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Top 10 Actors Due For an Oscar Win

At last Sunday’s Academy Awards Jeff Bridges was finally rewarded for his illustrious career with a Best Actor Oscar for his performance in Crazy Heart. The actor, who has amassed 5 nominations, has long been considered ‘due’ for a win at the illustrious award show. Meryl Streep, already a two-time winner, was passed over for 1st time nominee Sandra Bullock despite growing buzz that she is deserving of a 3rd trophy. In fact, outside of Best Actor, all of the top 8 categories went to 1st time nominees. The Oscars can sometimes be sentimental, especially in Best Supporting Actor, when handing out awards to perennially passed over veterans. Unfortunately, some actors have yet to benefit from these wins that are often more about rewarding the career of a performer more so than their specific performance.

With that, I bring you a list of 10 actors who are “due” for a win. First, a few factors to consider:

  • Performers who have been awarded the Honorary Oscar have been left off the list (Peter O’ Toole and Lauren Bacall)
  • An actor must still regularly work in film to be considered.
  • This list leans heavier towards actresses mainly because the Oscars are better at rewarding older men than they are women thus there are more glaring oversights in the actress field.
  • I also limited myself to only previous Oscar nominees which unfortunately eliminates someone like Alan Rickman who has been consistently great for decades.
  • I am not intending to suggest that all of these actors deserve an Oscar, simply that based on their status/nomination history it would seem sensible for them to win at some point in their career.

Honorable Mention: Angela Bassett, Debra Winger, Jude Law, Naomi Watts, Laura Linney, Samantha Morton, Joan Allen, Viggo Mortensen, Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Joaquin Phoenix, Don Cheadle, Bill Murray, Tom Wilkinson and Ed Harris.

10. Johnny Depp (3 nominations)

Although I question the worthiness of most of his nominations, it does seem absurd that an actor as popular and consistently good like him is Oscarless. Unfortunately, unless Depp breaks free from Tim Burton’s gothic wasteland (or unless Burton finally makes another good film again) I can’t see him winning. Depp is definitely capable and luckily has the most opportunity of anyone on this list. Now that Sean Penn is a double winner it seems especially easy to give Depp the gold in 2003.

Should Have Won For: Pirates of the Caribbean (lost to Sean Penn in Mystic River)

9. Annette Bening (3 nominations)

Like Depp, I question some of the worthiness of Bening’s nominations (mainly Being Julia) but she also seems like an actress that should have won by now. Unfortunately, on her two best attempts at an Oscar she lost to far superior work. Most of the drive for rewarding Bening seemingly comes from the fact that she lost twice to the same person (Hilary Swank). Unless the right role comes along I don’t see her picking up another nomination, much less a win.

Should Have Won For: Nothing (However, had Whoopi Goldberg won in 1985, I wouldn’t begrudge Bening a win in 1990 for The Grifters).

8. Edward Norton (2 nominations)

Norton, at one point, seemed destined to become the next Robert Deniro but after two richly deserved nominations in the late 90’s his momentum has appeared to stall. He still shows up in well received independent dramas but his last major success was the Spike Lee join 25th Hour (unless you count the bizarrely miscast appearance in The Hulk reboot). With his next performance being dual roles in the stoner comedy Leaves of Grass, things aren’t looking great for Mr. Norton on the awards front.

Should Have Won For: Primal Fear (lost to Cuba Gooding Jr. in Jerry Maguire)

7. Michelle Pfeiffer (3 nominations)

Pfeiffer has the unfortunate distinction of being an actress who won every single major precursor award but lost the Oscar. She was more than a lock in 1989 for her performance in The Fabulous Baker Boys then Mo’nique or Christoph Waltz were this year. She lost, however, to career validating win for Jessica Tandy in Driving Miss Daisy. After a successful run of box office hits in the 90’s, like many actresses over 40, Pfeiffer’s career hit a snag. In 2007, and at 50 no less, she managed a box office comeback playing roles in the hits Hairspray and Stardust. Unfortunately, her Oscar comeback vehicle, Cheri, bombed both critically and financially.

Should Have Won For: The Fabulous Baker Boys (lost to Jessica Tandy in Driving Miss Daisy)

6. Ian McKellan (2 nominations)

McKellan is the type of actor the Oscars would love to reward with a career capping Supporting Actor win. So it seems sort of strange that they didn’t with his iconic turn as Gandalf in Lord of the Rings. At 70, Sir Ian is the oldest actor on this list but actors as old as 82 have managed nominations but I wouldn’t advise the Academy to make Mr. McKellan wait much longer.

Should Have Won For: Gods and Monsters (lost to Roberto Benigni in Life Is Beautiful)

Check out the next page for the rest.

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  • MDV
    Alan Rickman....Truly deserves an oscar for the HP Series.....What an appearence....!!!
  • Really like the ones you've listed here. You should definately do a list for the unnominated. I agree with a previous commenter - Alan Rickman would be a good candidate.
  • Where's Leonardo DiCaprio? If you have Depp and Gosling on there, you should definitely have DiCaprio. You can't even begin to count the number of awards-worthy performances DiCaprio has given on one hand.
  • Weird_Fishes378
    So you don't think Ryan Gosling should've won for y'know, Half Nelson? Name anyone as good as him that year.

    Also Depp hasn't had a truly great performances since the mid to late 90s, the idea that he deserved the Oscar for Pirates in 03 is quite frankly ridiculous to me, if anyone was royally screwed that year it was Bill Murray for Lost in Translation.
  • Tone down the angst partner! There is room for all our opinions here. I love Gosling in Half Nelson but truly believe Whitaker deserved his Oscar. Gosling's time will hopefully come.

    IA about Depp. Not one of my favorite performers but he seems like someone they want to award.
  • Weird_Fishes378
    I thought Whitaker was quite good but a few times it felt a bit caricature-y to me, sorry if I came on a bit strong.

    Still waiting for Bill Murray's work to be recognized though, it seems as if they just write him off the same way they do with comedy films.
  • Susan
    Depp is great in almost everything he does, even when the film itself is not very good. he definitely deserves an Oscar.
  • Always
    Sorry, can't allow you to omit the amazing Alan Rickman. If any actor EVER deserved an oscar win, it is he, who has been consistently brilliant, whether the film was big or small. He is way overdue for Academy recognition.
  • Good call. In my opinion, Alan Rickman should have won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his turn as Hans Gruber in "Die Hard". His performance altered the entire paradigm of cinematic villains, critics agree, and still influences a generation of screenwriters. But sadly Oscar doesn't seem to like actioners, and until Rickman escapes the Harry Potter universe when Johnny Depp breaks the gate to escape Tim Burton's, he'll be stuck playing Severus Snape - basically a British Christmas pantomime villain, dialing it in from way beneath his true abilities - forever.
  • I'm thinking of doing another list just for the unnominated!
  • annette benning losing for american beauty is a crime.
  • Annette just has bad luck. I'm one of the few who think Whoopi hands down deserved her Oscar in 1990 (even if she had won in 85, I'd probably give her a second in 90). And Hilary Swank's first win is in the top 5 most deserving Best Actress wins of all time for me. So despite how good she was both years she just wasn't good enough to warrant a win.

    That, and her nomination for Being Julia is a joke. Completely undeserved.
  • univarn
    If I had to throw out a name in the older category I'd go with Max Von Sydow. He's got a presence like few others, but he's been stuck in mid-level supernatural thrillers for the last 50 or so years since his work with Bergman. His only nomination was back in the 80s, the same year Dustin Hoffman did Rain Man... and let's be honest nobody else was going to win that.
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