The 25 Oldest Men Ever Nominated for Best Actor
Friday, April 2, 2021 at 10:58PM
NATHANIEL R in Anthony Hopkins, Best Actor, Bruce Dern, Clint Eastwood, Denzel Washington, Henry Fonda, Morgan Freeman, Oscar Trivia, Peter O'Toole, Richard Farnsworth, Sir Laurence Olivier, The Father

by Nathaniel R

John Wayne just misses the list. Denzel almost double dips. And Hopkins tops the list setting a new recordWe did a "Youngest Best Actor" list a few years back so we thought we should balance it out with their counterparts given the return of Sir Anthony Hopkins this year at 83 years of age with The Father. He makes history in the process as the oldest nominee ever in this category. As we all know Oscar likes some years on his men (as opposed to how he feels about women) but that doesn't mean the golden years. Oscar loves men to be in their late 30s through mid 50s (whereas with women they prefer late 20s through mid 40s) but ageism  works against men, too. Just not as severely as it does against women. The roles still dry up at a certain age... though perhaps that's more on filmmakers and studios than the Oscars themselves. 

LIST HAS BEEN UPDATED WITH MINOR CORRECTIONS. (04/02). And a surprising piece of trivia about this list. Only one of the top 25 oldest nominees in this category actually won the Oscar. Not a strong success rate for senior men. Oscar likes to bid them farewell but doesn't feel the need to send them off with the statue (or a second statue)...

TOP 25 OLDEST NOMINEES OF ALL TIME 
IN THE "BEST ACTOR CATEGORY.
A star indicates a win

Runners up: The following men were in their sixties when they were nominated but were not old enough for this list as they were between 60 and 62: Richard Harris for The Field (1990), Peter Finch for Network (1976) ★, Jeff Bridges for True Grit (2010), Dustin Hoffman for Wag the Dog (1997), Paul Newman for The Color of Money (1986) ★, Clint Eastwood for Unforgiven (1992), George Arliss for Disraeli (1930) ★,  and Charles Boyer for Fanny (1961), Denzel Washington for Fences (2016) and... just barely missing the list John Wayne in True Grit (1969) ★ who would shortly turn 63.

25 Gary Oldman (62/63) for Mank (2020) 
Oldman was 62 when he was nominated but turned 63 in the long wait for the ceremony this year. His portrayal of Citizen Kane's screenwriter Herman Mankiewicz is his third nomination. He won on his second for Darkest Hour (2017).

24 Denzel Washington (63) for Roman J Israel Esq (2017)
UPDATED WITH MINOR CORRECTION HE WAS ORIGINALLY LISTED WITH THE WRONG AGE.  Denzel proved how beloved he is with his eighth acting nomination (and a consecutive nod at that) for a rather tepidly received film (apart from his performance of course).

23 Marcello Mastroianni (63) for Dark Eyes (1987)
Oscar voters loved Italian master Federico Fellini and they loved his most frequent muse, too. Mastroianni is the only actor ever nominated thrice for foreign-language performances. This was his third and final nomination ... all for Italian pictures though curiously they never honored him for any of his Fellini films. He never won and seemed like a sure bet for an Honorary Oscar but Oscar waits far too long for those and if you die before you're, say, 80, you're unlikely to get one. Mastroianni died at 72.

22 Willem Dafoe (63) for At Eternity's Gate (2018)
Dafoe was the late breaking surprise of the 2018 Best Actor race (and likely booted a harder Oscar sell in Ethan Hawke's anguished sick priest) playing Vincent van Gogh in this biopic. It was his fourth nomination and if he keeps up his recent pace of intriguing projects paired with showy performances, he could show up again soon.

21 Dexter Gordon (63) for Round Midnight (1986)
He turned 64 right around the time of the nominations. This felt like a debut picture for the jazz legend but it actually wasn't. He split his time between Paris and Copenhagen in the sixties and actually acted in a Swedish film in 1968, one of only a few film roles. He died four years after this movie.

20 Paul Muni (64) the Last Angry Man (1959)
This doctor role was the Oscar winner's fifth or sixth nomination depending on how you feel about those "unofficial" nominations in Oscar history, when they used to allow for write-in votes. He had won 23 years prior for the scientist biopic The Story of Louis Pasteur (1936). In addition to being his final nomination this was also his final film. He died eight years later.

17 [TIE] Sir Laurence Olivier (65) for Sleuth (1972)
Jack Nicholson (65) for About Schmidt (2002)
Sir Nigel Hawthorne (65) for Madness of King George (1994)
We can't really decipher who was older here without intense calendar studies of the year of their births and these Oscar ceremonies as they all turned 66 shortly after their ceremonies!

