Letter as Leslie Crosbie
- Joan Fontaine - Rebecca as The Second Mrs. de Winter
- Katharine Hepburn - The Philadelphia Story as Tracy Lord
- Martha Scott - Our Town as Emily Webb
- 1941 Joan Fontaine - Suspicion as Lina McLaidlaw Aysgarth
- Bette Davis - The Little Foxes as Regina Giddens
- Olivia de Havilland - Hold Back the Dawn as Emmy Brown
- Greer Garson - Blossoms in the Dust as Edna Kahly Gladney
- Barbara Stanwyck - Ball of Fire as Katherine 'Sugarpuss' O'Shea
- 1942 Greer Garson - Mrs. Miniver as Mrs. Miniver
- Bette Davis - Now, Voyager as Charlotte Vale
- Katharine Hepburn - Woman of the Year as Tess Harding
- Rosalind Russell - My Sister Eileen as Ruth Sherwood
- Teresa Wright - The Pride of the Yankees as Eleanor Twitchell
- 1943 Jennifer Jones - The Song of Bernadette as Bernadette
- Jean Arthur - The More the Merrier as Constance "Connie" Milligan
- Ingrid Bergman - For Whom the Bell Tolls as María
- Joan Fontaine - The Constant Nymph as Tessa Sanger
- Greer Garson - Madame Curie as Marie Curie
- 1944 Ingrid Bergman - Gaslight as Paula Alquist Anton
- Claudette Colbert - Since You Went Away as Mrs. Anne Hilton
- Bette Davis - Mr. Skeffington as Fanny Trellis
- Greer Garson - Mrs. Parkington as Susie 'Sparrow' Parkington
- Barbara Stanwyck - Double Indemnity as Phyllis Dietrichson
- 1945 Joan Crawford - Mildred Pierce as Mildred Pierce Beragon
- Ingrid Bergman - The Bells of St. Mary's as Sister Mary Benedict
- Greer Garson - The Valley of Decision as Mary Rafferty
- Jennifer Jones - Love Letters as Singleton/Victoria Morland
- Gene Tierney - Leave Her to Heaven as Ellen Berent Harland
- 1946 Olivia de Havilland - To Each His Own as Miss Josephine 'Jody' Norris
- Celia Johnson - Brief Encounter as Laura Jesson
- Jennifer Jones - Duel in the Sun as Pearl Chavez
- Rosalind Russell - Sister Kenny as Sister Elizabeth Kenny
- Jane Wyman - The Yearling as Orry Baxter
- 1947 Loretta Young - The Farmer's Daughter as Katrin Holstrom
- Joan Crawford - Possessed as Louise Howell
- Susan Hayward - Smash-Up, the Story of a Woman as Angelica 'Angie' / 'Angel' Evans Conway
- Dorothy McGuire - Gentleman's Agreement as Kathy Lacy
- Rosalind Russell - Mourning Becomes Electra as Lavinia Mannon
- 1948 Jane Wyman - Johnny Belinda as Belinda McDonald
- Ingrid Bergman - Joan of Arc as Joan of Arc
- Olivia de Havilland - The Snake Pit as Virginia Stuart Cunningham
- Irene Dunne - I Remember Mama as Martha 'Mama' Hanson
- Barbara Stanwyck - Sorry, Wrong Number as Leona Stevenson
- 1949 Olivia de Havilland - The Heiress as Catherine Sloper
- Jeanne Crain - Pinky as Patricia 'Pinky' Johnson
- Susan Hayward - My Foolish Heart as Eloise Winters
- Deborah Kerr - Edward, My Son as Evelyn Boult
- Loretta Young - Come to the Stable as Sister Margaret
1950s
- 1950 Judy Holliday - Born Yesterday as Emma 'Billie' Dawn
- Anne Baxter - All About Eve as Eve Harrington
- Bette Davis - All About Eve as Margo Channing
- Eleanor Parker - Caged as Marie Allen
- Gloria Swanson - Sunset Boulevard as Norma Desmond
- 1951 Vivien Leigh - A Streetcar Named Desire as Blanche DuBois
