Mikey Madison won the coveted statuette in 2025, joining the list of leading ladies who've nabbed the top honor since 1929
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NEED TO KNOW
- Meryl Streep has won Best Actress twice out of her record-setting 17 Oscar nominations in the category
- Mikey Madison joined the list of first-time winners in 2025 when she took home the award for her breakout performance in Anora
- The 98th Academy Awards will air live on ABC and stream live on Hulu on March 15, with Conan O’Brien returning as host
Since its inaugural ceremony in 1929, the Academy Awards' Best Actress winners over the years have been just as impressive as the range of characters they've played.
In 2025, breakout star Mikey Madison took home the coveted statuette for her performance as a sex worker in the titular role of Sean Baker's Anora. Madison was presented the award by previous Best Actress winner Emma Stone. Stone won the category for the second time in 2024 for Poor Things after receiving her first in 2017 for La La Land.
However, Stone isn't the only woman to earn the honor multiple times. She's joined by four-time winner Katharine Hepburn, three-time recipient Frances McDormand and a dozen other two-time winners, including Meryl Streep, who has been nominated 17 times in the category.
In 2026, another name will join these women — unless Stone gets her triple crown. She's nominated for the award again for Bugonia alongside nominees Jessie Buckley for Hamnet, Rose Byrne for If I Had Legs I'd Kick You, Kate Hudson for Song Sung Blue and Renate Reinsve for Sentimental Value.
Ahead, every leading lady who has cemented their name in Hollywood history by winning the Oscar for Best Actress.
2025: Mikey Madison, Anora

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Madison nabbed her first-ever Oscar at 25 for her portrayal of a young Brooklyn sex worker and dancer, Anora "Ani" Mikheeva, in Anora.
During her emotional speech, Madison reflected on growing up in Los Angeles before shouting out her team, her family in attendance, the sex-worker community, her fellow Best Actress nominees and those behind the film. To writer-director Baker, she said, "I adore you. This is all because of you."
2024: Emma Stone, Poor Things

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Stone won her second Oscar in 2024 for her uninhibited role in Poor Things and accepted it while laughing off her gown's broken zipper.
She thanked her family, husband and young daughter Louise Jean, saying, "And, most importantly, my daughter, who's gonna be 3 in three days and has turned our lives Technicolor, I love you bigger than the whole sky, my girl."
2023: Michelle Yeoh, Everything Everywhere All at Once

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Michelle Yeoh made history as the first Asian actress to win in the category for her leading performance as Evelyn Wang in the absurdist action film. Everything Everywhere All at Once also won the Oscar for Best Picture and picked up awards in five other categories.
2022: Jessica Chastain, The Eyes of Tammy Faye

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Jessica Chastain nabbed Best Actress for her portrayal of the late televangelist personality Tammy Faye Bakker in the 2021 biographical film.
2021: Frances McDormand, Nomadland

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After the death of her husband, McDormand's award-winning character Fern embarks on a nomadic life, selling her possessions and driving a van around the country. The win marked McDormand's third in the Best Actress category.
Nomadland also won the Oscar for Best Picture and Best Director for Chloé Zhao (the first Asian woman nominated in this category and the second woman ever to win it).
2020: Renée Zellweger, Judy

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Renée Zellweger's portrayal of Hollywood icon Judy Garland earned her the Best Actress Oscar for the 2019 biopic.
Zellweger honored Garland — who never won an Oscar — in her acceptance speech, saying, "I have to say that this past year of conversation celebrating Judy Garland across generations and across cultures has been a really cool reminder that it's our heroes that unite us now."
This was the second Oscar win for Zellweger, having earned a Best Supporting Actress statuette in 2004 for Cold Mountain.
2019: Olivia Colman, The Favourite

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Olivia Colman was a first-time nominee when she took home the trophy for her performance in The Favourite as Queen Anne, the real-life ruler of Great Britain in the 18th century.
2018: Frances McDormand, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

