The Los Angeles Times has won 39 Pulitzer Prizes for Journalism, including six prestigious Public Service Awards in 2011, 2005, 1984, 1969, 1960, and 1942.
There is no formal limit to the number of times a person (or news organization) can win a Pulitzer Prize. Robert Frost won four times for his poetry; The New York Times won 109 times for Journalism.
CNN has won a total of 11 Pulitzer Prizes as of 2021.
No. There is no single individual who won 49 Pulitzer Prizes, but some newspapers and news organizations have accumulated many for journalism categories over the years.The Associated Press (aka AP), which is not a newspaper but a "wire service" (or news bureau) that supplies articles and photographs to newspapers won 49 Pulitzer Prizes. Most of the their awards were for photography or photojournalism, and the majority of their wins were prior to 1990.The New York Times has an impressive record of 109 wins since 1917, the greatest number of Pulitzer Prizes won by one organization, as of 2011.
None. Zero. Zip. Nada. The big ol' goose egg.
There are 14 Pulitzer Prizes awarded each year in journalism across various categories such as breaking news reporting, investigative reporting, feature writing, and others.
Thornton Wilder won a total of three Pulitzer Prizes in his lifetime: two for Drama and one for a Novel.Thornton Wilder1928: The Bridge of San Luis Rey (novel)1938: Our Town (drama)1943: The Skin of Our Teeth (drama)
The Washington Post has produced a total of 69 Pulitzer Prize winners as of 2021.
Pulitzer Prizes* 1924 for New Hampshire: A Poem With Notes and Grace Notes * 1931 for Collected Poems * 1937 for A Further Range * 1943 for A Witness Treehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Frost#Pulitzer_Prizes
Robert Frost, a renowned American poet, received four Pulitzer Prizes for Poetry during his lifetime.
So far, only one, Toni Morrison -- but there have only been eight people in history to win both a Pulitzer Prize and a Nobel Prize in Literature.1988: Pulitzer (Fiction): Beloved by Toni Morrison1993: Nobel in Literature, Toni Morrison
The Pulitzer and Nobel Prizes are two different awards. The Pulitzer Prize is given annually to journalists, photographers, authors, poets and musicians for a recently published (or performed) work that is considered excellent. The Nobel Prizes span many different categories, but the one most similar to a Pulitzer is the Nobel Prize for Literature. This is more like a lifetime achievement award, and is given for a collection of writing produced over time, not for a single book.
Eugene O'Neill was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Drama four times: in 1920 for "Beyond the Horizon," in 1922 for "Anna Christie," in 1928 for "Strange Interlude," and in 1957 posthumously for "Long Day's Journey into Night."