Tangentia LGBTQ trivia note: Nigel Hawthorne was the first known-to-be-queer actor to bring a same sex date to the ceremony but he was "outed" during that year's Oscar hoopla. You'll read differently elsewhere because people like to rewrite history to fit with modern knowledge but Sir Ian McKellen is the ONLY out queer actor ever nominated when the Academy knew full well that the actor was part of the LGBTQ community. It's a problem we hope will change as society evolves. Elliot Page, Jodie Foster, Kevin Spacey, Leonard Frey, Lily Tomlin and the rest were not officially "out" at the time of their nominations (though some were not making efforts to hide their sexuality.) Jaye Davidson, a gay man playing a trans woman in The Crying Game was a total unknown making his film debut and a mystery to the voters and press essentially. Some argue for openly bisexual Angelina Jolie and, more recently, Lady Gaga (both of whom the Academy voters have only ever seen in high profile heterosexual relationships) but the point of this trivia is that Oscar voters (at least subconciously) resists queer performers -- even when they seem like shoo-ins due to a film's success (see Rupert Everett in My Best Friend's Wedding, a performance that 1000% would have gotten a straight actor nominated). McKellen is also the only out gay actor to ever be nominated for playing a gay character; all nominated queer and trans roles to date have been played by straight and cisgendered actors (or actors who were not known to be queer) with the arguable exception of Jaye Davidson.

16 Spencer Tracy (66) for Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967)
Tracy did not live to the see this movie released dying six months before the release. He had not made a movie in four years when he filmed this. This social issues drama was his film film and scored him his ninth and final nomination (all in the Best Actor category). He had won twice previously early in his career.

15 Robert Duvall (67) for The Apostle (1997)
He had just turned 67 when the nominations were announced. If we recall the awards hoopla of the year correctly he really wanted to win for this indie (which would have been his second Oscar) but instead Oscar went with a third statue to Jack Nicholson for the big hit As Good As It Gets. Duvall is still alive and working at 90 years of age. Since his film he's snagged two nominations in Best Supporting Actor (A Civil Action, The Judge) for a total of seven career nominations. 

14 Burt Lancaster (68) for Atlantic City (1981)
This was a comeback film/nomination for the athletic ginger movie star after three nominations and a win in his movie star heyday of the mid 50s through the mid 60s. Three of his four nominations came from Best Picture nominated films (From Here to Eternity, Elmer Gantry, Atlantic City with Birdman of Alcatraz as the sole non-Best Picture nominee). He lived another 12 years and made ten more pictures including yet another Best picture nominated film, Field of Dreams (1989) which proved to be his final picture. All in all his filmography includes six Best Picture nominees. That's nothing close to a record but it's impressive all the same since all six were in the stretch of decades where Oscar only picked five movies. (A lot of living stars have higher tallies now due to the expanded race) Lancaster died at the age of 80 in 1994.

13 Melyvn Douglas (69) for I Never Sang For My Father (1970)
He won two very deserved Oscars, one before (Hud) and one after (Being There) this nomination and both were in the Best Supporting Actor category. This was his only lead and only "losing" nomination. Gene Hackman, another Oscar favourite, played his son. Douglas died at the age of 80 in 1981 and made movies right up until the end. 

12 Michael Caine (70) for The Quiet American (2002)
He was 69 at the time of his sixth nomination and 70 by the time of the ceremony rolled around. We didn't expect it would be his last nomination but surprisingly despite high profile films ever since, he rarely has a meaty role though he did try recapturing old glories once (remember that he remade his own Sleuth with Jude Law, this time taking the Olivier role). He's 88 now and still acting. He MIGHT have two meaty roles this very year though: he's wrapped filming on Best Sellers (in which he plays a retired novelist), another take on the Oliver story called Twist in the role of Fagin (which brought Ron Moody an Oscar nomination in 1968).

11 Paul Newman (70) for Nobody's Fool (1994)
He had just turned 70 when he was nominated for the eight time as Best Actor. He had won his career Oscar AND the Honorary Oscar in the 1980s so Oscar didn't feel the need to hand him a statue. It turned out to be his penultimate rather than last nomination as he was back again for Road to Perdition (2002) albeit in supporting eight years later. This ultra beloved movie star died in 2008 at the age of 83.