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McDormand won her second of three Best Actress accolades for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri as aggrieved mother Mildred Hayes, whose daughter (Kathryn Newton) was raped and murdered. In the 2017 film, inspired by a true story in Texas, McDormand's character demands a thorough investigation of the crimes that took her daughter's life.
One of the most powerful moments of the 2018 Oscars came during McDormand's acceptance speech, when she asked every female nominee in each category to stand. She added, "Meryl, if you do it, every one else will," to which Streep happily obliged. Once they were standing, McDormand said, "Look around. Because we all have stories to tell, and projects to finance."
2017: Emma Stone, La La Land

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Stone's turn as aspiring actress Mia Dolan in La La Land, a romantic musical set in L.A., earned her Best Actress in 2017 — the year of Envelopegate.
2016: Brie Larson, Room

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Brie Larson took home the Oscar for her role as a young woman who escapes the captivity in which she and her son (played by Jacob Tremblay) have been held for years. Larson celebrated her big win with a burger from In-N-Out.
2015: Julianne Moore, Still Alice

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Julianne Moore won Best Actress in 2015 for her performance as the titular Alice, a linguistics professor diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer's disease.
2014: Cate Blanchett, Blue Jasmine

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Cate Blanchett nabbed the Best Actress award thanks to her leading role in Woody Allen's 2013 dramedy about a New York City socialite who has fallen on hard times. She previously earned an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress category for portraying Katharine in Martin Scorsese's Howard Hughes 2004 biopic The Aviator.
2013: Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook

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Though she famously (and elegantly) tripped on the stairs as she made her way up to the Oscars stage, Jennifer Lawrence accepted the award for her starring role as Tiffany, a young widow struggling with her mental health, in 2012's Silver Linings Playbook.
2012: Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady

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Streep won her third Oscar, and second in the Best Actress category, for her portrayal of Margaret Thatcher in the 2011 biographical drama of the first female British Prime Minister.
2011: Natalie Portman, Black Swan

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Natalie Portman earned the Best Actress award for her lead performance as Nina Sayers, a professional dancer who suffers a nervous breakdown under the pressure of her lead role as the White Swan in the famed ballet Swan Lake.
After earning the statuette, Portman told reporters, per The Hollywood Reporter, that winning "feels very dreamlike. I don't really know where I am, I suppose."
2010: Sandra Bullock, The Blind Side

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In the big-screen adaptation of this true story, Sandra Bullock played Leigh Anne Tuohy, the resolute Southern mother who adopts teen Michael Oher. In real life and the hit 2009 film, Oher went on to become a first-round NFL draft pick.
2009: Kate Winslet, The Reader

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Kate Winslet won for her role as Hanna Schmitz, a former Nazi guard tried for the war crimes she committed at Auschwitz.
2008: Marion Cotillard, La Vie en Rose

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Marian Cotillard took home the trophy for her portrayal of French singer Édith Piaf in the musical biopic named for her most famous song.
2007: Helen Mirren, The Queen

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Helen Mirren earned the Oscar for her performance as Queen Elizabeth II in the British biopic set after the death of Princess Diana.
2006: Reese Witherspoon, Walk the Line

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Reese Witherspoon took home the Best Actress award for her depiction of June Carter, the object of Johnny Cash's (Joaquin Phoenix) affection and his eventual wife, in both the biopic and real life.
2005: Hilary Swank, Million Dollar Baby

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Hilary Swank won her second Best Actress Oscar for her role as Maggie Fitzgerald, an up-and-coming boxer, in Clint Eastwood's sports drama.
2004: Charlize Theron, Monster

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In the 2003 crime drama, Charlize Theron plays real-life criminal Aileen Wuornos. Her semi-fictional portrayal of the serial killer earned Theron the coveted acting award.
2003: Nicole Kidman, The Hours

