The 25 Youngest Men Ever Nominated for Best Actor
Tuesday, November 28, 2017 at 11:33PM
NATHANIEL R in Albert Finney, Best Actor, James Dean, John Travolta, List-Mania, Marlon Brando, Mickey Rooney, Oscar Trivia, Oscars (30s), Oscars (50s), Robert Downey Jr, Timothée Chalamet

by Nathaniel R

Timothée Chalamet photographed by Craig McDean for Interview magazine

With the fine coming of age romantic drama Call Me By Your Name now in limited release, audiences can join critics in swooning over the revelatory work of Timothée Chalamet's as the preternaturally sophisticated but hormonally confused Elio. He won the Gotham Awards "Breakthrough" award last night. Should his incredible performance earn him an Academy nomination for Best Leading Actor, he will be the third youngest man to ever receive that honor (he turns 22 the day after Christmas) - UPDATE 01/23/18 THE LIST BELOW NOW INCLUDES BOTH HIM AND DANIEL KALUUYA FOR "GET OUT"

Only Mickey Rooney and Jackie Cooper were younger in their Oscar races and both happened in Oscar's first dozen years (!) when the Academy's habits and fetishes and aversions were still being sorted out. They quickly turned against really young actors. While many women have won Best Actress in their 20s, it's only happened once for a man. The youngest leading male winner is currently Adrien Brody who won his Oscar for The Pianist  (2002) just three weeks before he turned 30.

But who are the youngest male leads ever nominated? Read on for the dewiest 25. Tell us how many you've seen and who is your favorite...

YOUNGEST LEAD ACTOR NOMINEES

THIRD RUNNER UP: Leonardo DiCaprio (30) for The Aviator (2004)
Second of five acting nominations. Leo turned 30 right before The Aviator opened. He'd ultimately lose to Jamie Foxx's in one of those awful years where nearly everyone in Best Actor was starring in a biopic. It was only his second nomination but he was arguably the youngest actor ever to get the intangible but unmistakable "overdue" treatment each time he was up for the leading prize. He finally won at 41 by eating raw liver in The Revenant. Did you know that he wasn't the first Oscar nominated "Howard Hughes," though? That honor goes to Jason Robards who was nominated for Melvin & Howard (1980) in the supporting category. 

SECOND RUNNER UP  Adrien Brody (29) for The Pianist (2002)
First and only nomination. He took over the "youngest lead male winner ever" record from Richard Dreyfuss who had held the record for two decades at the age of 30 for The Goodbye Girl (1977)

FIRST RUNNER UP:  Marlon Brando (29) for Julius Caesar (1953)
During the 1950s Marlon Brando was repeatedly nominated for Best Actor in his 20something years -- four consecutive nominations, the last of which he won for at the age of 30 (On the Waterfront). This four consecutive nomination trick has been duplicated by only one man (Al Pacino) but Pacino wasn't this young when he did it.

25 Ryan O'Neal (29) for Love Story (1970)
First and only nomination. He was actually younger than Ali McGraw by two years -- and that's pretty rare for romantic movie casting with Hollywood's crazy age disparity for male and female actors. Tis a pity he wasn't recognized for Paper Moon, too.

24 Edward Norton (29) for American History X (1998)
Second of three nominations. The 1998 Best Actor race was such a curious beast, with opinion sharply divided all over the place as to who was most deserving and somehow Roberto Benigni lept over chairs in the theater to take it. American History X, which seemed like such a super niche topic back in 1998, is suddenly relevant again and this sentence couldn't be any sadder.

23 Anthony Franciosa (29) for A Hatful of Rain (1957)
First and only nomination. Though he's not as famous as most of the men on this list he had quite a fine career in the 1950s. This nomination was actually for a reprisal of a role he played on stage for which he was Tony nominated.

MORE TRIVIA: He was, get this, married to infamous double Oscar winner Shelley Winters at the time of this Oscar nomination! He was actually a favorite of the Golden Globes as well with two follow up nominations after this breakthrough and a Globe Drama win for a film called Career which Oscar liked but didn't love (3 below the line nominations)

22 Kenneth Branagh (29) for Henry V (1989)
First of two acting nominations. Like Orson Welles, who you'll have to scroll down for, he was a big deal multi-hyphenate right out of the gate, nominated for Directing and Acting. He has five Oscar nominations in total now spread across five categories but he has yet to win. 

21 Marlon Brando (28) for Viva Zapata  (1952)
Yet another.

20 Daniel Kaluuya (28) for Get Out (2017)
NEW ENTRY YAY!

19 Chester Morris (28) for Alibi (1929)
A Broadway regular in the 1920s before shifting his focus to film. This was his only nomination but he had a healthy film career until 1950 after which he began shifting into TV and then back to the stage.