10 Frank Langella (71) for Frost/Nixon (2008)
He won his this Tony Award for playing Richard Nixon on Broadway and with the film transfer he scores his first (and to date only) Oscar nomination. He then won his FOURTH Tony Award nine year's later in Broadway's The Father so it must have smarted a bit when the film version went with Anthony Hopkins who is the exact same age and also on this list. Langella at least got to be part of the awards hoopla of 2020 via Trial of the Chicago 7. Though Langella, who is now 83, is much more celebrated on the stage than on film he's been a consistent presence at the movies since the 1970s. 

09 Sir Laurence Olivier (71) for The Boys from Brazil (1978)
The only double dipper on this list other than Denzel Washington is also one of Oscar's all time favourite actors. This was his tenth and final nomination. He won only one competitive Oscar in his career (as the star of Hamlet) but Oscar gave him two Honorary as well, one of them at this very ceremony during his last Oscar nomination. Olivier was very active still around this time and starred in two well-received pictures the following year (A Little Romance, and playing Van Helsing to Frank Langella's Dracula). Seven more films followed, the best remembered of them being Clash of the Titans... he played Zeus of course. Olivier died in 1989 at 82 years of age. 

08 Jonathan Pryce (72) for The Two Popes (2019)
While most of this list is comprised of men Oscar really loved taking their final or penultimate bows... here is one of the few (like Frank Langella) who had been working for a very long time that Oscar finally applauded in their golden years. We think it probably helped that this came directly after The Wife and Glenn Close's almost-coronation run where Pryce was The Husband. 

07 Morgan Freeman (72) for Invictus (2009)
Freeman scored his fifth and to date final Oscar nomination playing Nelson Mandela in this biopic/sports drama with Matt Damon. He's 83 and still working consistently so perhaps he'll top this list one day? 

06 Peter O'Toole (74) for Venus (2006)
He holds the distinction of being the only actor to ever reach 8 nominations without ever winning a competitive Oscar. Glenn Close will tie this record IF she loses for Hillbilly Elegy later this month. This final nomination for O'Toole came just three years after the Academy cried uncle and gave him the Honorary Oscar. He died in 2013 at the age of 81.

05 Clint Eastwood (74) for Million Dollar Baby (2004)
Though Eastwood is one of the most famous of all living movie stars, he is just as famous for being the man behind the camera. His only two acting Oscar nominations were for self-directed performances in Best Picture winners: Unforgiven (1992) was the first and Million Dollar Baby (2004) followed. He's 90 years old and still directing AND acting. He has the leading role in his next picture Cry Macho (2021) about a retired rodeo star and horse breeder who takes a young man under his wing, which is due on October 22nd. Could a third acting nomination follow? 

04 Henry Fonda (76) for On Golden Pond (1981)
Henry Fonda had been a major movie star since Hollywood's Golden Age but he finally won the Oscar at the age of 76, the oldest man ever to win Best Actor. It was only his second acting nomination, the first being for The Grapes of Wrath (he holds the record of the longest gap between acting nominations!) He died about a year after this ceremony. (In addition to many great performances he also brought us Peter and Jane Fonda so we should all be grateful.)

03 Bruce Dern (77) for Nebraska (2013)
Here's another long gap between nomination. Dern was first Oscar nominated for supporting actor for the Best Picture nominated Coming Home (1978). Decades later he returned as a leading man in Alexander Payne's black and white dramedy, Nebraska. Hes now 84 and still acting up a storm with supposedly nine more movies in the can right now and two more announced for 2022.  (In addition to many great performances he also brought us Laura Dern so we should all be grateful.)

02 Richard Farnsworth (79) for The Straight Story (1999)
...Like Bruce Dern, Farnsworth was also first nominated in 1978 (Comes a Horseman) and then took his sweet time returning even though he surely came close to a second nomination with The Grey Fox (1983) for which he was Globe nominated. This was one of the most satisfying Best Actor nominations of our lifetime. He's just sublime in this G rated David Lynch picture of a man riding his lawnmower a great distance to make amends with his estranged brother. For over 20 years Farnsworth held the record of "Oldest Best Actor Nominee". But this season he lost that record to...

01 Sir Anthony Hopkins (83) for The Father (2020)
You know we're huge fans of this performance from his nomination here and our coverage of The Father in general. The Father is Sir Anthony's sixth nomination. He won the prize with his first nomination for Silence of the Lambs (1991). Though he'll likely lose the Oscar to Chadwick Boseman we all win because this is one of the highest quality shortlists we've ever seen in Best Actor.

What do you make of this list dear readers. Do you see any patterns or notes of interest? 

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