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Nicole Kidman's portrayal of 20th-century writer Virginia Woolf earned her Best Actress in 2003. The Hours also starred fellow Best Actress winners Moore and Streep. Kidman has been nominated in the category four times, most recently in 2022 for portraying Lucille Ball in Being the Ricardos and has five overall Oscar nods.
2002: Halle Berry, Monster's Ball

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Halle Berry made history in 2002 when she became the first Black woman to win in the category with her performance as Leticia Musgrove, the widow of a convicted murderer. Her character finds new love in a man whom she eventually discovers assisted in her late husband's execution.
Reflecting on her award to Variety in 2020, Barry called the win "one of my biggest heartbreaks" since it didn't break the boundaries it was supposed to, for her own career or the industry as a whole.
“The morning after, I thought, ‘Wow, I was chosen to open a door.’ And then, to have no one …,” she said. “I question, ‘Was that an important moment, or was it just an important moment for me?’ I wanted to believe it was so much bigger than me. It felt so much bigger than me, mainly because I knew others should have been there before me and they weren’t.”
Berry added: “Just because I won an award doesn’t mean that, magically, the next day, there was a place for me. I was just continuing to forge a way out of no way.”
2001: Julia Roberts, Erin Brockovich

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Julia Roberts fought the Pacific Gas & Electric Company as the titular character in this dramatic portrayal of Erin Brockovich's real-life class-action lawsuit against the corporation.
While onstage accepting her award, Roberts, with her megawatt smile, said at the podium, "I love the whole world. I'm so happy. Thank you."
2000: Hilary Swank, Boys Don't Cry

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Swank's win for playing Brandon Teena in 1999's Boys Don't Cry made her one of only three actresses to win the Best Actress award twice before the age of 30. Luise Rainer and Jodie Foster are the other two stars to claim this achievement.
1999: Gwyneth Paltrow, Shakespeare in Love

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In the period drama Shakespeare in Love, Gwyneth Paltrow plays the muse and lover of William Shakespeare (Joseph Fiennes). Her performance as the fictional Viola de Lesseps also stole the hearts of the Academy, and Paltrow took home the Oscar for Best Actress.
1998: Helen Hunt, As Good as It Gets

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Helen Hunt's portrayal of Carol Connelly, a struggling working mother, landed her the title of Best Actress in 1998.
1997: Frances McDormand, Fargo

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McDormand won her first Oscar as pregnant police chief Marge Gunderson in the 1996 crime film. Fargo was written, directed and produced by her husband Joel Coen and his brother Ethan Coen.
1996: Susan Sarandon, Dead Man Walking

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Susan Sarandon snagged the Best Actress honor for her portrayal of Sister Helen Prejean, the spiritual counselor of a death row inmate (Sean Penn) in Louisiana.
1995: Jessica Lange, Blue Sky

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Jessica Lange's portrayal of Carly Marshall — a woman struggling with her mental health and the domestic confines of her role as an army officer's wife living on a military base — earned her the Best Actress trophy for Blue Sky in 1995.
1994: Holly Hunter, The Piano

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Holly Hunter picked up an Oscar for her performance as Ada McGrath, a mute Scottish pianist who expresses herself through playing music.
1993: Emma Thompson, Howards End

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Emma Thompson won the Best Actress statuette for her performance as Margaret Schlegel in the period drama based on E.M. Forster's novel of the same name.
1992: Jodie Foster, The Silence of the Lambs

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Foster's iconic role as FBI trainee Clarice Starling won the actress her second Best Actress accolade, making her the second woman to win it twice before the age of 30 years old.
1991: Kathy Bates, Misery

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Kathy Bates won for her performance as manically obsessive Annie Wilkes in the film adaptation of Stephen King's psychological thriller novel.
1990: Jessica Tandy, Driving Miss Daisy

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At age 80, Jessica Tandy won the Best Actress award for her performance as Daisy Werthan in the dramedy, making her the oldest star to win in the category to date.
After winning the prize, Tandy vowed to keep working but said she hoped she'd know to stop "before they have to get the hook," per The New York Times, and she did, finishing three films and two TV shows even after getting sick. Tandy died of ovarian cancer on Sept. 11, 1994, at age 85.
1989: Jodie Foster, The Accused

