The Sting, starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford, made groundbreaking history with one of its Academy Award wins. Considered one of thebest heist movies of all time,The Stingsees Henry Gondorff (Newman) and Johnny Hooker (Redford) teaming up to con the crime boss Doyle Lonnegan(Robert Shaw). The 1973 film is among Robert Redford andPaul Newman’s best movies, with its heist being among one of the most iconic in cinematic history.

The Sting’s critical and commercial success led to ten nominations and seven wins at the 46th Academy Awards in 1974. It won for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, Best Art Direction, Best Costume Design, Best Film Editing, and Best Scoring. Redford also received aBest Actor nomination, with Jack Lemmon going on to win the honor forSave the Tiger. However, only one ofThe Sting’s Academy Award wins would change the future of movie awards.

Paul Newman and Robert Redford standing at bar counter with their hands up in The Sting

Julia Phillips Was The First Woman To Be Nominated For & Win Best Picture At The Oscars

She Was One Of The Sting’s Three Producers

The Stingwas produced by Julia Phillips, her husband, Michael Phillips, and Tony Bill. While Phillips shared the Academy Award win with her husband and with Bill,Phillips was the first woman to be nominated and the first to win in the Best Picture category. This was a groundbreaking development for the Academy Awards and the beginning of women being recognized in theBest Picture category, which is considered to be the most prestigious.

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After Phillips, more movies with female producers were nominated for Best Picture in the ensuing years, includingE.T. the Extra-TerrestrialandThe Color Purple, which had the future President of Lucasfilm, Kathleen Kennedy, as a producer. It was not until 1989 that the second movie with a female producer would win Best Picture. The Academy Award went to Morgan Freeman’s 1989 filmDriving Miss Daisy, which had Lili Fini Zanuck as one of its producers.

Split image of Paul Newman and Robert Redford in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and The Sting

Julia Phillips Became The First Two-Time Female Best Picture Nominee Three Years After The Sting

She Produced Taxi Driver

Three years afterThe Sting, Phillips produced theMartin Scorsese movieTaxi Driver, starring Robert De Niro and Jodie Foster. Thismade Phillips the first two-time female Best Picture nominee. She did not become the first two-time female Best Picture winner as Sylvester Stallone’s firstRockymovie won the honor instead. Phillips continued to produce more movies in the years that followed, including Steven Spielberg’sClose Encounters of the Third Kind, butTaxi Driverwas her second and final Academy Award nomination.

There is still a long way to go until women are fully recognized by the Academy Awards, but Phillips' win withThe Stingwas a crucial step forward.

The Sting - Poster

Phillips' achievement paved the way for more women to succeed in Hollywood. The majority of Best Picture nominees now have one or more female producers involved. Progress has been much slower in the Best Director category, where a woman did not win until Kathryn Bigelow did in 2010 forThe Hurt Locker. Since then, only two other women, Chloé Zhao and Jane Campion, have won Best Director. There is still a long way to go until women are fully recognized by the Academy Awards, but Phillips' win withThe Stingwas a crucial step forward.

The Sting

Cast

The Sting is a 1973 film directed by George Roy Hill, featuring Paul Newman and Robert Redford as con artists who team up to execute a complex scam against a powerful mob boss. Set in the 1930s, the film intricately combines elements of suspense, deception, and humor. It was well-received for its engaging plot and period-authentic production design, going on to win multiple Academy Awards, including Best Picture.