Knicks star Jalen Brunson met his wife, Ali, when they were in high school.
Michael Simon/Getty Images for Moet & Chandon
Neither high school relationships nor Hollywood relationships are known for longevity.
But these 19 celebrity couples met as teens, and many of them are still together today.
Knicks star Jalen Brunson met his wife, Ali, when they were in high school.
Even in the most stable environment, it's hard to maintain a relationship that moves from high school to the real world.
Now imagine doing it as a celebrity.
Nevertheless, these 19 couples all met as high schoolers (or in some cases, even earlier), and made it work for years after, even if not all of them are still together today.
Here are 19 celebrity couples who met back when they were just regular teenagers.
Jalen Brunson and Ali Marks
Jalen Brunson and Ali Marks in 2024.
Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images for Haute Living
The Knicks superstar has been dating his wife, Ali Marks, since high school — their 2015 prom photo is still on his Instagram, captioned, "Went to prom with the best date anyone could ask for."
They got engaged in 2022 and married in 2023.
"She's always been by my side and I'm lucky to have her," Brunson told People after the big day.
In a nod to their long relationship, Marks wore her prom dress as her second look at the wedding.
They welcomed their first child, Jordyn, in 2024.
Patrick and Brittany Mahomes
Patrick and Brittany Mahomes in 2024.
Lexie Moreland/WWD/Getty Images
The 2023 Super Bowl champion has been with Brittany, his now-wife, since they were classmates in Tyler, Texas.
In 2020, Patrick proposed to Brittany, captioning an Instagram post with "#RingSZN." A few days later, the couple revealed they were expecting their first child together. Their daughter, Sterling, was born in February 2021.
They married in March 2022. Their second child, a boy named Patrick "Bronze" Lavon Mahomes III, was born in November 2022. Their third baby, Golden, was born in January 2025.
Brittany and Sterling were at the stadium to watch the Chiefs quarterback win his second Super Bowl in February 2023.
Snoop Dogg and Shante Broadus
Snoop Dogg and Shante Broadus in 2025.
Bennett Raglin/Getty Images for BET
Their first son, Cordé, was born in 1994, and they were married three years later in 1997. Snoop even shared an adorable throwback shot of the two at prom on Instagram. The ups and downs of their marriage were all documented on their reality TV show, "Snoop Dogg's Father Hood."
The couple filed for divorce in 2004, but reconciled and renewed their vows in 2008.
According to VH1, Snoop told Queen Latifah in 2013 that "[he] had no understanding of how I was hurting her and how I was betraying myself, until I [realized] I need to love this woman who loves me and had my kids. [I needed to] put my life in perspective and let my music and my business become secondary."
Lin-Manuel Miranda and Vanessa Nadal
Vanessa Nadal and Lin-Manuel Miranda attend The 2022 Met Gala Celebrating "In America: An Anthology of Fashion" at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 02, 2022 in New York City
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Miranda and Nadal attended the same New York City high school, but they never actually spoke — though that didn't stop Miranda from developing a crush on his future wife.
"She was gorgeous and I'm famously bad at talking to women I find attractive. I have a total lack of game," Miranda told The New York Times in 2010.
They reconnected on Facebook years later, after they both graduated from college. They tied the knot in September 2010. They now have two sons.
Jeff Daniels and Kathleen Treado
Actor Jeff Daniels, winner of Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Serie for 'The Newsroom,' and his wife Kathleen Treado attend HBO's Annual Primetime Emmy Awards Post Award Reception at The Plaza at the Pacific Design Center on September 22, 2013 in Los Angeles, California.
Michael Buckner/Getty Images
Daniels and Treado grew up in Chelsea, Michigan, and met in high school. They've been together ever since. Throughout his highly successful career, the couple still call Chelsea their home, and they raised their three kids there.
In 2014, Daniels told MLive about why he chose to stay close to home rather than move out to industry hubs Los Angeles or New York City, saying, "[Chelsea] was home. Kathleen and I had both been raised here; good enough for us, good enough for them."
LeBron James and Savannah Brinson
LeBron James and Savannah Brinson in 2025.
Stefanie Keenan/Getty Images for the Hammer Museum
Brinson told Harper's Bazaar in 2010 about their first date at Outback, calling it "basic," but she shared that it was also when she knew he loved her.
"I knew he loved me when I left my leftovers from dinner in his car," Brinson said. "I'd totally forgotten about them, and he brought them to me. I think he just wanted another excuse to come and see me."
Brinson became pregnant with their first child, Bronny, while she was still in high school, and she was nervous that it would derail their lives, but James assured her that everything would be OK.
James finally proposed to his longtime girlfriend in 2011, after 10 years of dating, per the Los Angeles Times. They tied the knot in 2014. They also had two more kids.
LL Cool J and Simone Smith
LL Cool J and Simone Smith in 2023.
Johnny Nunez/Getty Images for The Recording Academy
LL Cool J shared the story of how he met his wife during an interview on "Jimmy Kimmel Live."
The rapper told Kimmel in 2012 that he "was just 19, something like that," when he was driving down the block on Easter Sunday. His friend asked him if he wanted to meet one of his friend's cousins, and once he got a look at Smith, he told his friend, "Oh yeah, I'll meet your cousin."
Smith recalled she was 17 years old when they met. The pair married in 1995 after dating for 8 years, and they have 4 kids together.
Bono and Ali Hewson
Ali Hewson and Bono in 2025.
VALERY HACHE/AFP/Getty Images
Bono and Hewson met when they were teenagers at school. Hewson played hard to get, since she didn't want to be known as "just another of Bono's girls," but eventually his pursuit of her was successful.
Their first date culminated with him walking her to the bus stop, per the Huffington Post.
The U2 star has called their relationship "a magic carpet ride." She "sees me as a figure of amusement," said Bono while speaking to The Sun.
Kendrick Lamar and Whitney Alford
Kendrick Lamar and Whitney Alford in 2016.
Larry Busacca/Getty Images for NARAS
The "Not Like Us" rapper is pretty private about his personal life, but we know that he met his fiancée when they were both high schoolers in Compton, California, according to Billboard.
"She's been here since day one," Lamar said of Alford in a 2014 New York Times Magazine profile.
They got engaged in 2015 and have two children together. The entire family appears on the cover of his fifth album, "Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers" in 2022.
Steph and Ayesha Curry
Ayesha and Steph Curry in 2026.
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Even though they're basketball's golden couple, Ayesha had never even attended a game until she was 19 — five years after she met her future-husband Steph, ABC News reported.
The two met as teenagers in Charlotte, North Carolina. They never officially dated when they were that young, but according to Ayesha, they'd talk on the phone sometimes. "It was that shy middle school, high school stuff," she said.
When the basketball star was flown out to Los Angeles for the ESPY Awards, his first thought was of his childhood crush. They met up, saw the sights, and the rest is history.
Now, he's widely regarded as one of the greatest basketball players in the game, and she's turned herself into a brand. Ayesha has written cookbooks, opened a barbecue restaurant, hosted a cooking show on the Food Network called "Ayesha's Home Kitchen," and founded a skincare brand called Sweet July.
They welcomed their fourth child in 2024.
Jon Bon Jovi and Dorothea Hurley
Jon Bon Jovi and Dorothea Hurley looked comfy at the Super Bowl.
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Roc Nation
People reported the couple met at Sayreville War Memorial High School in their New Jersey hometown, and have been together ever since. They have four kids together.
At the peak of Bon Jovi's fame in 1989, the couple decided to elope in Las Vegas and were married by an Elvis impersonator. And though Bon Jovi has die-hard fans, Hurley isn't concerned.
"I think it's great they love the music," she told People in 2016.
Ron Howard and Cheryl Alley
Cheryl Alley and Ron Howard in 2024.
Emma McIntyre/WireImage/Getty Images
Even though getting married young (they were both 21) might seem like a risky endeavor, these two have beaten the odds, successfully navigating Hollywood and parenthood.
"I felt really lucky when we met. It's crazy — we were teenagers, it shouldn't have worked. We got married young, that shouldn't have worked either, and yet it really and truly has," Howard told the Huffington Post about his decades-long marriage to Alley in 2013.
And now their kids are famous, too — their daughter, Bryce Dallas Howard, starred in the "Jurassic World" franchise and regularly directs episodes of the "Star Wars" TV shows.
Thomas Rhett and Lauren Akins
Thomas Rhett and Lauren Akins in 2026.
Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty Images
While they had known each other since they were kids (since first grade, to be exact, according to Country Living), Rhett and Akins didn't start dating until they were teenagers — and it didn't stick at first. The two broke up soon after, and actually almost both married other people, according to People.
But thankfully (for Rhett), Akins broke up with her boyfriend, and Rhett "moved in for the kill." They dated for six months and married in 2013, when they were both 22. They now have four daughters and a son, born in 2026.
Ja Rule and Aisha Atkins
Aisha Atkins and Ja Rule in 2026.
Vivien Killilea/Getty Images for Kenny Smith
According to Ja Rule, the two have been together since middle school. He told Ebony magazine in 2002 that "the first time I met her I was getting off the school bus, and she was the new girl in school."
The couple were married in 2001 and have three kids together.
Besides dealing with the normal issues that couples go through and constantly being scrutinized by the media, they also had to spend almost two years apart while Ja Rule was in prison for tax evasion and illegal gun possession. He was released in 2013, per TMZ.
Mariano and Clara Rivera
Mariano and Clara Rivera in 2019.
Jim McIsaac/Getty Images
Famed baseball player Rivera met his wife in elementary school, and the pair have been together ever since, The New York Times reported.
They were married in Panama in 1991, and they lived there until 2000, when they moved to Westchester County, New York.
Eminem and Kim Scott
Christopher Polk and Bill Pugliano/Getty Images
Their long and tumultuous relationship began when they were just kids.
Even if you have just cursory knowledge about Eminem, you know about Kim, the subject of many of the rapper's most disturbing songs, like "Kim," and "'97 Bonnie and Clyde."
The two met when they were just kids (she was 13 and he was 15). Kim and her twin, Dawn, had previously run away from an allegedly abusive home, and eventually began living with Eminem and his mother.
In 1995, they welcomed their daughter Hailie (the subject of more Eminem songs), and were married in 1999.
But things quickly went downhill — Eminem was accused of pistol-whipping a man he claimed he saw kissing his wife, according to NME. The charge was dropped in favor of a reduced charge of carrying a concealed weapon, and he was sentenced to two years' probation. The couple divorced in 2001.
Five years later, they shocked the world and remarried. But just three months after that, the rapper filed for divorce. Their second divorce was finalized in 2006, per People.