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Foster took home her first Best Actress Oscar for her portrayal of Sarah Tobias, a victim of sexual assault, in the legal drama.
1988: Cher, Moonstruck

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In Moonstruck, Cher plays Loretta Castorini, a widow engaged to a man (Danny Aiello) she doesn't love — but she does love his brother (Nicolas Cage). The heartfelt performance earned the "Goddess of Pop" her only Oscar win, though she also received a nomination four years earlier for her supporting role in the biographical whistleblower drama Silkwood.
1987: Marlee Matlin, Children of a Lesser God

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At 21 years old, Marlee Matlin made history as the youngest person to win Best Actress and the first deaf person to win an Oscar. Matlin earned the accolade for her role as janitor Sarah Norman in Children of a Lesser God, which also marked her film debut.
1986: Geraldine Page, A Trip to Bountiful

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Geraldine Page won Best Actress for her performance as Carrie Watts, an elderly woman who journeys back to her hometown — the fictional haven of Bountiful, Texas — against the advice of her doctor and family members.
1985: Sally Field, Places in the Heart

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Sally Field took home her second Best Actress Oscar for her lead role as Edna Spalding, a widowed mother handling life in Texas during the Great Depression. It was during this acceptance speech that she uttered the often misquoted, “I can’t deny the fact that you like me. Right now, you like me.”
1984: Shirley MacLaine, Terms of Endearment

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Shirley MacLaine's Best Actress-winning performance in Terms of Endearment sees her as Aurora Greenway, a mother struggling with her daughter's (Debra Winger) coming of age and the death of her husband Rudyard (Albert Brooks).
1983: Meryl Streep, Sophie's Choice

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Streep's heartwrenching portrayal of Zofia "Sophie" Zawistowski earned her a second Academy Award.
The Hollywood icon holds the record for most nominations at 21: 17 for Best Actress and four for Best Supporting Actress. She won in the latter category in 1980 for Kramer vs. Kramer, starring opposite Dustin Hoffman.
1982: Katharine Hepburn, On Golden Pond
Katharine won her fourth and final Best Actress Oscar for her performance as Ethel Thayer in On Golden Pond. Actor Jon Voight accepted the award on her behalf during the ceremony.
1981: Sissy Spacek, Coal Miner's Daughter

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Sissy Spacek won for her leading performance in this 1980 biopic of Loretta Lynn's journey to country music glory.
1980: Sally Field, Norma Rae

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Field nabbed her first Best Actress award for her performance as a resilient cotton mill employee who organizes a union to advocate for her fellow workers' rights.
1979: Jane Fonda, Coming Home

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For her performance as disillusioned army wife Sally Hyde, Jane Fonda won her second Best Actress Oscar.
1978: Diane Keaton, Annie Hall

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In the romantic comedy Annie Hall, Diane Keaton plays the titular elusive girlfriend of a neurotic comedian (Allen), and she took home the trophy for her spirited performance.
Keaton and Allen dated in the 1960s, and Allen wrote the role to highlight Keaton's unique sensibilities and style after working with her on the films Play It Again, Sam (1972), Sleeper (1973) and Love and Death (1975).
1977: Faye Dunaway, Network

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For her role as Diana Christensen, an uptight, determined television executive, the Academy named Faye Dunaway the Best Actress of the 49th Academy Awards.
1976: Louise Fletcher, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

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Louise Fletcher earned widespread acclaim for her portrayal of heartless, hostile Nurse Mildred Ratched, who oversees the mental institution in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.
The film became the second in Academy history to win the “Big Five” Oscars: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Actress and Best Screenplay. The only other movies to achieve that distinction thus far are It Happened One Night (1934) and The Silence of the Lambs (1991).
1975: Ellen Burstyn, Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore
Ellen Burstyn won Best Actress for her performance as Alice Hyatt, a widow seeking a fresh start with her son in California, away from her old life in New Mexico. Burstyn didn't attend the ceremony, but Scorsese, her director, accepted the statuette on her behalf.
1974: Glenda Jackson, A Touch of Class

