List of accolades received by The Hours

The Hours is a 2002 drama film directed by Stephen Daldry and written by David Hare. The screenplay is based on the novel of the same name by Michael Cunningham, which follows three generations of women whose lives are affected by the novel Mrs Dalloway: Virginia Woolf (Nicole Kidman), as she writes the novel in 1923, a suicidal 1950s housewife (Julianne Moore), and a modern-day woman (Meryl Streep) preparing a party for her poet friend, Richard (Ed Harris).[1] The film premiered on December 25, 2002,[1] followed by a limited theatrical release on December 27, and then went on a wide release in North America on January 14, 2003.[2] The Hours grossed a worldwide box office total of over $108 million, against an estimated budget of $25 million.[3]

List of accolades received by The Hours
A photograph of actress Nicole Kidman at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival.

Nicole Kidman received several nominations for her portrayal of writer Virginia Woolf, and went on to win the Academy Award for Best Actress.

Total number of wins and nominations
Totals2588
References

The Hours garnered various awards and nominations following its release, with nominations ranging from recognition of the film itself to Hare's screenplay, Philip Glass' score and the cast's acting performances, particularly those of Kidman, Moore and Streep. The film received nine nominations at the 75th Academy Awards; Kidman won the Best Actress award at the ceremony. At the 56th British Academy Film Awards, The Hours won two awards from eleven nominations. It earned seven nominations at the 60th Golden Globe Awards, and went on to win the Best Drama Film and Best Actress accolades. It was also named Best Foreign Feature Film at the Amanda Awards.

During the Berlin International Film Festival, Kidman, Moore and Streep tied for the Silver Bear for Best Actress. Film editor Peter Boyle received an American Cinema Editors nomination for his work, and casting director Daniel Swee won the Casting Society of America's Best Drama Film Casting accolade. The Deutscher Filmpreis awarded The Hours Best Foreign Film, while the GLAAD Media Awards named it Outstanding Wide Release Film. Moore earned a Best Actress award from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, while Streep was given the award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role from Outfest, an LGBT-oriented film festival.[4]

The film was nominated for a total of eight awards from the 7th Golden Satellite Award and 9th Screen Actors Guild Award ceremonies. The Hours won three Vancouver Film Critics Circle Awards from five nominations, including Best Supporting Actress for Toni Collette. Collette also won the Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress. Hare and Cunningham were given the 2002 USC Scripter Award for Best Screenplay. The Writers Guild of America named Hare the winner of the Best Adapted Screenplay award, while the London Film Critics' Circle named him British Screenwriter of the Year.

