5th grade grammar
DICIEMBRE
Wishing you a great time with your family.
Hoping the New Year comes full of blessings to all of you.
On the other hand, it is very important to be prepared for the next event: The English Fair which will be held on February 2nd. The topic is going to be Oscar's movies. Please investigate about this so that you can bring your proposals next January.
The Academy Awards through the years
The first ceremony made the Los Angeles Times’ front page under the headline “Film-Merit Trophies Awarded.” Coverage was all of one photograph and two paragraphs. Since then, the Academy Awards have become an event watched around the world. Scroll down for a year-by-year look at the Oscars.
Before a large gathering of motion-picture celebrities and other notables, the first Academy Awards ceremony is held at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. Academy President Douglas Fairbanks handed out 15 statuettes for outstanding achievement in 1927 and 1928.
Best picture: “Wings”
Actor: Emil Jannings, “The Last Command” and “The Way of all Flesh”
Actress: Janet Gaynor, “Seventh Heaven,” “Street Angel” and “Sunrise”
Director: Frank Borzage, “Seventh Heaven”
Actor: Emil Jannings, “The Last Command” and “The Way of all Flesh”
Actress: Janet Gaynor, “Seventh Heaven,” “Street Angel” and “Sunrise”
Director: Frank Borzage, “Seventh Heaven”
The Academy Awards are announced during a banquet attended by 300 academy members and their guests at the Ambassador Hotel. Academy President William C. deMille presents seven gold statuettes.
Best picture: “The Broadway Melody”
Actor: Warner Baxter, “In Old Arizona”
Actress: Mary Pickford, “Coquette”
Director: Frank Lloyd, “The Divine Lady”
Actor: Warner Baxter, “In Old Arizona”
Actress: Mary Pickford, “Coquette”
Director: Frank Lloyd, “The Divine Lady”
Bob Hope oversees a ceremony that makes history with the most honored film ever at the Oscars:
“Ben-Hur.” The biblical epic, with its Oscar-worthy running time of more than three hours, wins 11 of the 12 awards it is nominated for.
“Ben-Hur.” The biblical epic, with its Oscar-worthy running time of more than three hours, wins 11 of the 12 awards it is nominated for.
Best picture: “Ben-Hur”
Actor: Charlton Heston, “Ben-Hur”
Actress: Simone Signoret, “Room at the Top”
Supporting actor: Hugh Griffith, “Ben-Hur”
Supporting actress: Shelley Winters, “The Diary of Anne Frank”
Director: William Wyler, “Ben-Hur”
Actor: Charlton Heston, “Ben-Hur”
Actress: Simone Signoret, “Room at the Top”
Supporting actor: Hugh Griffith, “Ben-Hur”
Supporting actress: Shelley Winters, “The Diary of Anne Frank”
Director: William Wyler, “Ben-Hur”
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