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For her role as divorced London-based mother Vickie Allessio, Glenda Jackson picked up her second Best Actress Oscar in 1974.
1973: Liza Minnelli, Cabaret

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Liza Minnelli plays lively American performer Sally Bowles in the iconic Bob Fosse musical set during the rise of Nazi Germany. She took home the Oscar for her buoyant yet nuanced portrayal of the rising star.
1972: Jane Fonda, Klute

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This neo-noir crime drama features Fonda in the lead role of Bree Daniels, an escort with acting aspirations who becomes entangled in a missing-persons mystery. The character earned Fonda her first Academy Award.
1971: Glenda Jackson, Women in Love
Jackson won her first Best Actress Oscar for her performance as Gudrun Brangwen, an intellectual woman and artist living in England during the early 20th century.
1970: Maggie Smith, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
Maggie Smith portrays an unlikely teacher — one who often lauds the likes of Mussolini, Franco and other fascists — at an all-girls school in Scotland. Her performance as the eccentric educator earned Smith her only Best Actress Oscar. She would later win Best Supporting Actress in 1979 for California Suite.
Designing Women and Bewitched actress Alice Ghostley accepted the statuette on Smith's behalf at the 1970 ceremony.
1969: Katharine Hepburn, The Lion in Winter & Barbra Streisand, Funny Girl

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Two stars took home the Academy Award for Best Actress in 1969, one of six ties in Oscars history to date: Hepburn, for her role as Eleanor Aquitaine in The Lion in Winter, and Barbra Streisand, for her portrayal of Fanny Brice in Funny Girl.
1968: Katharine Hepburn, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner
For her performance as Christina Drayton, a progressive thinker married to a conservative man, Katharine earned her second Best Actress accolade.
1967: Elizabeth Taylor, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

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After starring in the 1966 screen adaptation of Edward Albee's play, Elizabeth Taylor took home the Oscar for Best Actress for her portrayal of Martha, the daughter of a university president and wife of a history professor (Richard Burton) employed by her father.
At the 1967 ceremony, Anne Bancroft accepted the award on Taylor's behalf. Onstage, Bancroft shared, "Miss Taylor regrets very much that she cannot be here tonight. I'm sure she must be very, very proud. Not half as nervous as me, I'm sure. But she thanks you very, very much."
Over the course of her career, Taylor received five Oscar nominations in the Best Actress category. This was her second and final win.
1966: Julie Christie, Darling

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Julie Christie won for her performance as Diana Scott, a British model and actress who finds fame and success in her career but questions her virtues and the depth of her relationships along the way.
1965: Julie Andrews, Mary Poppins

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For her whimsical performance as the famed magical caretaker in the Walt Disney musical Mary Poppins, Julie Andrews took home the Oscar for Best Actress.
1964: Patricia Neal, Hud
In the Western drama Hud, Patricia Neal portrays Alma Brown, the housekeeper of a ranching family and love interest of the titular character (Paul Newman). For her strong-willed performance, Neal won the Oscar for Best Actress.
1963: Anne Bancroft, The Miracle Worker

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Bancroft nabbed the Best Actress award for playing Anne Sullivan in this biopic of Helen Keller's tutor.
1962: Sophia Loren, Two Women

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The 1961 film Two Women features Sophia Loren in the lead role of Cesira, a widow, shopkeeper and mother raising her daughter in Rome during World War II. The Italian-American star took home the Best Actress award for her emotional portrayal.
1961: Elizabeth Taylor, BUtterfield 8

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Taylor earned her first Academy Award for the 1960 drama BUtterfield 8. She portrays Gloria Wandrous, a beautiful yet troubled woman navigating her affair with a married man (Laurence Harvey).
1960: Simone Signoret, Room at the Top

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Simone Signoret was named Best Actress for her role in the 1959 film adaptation of the eponymous book Room at the Top. She stars as Alice Aisgill, a married, wealthy and unsatisfied woman who begins an affair with a younger, working-class man (Harvey).
1959: Susan Hayward, I Want to Live!