- Katharine Hepburn - The African Queen as Rose Sayer
- Eleanor Parker - Detective Story as Mary McLeod
- Shelley Winters - A Place in the Sun as Alice Tripp
- Jane Wyman - The Blue Veil as Louise Mason
- 1952 Shirley Booth - Come Back, Little Sheba as Lola Delaney
- Joan Crawford - Sudden Fear as Myra Hudson
- Bette Davis - The Star as Margaret Elliot
- Julie Harris - The Member of the Wedding as Frances 'Frankie' Addams
- Susan Hayward - With a Song in My Heart as Jane Froman
- 1953 Audrey Hepburn - Roman Holiday as Princess Ann
- Leslie Caron - Lili as Lili Daurier
- Ava Gardner - Mogambo as Eloise Y. Honey Bear Kelly
- Deborah Kerr - From Here to Eternity as Karen Holmes
- Maggie McNamara - The Moon Is Blue as Patty O'Neill
- 1954 Grace Kelly - The Country Girl as Georgie Elgin
- Dorothy Dandridge - Carmen Jones as Carmen Jones
- Judy Garland - A Star Is Born as Vicki Lester (Esther Blodgett)
- Audrey Hepburn - Sabrina as Sabrina Fairchild
- Jane Wyman - Magnificent Obsession as Helen Phillips
- 1955 Anna Magnani - The Rose Tattoo as Serafina Delle Rose
- Susan Hayward - I'll Cry Tomorrow as Lillian Roth
- Katharine Hepburn - Summertime as Jane Hudson
- Jennifer Jones - Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing as Dr. Han Suyin
- Eleanor Parker - Interrupted Melody as Marjorie 'Margie' Lawrence
- 1956 Ingrid Bergman - Anastasia as Anna Koreff / Anastasia
- Carroll Baker - Baby Doll as Baby Doll Meighan
- Katharine Hepburn - The Rainmaker as Lizzie Curry
- Nancy Kelly - The Bad Seed as Christine Penmark
- Deborah Kerr - The King and I as Anna Leonowens
- 1957 Joanne Woodward - The Three Faces of Eve as Eve White / Eve Black / Jane
- Deborah Kerr - Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison as Sister Angela
- Anna Magnani - Wild Is the Wind as Gioia
- Elizabeth Taylor - Raintree County as Susanna Drake
- Lana Turner - Peyton Place as Constance MacKenzie
- 1958 Susan Hayward - I Want to Live! as Barbara Graham
- Deborah Kerr - Separate Tables as Sibyl Railton-Bell
- Shirley MacLaine - Some Came Running as Ginnie Moorehead
- Rosalind Russell - Auntie Mame as Mame Dennis
- Elizabeth Taylor - Cat on a Hot Tin Roof as Margaret 'Maggie the Cat' Pollitt
- 1959 Simone Signoret - Room at the Top as Alice Aisgill
- Doris Day - Pillow Talk as Jan Morrow
- Audrey Hepburn - The Nun's Story as Sister Luke (Gabrielle van der Mal)
- Katharine Hepburn - Suddenly, Last Summer as Violet Venable
- Elizabeth Taylor - Suddenly, Last Summer as Catherine Holly
1960s
- 1960 Elizabeth Taylor - Butterfield 8 as Gloria Wandrous
- Greer Garson - Sunrise at Campobello as Eleanor Roosevelt
- Deborah Kerr - The Sundowners as Ida Carmody
- Shirley MacLaine - The Apartment as Fran Kubelik
- Melina Mercouri - Never on Sunday as Ilya
- 1961 Sophia Loren - Two Women as Cesira
- Audrey Hepburn - Breakfast at Tiffany's as Holly Golightly
- Piper Laurie - The Hustler as Sarah Packard
- Geraldine Page - Summer and Smoke as Alma Winemiller
- Natalie Wood - Splendor in the Grass Wilma Dean 'Deanie' Loomis