Though Eminem built his brand around graphic songs, he apologized to his former wife on the track "Bad Husband" from his 2017 album, "Revival."
Joey Fatone and Kelly Baldwin
Joey Fatone and Kelly Baldwin arrive at the mPowering ActionPre-GRAMMY Launch Event at The Conga Room at L.A. Live on February 8, 2013 in Los Angeles, California.
Valerie Macon/Getty Images)
Fatone and Baldwin had been dating for 10 years and had a daughter together in 2001 before they were married in 2004, per People. Their second daughter was born in 2010.
Their relationship was plagued with rumors of infidelity from outlets such as Page Six, reaching a high in 2013 after his appearances on two seasons of "Dancing with the Stars." At the time, when Baldwin was asked for a comment, she simply responded, "I don't really want to talk about this."
In 2020, Fatone confirmed to Us Weekly that they were getting divorced.
Robin Thicke and Paula Patton
Singer Robin Thicke and actress Paula Patton attend the 2013 MTV Video Music Awards at the Barclays Center on August 25, 2013 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.
Larry Busacca/Getty Images
Thicke and Patton's 21-year-long relationship began when they were 16.
Thicke told Essence in 2011 that their relationship began when they were teenagers, and Patton was "the president of the Black student union and [Thicke] was just a silly white boy."
But they had actually met a year prior at a teen club where, according to Thicke, he serenaded his future wife with the Stevie Wonder song "Jungle Fever."
They were together for 21 years and married for nine before filing for divorce in 2014 and engaging in a particularly nasty custody battle for their son, Julian.
Misha Collins and Victoria Vantoch
Misha Collins.
Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images
Collins and Vantoch got married in 2001, though they met way back in high school — Collins was the only boy in one of Vantoch's English classes.
The two separated at some point before 2021. He acknowledged the split in the author's note in his poetry book, "Some Things I Still Can't Tell You."
Every US state has a capitol that houses its state legislature.
Many state capitols are domed buildings similar to the US Capitol, but others are more unique.
Maryland's State House is the oldest capitol in continuous legislative use in the US.
A state's capitol can tell you a lot about its history.
State capitols house each state's legislative branch of government, executive offices, and other administrative and ceremonial spaces. While their function may be the same across all 50 states, their architectural designs vary.
Many state capitols feature references to their locations, like the Kansas State Capitol is topped by Ad Astra, a statue representing a Kansa (Kaw) warrior, while the New Hampshire State House, built largely from locally quarried granite, nods to the state's "Granite State" identity.
Some buildings date back to the founding of the United States. Maryland's State House in Annapolis, completed in 1779, is the oldest one in continuous use as a legislative center.
Every capitol has a unique look and distinct origin. Here's what the capitol looks like in every state.
Montgomery, Alabama
UNITED STATES - MARCH 15: Capitol building, Montgomery, Alabama
Carol M. Highsmith/Buyenlarge/Getty Images
Alabama's capitol served as the first capital of the Confederacy, and there's a brass star on one of the porticos marking the spot where Jefferson Davis was sworn in as its president, according to the Alabama Historical Commission.
The building that stands today was constructed in 1851, after a fire burned down the original building in 1849, according to the Alabama Historical Commission.
One of the more famous parts of the capitol grounds is the Avenue of Flags. It has the flag of every state, plus a native rock from each state at the base of its flag. It was dedicated in 1968, according to Exploring Montgomery.
Juneau, Alaska
Alaska's capitol in Juneau.
Leamus/iStock/Getty Images Plus
The Alaska State Capitol, completed in 1931, doesn't look much different from any other office building in Juneau, save for the marble columns. According to Alaska's official website, it is one of the few state capitols that do not feature a dome.
As The New York Times reported in 1981, neither the building nor the location was popular with locals — both were chosen because of cost concerns shaping both construction and relocations. Voters approved a measure in the 1970s to move the capitol, but the effort ultimately failed.
As recently as 2022, Alaskan senators sponsored a bill to move the capital, this time to Willow, reported Alaska Public Media, but for now, Juneau remains the Last Frontier's capital city.
Phoenix, Arizona
PHOENIX ARIZONA, Replica of Liberty Bell in front of Arizona State Capitol Building at sunrise.
Visions of America/Universal Images Group/Getty Images
Arizona's capitol was dedicated in 1901. It stopped being the home of the legislative branches of government in 1960, and by 1978, all government officials had been moved to other buildings nearby in an area called the Capitol Complex.
The original building was then officially converted into a museum open to the public.
Little Rock, Arkansas
Arkansas State Capitol building front entrance in Little Rock.
Don & Melinda Crawford/Education Images/Universal Images Group/Getty Images
Arkansas' capitol took 16 years to complete. Construction lasted from 1899 to 1915, and the building was originally designed by architect George R. Mann, with later revisions by Cass Gilbert, according to the Encyclopedia of Arkansas.
This building replaced the State House, which is now the Old State House Museum, according to Arkansas Heritage.
Sacramento, California
SACRAMENTO, CA - OCTOBER 9: The California state Capitol building is shown October 9, 2003 in downtown Sacramento, California. Actor Arnold Schwarzenegger won in his bid to replace California Gov. Gray Davis, who was recalled in a special election October 7.
David Paul Morris/Getty Images
The building was constructed between 1860 and 1874, and designed by Reuben S. Clark. It has been listed as a California Historical Landmark since 1974, according to the Historic State Capitol Commission.
Its design was based on the US Capitol in Washington, DC, among other well-known American buildings, according to the State of California Capitol Museum.
The California State Capitol is located inside the 40-acre Capitol Park, which contains trees from around the world, a World Peace Rose Garden, and the Civil War Memorial Grove.
Denver, Colorado
Colorado's capitol in Denver.
4nadia/Getty Images/iStock
The Colorado Capitol, which was completed in 1901, was also designed to look like the US Capitol, but with a Colorado twist: The dome is covered in real gold leaf donated by gold miners to reference the Colorado Gold Rush from 1858 to 1861, according to the Colorado General Assembly.
Hartford, Connecticut
Connecticut State Capitol. The building houses the Connecticut General Assembly; the upper house, the State Senate, and lower house, the House of Representatives, as well as the offices of the Governor and Lieutenant Governor.
Rolf Schulten/ullstein bild/Getty Images
The current Connecticut State Capitol is actually the third capitol the state has had since the American Revolution. This one, designed by Richard M. Upjohn, opened in 1879, according to Connecticut's official state website.
The golden dome is surrounded by six pairs of statues representing agriculture, commerce, education and law, force and war, science and justice, and music, according to the State Capitol Preservation & Restoration Commission.
Dover, Delaware
The Legislative Hall in Dover, Delaware, USA, circa 1960.
Harvey Meston/Archive Photos/Getty Images
The Delaware Legislative Hall was dedicated in 1933 and replaced the Old State House, which is opposite the Hall on the capitol mall. It was designed in the Colonial Revival style by E. William Martin, according to Delaware's official state website.
Washington, DC
WASHINGTON - JUNE 5: The U.S. Capitol is shown June 5, 2003 in Washington, DC. Both houses of the U.S. Congress, the U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives meet in the Capitol.
Stefan Zaklin/Getty Images
The United States Capitol is located on Capitol Hill in DC. It was in construction for decades, partially destroyed in 1814, and then finally finished in 1829, according to Architect of the Capitol. The famous, gigantic dome was later added during an expansive addition in 1855, designed by Thomas U. Walter.
Atop the dome sits the "Statue of Freedom," a 19-foot statue of a woman wearing a battle helmet, holding a sheathed sword in one hand, and a laurel wreath and shield in the other. She's been there since 1863, according to Architect of the Capitol.
Tallahassee, Florida
TALLAHASSEE, FL - NOVEMBER 10: A view of the Florida State Capitol building on November 10, 2018 in Tallahassee, Florida. Three close midtern election races for governor, senator, and agriculture commissioner are expected to be recounted in Florida.
Mark Wallheiser/Getty Images
The current capitol, also called the New Capitol, is located directly in front of the original — together, they form the Capitol Complex. The New Capitol was built in 1977 by architect Edward Durell Stone and the firm of Reynolds, Smith, and Hills, according to the Florida Capitol website.
The website reports the building was designed in an "international style to reflect a modern Florida," and includes a 22-story central tower.
The Old Capitol still stands, and it was restored to its original 1902 glory in the '80s. Currently, the building is the Florida Historic Capitol Museum.
Atlanta, Georgia
Sunlight gleams on the golden dome of the Georgia State Capitol building in Atlanta, Georgia.
Kevin Fleming/Corbis/VCG/Getty Images
Georgia's capitol was finished in 1889 and designed by Willoughby J. Edbrooke and Franklin P. Burnham, according to the city of Atlanta's website. It sits on the site of the former Atlanta City Hall/Fulton County Courthouse, which was there from 1854 to 1994.
According to the city, it's one of 43 National Historic Landmarks in the state.
Honolulu, Hawaii
Hawaii State Capitol. The Capitol building houses the Hawaii State Legislature (Senate and House of Representatives) and the offices of the Governor and Lieutenant Governo
Rolf Schulten/ullstein bild/Getty Images
At the dedication of the Hawaiian capitol in 1969, then-Governor John A. Burns explained the design of the building, the Honolulu Star Advertiser reported.
"In this great State Capitol there are no doors at the grand entrances which open toward the mountains and toward the sea," he said. "There is no roof or dome to separate its vast inner court from the heavens and from the same eternal stars which guided the first voyagers to the primeval beauty of these shores."
The building is also surrounded by a reflecting pool meant to symbolize the Pacific Ocean, which surrounds the chain of 137 recognized islands that make up Hawaii, according to the State of Hawaii.
Boise, Idaho
The Idaho State Capitol building in Boise home of the government of the state of Idaho
Idaho's capitol was designed by architects J.E. Tourtellotte and Charles Hummel, and was constructed between 1905 and 1920. According to Idaho's Capitol Commission, it's the only capitol in the US that is heated by geothermal water. It comes from a spring 3,000 feet underground.
Springfield, Illinois
SPRINGFIELD, IL - APRIL 9: The Illinois State Capitol building stands among empty streets in Springfield, Illinois on April 9, 2020
Daniel Acker for The Washington Post/Getty Images
According to a pamphlet by the Illinois Secretary of State's office, the current capitol (the state's sixth) was completed in 1888, 20 years after crews broke ground. At the time of its construction, the limestone dome was illuminated by 144 gas jets. However, the carbon emitted by those jets eventually turned the dome black.
It took 100 years, but it was finally cleaned in 1986.