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I Want to Live! sees Susan Hayward as real-life criminal Barbara Graham, who faced the death penalty after being charged with the murder of an older woman. Hayward won Best Actress for her complex portrayal of the character.
1958: Joanne Woodward, The Three Faces of Eve

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In 1957's The Three Faces of Eve, Joanne Woodward plays a woman who suffers from dissociative identity disorder, previously known as multiple personality disorder. The star won the Best Actress Oscar for her portrayals of each of her character's personalities: Eve White, Eve Black and Jane.
1957: Ingrid Bergman, Anastasia
Ingrid Bergman won her second Best Actress Oscar for her portrayal of the titular character in this period drama. Bergman plays a girl who claims to be the daughter of Russia's last Tsar and, therefore, the only Romanov family member who escaped execution.
She would later win a third Oscar, for her supporting role in 1974’s Murder on the Orient Express.
1956: Anna Magnani, The Rose Tattoo

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Best Actress winner Anna Magnani took home the coveted award for her onscreen work as Serafina Delle Rose, an Italian-American seamstress living in Louisiana with her daughter and husband, who is killed early on in this film adaptation of the Tennessee Williams play.
1955: Grace Kelly, The Country Girl

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Before she became the Princess of Monaco in 1956, Grace Kelly received an Oscar for her portrayal of Georgie Elgin, the loyal wife of an actor with an alcohol problem who faces blame for her husband's (Bing Crosby) declining stardom.
1954: Audrey Hepburn, Roman Holiday

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Audrey Hepburn won for her role as Princess Ann, a bored royal who visits Rome on stately duties but instead enjoys the Italian city alongside an American reporter (Gregory Peck).
1953: Shirley Booth, Come Back, Little Sheba

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In Come Back, Little Sheba, Shirley Booth plays housewife Lola Delaney, whose troubled life has left her unhappy and lonely despite her marriage to Doc (Burt Lancaster). The heartbreaking portrayal won Booth the award for Best Actress.
1952: Vivien Leigh, A Streetcar Named Desire
Adapted for the big screen from Williams' play of the same name, Vivien Leigh took home Best Actress for her performance as Blanche DuBois, a former Mississippi-based schoolteacher who travels to New Orleans to live with family as she deals with her tumultuous past.
1951: Judy Holliday, Born Yesterday
Judy Holliday took home the Best Actress accolade for her portrayal of the naturally gifted, though not formally educated, Emma "Billie" Dawn. Billie falls in love with a journalist (William Holden), whom her husband, Harry Brock (Broderick Crawford), hires to teach her about manners and culture.
1950: Olivia de Havilland, The Heiress

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Olivia de Havilland won her second Best Actress honor for her portrayal of Catherine Sloper, the reserved and awkward daughter of a wealthy New York City doctor (Ralph Richardson) who disapproves of the young man (Montgomery Clift) with whom she falls in love.
1949: Jane Wyman, Johnny Belinda

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In her Oscar-winning performance, Jane Wyman stars as Belinda MacDonald, a deaf-mute woman who finds companionship in a physician (Lew Ayres) before a tragic incident further ostracizes her from her community.
1948: Loretta Young, The Farmer's Daughter

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Loretta Young was named Best Actress for her role as Katie Holstrom, a maid turned congresswoman, in The Farmer's Daughter.
1947: Olivia de Havilland, To Each His Own

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For her award-winning performance in this drama set during World War II, de Havilland plays Jody Norris, a woman reckoning with her decision to give up a son she had out of wedlock.
1946: Joan Crawford, Mildred Pierce

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Joan Crawford won Best Actress for her titular performance in the melodrama Mildred Pierce. Since she claimed to have pneumonia at the time of the ceremony, Crawford accepted the award from the comfort of her bed.
1945: Ingrid Bergman, Gaslight

