What Was The Color Of Joan Fontaine's Ball Dress In Suspicion
Oscar fashion through the years
Oscar-Mode
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Equally the Oscar ceremony fast approaches, we're taking a stroll down memory lane — which, it turns out, is carpeted in ruby. Besides equally being markers of Hollywood history, every University Awards ceremony is a fashion time capsule. Here are 64 of the most essential ruby-red-carpeting style moments from Oscars past.
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Janet Gaynor (1929)
Douglas Fairbanks Giving Janet Gaynor Get-go Best Actress Oscar
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Janet Gaynor was '20s-cool in a sweater and scarf when she accepted the first-ever Academy Honour for Best Actress in 1929, for her performances in the films 7th Sky, Street Affections, and Sunrise: A Vocal of 2 Humans.
Mary Pickford (1930)
The Oscars 1930
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Mary Pickford was elegant in this beaded silk chiffon gown at the second University Awards, where she won All-time Extra for her performance in Coquette.
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Norma Shearer (1930)
Best Actress
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Six-time nominee Norma Shearer accepted the third Oscar for Best Actress (for The Divorcee) in a shimmering flooring-length dress with a matching fur-trimmed jacket.
Clark Gable (1935)
Clark Gable with Oscar
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Frankly, my dearest, Clark Gable looked the part of the perfect movie star in 1935, when Information technology Happened One Night swept the four main categories, including a Best Actor win for Gable.
Bette Davis (1939)
VARIOUS
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Best Actress winner Bette Davis (for Jezebel) stopped the show in this dramatic full-skirted tulle gown, her face framed past egret feathers sewn along the neckline.
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Vivien Leigh (1940)
Vivien Leigh Holds Oscar Statue
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Vivien Leigh accepted the award for Best Extra in 1940 (for Gone with the Wind) wearing this floral Irene dress with a full skirt, the print and silhouette of which were atypical of eveningwear at the time.
Hattie McDaniel (1940)
Hattie McDaniel, Left, Gets Academy Award
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Hattie McDaniel was elegant in a turquoise dress and matching beaded jacket, with white gardenias at her neckband and in her hair, when she fabricated history equally the first blackness artist to win an University Award. The venue where the 12th ceremony was held, the Cocoanut Grove at the Administrator Hotel, made an exception to its racially discriminatory policy by allowing McDaniel to attend, but the Best Supporting Extra winner was still forced to sit at a separate table against the wall rather than with her Gone with the Wind costars.
Joan Fontaine (1942)
Portrait of Ginger Rogers and Joan Fontaine
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In 1942, when the state was at state of war, female attendees were asked to tone downwards their evening habiliment; Best Actress winner Joan Fontaine (for Suspicion), pictured hither with Ginger Rogers, wore a long-sleeved blackness apparel with a matching blackness lace mantilla.
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Jimmy Stewart (1942)
Thespian Jimmy Stewart in US Air Strength uniform at pod
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For 1942'south somewhat more solemn wartime ceremony, Brigadier General Jimmy Stewart appeared in his Air Force compatible.
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Olivia de Havilland (1947)
Olivia De Havilland And Ray Milland
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The 1947 winner for Best Actress, To Each His Own star Olivia de Havilland, wore a pale-blue organza gown with a colorful cord of flowers mitt-painted beyond the bodice and down the full brim.
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Loretta Young (1948)
OSCARS Immature, LOS ANGELES, United states
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Loretta Immature was resplendent in abundantly ruffled emerald-greenish silk taffeta, accessorized with matching opera-length gloves, when she won All-time Extra in 1948 for her performance in The Farmer's Daughter.
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Marilyn Monroe (1951)
As Young As You Feel - 1951
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Marilyn Monroe made her but Oscar advent at the 1951 show, when she presented in this dramatic black tulle gown.
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Donna Reed (1954)
Donna Reed
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Donna Reed embodied pure '50s glamour in this fitted strapless gown when she accepted the trophy for Best Supporting Actress (for From Here to Eternity) in 1954.
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Audrey Hepburn (1954)
The 26th Annual Academy Awards
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Audrey Hepburn won her only competitive Oscar on her showtime nomination (of five), for Roman Holiday in 1954. The icon of chic accepted the honor in this belted boatnecked floral dress by her friend Hubert de Givenchy, who dressed her regularly.
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Grace Kelly (1955)
Grace Kelly Receiving Her University Award
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Legendary costumer Edith Head made Grace Kelly's ice-blue strappy silk sheath dress in 1955, when she was named Best Actress for her performance in The Country Girl.
