Emma Stone is the youngest woman to ever score seven Oscar nominations

After watching Bugonia last year, I wondered if it would be in the awards-season conversation. While Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons absolutely gave phenomenal performances, the film is just so bonkers. It didn’t seem like traditional awards-bait. But then again, Poor Things didn’t feel like awards-bait to me either, and Emma ended up winning her second Best Actress Oscar for that film. And now another one – Emma was nominated yet again this week, back in the Best Actress category. Bugonia had Emma reteaming with director Yorgos Lanthimos, who directed her in The Favourite, Poor Things and Kinds of Kindness. Emma also produced Poor Things and Bugonia, and now, for both of those films, she’s an Oscar-nominated producer too. Basically, Emma Stone is that girl. She’s breaking all kinds of records.

Emma Stone‘s two 2026 Oscar nominations on Thursday — best picture for producing and best actress for starring in Bugonia — broke a few Oscar records.

The 37-year-old has become the second-youngest person — and the youngest woman — in Oscar history to accumulate seven nominations. Only Walt Disney was younger when he reached that tally in 1936, at just 34. Meryl Streep had held the record for women; she was 38 when she was nominated for the seventh time, back in 1988.

Stone also became the first woman to be nominated twice for producing and acting in a single film. Frances McDormand was the first, for 2021’s Nomadland. Stone followed with dual noms for 2023’s Poor Things. And now she has done it again.

Of Stone’s five noms prior to Thursday’s, two resulted in wins, both in the category of best actress: for 2016’s La La Land and for Poor Things. Only three women have ever won best actress three or more times: Katharine Hepburn, who won four times, and McDorm and Streep, who won three.

Stone was nominated in the best actress category alongside Jessie Buckley (Hamnet), Rose Byrne (If I Had Legs I’d Kick You) Kate Hudson (Song Sung Blue) and Renate Reinsve (Sentimental Value). In the best picture category, Bugonia was nominated alongside F1, Frankenstein, Hamnet, Marty Supreme, One Battle After Another, The Secret Agent, Sentimental Value and Sinners.

Bugonia also received nominations for best adapted screenplay (Will Tracy) and best original score (Jerskin Fendrix).

[From THR]

Much like Meryl, it feels like Emma has entered that elite status where she’s nominated for basically everything she does. But like Meryl, I think that the “she could be nominated for reading the phone book” complaint overlooks the fact that Emma is actually turning in really amazing and bold performances. Bugonia is absolutely insane, and her performance is so nuanced. Now, I will say this – if a lesser known actress had played that role, I’m not sure that woman would have gotten an Oscar nom. I also think that Jesse Plemons deserved some attention for what he did with his role.

It also feels sort of notable that Emma has barely campaigned in the early part of the awards season. She hasn’t done any actress-roundtables, she’s only given a handful of big interviews (and most of them were just straight promotion for the film), and I haven’t heard anything or seen anything about Emma glad-handing at Oscar-voter screenings. It’s pretty crazy.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red.

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10 Responses to “Emma Stone is the youngest woman to ever score seven Oscar nominations”

  1. ThatGirlThere says:

    Are there no other actresses who have given phenomenal performances? Of course there are but the academy is hooked on Emma.

  2. Lady Rae says:

    That is pretty remarkable. I’m still mad at the hype over la la land. I really hated that film. Congrats to Emma especially considering the lack of campaign.

  3. Thinking says:

    She’s an excellent actress. But it’s still strange to think she’s beaten Meryl Streep’s record.

    • Paisley25 says:

      In my mind, she hasn’t beaten Meryl’s record. Meryl’s were all for acting. Emma has two of these for producing, which isn’t the same thing to me. But it’s still a huge accomplishment.

  4. Jegede says:

    Crazy.😯😯

    I remember she confessed to being jealous and insecure about J-Law ten years ago.

    Now it seems their careers path have not surged together, rather diverged.

  5. scorpionista says:

    what has she done to her face? I don’t even recognize her.

  6. Becks1 says:

    I said this the other day but I am just not a fan of Emma Stone. she seems like a nice enough person but I find her acting very blah. Maybe La La Land ruined her for me, IDK. I feel like I am just missing something when people talk about how she’s this amazing actress who might very soon end up in the same conversation as Streep and possibly Hepburn. (I have not seen Bugonia though so can’t comment on that particular one.)

    Maybe she’s my Laura Dern, I dont know, lol.

    • DeeSea says:

      @Becks1, I am (or was) like you, and LLL remains one of my most-disliked films ever (probably largely because of how much everyone hyped it up relative to how “good” it actually was, which made me feel like I was living on a different plane of reality from the rest of the world). BUT I had to admit that Emma Stone was **ridiculously excellent** in Bugonia, and watching that film budged my opinion of her a bit. I’m now a reluctant admirer, but not necessarily a fan!

  7. Sasha says:

    I think with Emma she’s also an extremely charismatic and likeable person. She has a devoted following of staff who adore her, appeals to every kind of person from actors like Ryan Gosling and Jennifer Lawrence, oddballs like Nathan Fielder and very serious directors like Yorgos. People just seem to fall in love with her and stay in her orbit after they work with her, and I wonder if people want to reward her partly because she’s very talented but also because they just really, really like her.

  8. Aimee says:

    @Sasha I think your assessment is right. She’s talented but that Oscar for La La Land while her best work was still to come….was a shame.

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