The Academy Awards have recognized talent across a wide age spectrum, from child performers to seasoned veterans. Records show nominees as young as 8 and as old as 88, highlighting Hollywood's embrace of diverse life stages. These milestones span acting, directing, and over a century of ceremonies.
The Oscars, spanning nearly a century, have celebrated performers and filmmakers at every age, from precocious children to enduring icons. Among the youngest nominees, Justin Henry earned a supporting actor nod at age 8 for Kramer vs. Kramer in 1979, a record that also marks him as the youngest in actor categories. Quvenzhané Wallis followed as the youngest actress nominee at 9 for Beasts of the Southern Wild in 2012. Tatum O’Neal holds the overall youngest winner title, taking best supporting actress at 10 for Paper Moon in 1973, unchallenged in actress wins. For male actors, Timothy Hutton won best supporting actor at 20 for Ordinary People in 1980.
On the other end, Christopher Plummer set the oldest nominee record at 88 for All the Money in the World in 2017, also the oldest in actor categories. Gloria Stuart, at 87, was the oldest actress nominee for Titanic in 1997. Anthony Hopkins became the oldest winner overall and in actor categories at 83 for The Father in 2020. Jessica Tandy won best actress at 80 for Driving Miss Daisy in 1989, the oldest in her category.
Directors also feature extremes: John Singleton was the youngest nominee at 24 for Boyz n the Hood in 1991, while Martin Scorsese holds the oldest nominee spot at 81 for The Irishman in 2019. Clint Eastwood won best director at 74 for Million Dollar Baby in 2004, and Damien Chazelle at 32 for La La Land in 2016.
These records illustrate how the Academy values talent unbound by age, from early breakthroughs to late-career triumphs.