Patrick Doyle's St. Cirspin's Day Speech from the score for Henry V
In grand total, for his entire career? Zero. He did get a lifetime achievement Oscar soon before his death.
3, it won for: Best Achievement in Art Direction, Best Achievement in Cinematography, and in, Best Achievement in Visual Effects
I will presume you mean "Best Picture" Oscars{R}.Rebecca (1940) was nominated and won.The only other nominated film was Spellbound (1945).Hitchcock himself never won an award for directing a film from either the Oscars{R}, the Directors Guild, or the Golden Globes -- but he won lifetime achievement awards from all three of these organizations.
It won 3 Oscars in 2013. They were Best Film, Best Writing/Adapted Screenplay and Best Achievement in Film Editing.
Yes, in 2008. you can watch it at Youtube.
The individual who received the most Oscars was Walt Disney, who received a total of 20 in different categories during his lifetime, and four more after his death.
The 1933 version won no Oscars. The 1976 version won a Special Achievement Award Oscar for Visual Effects. The 2005 version won 3 Oscars: Sound Editing, Sound Mixing, Visual Effects.
She has, to date been awarded Two Oscars. ( best actress for Two Women, way back when, and more recently a lifetime awards thing- but both Oscars.
None other than the Walt Disney. He leads with 22 Academy Awards to his name. He has been nominated for 59 Oscars in his lifetime.
Nobody has won more Oscars{R} than Walt Disney, who won 22 in his lifetime.
"Alice in Wonderland" won 2010 Academy Awards in the categories of Best Achievement in Art Direction (Robert Stromberg and Karen O'Hara) and Best Achievement in Costume Design (Colleen Atwood).
Yes, Catherine Martin was nominated for the Oscar for Best Achievement in Costume Design for Austrilia (2008). (She didin't win.)