18 Montgomery Clift (28) for The Search (1948)
First of four nominations. Sadly this great influential actor (my personal favorite) never won and his life was marked by tragedy. Brando is among the many artists who were influenced by him and as great as Brando is, he didn't singlehandedly cause the shift in screen acting that he is usually given 100% of the credit for. 

17 Richard Burton (28) for The Robe (1953)
Second of seven nominations. He is second only to Peter O'Toole for most acting nominations without a competitive Oscar win. Glenn Close & Thelma Ritter are in third place with six each.

16 Marlon Brando (27) for A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)
First of the four consecutive nods... though his grand total hit 8 nominations with 2 wins. It's rather insane that he didn't win for this role. No movie has yet won all four acting prizes but this one and Network almost did.

15 Matt Damon (27) for Good Will Hunting (1997)
First of three acting nominations. He won that same Oscar ceremony for the screenplay to this film.

14 Tom Cruise (27) for Born on the Fourth of July (1989)
First of three nominations. Back in the day when he was doing dramas people thought he would eventually win.

13 Robert Downey Jr (27) for Chaplin (1992)
First of two nominations. He seems happily settled into superhero millions now with no remaining artistic ambitions but for a while people thought he might become THE actor of his generation.

12 Albert Finney (27) for Tom Jones (1963)
First of five nominations. Hey, where's his honorary? He's 81. It's past time for it. 

11 Jesse Eisenberg (27) for The Social Network (2010)
First and to date only nomination. Uff he was so great in this movie.

10 YOUNGEST BEST ACTOR NOMINEES

10 Heath Ledger (26) for Brokeback Mountain (2005)
First of two nominations. Shoulda won both but he had to settle for a posthumous for The Dark Knight (2008) after his tragic death. Still miss him so much, don't you?

09 Orson Welles (26) for Citizen Kane (1941)
First and only acting nomination. Orson Welles is one of those people who always seemed to be like 40something right? Even in this film with the aging makeup. But he really was a young wunderkind at the time of his breakthrough and genius string of movies. He received three nominations for his multi-hyphenate work on Citizen Kane (it was highly irregular back then to write, direct, and act) but like Matt Damon he had to settle for the screenplay win in his big year.

08 Ryan Gosling (26) for Half Nelson (2006)
First of two nominations. Seems like it should be more by now, right? 

07 James Dean (26*) for Giant (1956)
06 James Dean (25*) for East of Eden (1955)
* James Dean didn't live past the age of 24, dying in the fall of 1955 after committing three indelible movie star turns for the cameras. He became an instant star with the release of his debut East of Eden just five months before his tragic death. Rebel Without a Cause was released a month after his death and the epic Giant (which was still in production when Dean died) came out a year later, so this listing is projected ages since both of his nominations were posthumous. Some of Dean's less intelligible dialogue on Giant was rerecorded later by his friend, the actor Nick Adams (Rebel Without a Cause), during the film's lengthy post-production process. 

05 John Travolta (24) for Saturday Night Fever (1977)
First of two nominations. He'll lose this fourth place ranking to Timothée Chalamet  should Chalamet be Oscar nominated. It's probably difficult for today's audiences to understand how big a deal Travolta was in the late 70s. He was a breakout player on TV (Welcome Back Kotter and The Boy in the Plastic Bubble) and cinema (Carrie) in 1976. And he followed that up with superstardom via two back to back blockbusters (Saturday Night Fever and Grease) from 1977 and 1978. 

04 *see the 2nd youngest listing below

03 Timothée Chalamet (22) for Call Me By Your Name (2017)
Hooray!

04 Mickey Rooney (23) for The Human Comedy (1943)
and
02 Mickey Rooney (19) for Babes in Arms (1939)
This is quite a record to hold but babyface Mickey Rooney was no ordinary actor, but a bonafide superstar of the Hollywood studio system. In addition to headlining the long running early comedy franchise "Andy Hardy..." he also made dramas and musicals which accounts for these two nominations. Babes in Arms is, in some ways, the perfect distillation of Hollywood's numerous vaudeville-influenced 'let's put on a show!' movies, but The Human Comedy, despite the title, is the more typical Oscar situation where a comic performer gets serious for Oscar love.

Oscar Trivia Note: Weird isnt it that his historic nomination for Babes in Arms which features one scene with Rooney in "black-face" is in the very same year that the Academy first gave a black actor the statue: Hattie McDaniel in Gone With the Wind (1939).

01 Jackie Cooper (9) for Skippy (1931)
The only boy actor ever nominated for Best Actor. We'll never know how close Jacob Tremblay got for Room (2015) or Jamie Bell (2000) got for Billy Elliott but one can freely imagine, should one choose to, that they were in the dread 6th place in their respective years given the overall receptions of those films and the deep bench of enthusiasm for their performances. We still sometimes kinda think Tremblay could have pulled it off if they hadn't tried to pretend he was supporting. Our suspicion is he got caught with too little votes in both categories.

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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