Indianapolis, Indiana
State capitol building in downtown Indianapolis Indiana on a sunny spring morning, Indianapolis is the capital city of Indiana and is located in the center of the state with the capitol building located downtown.
According to the Indiana Department of Administration, Indiana's capitol was completed in 1888, and is home to all executive offices, the Indiana State Senate, the Indiana House of Representatives, and the Indiana State Supreme Court, among others. It was constructed with Indiana limestone.
Des Moines, Iowa
UNITED STATES - AUGUST 28: Capitol building, Des Moines, Iowa
Carol M. Highsmith/Buyenlarge/Getty Images
The large golden dome is 23 carats, and the entire building is 275 feet tall, according to a visitor's guide. It's been re-gilded four times since its construction in 1886.
Overall, Iowa's capitol has a total of five domes, making it the only capitol in the US with five.
Topeka, Kansas
State Capitol of Kansas, Topeka
Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group/Getty Images
Kansas' capitol dome is topped with a statue called "Ad astra" (Latin for "to the stars"), which is part of the state's motto, "ad astra per aspera" ("to the stars through difficulties"), according to the Kansas Historical Society.
The statue itself is a bronze depiction of a warrior from the Kansa tribe (also known as the Kaw Nation or Kanza), who call Kansas home and gave the state its name.
The entire building took 37 years to construct, also according to the Kansas Historical Society, from 1866 to 1903.
Frankfort, Kentucky
FRANKFORT, KY - APRIL 2: Thousands of public school teachers and their supporters protest against a pension reform bill at the Kentucky State Capitol April 2, 2018 in Frankfort, Kentucky. The teachers are calling for higher wages and are demanding that Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin veto a bill that overhauls their pension plan.
Bill Pugliano/Getty Images
Kentucky's capitol was designed by Frank Mills Andrews, according to Kentucky's official state website. There are also statues lining the front portico that represent Kentucky, the central figure, with Progress, History, Plenty, Law, Art, and Labor as her "attendants," according to the state website.
The current building is the fourth capitol in the state, and it was completed in 1910.
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
The capitol of Louisiana, seat of government, is a building of 34 floors and 135 meters high, which makes it the highest capitol of the United States. It is also the highest building of Louisiana. Its style is connected with that of the old New York skyscrapers. This new capitol was built between 1930 and 1932.
David LEFRANC/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images
The Louisiana Capitol is just one of nine capitols in the US that doesn't feature a dome — and at 450 feet tall (or 34 floors), it's also the tallest capitol in the country, according to Louisiana's House of Representatives.
It was dedicated in 1932, without the person who had spearheaded the effort to build it, Senator Huey P. Long, a controversial figure in Louisiana's history, as reported by Encyclopedia Britannica.
Augusta, Maine
Staff photo by Joe Phelan -- For slide show about the Statehouse in Augusta.
Joe Phelan/Portland Press Herald/Getty Images
The capital of Maine was originally Portland when the state broke away from Massachusetts in 1820. But when Mainers asked for a more centrally located capital city, Augusta was chosen in 1827, according to the Maine State Legislature. The building was completed by 1832.
The State House's dome is topped with a female figure of Wisdom, which was designed by sculptor W. Clark Noble of Gardiner, a town 6 miles from Augusta.
Annapolis, Maryland
Maryland State House, state capitol building, Annapolis, Maryland, exterior view.
Maryland's State House is the oldest capitol in continuous legislative use in the US, built in 1779, according to its official website. It's also the only state capitol to have once served as the US capitol when the Continental Congress met there from 1783 to 1784, according to the website.
Boston, Massachusetts
The Old State House for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, State Capitol Building, Boston, Mass.
Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group/Getty Images
The Massachusetts State House, built in 1789, originally had a wooden dome, but Paul Revere's own company was responsible for covering it in copper in 1802, CBS News reported.
And the land it was built on? It used to be owned by none other than John Hancock, who was Massachusetts' first elected governor.
Lansing, Michigan
August 1970. Lansing, Michigan. Exterior view of the Michigan State Capitol building in Lansing.
Bettman/Getty Images
The floors of Michigan's capitol, which was dedicated in 1879, are made of limestone and have visible fossils in them, as you can see on the capitol's official website.
St. Paul, Minnesota
ST. PAUL, MN - OCTOBER 15: Minnesota State Capitol Building in St. Paul, Minnesota on October 15, 2018.
Raymond Boyd/Getty Images
According to Explore Minnesota, the state's capitol is the second-largest self-supporting marble dome in the world, only behind St. Peter's Basilica in Rome.
Architect Cass Gilbert insisted on using Georgia marble for the dome, according to the Minnesota Historical Society. Some were critical of using out-of-state materials, so as a compromise, the contractor leased the quarry in Georgia and imported the rough marble so Minnesotans could do the work in-state.
It took nine years, but was completed in 1905.
Jackson, Mississippi
Protesters (L) gather outside the Mississippi State Capitol building during the state legislature's historic vote to change the Mississippi flag in Jackson, Mississippi on June 28, 2020. - Lawmakers in Mississippi voted on June 28 to remove the Confederate battle standard from the state flag, after nationwide protests drew renewed attention to symbols of the United States' racist past.
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Designed by architect Theodore Link and constructed between 1901 and 1903, Mississippi's state capitol was built on the site of an old state penitentiary, according to the state capitol's official website. The building spans 171,000 square feet and features 4,750 original electric light fixtures, as well as an 8-foot statue of an eagle on the top of its dome.
Jefferson City, Missouri
8/31/1970- Jefferson City, MO- ORIGINAL CAPTION READS: Exterior views of the Missouri State Capitol building, include the surrounding trees and lawn.
Bettman/Getty Images
Missouri's state capitol was completed in 1917, according to its official website. Ceres, the goddess of grain, sits at the top of its dome.
In addition to Missouri's state legislature, the 500,000-square-foot building houses the Missouri State Museum with exhibits about the state's history and natural resources.
The main building of Montana's state capitol was completed in 1902, and its two wings were added in 1911 and 1912, according to the Montana Historical Society. Inside, the building features works of art such as the mural "Lewis and Clark Meeting Indians at Ross' Hole," painted by Charles M. Russell in 1912.
Lincoln, Nebraska
tate capitol building in Lincoln Nebraska on a sunny spring day and emphasizing the buildings tall central tower and dome, Lincoln, the capital city of Nebraska, is located in the southeastern part of the state along Interstate-80. The state legislature in Nebraska is the only unicameral legislature among all of the states.
Nebraska's state capitol was designed by architect Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue and completed in 1932, according to its official website. The 400-foot tower is topped with a 19-foot bronze statue called "The Sower."
It is the only state legislature to be unicameral, meaning it only has one chamber.
Carson City, Nevada
State Capitol of Nevada, Carson City
Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group/Getty Images
Nevada's state capitol was built from 1870 to 1871 out of sandstone sourced from a quarry belonging to Abe Curry, the founder of Carson City, according to Travel Nevada. It features a silver-colored dome, a nod to Nevada's nickname as "the silver state."
Concord, New Hampshire
State Capitol of New Hampshire, Concord
Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group/Getty Images
The New Hampshire State House was constructed between 1816 and 1819 with locally sourced granite from Rattlesnake Hill in Concord, according to the New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources.
In 1818, a wooden sculpture of an eagle painted with gold was installed on top of the capitol dome. It was replaced with a copper replica in 1957, but the original sculpture can be viewed on display inside the capitol, according to EverGreene, the architecture firm that restored the State House's gold-plated dome.
Trenton, New Jersey
TRENTON, NJ - JUNE 24: New Jersey State Capitol Building, New Jersey Flags Fly at Half Staff in Honor of Actor James Gandolfini on June 24, 2013 in Trenton, New Jersey.Gandolfini passed away on June 19, 2013 at the age of 51 while on vacation in Rome, Italy.
Bobby Bank/WireImage/Getty Images
After Maryland, New Jersey State House is the second-oldest capitol still in use, completed in 1792, according to the state of New Jersey's official website. Much of the original building, designed by architect Jonathan Doane, was destroyed in a fire in 1885.
Architect Lewis Broome restored the capitol and added a cast-iron dome plated with copper and gold and featuring the Latin phrase "Fiat Justitia Ruat Coelum," meaning "There must be justice even though the heavens fall."
Santa Fe, New Mexico
SANTA FE, NM - FEBRUARY 10, 2012: The New Mexico State Capitol in Santa Fe, known as the Roundhouse, is the only round capitol building in the U.S.
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New Mexico's capitol, known as the Roundhouse, is the only round capitol in the US, according to Santa Fe's official tourist website. Architect Willard C. Kruger modeled the design after the Zia sun symbol, which he also incorporated into the capitol rotunda skylight. The symbol is also part of New Mexico's state flag.
Albany, New York
ALBANY, NEW YORK, UNITED STATES - 2018/10/09: New York State Capitol Building.
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When New York's state capitol in Albany was finally finished after 32 years in 1899, it was at a cost of $25 million, making it one of the most expensive government projects in the US. In 2013, The New York Times reported the figure was equivalent to more than half a billion dollars today.
Inside the granite building, visitors can find 25 murals by William deLeftwich Dodge in the Governor's Reception Room.
Raleigh, North Carolina
Law enforcement stand guard outside of the state capitol building in downtown Raleigh, North Carolina, on January 17, 2021, during a nationwide protest called by anti-government and far-right groups supporting US President Donald Trump and his claim of electoral fraud in the November 3 presidential election. - The FBI warned authorities in all 50 states to prepare for armed protests at state capitals in the days leading up to the January 20 presidential inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden.
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Completed in 1840, North Carolina's 3-story capitol includes a copper dome, according to the National Park Service.
Bismarck, North Dakota
Photo taken August 18, 2013 shows the state Capitol building of North Dakota at Bismarck
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North Dakota's state capitol is the tallest building in the state at 241 feet and 8 inches tall, according to the official government website. The Art-Deco structure is nicknamed the "Skyscraper on the Prairie," according to the Society of Architecture Historians.
Columbus, Ohio
Aerial of Capitol Building, Downtown Columbus, Ohio, USA
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Construction of the Ohio Statehouse took over 20 years, from 1839 to 1861, according to its official website. Much of the work was done by prisoners at Ohio Penitentiary, some of whom left graffiti on the walls that was uncovered during restoration work, the website says. Built in the Greek-Revival architecture style out of Columbus limestone, the Statehouse is a designated National Historic Landmark.
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
The Oklahoma State Capitol building was built in 1917. The beautiful dome was added in recent years. When the state erected the building it lacked the funding to build the planned dome, and therefore it went without for decades. Oklahoma City has been the state capital since 1910; Guthrie was the capital of Oklahoma from 1890 to 1910.