- 1962 Anne Bancroft - The Miracle Worker as Annie Sullivan
- Bette Davis - What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? as Baby Jane Hudson
- Katharine Hepburn - Long Day's Journey Into Night as Mary Tyrone
- Geraldine Page - Sweet Bird of Youth as Alexandra Del Lago
- Lee Remick - Days of Wine and Roses as Kirsten Arnesen Clay
- 1963 Patricia Neal - Hud as Alma Brown
- Leslie Caron - The L-Shaped Room as Jane Fossett
- Shirley MacLaine - Irma la Douce as Irma La Douce
- Rachel Roberts - This Sporting Life as Margaret Hammond
- Natalie Wood - Love with the Proper Stranger as Angie Rossini
- 1964 Julie Andrews - Mary Poppins as Mary Poppins
- Anne Bancroft - The Pumpkin Eater as Jo Armitage
- Sophia Loren - Marriage Italian Style as Filumena Marturano
- Debbie Reynolds - The Unsinkable Molly Brown as Molly Brown
- Kim Stanley - Séance on a Wet Afternoon as Myra Savage
- 1965 Julie Christie - Darling as Diana Scott
- Julie Andrews - The Sound of Music as Maria von Trapp
- Samantha Eggar - The Collector as Miranda Grey
- Elizabeth Hartman - A Patch of Blue as Selina D'Arcy
- Simone Signoret - Ship of Fools as La Contessa
- 1966 Elizabeth Taylor - Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? as Martha
- Anouk Aimée - A Man and a Woman as Anne Gauthier
- Ida Kaminska - The Shop on Main Street as Rozalie Lautmann
- Lynn Redgrave - Georgy Girl as Georgy
- Vanessa Redgrave - Morgan! as Leonie Delt
- 1967 Katharine Hepburn - Guess Who's Coming to Dinner as Christina Drayton
- Anne Bancroft - The Graduate as Mrs. Robinson
- Faye Dunaway - Bonnie and Clyde as Bonnie Parker
- Edith Evans - The Whisperers as Maggie Ross
- Audrey Hepburn - Wait Until Dark as Susy Hendrix
- 1968 Katharine Hepburn - The Lion in Winter as Eleanor of Aquitaine and Barbra Streisand - Funny Girl as Fanny Brice
- Patricia Neal - The Subject Was Roses as Nettie Cleary
- Vanessa Redgrave - Isadora as Isadora Duncan
- Joanne Woodward - Rachel, Rachel as Rachel Cameron
- 1969 Maggie Smith - The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie as Jean Brodie
- Geneviève Bujold - Anne of the Thousand Days as Anne Boleyn
- Jane Fonda - They Shoot Horses, Don't They? as Gloria Beatty
- Liza Minnelli - The Sterile Cuckoo as Mary Ann 'Pookie' Adams
- Jean Simmons - The Happy Ending as Mary Wilson
1970s
- 1970 Glenda Jackson - Women in Love as Gudrun Brangwen
- Jane Alexander - The Great White Hope as Eleanor Backman
- Ali MacGraw - Love Story as Jennifer Cavalleri
- Sarah Miles - Ryan's Daughter as Rosy Ryan
- Carrie Snodgress - Diary of a Mad Housewife as Tina Balser
- 1971 Jane Fonda - Klute as Bree Daniels
- Julie Christie - McCabe & Mrs. Miller as Constance Miller
- Glenda Jackson - Sunday Bloody Sunday as Alex Greville
- Vanessa Redgrave - Mary, Queen of Scots as Mary, Queen of Scots
- Janet Suzman - Nicholas and Alexandra as Empress Alexandra / Alix of Hesse Darmstadt
- 1972 Liza Minnelli - Cabaret as Sally Bowles
- Diana Ross - Lady Sings the Blues as Billie Holiday
- Maggie Smith - Travels with My Aunt as Augusta Bertram