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Marlon Brando (1955)
Best Actor Winner With His Oscar
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Marlon Brando looked precipitous in a blackness tux when he accepted the award for All-time Actor, for his performance in On the Waterfront, in 1955.
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Miyoshi Umeki (1958)
Miyoshi Umeki
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The but Asian actress to always win an Academy Award, 1958's Best Supporting Actress (for Sayonara) Miyoshi Umeki wore a beautiful black kimono to the anniversary. Almost twenty years subsequently, she destroyed her statuette.
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Janet Leigh (1960)
Curtis And Leigh
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Janet Leigh (pictured with and so-husband Tony Curtis) rang in the '60s in this glittering belted sheath clothes with white elbow-length gloves.
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Rita Moreno (1962)
Rita Moreno Holding Award
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When she won All-time Supporting Actress for West Side Story in 1962, Rita Moreno wore a shimmery gown with a black bodice atop a full floral skirt. Over 50 years subsequently, Moreno wore the dress again to the 2018 Oscars.
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Sophia Loren (1963)
1963: 35th Almanac Academy Awards
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Sophia Loren presented at the 1963 ceremony wearing a midi-length tulle dress with a voluminous textured collar.
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Sidney Poitier (1964)
Sidney Poitier At The Oscars
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For his historic 1964 Oscar win, when Sidney Poitier became the first black man to win Best Histrion (for Lilies of the Field), he looked abrupt in a white bow tie worn with a black morning time glaze.
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Barbra Streisand (1969)
BARBRA STREISAND
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One of 1969'southward two All-time Actresses (an accolade she won for Funny Girl, tying with The Lion in Winter's Katharine Hepburn), Barbra Streisand delivered an Oscar expect for the ages with these sequined, sheer Arnold Scaasi pajamas, finished off with a crisp white collar on superlative and huge billowing bellbottoms at her anxiety.
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Diahann Carroll (1969)
DIAHANN CARROLL
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In a pale pink gown with a sheer, glittering white overlay, Diahann Carroll brought ethereal glamour to the Oscar stage when she presented at the 1969 ceremony.
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Diana Ross (1973)
Diana Ross and Robert Ellis Arriving at the University Awards
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For her turn every bit a presenter at the 1973 show, Diana Ross went with menswear-gone-glam, choosing this silvery silk tuxedo by Bob Mackie.
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Ann-Margret (1974)
46th Academy Awards
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Ann-Margret experimented with fashion at the 1974 awards, wearing this rhinestone-covered cap atop a loftier-necked, skintight, beaded black sheath.
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Lauren Hutton (1975)
47th University Awards
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Presenter Lauren Hutton emanated breezy glamour at the 1975 show, where she wore a multi-pastel Halston gown accessorized with effortless loose hair and a luxurious fur coat.
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Elizabeth Taylor (1976)
48th Annual University Awards
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Yous could practically trace the history of Oscar style using the fashion of Elizabeth Taylor alone. I of the icon'southward nearly essential Academy Awards moments came in 1976, when she wore this strapless Halston dress — the colour of which the designer and then named "Elizabeth Taylor Red."
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Jack Nicholson (1976)
48th University Awards
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Jack Nicholson could not have looked more '70s cool when he accepted the Oscar for All-time Actor in 1976 (for his functioning in One Flew Over the Cuckoo'south Nest), accessorizing his tuxedo with aviator sunglasses.
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Diane Keaton (1978)
50th Almanac Academy Awards
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Annie Hall's iconic way lasted well afterwards the credits rolled, with Diane Keaton bringing the graphic symbol's signature look to the Oscar phase when she accepted the award for All-time Extra for her performance in the film.
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Farrah Fawcett (1978)
50th Annual Academy Awards
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Farrah Fawcett didn't need a speck of jewelry to bring sparkle to her 1978 wait, a glittery, drapey gold minidress.
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John Travolta (1978)
50th Annual University Awards
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A flowy-haired John Travolta lent his classic black tux some stardom in 1978, updating the wait with a white silk scarf draped around his neck.
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Raquel Welch (1979)
GIORGIO MORODER;RAQUEL WELCH
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Presenter Raquel Welch didn't go for a gown in 1979, but rather a skintight, bright-blueish sequined catsuit, accessorized with a wide gold choker at her neck.
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Sigourney Weaver (1981)
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Sigourney Weaver presented at the 1981 bear witness, where she wore this shoulder-padded, elaborately draped white jumpsuit with flat shoes.