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Built in 1917, the dome on Oklahoma's capitol was added more recently, in 2002, according to the Oklahoma Historical Society — it was left out of the original construction due to costs. The grounds of Oklahoma's capitol also had active oil rigs until 1986. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.
Salem, Oregon
Oregon's state capitol building in Salem.
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Oregon's Art Deco capitol is made of white Vermont marble with a gold statue of an "Oregon Pioneer" atop the dome, according to the capitol's official website. In-person guided tours are paused due to construction.
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
HARRISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA, UNITED STATES - 2015/10/06: Pennsylvania State capitol building
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Pennsylvania's capitol, designed by architect Joseph Huston, cost $13 million to build when it was completed in 1906, which would be over $403 million today, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The building's 272-foot dome is decorated with green glazed terra cotta tile, according to the capitol's official website.
Providence, Rhode Island
Rhode Island, Providence, State House, State Capitol.
The Rhode Island State House, built between 1895 and 1904, features the fourth-largest freestanding marble dome in the world, according to the Rhode Island Restoration Committee's official website. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1970.
Columbia, South Carolina
An exterior view of the South Carolina State House, Columbia - construction work first began in 1851 and was completed in 1907, it was designated a national historic landmark in 1976 for its significance in the post-civil war reconstruction era.
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The construction of the South Carolina State House began in 1854, but halted due to the Civil War. The building still features cannonball marks from when the Union army captured Columbia in 1865, according to Discover South Carolina. The State House was finally completed in 1903, and it was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1976, according to the South Carolina Department of Archives and History.
A portrait of state senator Clementa Pinckney, who was killed in the 2015 shooting at Charleston's Mother Emanuel AME Church, hangs in the Senate Gallery.
Pierre, South Dakota
State capitol building in downtown Pierre in central South Dakota, The state capital city of South Dakota is Pierre in the center of the state on the shores of the Missouri River with the capitol building located downtown in this small city of about 14,000 people.
South Dakota's state capitol was constructed between 1905 and 1910, not long after South Dakota became a US state in 1889, according to the South Dakota Bureau of Administration. An annex was added in 1932. The Neoclassical building features scagliola plaster columns, war memorials, and stained-glass windows, according to Travel South Dakota.
Nashville, Tennessee
NASHVILLE - MAY 25: Tennessee State Capitol Building, as photographed from The Rivers Of Tennessee Fountain grounds at Bicentennial Capitol Mall State Park in Nashville, Tennessee on May 25, 2016. (
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The Tennessee State Capitol opened in 1859. The architect, William Strickland, died during its construction in 1854 and was buried on the capitol grounds along with President James K. Polk and first lady Sarah Childress Polk, according to the Tennessee State Museum.
Austin, Texas
The Texas State Capitol building in Austin, Texas
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Completed in 1888, the Texas State Capitol dome is topped with a statue of Libertas, the goddess of liberty, according to the official website for the Texas House of Representatives. It stands 14 feet taller than the US Capitol.
Salt Lake City, Utah
The Utah State Capitol building in Salt Lake City.
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Utah's State Capitol was designed by architect Richard K.A. Kletting and was completed in 1916, according to its official website. The rotunda features bronze and marble statues of Native American leaders, LDS pioneers, and US presidents such as Abraham Lincoln, according to its website.
Montpelier, Vermont
Vermont capitol building in Montpelier.
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The Vermont State House, designed in the Greek Revival architecture style, dates back to 1857, according to the National Park Service. A statue of Ceres, the goddess of agriculture, adorns the top of the dome.
Richmond, Virginia
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA - JANUARY 20: Thousands of gun rights advocates attend a rally organized by The Virginia Citizens Defense League on Capitol Square at the State Capitol building January 20, 2020 in Richmond, Virginia. During elections last year, Virginia Governor Ralph Northam promised to enact sweeping gun control laws in 2020, including limiting handgun purchase to one per month, banning military-style weapons and silencers, allowing localities to ban guns in public spaces and enacting a 'red flag' law so authorities can temporarily seize weapons from someone deemed a threat. While event organizers have asked supporters to show up un-armed, militias and other extremist groups from across the country plan to attend the rally and show their support for gun rights.
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Thomas Jefferson designed Virginia's state capitol to look like the ancient Roman temple of Maison Carée, according to the Virginia General Assembly's official website. The building also features a bronze statue of Jefferson, who is depicted holding the capitol's architectural blueprints.
Olympia, Washington
Washington State Capitol Legislative Building and blooming cherry trees in Olympia, Washington.
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The Washington State Legislative Building features the tallest freestanding masonry dome in North America at 287 feet, according to the Washington State Department of Enterprise Services. Designed by Walter Wilder and Harry White, it was completed in 1928.
Charleston, West Virginia
CHARLESTON, WV -JUNE 26: The State Capitol building in Charleston is actually taller than the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. -Charleston is the destination for the traveler who enjoys food, music, nature and rural culture in a mid-size city.
Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post/Getty Images
West Virginia's capitol, designed by Cass Gilbert, took eight years and almost $10 million to construct before its completion in 1932, according to its official website. The dome stands at 293 feet tall — 5 feet higher than the US Capitol in Washington, DC.
Madison, Wisconsin
MADISON, WI - MARCH 12: Thousands of demonstrators protest outside the Wisconsin State Capitol March 12, 2011 in Madison, Wisconsin. Organizers were expecting 200 thousand participants to attend the rally to voice their opposition to Governor Scott Walker's budget repair bill which essentially eliminated collective bargaining rights for state workers.
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Wisconsin's state capitol features the only granite dome in the US, according to Travel Wisconsin. On top of the dome, a gilded bronze statue by Daniel Chester French is aptly named "Wisconsin."
Cheyenne, Wyoming
386423 02: The Wyoming State Capitol building is seen March 6, 2001 in Cheyenne, Wy. Wyoming lawmakers passed the Insurance Coverage for Diabetes Act which requires health policies to cover diabetes supplies, equipment and education.
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Wyoming's state capitol, constructed between 1886 and 1890, was built in the Renaissance Revival architecture style, according to the Wyoming Department of Administration and Information. It is one of 20 state capitols designated as a National Historic Landmark, according to the National Park Service.
With the rise of matcha and its health benefits (it's high in antioxidants, making it a superfood, and can bolster immunity and help with inflammation), it's no wonder that some of the most popular coffee chains in the US have hopped on the matcha train.
Starbucks has had matcha on the menu since 2006, but the chain has acknowledged that 20 years later, "matcha is having a moment." Dunkin' and Tim Hortons embraced matcha much more recently, adding it to their menus in 2020.
Matcha, to me, seems like the perfect springtime drink. So, to celebrate the end of what seemed like the longest winter on record, I tried the iced matcha lattes at Starbucks, Dunkin', and Tim Hortons.
Here's what I thought.
My first stop was Starbucks, which I was surprised to see had an entire collection "inspired by matcha."
Gabbi Shaw/Business Insider
The sign read, "We love it as much as you do. It's why we made this collection that captures matcha's unique vibrancy and energy."
I was particularly fond of the mug on the far left, with the paint splatters, and the mug second from the right.
We were off to a strong start, but the good vibes didn't last long.
I was already dubious before taking a sip, after noticing how separated the latte was.
Gabbi Shaw/Business Insider
A grande iced matcha latte at my local Starbucks costs $6.25 for 16 fluid ounces.
I only needed to take one sip to know something did not taste right to me.
Matcha, a type of green tea, is not sweet — it's bitter. So I usually add a little bit of sweetener to it (most frequently a pump of vanilla).
Starbucks adds, by default, three pumps of classic syrup to a matcha latte, so if I added more syrup, it could be disgustingly sweet.
However, this drink was so bitter that I had to double-check that the syrup had been added. It had — I just couldn't handle it, I guess.
It looked good, but overall it wasn't for me.
Gabbi Shaw/Business Insider
This drink looked thick and creamy, precisely what I would want, but it ended up being a bit more watery than I thought.
Ultimately, it felt like I was drinking bitter, watery green tea. The chain uses unsweetened powder, which I think threw me off.
Starbucks confirmed that in January 2025, it switched from sweetened matcha powder to an unsweetened one to give customers more customization options.
Once I shook it up and stopped drinking from the straw, the latte got better, but it still wasn't for me.
Of the three chains I visited, Starbucks easily had the most options to customize its drinks, and it has the most expansive matcha menu, with 16 different types, including Dubai chocolate, banana bread, and lavender cream. Clearly, the chain is responding to customer demand for its matcha.
In the future, I think I would add vanilla syrup or try another flavor combination to reach my preferred level of sweetness. But as it stands, I didn't love the basic option.
Onto the next!
If Starbucks was too bitter, Dunkin' was on the opposite end of the spectrum.
Gabbi Shaw/Business Insider
A medium matcha latte from Dunkin' set me back $5.49, so it was slightly cheaper than Starbucks and came in a larger size at 24 fluid ounces.
However, it really just tasted like matcha-flavored milk to me.
Both Starbucks and Dunkin' use three scoops of matcha powder in their standard drinks, but while Starbucks uses syrup to sweeten it, Dunkin' uses cane sugar.
The drink was on the thinner side.
Gabbi Shaw/Business Insider
This didn't taste bad, but if I was really craving the earthy taste of matcha, I wouldn't go back to Dunkin'.
That said, I would recommend this to someone who has never had matcha before and is looking to ease into it. They'll be shopping for the ceremonial grade stuff in no time.
Dunkin' did not respond to a request for comment regarding its matcha recipe or use of sweeteners.
To my surprise, my favorite matcha latte came from Tim Hortons.
Gabbi Shaw/Business Insider
This cost $5.27 for 16 fluid ounces, placing it in the middle of the three in terms of cost per fluid ounce.
Tim Hortons uses a sweetened matcha powder, which I think made all the difference. They don't add any additional sweeteners, so this struck the perfect balance of being slightly sweet, not too milky, and still having that earthy flavor.
Tim Hortons did not respond to a request for comment regarding its matcha recipe.
I felt like Goldilocks sipping this.
Gabbi Shaw/Business Insider
Not too sweet, not too bitter, a reasonable price — what more could I ask for?
I was also into the little maple leaf Tim Hortons puts on its cups. Thank you, Canada!
Gabbi Shaw/Business Insider
Sadly, there's only one Tim's in all of Manhattan (in addition to two in Brooklyn and four in Staten Island). The Midtown location isn't the most convenient from my apartment or office, so I don't think I'll be able to add it to the rotation.