Accolades

AwardDate of ceremonyCategoryRecipient(s)ResultRef(s)
AARP Movies for Grownups AwardsMarch 11, 2003Best Movie for GrownupsThe HoursNominated[5]
[6]
Best ScreenwriterDavid HareWon
Best Intergenerational FilmThe HoursNominated
Academy AwardsMarch 23, 2003Best PictureScott Rudin and Robert FoxNominated[7]
[8]
Best DirectorStephen DaldryNominated
Best ActressNicole KidmanWon
Best Supporting ActorEd HarrisNominated
Best Supporting ActressJulianne MooreNominated
Best Adapted ScreenplayDavid HareNominated
Best Costume DesignAnn RothNominated
Best Film EditingPeter BoyleNominated
Best Original ScorePhilip GlassNominated
Amanda AwardsAugust 22, 2003Best Foreign Feature FilmThe HoursWon[9]
American Cinema EditorsFebruary 23, 2003Best Edited Feature Film – DramaticPeter BoyleNominated[10]
American Film Institute AwardsDecember 16, 2002Top Ten Movies of the YearThe HoursWon[11]
Art Directors GuildFebruary 22, 2003Excellence in Production Design for a Contemporary FilmThe HoursNominated[12]
Australian Film InstituteNovember 21, 2003Best Foreign FilmThe HoursNominated[13]
Berlin International Film FestivalFebruary 6–16, 2003Golden Bear for Best FilmThe HoursNominated[14]
Silver Bear for Best ActressNicole Kidman, Julianne Moore, Meryl StreepWon
Bodil AwardsMarch 7, 2004Best American FilmThe HoursNominated[15]
Boston Society of Film CriticsDecember 15, 2002Best Supporting ActressToni Collette[a]Won[16]
Best Supporting ActorJohn C. Reilly[b]Nominated
British Academy Film AwardsFebruary 23, 2003Best FilmThe HoursNominated[17]
Best British FilmThe HoursNominated
Best DirectorStephen DaldryNominated
Best Adapted ScreenplayDavid HareNominated
Best ActressNicole KidmanWon
Meryl StreepNominated
Best Supporting ActorEd HarrisNominated
Best Supporting ActressJulianne MooreNominated
Best EditingPeter BoyleNominated
Best Film MusicPhilip GlassWon
Best Makeup and HairJo Allen, Conor O'Sullivan, Ivana PrimoracNominated
Broadcast Film Critics AssociationJanuary 17, 2003Best PictureThe HoursNominated[18]
Best ActressNicole KidmanNominated
Best Acting EnsembleThe HoursNominated
Best ScorePhilip GlassNominated
Casting Society of AmericaOctober 9, 2003Best Drama Film CastingDaniel SweeWon[19]
César AwardsFebruary 21, 2004Best Foreign FilmThe HoursNominated[20]
Chicago Film Critics AssociationJanuary 8, 2003Best ActressNicole KidmanNominated[21]
Best Supporting ActressJulianne MooreNominated
Best Original ScorePhilip GlassNominated
Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics AssociationJanuary 6, 2003Best ActressNicole KidmanNominated[22]
Best Supporting ActorEd HarrisNominated
Deutscher FilmpreisJune 6, 2003Best Foreign FilmThe HoursWon[23]
Directors Guild of America AwardsMarch 1, 2003Outstanding Directing in a Feature FilmStephen DaldryNominated[24]
Evening Standard British Film AwardsFebruary 1, 2004Technical AchievementSeamus McGarveyWon[25]
GLAAD Media AwardsMay 31, 2003Outstanding Film – Wide ReleaseThe HoursWon[26]
Golden Globe AwardsJanuary 19, 2003Best Motion Picture – DramaThe HoursWon[27]
[28]
Best DirectorStephen DaldryNominated
Best ScreenplayDavid HareNominated
Best Actress in a Motion Picture – DramaNicole KidmanWon
Meryl StreepNominated
Best Supporting Actor – Motion PictureEd HarrisNominated
Best Original ScorePhilip GlassNominated
Golden Trailer AwardsMarch 13, 2003Best DramaThe Hours and Giaronomo ProductionsWon[29]
Best of ShowThe Hours and Giaronomo ProductionsNominated
Grammy AwardsFebruary 8, 2004Best Score Soundtrack for Visual MediaPhilip GlassNominated[30]
London Film Critics' CircleFebruary 11, 2004Film of the YearThe HoursNominated[31]
[32]
British Film of the YearNominated
British Director of the YearStephen DaldryNominated
British Screenwriter of the YearDavid HareWon
Actor of the YearEd HarrisNominated
British Supporting Actor of the YearStephen DillaneNominated
Los Angeles Film Critics AssociationDecember 15, 2002Best ActressJulianne MooreWon[33]
[34]
Best MusicPhilip GlassNominated
National Board of ReviewDecember 4, 2002Best FilmThe HoursWon[35]
OutfestJuly 21, 2003Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading RoleMeryl StreepWon[4]
Robert AwardsFebruary 1, 2004Best American FilmThe HoursWon[36]
Satellite AwardsJanuary 12, 2003Best Film – DramaThe HoursNominated[37]
Best DirectorStephen DaldryNominated
Best Actress in a Motion Picture – DramaNicole KidmanNominated
Meryl StreepNominated
Best Supporting Actress – Motion PictureJulianne MooreNominated
Screen Actors Guild AwardsMarch 9, 2003Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading RoleNicole KidmanNominated[38]
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting RoleEd HarrisNominated
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting RoleJulianne MooreNominated
Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion PictureThe HoursNominated
Toronto Film Critics AssociationDecember 18, 2002Best Adapted ScreenplayDavid HareNominated[39]
USC Scripter AwardsMarch 15, 2003Best ScreenplayDavid Hare and Michael CunninghamWon[40]
Vancouver Film Critics CircleJanuary 30, 2003Best FilmThe HoursWon[41]
[42]
Best DirectorStephen DaldryWon
Best ActressNicole KidmanNominated
Meryl StreepNominated
Best Supporting ActressToni ColletteWon
World Soundtrack AwardsOctober 11, 2003Best Original Score of the YearPhilip GlassNominated[43]
Soundtrack Composer of the YearPhilip GlassNominated
Writers Guild of America AwardsMarch 8, 2003Best Adapted ScreenplayDavid HareWon[44]

Notes

References

General
  • "The Hours (2002) Awards". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Baseline & AllMovie. 2012. Archived from the original on November 2, 2012. Retrieved July 23, 2010.
Specific

External links