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Jane Seymour (1981)
53rd Almanac Academy Awards' Governor'due south Brawl
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Presenter Jane Seymour glittered at the 1981 ceremony in this bright red dress dripping in silver fringe, her huge '80s hair cascading over one shoulder.
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Jessica Lange (1983)
55th Almanac Academy Awards - Backstage
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Jessica Lange went pure '80s when she won Best Supporting Actress (for Tootsie) in 1983, opting for this ice-blue, knee-length Valentino with long sleeves, shoulder pads, and rhinestones all over.
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Anjelica Huston (1986)
58th Annual Academy Awards
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Nosotros're green with envy over the vivid emerald Tzetzi Ganev gown Anjelica Huston wore to the 1986 awards, where she was named All-time Supporting Actress for her operation in Prizzi's Accolade.
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Cher (1988)
The University Awards
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How to choose just ane Cher look? Every entry in the icon's drove of outrageous Bob Mackie Oscar ensembles is worthy of recognition, only we have to give the aureate to what she wore when she won Best Actress in 1988 (for Moonstruck). The sheer beaded gown, accessorized with a matching wrap and earrings that driblet downwardly to her collarbone, was a genuine showstopper.
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Spike Lee (1990)
Ron Galella Archive - File Photos
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Best Original Screenplay nominee (for Do the Correct Matter) Fasten Lee dressed upwardly his 1990 Oscar look with a brilliantly colored Kente cloth scarf.
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Cindy Crawford (1991)
63rd Annual University Awards
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Cindy Crawford embodied early '90s glamour in this plunging cerise Versace, worn with natural makeup and voluminous blown-out pilus, at the 1991 Oscars.
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Michael Jackson (1991)
Michael Jackson
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Michael Jackson may have attended the 1991 awards with Madonna, but even the Material Daughter (dressed similar Marilyn Monroe) couldn't upstage Jackson's Oscar fashion game. The King of Pop defended his crown in a bedazzled white jacket, a huge diamond brooch, a thick black armband, and black gloves — yeah, on both hands!
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Marisa Tomei (1993)
GettyImages-770544
Credit: Barry King/Liaison
When Marisa Tomei won Best Supporting Actress (for My Cousin Vinny) in a memorable upset, she accepted the trophy in this white silk organza Chanel with black pipage, white lace insets, and a thick black bow at the waist.
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Whoopi Goldberg (1994)
OSCARS HOST GOLDBERG
Credit: Reed Saxon/AP Photo
For her 1994 hosting gig, Whoopi Goldberg took the phase in this long-sleeved, empire-waisted gown in luxe chocolate-brown velvet.
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Oprah Winfrey (1995)
1995 Academy Awards
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When she presented the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award to Quincy Jones in 1995, Oprah wore this long-sleeved, collared brown dress with a black tulle railroad train.
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Susan Sarandon (1996)
GettyImages-776126
Credit: Barry Male monarch/Liaison
Susan Sarandon'due south bronze Dolce & Gabbana halter gown, which she wore whe she won Best Extra for Dead Human Walking in 1996, is now housed at the Met, and is the but Oscars dress in the museum's drove thus far.
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Nicole Kidman (1997)
The 69th Annual University Awards - Arrivals
Credit: Kevin Mazur/WireImage
Nicole Kidman never fails to own the Oscars carpet whenever she attends, but the one look that made waves above all the Aussie'south others was the daring chartreuse chinoiserie sheath she wore to the 1997 ceremony (with then-husband Tom Cruise). The embroidered, fur-trimmed Dior gown was a fashion chance for the actress — Joan Rivers hated it — and a ruby-red carpeting game-changer.
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Cate Blanchett (1999)
71st Annual Academy Awards - Arrivals
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Cate Blanchett has been a consequent Oscars manner star ever since her very first Academy Awards as a nominee (for Best Actress for Elizabeth) in 1999. The actress hitting the carpet in this slinky John Galliano cosmos, the sheer back embroidered with flowers and hummingbirds.
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Gwyneth Paltrow (1999)
Gwyenth Paltrow cries every bit she receives the Oscar fo
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Gwyneth Paltrow brought pink back when she won Best Actress (for Shakespeare in Dearest) in 1999 wearing this sweetness Ralph Lauren wearing apparel. She finished off the girlish look with a Grace Kelly-esque chignon and a diamond choker, bracelet, and earrings.
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Uma Thurman (1999)
71st Annual University Awards - Arrivals
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To perform presenting duties at the 1999 ceremony, Uma Thurman chose this platinum Chanel halter and full brim, accessorizing the glamorous two-piece expect with glittering sandals and a bejeweled armband.