I really enjoyed the Timbits I ordered with my drink, too.
Please expand, Tim Hortons! I'll become a dedicated Horton Head and drink matcha every day if one were closer.
A few records were broken with this year's crop of winners.
Jessie Buckley took the best actress statue home to Ireland for the first time ever.
At the 98th Academy Awards on Sunday, a whole new class of winners were minted.
This year's crop of nominated films, which were largely well-liked by critics, came from around the world — and made history. For example, "Sinners" became the most-nominated film ever, "Sentimental Value" was the first Norwegian film to ever win best international feature, and Jessie Buckley is the first Irish woman to win best actress.
A few other records were broken with this year's winners. Here are some Oscars records that could prove helpful at your next trivia night.
Autumn Durald Arkapaw is the first woman to ever win best cinematography.
Autumn Durald Arkapaw at the 2026 Oscars.
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images
Arkapaw, who won for "Sinners," was only the fourth woman to ever be nominated for the award and the first to win.
In a heartwarming moment, she asked every woman in the audience to stand up as she thanked them for paving the way.
Amy Madigan set a new record for the longest gap between first nomination and first win.
Amy Madigan at the 2026 Oscars.
Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic/Getty Images
Madigan received her first (and until this year, only) nomination in 1986 for best supporting actress in the film "Twice in a Lifetime." Forty years later, she finally won for playing the villainous Aunt Gladys in "Weapons."
Jessie Buckley is the first Irish woman to win best actress.
Jessie Buckley at the 2026 Oscars.
Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic/Getty Images
Buckley, who won best actress for playing Agnes Shakespeare in "Hamnet," became the first Irish person to win best actress — she thanked the country for paying for her family's flights to the ceremony.
This year, there was also the seventh tie in Oscars history, and the first in 13 years.
Jack Piatt and Sam A. Davis, winner of the Live Action Short Film award for "The Singers"; Alexandre Singh and Natalie Musteata, winners of the Best Live Action Short Film Award for "Two People Exchanging Saliva",
The teams from "The Singers" and "Two People Exchanging Saliva" took turns at the podium to accept their respective Oscars for best live-action short film.
This has happened six other times: in 2013 for best sound editing; in 1995 for best live-action short film; in 1987 for best feature documentary; in 1969 for best actress; in 1950 for best documentary (short subject); and in 1932 for best actor.
In 2025, Sean Baker became the first person since Walt Disney to win four Oscars in one night — and the first to win them for the same movie.
Sean Baker, winner of the Best Picture, Best Directing, Best Film Editing, and Best Original Screenplay for "Anora", poses in the press room during the 97th Annual Oscars at Ovation Hollywood on March 02, 2025
Mike Coppola/Getty Images
Baker won for writing, directing, editing, and producing "Anora," which took home another Oscar for its leading lady, Mikey Madison.
In one night, in 1954, Disney took home the Oscars for best documentary feature for "The Living Desert," best documentary short subject for "The Alaskan Eskimo," best short subject (cartoon) for "Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Boom," and best short subject (two-reel) for "Bear Country."
That means the two are tied, but Baker had a clean sweep of "Anora" wins. The only award it lost was for best supporting actor.
Legendary composer John Williams has the most Oscar nominations of any living person, with 54 nods.
Reuters
Williams has won five times, for his work on "Fiddler on the Roof," "Jaws," "Star Wars," "E.T. the Extra Terrestrial," and "Schindler's List."
He was nominated for the 54th time in 2024 for "Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny."
He is also the only person to ever be nominated for an Oscar in seven different decades.
Hollywood, California: John Williams, the winner of the 1982 Academy Award for the Best Original Score for E.T., stands backstage during the Academy Awards Ceremony holding his Oscar.
Bettmann/Getty Images
He's been nominated at least once a decade since his first nomination for 1968's "Valley of the Dolls."
His 2023 nomination made the then-90-year-old the oldest nominee ever — he broke his own record one year later.
However, with 22 wins from 59 nominations, Walt Disney is the most decorated Oscar winner in history.
Movie producer Walt Disney holding four Oscar awards he won for best feature-length documentary, short documentary, cartoon & two-reeler at Academy Awards ceremony
George Silk/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images
He was nominated for 58 during his lifetime, from 1932 to 1964. He received a final posthumous nomination (and win) at the 1968 ceremony — best short subject (cartoon) — for "Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day."
Karla Sofía Gascón made history in 2025 as the first transgender actor to be nominated in any category.
Karla Sofía Gascón attends the 82nd Annual Golden Globe Awards at The Beverly Hilton on January 05, 2025
Amy Sussman/Getty Images
Gascón was nominated for best actress for her performance in "Emilia Pérez," making her the first trans actor to be nominated for an acting Academy Award. She lost to Mikey Madison.
Troy Kotsur's best supporting actor win for "CODA" in 2022 made him the first deaf man and the second deaf actor overall to win an Oscar.
US actor Troy Kotsur holds his award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for "CODA" as he attends the 2022 Vanity Fair Oscar Party on March 27, 2022.
In "CODA," his wife was played by Marlee Matlin, who was the first deaf actor ever to win an Oscar. She won the best actress statue for "Children of a Lesser God."
Marlee Matlin became both the first deaf person to win an Oscar and the youngest best actress winner when she won for 1986's "Children of a Lesser God."
3/30/1987-Los Angeles, CA-Actress Marlee Matlin holds her Oscar, which she recieved for Best Actress, as she signs "I love you" at the Academy Awards.
Bettmann/Getty Images
She was 21 at the time of her win.
The youngest winner of best actor was 29-year-old Adrien Brody, who won for "The Pianist" in 2003.
Best actor Adrien Brody poses with his Oscar at the 75th annual Academy Awards Sunday, March 23, 2003, in Los Angeles. Brody won for "The Pianist.
Reed Saxon/AP Images
Brody was close to 30 when he won in 2003. In 2025, he won his second Academy Award for his role in "The Brutalist."
Brody has now also joined an elite club of 10 other actors who have won best actor more than once — he's now peers with Spencer Tracy, Jack Nicholson, Marlon Brando, Dustin Hoffman, Gary Cooper, Tom Hanks, Fredric March, Anthony Hopkins, and three-time winners Daniel Day-Lewis and Sean Penn.
Timothée Chalamet became the first actor to be nominated for best actor twice before the age of 30 since James Dean.
Timothée Chalamet at the 2026 Oscars.
Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times/Getty Images
Chalamet received his first Oscar nomination in 2018 for his role in "Call Me By Your Name" when he was 23. Seven years later, he was nominated once again for playing Bob Dylan in "A Complete Unknown" at age 29.
He was nominated for his third Academy Award this year, for "Marty Supreme," just a few weeks after he turned 30.
The last time an actor had two best actor nominations to his name before turning 30 was in 1957, when James Dean (posthumously) received two nominations in 1956 and 1957. He died in September 1955 at the age of 24.
In 2022, Ariana DeBose became the first openly queer person of color to win an acting Oscar. She won for "West Side Story."
Ariana DeBose poses with her Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for 'West Side Story' in the press room at the 94th Annual Academy Awards at Hollywood and Highland on March 27, 2022
David Livingston/Getty Images
DeBose also became the first Afro-Latina woman to win.
In her acceptance speech, she called herself an "openly queer woman of color, an Afro-Latina who found her strength in life through art. And that's what I believe we're here to celebrate. Anybody who's ever questioned your identity ever or find yourself living in the gray spaces? I promise you this: There is indeed a place for us."
Marlon Brando and Robert De Niro were the only men to win Oscars for playing the same role — Vito Corleone, in "The Godfather" and "The Godfather Part II" — until Joaquin Phoenix took home the Oscar for "Joker."
"The Dark Knight" and "Joker."
Warner Bros. Pictures.
Brando portrayed Vito Corleone as an old man with adult children and grandkids, while De Niro played him as a young man who had just emigrated from Italy.
When Joaquin Phoenix won for "Joker," it marked the second time this happened, as Heath Ledger posthumously won for his performance as the Joker in 2008's "The Dark Knight."
Ariana DeBose and Rita Moreno were the first women to win Oscars for playing the same role. They each won for playing Anita in "West Side Story."
Rita Moreno and Ariana DeBose attend the 94th Annual Academy Awards on March 27, 2022.
Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic/Getty Images
Moreno won for playing Anita in the 1961 film "West Side Story" at the 1962 Oscars. Sixty years later, DeBose took home the Oscar for the same role in Steven Spielberg's 2021 remake.
"Parasite" was the 12th film in history to win best picture without receiving a single acting nod.
This would be the first time a South Korean film has won any kind of Oscar at all.
There are two best picture nominees this year that would've joined this list if they had won: "F1" and "Train Dreams."
"Parasite" was also the first foreign-language film to win best picture. Two international films were also nominated this year ("Sentimental Value" and "The Secret Agent"), but they lost to "One Battle After Another."
Meryl Streep is the most-nominated actress in Oscar history, with a staggering 21 nominations under her belt. She's won three times.
meryl streep oscars 2012
Michael Buckner/Getty Images
Streep has won best actress twice, for "Sophie's Choice" and "The Iron Lady." She won best supporting actress for "Kramer vs. Kramer."
The country that's taken home best international film the most is Italy, which has produced 14 winners from 33 nominations.
OLLYWOOD, CA - MARCH 02: Director Paolo Sorrentino poses in the press room at the 86th annual Academy Awards at Dolby Theatre on March 2, 2014 in Hollywood, California.
Jason LaVeris/WireImage/Getty Images
Most recently, Italy won for "The Great Beauty," or "La grande bellezza" in 2014, directed by Paolo Sorrentino. He was nominated again in 2022 for "The Hand of God," but lost to Japan's entry, "Drive My Car."
In 2025, Brazil won its first Oscar with "I'm Still Here."
Walter Salles, winner of the Best International Feature Film for "I'm Still Here", poses in the press room during the 97th Annual Oscars at Dolby Theatre on March 02, 2025
Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic/Getty Images
"I'm Still Here," based on the real story of Eunice and Rubens Paiva, was also nominated for best picture and best actress for its star, Fernanda Torres.
This year, Norway earned its first win in that category with "Sentimental Value."
Joachim Trier at the 98th annual Oscars.
Gilbert Flores/Penske Media/Getty Images
"Sentimental Value," which was also nominated for best picture, won best international feature at the 2026 Academy Awards. The film was directed by Joachim Trier, who was previously nominated in this category in 2022 but lost to Japan's "Drive My Car."
This is the first time Norway has taken home this award. "This is a historic moment for Norwegian cinema," Norwegian Film Institute CEO Kjersti Mo told Variety.
