Marty
1955
This Oscar-winning drama is a story about Marty Pilletti (Ernest Borgnine), a lonely Bronx butcher. Marty is a burly but gentle man, easing into middle age without much hope for romance or a career. He lives at home with his mother (Esther Minciotti), a kind but life-smothering woman, and a small circle of dead-end friends. Marty has no self-confidence and feels he's dumpy and unattractive. While it takes some doing, Marty's friends finally convince him to go to a local dance with them and try to pick up girls. At the dance he meets a plain-looking schoolteacher named Clara (Betsy Blair), whose life appears to mirror his own. He asks Clara to dance and soon they are dating. But to Marty's surprise and frustration, his friends put her down and his mother is hostile to her. Swayed by his friends and his mother, he doesn't call Clara back. But sitting alone at home watching television one night, Marty decides he has had enough, and defying his enclosed little world, he picks up the phone and gives Clara a call. As Marty shouts to his friends, "You don't like her. My mother don't like her. She's a dog. And I'm a fat, ugly man. Well, all I know is I had a good time last night ... You don't like her? That's too bad!"
Won
Best Actor in a Leading Role
Ernest Borgnine
Best Director
Delbert Mann
Best Picture
Harold Hecht
Best Writing, Screenplay
Paddy Chayefsky
Nominated
Best Actor in a Supporting Role
Joe Mantell
Best Actress in a Supporting Role
Betsy Blair
Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White
Ted Haworth
Walter M. Simonds
Robert Priestley
Best Cinematography, Black-and-White
Joseph LaShelle