- Cicely Tyson - Sounder as Rebecca Morgan
- Liv Ullmann - The Emigrants as Kristina
- 1973 Glenda Jackson - A Touch of Class as Vicki Allessio
- Ellen Burstyn - The Exorcist as Chris MacNeil
- Marsha Mason - Cinderella Liberty as Maggie Paul
- Barbra Streisand - The Way We Were as Katie Morosky
- Joanne Woodward - Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams as Rita Walden
- 1974 Ellen Burstyn - Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore as Alice Hyatt
- Diahann Carroll - Claudine as Claudine
- Faye Dunaway - Chinatown as Evelyn Cross Mulwray
- Valerie Perrine - Lenny as Honey Bruce
- Gena Rowlands - A Woman Under the Influence as Mabel Longhetti
- 1975 Louise Fletcher - One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest as Nurse Ratched
- Ann-Margret - Tommy as Nora Walker Hobbs
- Isabelle Adjani - The Story of Adele H. as Adèle Hugo a.k.a. Adèle Lewry
- Glenda Jackson - Hedda as Hedda Gabler
- Carol Kane - Hester Street as Gitl
- 1976 Faye Dunaway - Network as Diana Christensen
- Marie-Christine Barrault - Cousin, cousine as Marthe
- Talia Shire - Rocky as Adrian Pennino
- Sissy Spacek - Carrie as Carrie White
- Liv Ullmann - Face to Face as Dr. Jenny Isaksson
- 1977 Diane Keaton - Annie Hall as Annie Hall
- Anne Bancroft - The Turning Point as Emma Jacklin
- Jane Fonda - Julia as Lillian Hellman
- Shirley MacLaine - The Turning Point as Deedee Rodgers
- Marsha Mason - The Goodbye Girl as Paula McFadden
- 1978 Jane Fonda - Coming Home as Sally Hyde
- Ingrid Bergman - Autumn Sonata as Charlotte Andergast
- Ellen Burstyn - Same Time, Next Year as Doris
- Jill Clayburgh - An Unmarried Woman as Erica
- Geraldine Page - Interiors as Eve
- 1979 Sally Field - Norma Rae as Norma Rae Webster
- Jill Clayburgh - Starting Over as Marilyn Holmberg
- Jane Fonda - The China Syndrome as Kimberly Wells
- Marsha Mason - Chapter Two as Jennie MacLaine
- Bette Midler - The Rose as Mary Rose Foster
1980s
- 1980 Sissy Spacek - Coal Miner's Daughter as Loretta Lynn
- Ellen Burstyn - Resurrection as Edna Mae McCauley
- Goldie Hawn - Private Benjamin as Pvt. Judy Benjamin
- Mary Tyler Moore - Ordinary People as Beth Jarrett
- Gena Rowlands - Gloria as Gloria Swenson
- 1981 Katharine Hepburn - On Golden Pond as Ethel Thayer
- Diane Keaton - Reds as Louise Bryant
- Marsha Mason - Only When I Laugh as Georgia
- Susan Sarandon - Atlantic City as Sally Matthews
- Meryl Streep - The French Lieutenant's Woman as Sarah / Anna
- 1982 Meryl Streep - Sophie's Choice as Sophie Zawistowski
- Julie Andrews - Victor/Victoria as Victoria Grant, aka Count Victor Grezhinski
- Jessica Lange - Frances as Frances Farmer
- Sissy Spacek - Missing as Beth Horman
- Debra Winger - An Officer and a Gentleman as Paula Pokrifki
- 1983 Shirley MacLaine - Terms of Endearment as Aurora Greenway
- Jane Alexander - Testament as Carol Wetherly
- Meryl Streep - Silkwood as Karen Silkwood
- Julie Walters - Educating Rita as Rita
- Debra Winger - Terms of Endearment as Emma Greenway Horton
- 1984 Sally Field - Places in the Heart as Edna Spalding