Martin Scorsese is the most nominated living director, after receiving his 10th nomination for "Killers of the Flower Moon."
Gotham / Contributor / Getty Images
Overall, he's been nominated 10 times for "Raging Bull," "The Last Temptation of Christ," "Goodfellas," "Gangs of New York," "The Aviator," "The Departed," "Hugo," "The Wolf of Wall Street," "The Irishman," and "Killers of the Flower Moon."
He's only won once, for "The Departed."
In 2022, Steven Spielberg became the first person nominated for the best director award in six different decades.
Steven Spielberg with his Oscars for "Schindler's List."
Steve Starr/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images
Spielberg's "West Side Story" earned a best director nod. In total, the movie secured eight nominations, winning one. He was nominated again in 2023 for "The Fabelmans," and in 2026 for producing "Hamnet."
His previous best director nominations were for "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" (1978), "Raiders of the Lost Ark" (1981), "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial" (1982), "Schindler's List" (1993), "Saving Private Ryan" (1998), "Munich" (2005), and "Lincoln" (2012). He won for "Schindler's List" and "Saving Private Ryan."
Before "West Side Story," he and Scorsese shared the record for a director nominated in five decades. After "Killers of the Flower Moon," the two are tied once again.
In 2021, Anthony Hopkins took the mantle of oldest winner in an acting category from Christopher Plummer — the then-83-year-old won best actor for "The Father."
Hopkins and his first Oscar in 1992.
Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images
Hopkins took the record from Plummer, who was 82 when he won for "Beginners" in 2012.
Plummer is still the oldest nominee in an acting category, though. He was 88 when he was nominated for best actor in "All the Money in the World" in 2018.
Christopher Plummer with his award for best supporting actor at the 2012 Oscars.
Rick Rowell/ABC via Getty images
He was also nominated in 2010 for "The Last Station."
But the oldest winner in any category is James Ivory, who was 89 when he took home the Oscar for best adapted screenplay in 2018.
HOLLYWOOD, CA - MARCH 04: Writer James Ivory, winner of the Best Adapted Screenplay award for 'Call Me By Your Name,' poses in the press room during the 90th Annual Academy Awards at Hollywood & Highland Center on March 4, 2018 in Hollywood, California.
Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images
Ivory won for the "Call Me By Your Name" screenplay, based on the novel of the same name by André Aciman.
The youngest person to ever be nominated for an Oscar was 8-year-old Justin Henry for "Kramer vs. Kramer" in 1979.
Columbia Pictures
Henry is now 54 and acts sporadically.
The youngest winner was 10-year-old Tatum O'Neal, who won best supporting actress for "Paper Moon" in 1974.
2nd April 1974: American actor Tatum O'Neal, wearing a tuxedo, holds her Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her role in director Peter Bogdanovich's film, 'Paper Moon,' at the 46th Annual Academy Awards, Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, Los Angeles, California. She was the youngest actor to ever win an Oscar
Hulton Archive/Getty Images
O'Neal co-starred in "Paper Moon" with her father, Ryan O'Neal.
But the true youngest winner is Shirley Temple, who was 6 when she won the Academy Juvenile Award in 1935. This category no longer exists.
Shirley Temple as a child star wearing accordion pleated dress. Undated photograph.
Bettmann/Getty Images
Other notable winners in this category included Mickey Rooney, Judy Garland, Bobby Driscoll, and Margaret O'Brien.
2022 was the first time two couples had been nominated for awards in the same year — their nominations covered the four acting categories.
Cruz and Bardem, left, and Plemons and Dunst, right.
P. Lehman/Future Publishing/Getty Images
Penélope Cruz and Javier Bardem, who married in 2010, were both nominated: Cruz for best actress in "Parallel Mothers," and Bardem for best actor for "Being the Ricardos."
A second couple, Kirsten Dunst and Jesse Plemons, both secured best supporting acting nominations for their roles in "The Power of the Dog."
Cruz and Bardem lost to Jessica Chastain and Will Smith, while Dunst and Plemons lost to Ariana DeBose and Troy Kotsur.
Three movies are tied for the most wins. "Ben-Hur" (1959), "Titanic" (1997), and "The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King" (2003) all won 11 awards.
Paramount Pictures
That record hasn't been broken in over 20 years.
But "Sinners" broke the record for most overall nominations this year, with a staggering 16 nods.
"Sinners."
Warner Bros.
It ended up winning four: best original screenplay, best actor, best cinematography, and best score.
Three movies are tied for second place with 14 Oscar nods: "All About Eve" (1950), "Titanic" (1997), and "La La Land" (2016).
As previously stated, "Titanic" went on to win 11 awards. "All About Eve" and "La La Land" each took home six statues.
The longest winner of best picture in Oscars history is 1939's "Gone With the Wind," which clocks in at 3 hours, 58 minutes.
Loews Cineplex Entertainment
That's even longer than the notoriously long "The Brualist," "The Irishman," or "Killers of the Flower Moon."
The most prestigious award of the night is best picture, but it doesn't always go to the best movie. The worst-reviewed winner, according to Rotten Tomatoes, is 1929 winner "The Broadway Melody." It has a 42%.
MGM
"'The Broadway Melody' is interesting as an example of an early Hollywood musical, but otherwise, it's essentially bereft of appeal for modern audiences," wrote Rotten Tomatoes.
This year's winner, "One Battle After Another," has a 94% critics score and a 85% audience score.
The first woman to win the best director award was Kathryn Bigelow in 2009 for "The Hurt Locker."
HOLLYWOOD - MARCH 07: Director Kathryn Bigelow accepts Best Director award for "The Hurt Locker" onstage during the 82nd Annual Academy Awards held at Kodak Theatre on March 7, 2010 in Hollywood, California.
Kevin Winter/Getty Images
Prior to Bigelow, just three women had been nominated for directing: Lina Wertmüller for 1975's "Seven Beauties," Jane Campion for 1993's "The Piano," and Sofia Coppola for 2003's "Lost in Translation."
This year, Chloé Zhao was the lone woman nominated for best director. She directed "Hamnet."
In 2021, two women were recognized for directing, and winner Chloé Zhao became the first Asian woman — and second woman overall — to take home the award.
Chloé Zhao holding her first Oscar.
ABC via Getty Images
She won for "Nomadland." She was nominated once again this year for "Hamnet."
Also in 2021, Steven Yeun became the first Asian American to be nominated for best actor.
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – APRIL 25: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY) In this handout photo provided by A.M.P.A.S., Steven Yeun attends the 93rd Annual Academy Awards at Union Station on April 25, 2021 in Los Angeles, California.
Matt Petit/A.M.P.A.S. via Getty Images
While Yeun lost the award to Anthony Hopkins, his nomination for "Minari" was still a record-breaking moment.
Only one movie to win best picture has been rated X: "Midnight Cowboy" (1969).
United Artists
It was mainly rated X simply because it wasn't suitable for kids — the "X" rating was almost brand new in 1969 and didn't have the same connotations as it does today. However, MTV does point out the film has "a fair amount of nudity and some brief scenes of sexual activity."
When it was later re-rated, it earned an R rating.
Only two sequels have won best picture: "The Godfather Part II" (1974) and "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King" (2003).
Paramount Pictures/IMDb
In total, 10 sequels have been nominated for best picture — "Dune: Part Two," "Avatar: The Way of Water," "Top Gun: Maverick," "Toy Story 3," "Mad Max: Fury Road," "The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers," "The Godfather Part III," and "The Bells of St. Mary's," plus the two winners.
You may be wondering, what about "The Silence of the Lambs"? The Anthony Hopkins/Jodie Foster joint could be considered a sequel to "Manhunter," but it's really more of a reboot.
When Cate Blanchett earned an Oscar for playing Katharine Hepburn in 2004's "The Aviator," she became the first person to win an Oscar for playing an Oscar winner.
Renée Zellweger became the second when she won for playing Judy Garland in "Judy" in 2020.
Hepburn herself holds the record for most Oscars for acting — she won four times.
Reuters Pictures
Hepburn won in 1933, 1967, 1968, and 1981 for "Morning Glory," "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner," "The Lion in Winter," and "On Golden Pond," respectively.
Though, famously, she never attended an awards show to collect her statues in person, per The Hollywood Reporter.
The first Black actor to win an Oscar was Hattie McDaniel in 1939.
- Los Angeles, CA: Actress Hattie Mc Daniel is shown with the statuette she received for her portrayal in "Gone With The Wind." The award was for Best Supporting Role by an Actress, and was made at the 12th annual Academy Awards ceremony.
Bettmann/Getty Images
McDaniel won the best supporting actress award for "Gone with the Wind," in which she played Mammy, a role that has since been mired in controversy, per the Jim Crow Museum.
Sidney Poitier became the first Black man to win when he was awarded best actor for "Lilies of the Field" (1963).
Sidney Poitier admires the Oscar he has just received in Santa Monica, California, on April 13, 1964. He won Best Performance by an Actor for his role in the 1963 film Lilies of the Field.
Bettmann/Getty Images
Poitier had previously been nominated for his role in 1958's "The Defiant Ones."
With four nominations, Viola Davis is the most Oscar-nominated Black actress in history.
ABC/Tyler Golden
Davis, an EGOT winner, has been nominated four times: twice for best supporting actress for "Doubt" and "Fences" (which she won), and twice for best actress for "The Help" and "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom."
"For me, it's a reflection of the lack of opportunities and access to opportunities people of color have had in this business. If me, going back to the Oscars four times in 2021, makes me the most nominated Black actress in history, that's a testament to the sheer lack of material there has been out there for artists of color," said Davis in a February 2021 interview with Variety.
Octavia Spencer is right behind her with three nominations ("The Help," "Hidden Figures," and "The Shape of Water"). Whoopi Goldberg, with two, is the only other Black actress with more than one competitive Oscar nomination ("Ghost" and "The Color Purple").
Denzel Washington is the most nominated Black actor of all time. With "The Tragedy of Macbeth," he secured his 10th nomination.
AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian
He has been nominated 10 times between 1988 and 2022, earning nods for best supporting actor ("Cry Freedom," "Glory"), best actor ("Malcolm X," "The Hurricane," "Training Day," "Flight," "Fences," "Roman J. Israel, Esq." and "The Tragedy of Macbeth"), and best picture ("Fences").
He has won twice: He won best supporting actor for "Glory" in 1990 and best actor for "Training Day" in 2002.
In 2026, songwriter Diane Warren earned her 17th nomination — she's the most-nominated person in Oscars history to have never taken home a competitive statue.
Diane Warren at the 2026 Oscars.