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Julia Roberts (2001)
73rd Annual University Awards - Pressroom
Credit: Kevin Wintertime/Getty Images
Julia Roberts accepted the Oscar for All-time Actress (for her performance in Erin Brockovich) in 2001 wearing this vintage Valentino gown with white straps and a blackness tulle train.
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Björk (2001)
Bjork, Best Song nomminee for "Dancer in the Night" arriving for the 73rd Academy Awards 3/25/01.
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Who could mayhap forget Björk'southward swan dress? Created by designer Marjan Pejoski, the garment has gone down in Oscar history every bit one of the nigh iconic red-carpet looks of all time.
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Renée Zellweger (2001)
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Presenter Renée Zellweger shone at the 2001 awards in this canary-yellowish cavalcade dress, a vintage Jean Dessès gown from the 1950s.
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Jennifer Lopez (2001)
73rd Almanac University Awards - Pressroom
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Attending the 2001 ceremony every bit a presenter, Jennifer Lopez shocked some critics with this Grecian-inspired Chanel, the sheer top one-half of which left little to the imagination.
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Halle Berry (2002)
Us extra Halle Berry accepts her Oscar for all-time
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On the night she became the beginning (and thus far simply) blackness woman to ever win the Oscar for Best Extra (for Monster'due south Ball), Halle Berry delivered both a moving acceptance voice communication and a legendary fashion moment. She accepted her award in this deep-red Elie Saab gown with a strategically embroidered mesh bodice atop a full taffeta skirt.
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Hilary Swank (2005)
The 77th Almanac Academy Awards - Arrivals
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Hilary Swank accustomed her second Oscar for Best Extra (for Million Dollar Baby) and made a manner splash in this backless navy Guy Laroche dress in 2005.
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Salma Hayek (2005)
77th Annual Academy Awards - Arrivals
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For the 2005 awards, presenter Salma Hayek wore this fitted navy Prada gown with black sequined embroidery and ribbon detail.
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Michelle Williams (2006)
78th Annual University Awards - Arrivals
Credit: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images
Best Supporting Actress nominee Michelle Williams (for Brokeback Mountain) stole the show on the 2006 Oscars' red carpet in this marigold silk-chiffon gown past Vera Wang.
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Helen Mirren (2007)
The 79th Annual Academy Awards - Press Room
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Helen Mirren won All-time Actress for The Queen in 2007 and looked zero less than regal when she did it, wearing this champagne gold Christian Lacroix with a gilded skirt and beaded lace bodice.
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Freida Pinto (2009)
The 81st University Awards - Arrivals - Kevin Mazur
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Slumdog Millionaire won big at the 2009 Academy Awards, where its star Freida Pinto served as a presenter and served up a stunning crimson rug look with this one-sleeved sequined cobalt gown by John Galliano.
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Angelina Jolie (2012)
84th Annual University Awards - Arrivals
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Angelina Jolie looked wonderful in this black Atelier Versace gown when she presented at the 2012 Oscars, but it was her right leg — which she never moved from its position sticking out of the skirt's high slit — that made headlines and inspired a meme.
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Jennifer Lawrence (2013)
85th Annual University Awards - Arrivals
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Everyone remembers when Jennifer Lawrence tripped on her way to the stage to accept the Oscar for All-time Actress (for Silver Linings Playbook) at the 2013 anniversary — but just as memorable is the strapless white Dior apparel in which she did information technology.
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Lupita Nyong'o (2014)
86th Annual Academy Awards - Press Room
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Lupita Nyong'o made every best-dressed list in 2014, when she won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress (for 12 Years a Slave) wearing this stake-blue Prada gown with a sparkling headband.
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Kate Hudson (2014)
86th Almanac Academy Awards - Arrivals
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Presenter Kate Hudson brought Former Hollywood glamour to the 2014 awards with this caped, plunging white Versace.
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Mahershala Ali (2017)
89th Annual University Awards - Arrivals
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Winning Best Supporting Role player for Moonlight in 2017, Mahershala Ali became the first Muslim actor to win an Academy Award — and he dressed for the occasion with this monochrome Ermenegildo Zegna Couture tux.
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Janelle Monáe (2017)
89th Almanac Academy Awards - Arrivals
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Janelle Monáe appeared in ii of 2017's Best Picture nominees (Subconscious Figures and winner Moonlight), and she represented them both stylishly at the ceremony in this spectacular black tulle Elie Saab Haute Couture gown with a sheer embroidered bodice over a full, elaborately embellished skirt.
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