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In the psychological thriller Gaslight, Bergman plays Paula Alquist, a woman who moves into the house where her aunt was murdered. The role earned her the Oscar for Best Actress that year, her first of three Academy Awards for acting.
1944: Jennifer Jones, The Song of Bernadette

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Jennifer Jones won Best Actress for her portrayal of Bernadette Soubirous in the biopic of a girl who claimed to have seen visions of the Virgin Mary.
1943: Greer Garson, Mrs. Miniver
Greer Garson took home the Best Actress prize for her performance as English housewife Kay Miniver, who copes with the ongoing global conflict of World War II while navigating family challenges.
1942: Joan Fontaine, Suspicion

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Joan Fontaine plays the naive Lina McLaidlaw, a woman who falls for and marries a man (Cary Grant) whom she suspects is plotting to murder her. The actress' performance in Alfred Hitchcock's psychological drama earned her an Oscar win.
1941: Ginger Rogers, Kitty Foyle

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In the film adaptation of Kitty Foyle, Ginger Rogers plays the titular character, a saleswoman grappling with a life-changing decision between two men and her future.
1940: Vivien Leigh, Gone with the Wind

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Leigh won her first Best Actress Oscar for her role as Scarlett O'Hara, a plantation owner's daughter, in this epic (albeit controversial) romance set in the South during the American Civil War.
1939: Bette Davis, Jezebel

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Bette Davis won the Oscar for Best Actress for a second time for her performance as Julie Marsden, a Southern belle engaged to a man (Henry Fonda) whom she drives away through her promiscuous behavior.
She would not win again in this category, despite an additional eight nominations, bringing her total career nods to 11.
1938: Luise Rainer, The Good Earth

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Following her award-winning performance as O-Lan in The Good Earth, Rainer became the first woman to win two Best Actress Oscars before the age of 30 — and it was her second win in a row.
1937: Luise Rainer, The Great Ziegfeld
In the musical drama, Rainer plays Anna Held, a French star who falls for an American performer (William Powell). The role won Rainer her first Oscar.
1936: Bette Davis, Dangerous
Davis won her first Best Actress Oscar for her portrayal of Joyce Heath, an actress pushed out of the Hollywood mainstream due to a scandalous streak.
1935: Claudette Colbert, It Happened One Night

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Shirley Temple presented Claudette Colbert with her Best Actress Oscar when she won for her portrayal of heiress Ellie Andrews in the 1934 romantic comedy It Happened One Night, which was the first film to win the “Big Five” Oscars.
1934: Katharine Hepburn, Morning Glory
Katharine, who still holds the record for most Best Actress wins, started her winning streak when she received the award for her performance in Morning Glory. In the drama, she played the determined, aspiring actress Eva Lovelace.
1933: Helen Hayes, The Sin of Madelon Claudet

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Helen Hayes won Best Actress for her portrayal of Madelon Claudet, a French woman who turns to a life of crime to support her son after she is wrongly imprisoned.
1932: Marie Dressler, Min and Bill

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Marie Dressler's award-winning performance as Min Divot sees her running a dockside inn and caring for her daughter.
1931: Norma Shearer, The Divorcee

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In The Divorcee, Norma Shearer plays Jerry Martin, a woman who discovers her husband (Chester Morris) is having an affair, so she retaliates with one of her own.
1930: Mary Pickford, Coquette

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Mary Pickford's winning performance in Coquette portrays a headstrong, wealthy woman who falls in love with a simple man (Johnny Mack Brown) whom her father disapproves of.
1929: Janet Gaynor, 7th Heaven, Street Angel and Sunrise

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At the first-ever Academy Awards in 1929, Janet Gaynor took home the Best Actress award for three different characters she'd played in the two years prior: Diane in 7th Heaven and The Wife in Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans, both 1927, and Angela in the 1928 drama Street Angel.
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