ANGELA WEISS/AFP/Getty Images
Warren was nominated in the best original song category for "Dear Me" from the documentary "Diane Warren: Relentless" this year.
In 2026, she lost out on a statue following her 17th nomination.
She won an honorary Oscar in 2022, but she still hasn't taken home a competitive statue, making it the longest losing streak in Academy history.
In 2025, Paul Tazewell became the first Black man to win best costume design.
Paul Tazewell, winner of the Best Costume Design for "Wicked", poses in the press room during the 97th Annual Oscar
Mike Coppola/Getty Images
Tazewell won for his stunning costumes in "Wicked."
He's only the second Black costume designer to ever win. The first was Ruth E. Carter in 2019 and 2023.
Ruth E. Carter poses with the Best Costume Design award for "Black Panther" in the press room during the 91st Annual Academy Awards at Hollywood and Highland on February 24, 2019
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images
Carter won for her work on both "Black Panther" films. She was nominated again in 2026 for "Sinners," but lost.
Only two actors have won Oscars posthumously: Heath Ledger for "The Dark Knight" and Peter Finch for "Network."
Ledger and Finch.
BILLY FARRELL/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images; Photoshot/Getty Images
In 2021, Jamika Wilson and Mia Neal became the first Black winners of the best makeup and hairstyling award for their work on "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom."
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – APRIL 25: (L-R) Mia Neal, Jamika Wilson, and Sergio Lopez-Rivera, winners of Makeup and Hairstyling for "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom", pose in the press room during the 93rd Annual Academy Awards at Union Station on April 25, 2021 in Los Angeles, California.
Chris Pizzello-Pool/Getty Images
They shared the award with Sergio Lopez-Rivera, as well.
This year's best actress nominees are Jessie Buckley, Emma Stone, Rose Byrne, Kate Hudson, and Renate Reinsve.
We went back to 1930 to see how red-carpet fashion has changed over the decades.
Besides being a night to recognize talent both in front of and behind the camera, the Oscars are also a night for fashion.
The style of the nominees in the best actress category is perhaps the most scrutinized, analyzed, and remembered by the general public — it's their coronation moment as the reigning queens of Hollywood.
We went all the way back to 1930 to see what (almost) every best actress winner has worn on their big night, from Ginger Rogers to Faye Dunaway to Julia Roberts to Mikey Madison.
Kirsten Acuna contributed to a prior version of this article.
1930: Mary Pickford
Hanns Kraly, William C. deMille, Mary Pickford, and Warner Baxter.
FPG/Getty Images
Pickford wore a bedazzled dress, a large diamond bangle, and a few strings of pearls when she won for "Coquette."
There were actually two Academy Awards in 1930; one in April and then another in November.
1930: Norma Shearer
AP
Shearer wore a jacket with fur-lined sleeves over her dress when she won the Oscar for her role in "The Divorce."
She finished her outfit with red lipstick, wavy hair, and several pieces of dainty jewelry.
1931: Marie Dressler
AP
Dressler received the Oscar for her part in "Min and Bill." She wore a dark shift dress and a long necklace.
1932: Helen Hayes
Louis B. Mayer and Helen Hayes.
Getty Images/Getty Images
Hayes wore a classic black dress paired with a pearl necklace and gloves to win best actress for her performance in "The Sin of Madelon Claudet."
1935: Claudette Colbert
Shirley Temple and Claudette Colbert.
Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone/Getty Images
Colbert won best actress for "It Happened One Night." She wore a gray suit with a large flower pinned to the lapel and a black hat.
1936: Bette Davis
Bette Davis and Victor McLaglen are shown after winning their Oscars at the 1935 Academy Awards banquet held at the Biltmore Bowl, Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles, Ca., on March 5, 1936.
AP Photo
Davis wore a patterned ensemble when she took home the award for best actress for her work in "Dangerous."
She was so convinced that she wouldn't win the Oscar that she wore "an old costume" to the ceremony, Harper's Bazaar reported.
1937: Luise Rainer
AP
Rainer wore an elegant white coat and styled her hair in an updo to win the Oscar for her portrayal of Anna Held in "The Great Ziegfeld."
1938: Luise Rainer
Luise Rainer.
Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
Yes, Rainer won back-to-back Academy Awards. Her second win came for her performance as O-Lan in "The Good Earth." For her second win, she wore a high-necked gown with bell sleeves.
1939: Bette Davis
Spencer Tracy and Bette Davis.
Eric Carpenter/Getty Images
Bette Davis won her second best actress Oscar for her role in "Jezebel." She wore a black gown with a cloud-like collar embellishment.
1940: Vivien Leigh
AP
Leigh wore a patterned dress while accepting the Oscar for playing Scarlett O'Hara in "Gone with the Wind." She completed her outfit with a single pendant, dark lipstick, curled hair, and tons of mascara.
1941: Ginger Rogers
Jimmy Stewart and Ginger Rogers.
Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images
Rogers accepted the Oscar at the 13th annual Academy Awards for "Kitty Foyle" in a brown dress with lace details.
In 1921, attendees were advised to wear "muted tones" because of the ongoing war, The Telegraph reported.
1942: Joan Fontaine
AP
Fontaine won best actress for "Suspicion." She wore a lacy black dress, which she paired with a matching hat and several pearl necklaces.
1944: Jennifer Jones
Paul Lucas, Jennifer Jones, Katina Paxinou, and Charles Coburn.
Bettmann/Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Jones (second from left) won her Oscar for "The Song of Bernadette." She wore a unique dark gown with white, puffy sleeves and a flower embellishment at the collar.
1945: Ingrid Bergman
AP Photo/Harold P. Matosian
Bergman wore a dark skirt and blouse when she won the Oscar for her role in "Gaslight." The star finished her outfit by sweeping her hair away from her face.
1947: Olivia de Havilland
Olivia De Havilland and Ray Milland.
Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone/Getty Images
De Havilland took home the gold for her role in "To Each His Own."
The actor wore a strapless floral gown, complemented by large curls and a pearl necklace.
1948: Loretta Young
AP
Young wore a green satin gown with matching gloves to accept the award for "The Farmer's Daughter." Her tiered dress had plenty of ruffles.
1949: Jane Wyman
AP
Wyman kissed her best actress Oscar for her role in "Johnny Belinda." She wore a white gown with an embellished collar.
1950: Olivia de Havilland
Broderick Crawford, Olivia de Havilland, Robert Rossen, Mercedes McCambridge, and Dean Jagger
AP
De Havilland (second from left) embodied '50s style when she accepted the Oscar for her role in "The Heiress." The actor paired her flower-embellished gown with matching gloves.
1953: Shirley Booth
Shirley Booth and Frederic March.
Bettmann/Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Booth won best actress at the 25th Academy Awards for her performance in "Come Back, Little Sheba" in a patterned, long-sleeve dress with matching gloves.
This ceremony was held simultaneously in Hollywood and New York City, and was also the first to be televised.
1954: Audrey Hepburn
AP
Hepburn wore a belted Givenchy dress as she accepted the award for her performance in "Roman Holiday." She finished the look with classic eyeliner and lipstick.
1955: Grace Kelly
Edmond O'Brien and Grace Kelly.
Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images
Kelly accepted the award for her role in "The Country Girl." The future princess of Monaco topped off her pale-green ensemble with elbow-length gloves, dainty earrings, and an updo.
1958: Joanne Woodward
Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman.
Darlene Hammond/Getty Images
Woodward, Oscar winner and wife of Paul Newman, accepted her award for "The Three Faces of Eve" in a strapless gown embellished with sewn-on flowers. She kept her hair and makeup simple, allowing her outfit to stand out.
1959: Susan Hayward
Susan Hayward.
Bettmann/Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Hayward wore a black dress to take home the Oscar for "I Want to Live!" She also sported a voluminous blowout, white gloves, and red lipstick.
1960: Simone Signoret
AP
Signoret won the Oscar for "Room at the Top," wearing an off-the-shoulder black dress.
1961: Elizabeth Taylor
AP
Taylor went floral in a Christian Dior gown to accept her award for "Butterfield 8." Her high-volume hair and white gloves added some serious glamour to her outfit.
1965: Julie Andrews
Julie Andrews, Rex Harrison, and Lila Kedrova.
Bettmann/Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Julie Andrews hugged her Oscar for "Mary Poppins" in a pale-yellow gown. The "My Fair Lady" actor topped off her simple dress with a statement necklace and gloves.
1966: Julie Christie
AP
Christie wore a shiny gold dress to match the Oscar she won for "Darling." She finished her outfit with a feathery blowout.
1969: Barbara Streisand
AP
Streisand didn't realize her Arnold Scaasi pantsuit was see-through under the lights as she accepted the Academy Award for "Funny Girl." She finished her sequined pantsuit with a sleek bob and lots of eyeliner.
This year featured a rare tie: Streisand shared her award with Katharine Hepburn for "The Lion in Winter," but Hepburn famously attended the Academy Awards only once, to present.
1972: Jane Fonda
Gene Hackman and Jane Fonda.
Bettmann/Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Fonda accepted the Oscar for "Klute" in a black Yves Saint Laurent suit. She parted her sleek, shoulder-length hair to the side to complete her mod ensemble.
1973: Liza Minnelli
AP
Minnelli shone in a bright-yellow Halston dress to accept the award for her role in "Cabaret." She paired her outfit with a colorful choker and a matching bracelet.
1976: Louise Fletcher
Jack Nicholson and Louise Fletcher.
Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images
Jack Nicholson and Fletcher posed together after their Oscar wins for "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest." Fletcher wore a delicate Champagne-colored gown by Alfred Fiandaca.
1977: Faye Dunaway
Faye Dunaway.
Tony Korody/Sygma/Getty Images
Dunaway wore a black Geoffrey Beene dress with a rope belt to accept her award for "Network." She finished her dark outfit with several pieces of gold jewelry.
1978: Diane Keaton
Diane Keaton.
ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content/Getty Images
Keaton accepted the award for "Annie Hall" in a unique Ruth Morley suit. She went for a muted color palette with her layered outfit.
1979: Jane Fonda
Jane Fonda.
ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content/ Getty Images
Fonda wore a gorgeous James Reva gown to accept her trophy for "Coming Home." The two-time winner embraced the trends of the '70s in a flowy floral dress.
1980: Sally Field
Sally Field and Dustin Hoffman.
Bettmann/Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Field embodied spring in a white Bob Mackie dress with sheer floral cover as she accepted the award for "Norma Rae." She added to the look with lots of eyeliner and teased, voluminous hair.
1981: Sissy Spacek
Sissy Spacek.
Fotos International/Getty Images
Spacek took the award for "Coal Miner's Daughter" in a black jumpsuit and kept the rest of her look simple.
1983: Meryl Streep
Meryl Streep.
Barry King/WireImage/Getty Images
Streep won the Oscar for "Sophie's Choice" in a gold Christian Leigh dress while she was pregnant with her second daughter, Mamie (familiar to fans of "We Were Liars"). She finished her outfit with a pink-brown shade of lipstick and curled hair.
1984: Shirley MacLaine
Shirley MacLaine.
William Nation/Sygma/Getty Images
MacLaine wore a Fabrice pale-pink suit when she won for "Terms of Endearment." The suit was embellished with an intricate embroidered pattern.
1985: Sally Field
F. Murray Abraham and Sally Field.
ABC Photo Archives/ABC/Getty Images
Field cried out her famous, "You like me! You really like me!" in a strapless black dress as she won for "Places in the Heart," her second win in five years. She finished off her outfit with a necklace that looked like a bow.
1986: Geraldine Page
William Hurt and Geraldine Page.
ABC Photo Archives/ABC/Getty Images
Page, who won the Oscar for her work in "The Trip to Bountiful," layered a deep-purple velvet cape over her dress. She completed her outfit with chandelier earrings and a warm shade of lipstick.
1987: Marlee Matlin
Marlee Matlin.
Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images
Matlin paired her pink dress with a floral headpiece when she won for her role in "Children of a Lesser God." She paired her mixed-material gown with peachy lipstick.
1988: Cher
Lennox McLendon/AP Photo
Cher famously wore a sheer Bob Mackie ensemble to accept the award for "Moonstruck." From her headdress to her sandals, the star sparkled.
1989: Jodie Foster
Jodie Foster.
Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images
Foster wore a light-blue gown when she took home the Oscar for her role in "The Accused." She kept her hair and makeup simple, letting the ruched gown speak for itself.
1990: Jessica Tandy
Jessica Tandy.
CHRISTOPHE D YVOIRE/Sygma/Getty Images
Tandy sparkled in a two-piece getup by Giorgio Armani as she accepted the award for her performance in "Driving Miss Daisy." She finished her outfit with a pair of statement earrings.
1991: Kathy Bates
Bob Galbraith/Associated Press
Bates wore a black gown with shoulder pads to accept her award for "Misery." Her earrings matched the glitzy details on her dress.
1992: Jodie Foster
Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster.
Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images
Foster took home the gold statue again for her role in "The Silence of the Lambs." This time, she opted for a cream Armani jacket and paisley crystal-encrusted trousers, and went old school with matching gloves. Foster also wore a red pin on her lapel for HIV/AIDS awareness.
1993: Emma Thompson
Emma Thompson.
Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images
Thompson wore an emerald Caroline Charles jumpsuit when she won for "Howards End." She completed her look with red lipstick and curled ringlets.
1994: Holly Hunter
Tom Hanks and Holly Hunter.
Frank Trapper/Corbis/Getty Images
Hunter wore a black and gray Vera Wang dress with a hint of sparkle when she won for "The Piano." She matched her earrings and bracelet to the glimmering details on her dress.
1995: Jessica Lange
Jessica Lange.
Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images
Lange wore Calvin Klein when she won the award for "Blue Sky." She added a touch of color to her dark, mesh-paneled gown with her bright lipstick.
1996: Susan Sarandon
Reed Saxon/Associated Press
Sarandon wore a bronze Dolce & Gabbana gown when she was recognized for "Dead Man Walking." She finished off her outfit with tousled hair.
1997: Frances McDormand
Frances McDormand.
Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images
McDormand wore a simple blue dress when she won for "Fargo." She kept her accessories minimal, opting for just one ring and a pair of earrings, a style she still goes by to this day.
1998: Helen Hunt
Helen Hunt.
Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images
Hunt stunned in a strapless blue dress by Tom Ford for Gucci when she won for "As Good as It Gets." She finished off her outfit with a matching wrap, frosty makeup, and a diamond bracelet.
1999: Gwyneth Paltrow
Gywneth Paltrow.
Kevin.Mazur/WireImage/Getty Images
Paltrow wore a baby-pink Ralph Lauren princess gown when she took home the Academy Award for "Shakespeare in Love," one of the most iconic Oscar looks of all time. She topped off her dress with a sheer, tulle wrap, a statement necklace, bright-pink lipstick, and a touch of blush.
2000: Hilary Swank
Hilary Swank.
Jim Smeal/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images
Swank wore a strapless green Randolph Duke dress when she accepted the award for "Boys Don't Cry." She glammed up her dress with a dazzling statement necklace.
2001: Julia Roberts
Julia Roberts.
Mirek Towski/FilmMagic/Getty Images
Roberts wore a black Valentino gown with white accents when she won for "Erin Brockovich."
2002: Halle Berry
AP
Berry wore one of the most memorable Oscars dresses when she accepted her award for "Monster's Ball" in a floor-sweeping Elie Saab gown. Her dress had a mesh, floral-embroidered top and a contrasting satin skirt.
2003: Nicole Kidman
Nicole Kidman.
Robert Mora/Getty Images
Kidman accepted her Oscar for "The Hours" in a black Jean Paul Gaultier dress that had an unexpected, edgy neckline.
2004: Charlize Theron
Charlize Theron.
Christopher Polk/FilmMagic/Getty Images
Theron rocked a glittering Gucci dress when she won for "Monster." The actor looked very old Hollywood with her hair styled in glamorous waves.
February 2005: Hilary Swank
hilary swank oscars 2005
Chris Pizzello/AP Photo
Swank accepted her Oscar for "Million Dollar Baby" in a fully backless Guy Laroche dress. She completed the look with shimmering makeup and a sleek hairdo.
2006: Reese Witherspoon
Reese Witherspoon.
J. Vespa/WireImage/Getty Images
Witherspoon looked radiant in a Christian Dior gown when she won for her performance in "Walk the Line." She completed her outfit with a smoky eye, a simple hairdo, and earrings that matched her dress.
2007: Helen Mirren
AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian
Mirren wore a Christian Lacroix gown when she accepted the Oscar for "The Queen." It looks like she layered a patterned tulle skirt over her lacy, embellished gown.
2008: Marion Cotillard
Marion Cotillard Oscars 2008
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images
Cotillard took home the Oscar for "La Vie En Rose." The actor looked glamorous, with sleek curls and a mermaid-inspired dress by Jean Paul Gaultier.
2009: Kate Winslet
AP Photo/Matt Sayles
Winslet took home the Oscar for "The Reader" in a one-shouldered, blue-gray Yves Saint Laurent gown. Winslet complemented her two-toned dress with a smoky eye.
2010: Sandra Bullock
Sandra Bullock.
Jason Merritt/Getty Images
Bullock wore a silver Marchesa dress as she accepted the award for her role in "The Blindside." The actor brought some color to her look with bright-pink lipstick.
2011: Natalie Portman
natalie portman 2011 oscars
Jason Merritt/Getty Images
Portman wore an off-the-shoulder Rodarte dress while accepting the award for "Black Swan." Portman's shoes and earrings perfectly matched her dress. Fun fact: She was four months pregnant at the time!
2012: Meryl Streep
Meryl Streep.
Jason Merritt/Getty Images
Streep matched her Oscar for "The Iron Lady" in a gold Lanvin dress. From her accessories to her makeup, she appeared to be dripping in gold.
2013: Jennifer Lawrence
Jason Merritt/Getty Images
Lawrence, who won for "Silver Linings Playbook," may have tripped on her way to the stage, but she still looked flawless in this white Christian Dior gown.
2014: Cate Blanchett
AP
Blanchett wore an embellished Armani Privé gown when she took home the award for "Blue Jasmine." She completed her look with delicate curls and large sunburst earrings.
2015: Julianne Moore
Julianne Moore.
Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic/Getty Images
Moore wore a strapless Chanel gown when she accepted the award for "Still Alice." The custom, detailed gown took over 900 hours to make, according to People.
2016: Brie Larson
Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP
Larson accepted the Oscar for "Room" in a belted, royal-blue Gucci dress. The intricate gown was in the works for two months, per ABC.
2017: Emma Stone
Getty Images
Stone wore a vintage-inspired gown when she won the award for her performance in "La La Land." She finished her golden-toned dress with big waves and classic red lipstick.
2018: Frances McDormand
Frances McDormand.
Kevin Winter/Getty Images
McDormand won the award for her role in "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri," wearing a black dress with a gold pattern. During her acceptance speech, McDormand asked every female nominee in the audience to stand and discussed the importance of inclusion riders.
2019: Olivia Colman
Olivia Colman.
Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images
Colman wore an emerald-green Prada gown that took months to create as she accepted the award for "The Favourite." Colman's gown was draped with a silk organza cape, tied into a giant bow at the back, and covered in Swarovski crystal flowers.
2020: Renée Zellweger
Jennifer Graylock/PA Images via Getty Images
Zellweger won her second Oscar — her first best actress Oscar, for "Judy" — in a custom white Armani Privé gown.
Though tough to see, according to Entertainment Tonight, the gown was covered in beads with pale pink and blue thread.
2021: Frances McDormand
Matt Petit/A.M.P.A.S. via Getty Images
McDormand wore a navy-blue gown with a feathered bottom and feathered sleeves to win her third acting Oscar for "Nomadland."
With her win, McDormand tied Meryl Streep and Ingrid Bergman with the most Oscar wins for acting. Katharine Hepburn holds the record with four best actress statues.
2022: Jessica Chastain
Jessica Chastain with her first Oscar win.
Mike Coppola/Getty Images
Chastain dazzled in a sparkly ombré Gucci gown that transitioned from rose gold to lavender as she accepted her first Academy Award for "The Eyes of Tammy Faye."
2023: Michelle Yeoh
Michelle Yeoh channeled an angelic goddess in white.
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images
Feathers accented the angelic Dior Couture gown. The "Everything Everywhere All At Once" star paired the look with a Moussaieff diamond headband and earrings, along with a Richard Mille watch.
2024: Emma Stone
Emma Stone.
Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images
Stone accepted her second best actress Oscar (this one for "Poor Things") in a mint-green peplum gown designed by Louis Vuitton, but she made sure to point out during her speech that the zipper had broken at some point during the ceremony.
She blamed Ryan Gosling's spirited performance of "I'm Just Ken."
2025: Mikey Madison
Mikey Madison.
Scott Kirkland/Disney via Getty Images
Madison, who won for "Anora," went for an Old Hollywood look at the 2025 Oscars, wearing a two-toned pink and black satin dress with a bow. It was designed by Dior.