# The Day Hollywood's Golden Age Officially Ended: March 29, 1960
On March 29, 1960, the Academy Awards ceremony became the site of one of cinema's most symbolic passing-of-the-torch moments, though nobody quite realized it at the time. This was the night that Ben-Hur steamrolled the competition, winning an unprecedented 11 Oscars—a record that would stand for nearly four decades.
But here's what makes this date so significant: it wasn't just about Ben-Hur's triumph. March 29, 1960, represented the last gasp of Old Hollywood's epic studio system before the new wave of filmmaking would wash it all away.
The ceremony, held at the RKO Pantages Theatre in Hollywood, was a spectacle befitting the films it honored. Ben-Hur, William Wyler's three-hour-and-32-minute Technicolor epic starring Charlton Heston, had cost MGM an astronomical $15 million to produce—more than any film in history at that point. The studio had quite literally bet its future on this ancient Roman chariot race, and on this night, the gamble paid off magnificently.
When the final tally was counted, Ben-Hur had won in nearly every category it was nominated: Best Picture, Director, Actor (Heston), Supporting Actor (Hugh Griffith), Cinematography, Art Direction, Sound, Film Editing, Musical Score, Costume Design, and Special Effects. It tied the record of 11 wins set by 1959's Gigi and wouldn't be matched until Titanic in 1998 and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King in 2004.
But here's the delicious irony: while Hollywood was celebrating this triumph of the old ways—the star-studded epic, the massive studio production, the three-hour roadshow presentation—the world of cinema was already changing beneath its feet. In France, the New Wave was cresting with films shot on shoestring budgets with handheld cameras. In America, independent productions were beginning to challenge the studio system. Television was devouring the family audience that had sustained Hollywood for decades.
Ben-Hur's victory was essentially Hollywood shouting "We're still relevant!" by doing what it had always done, just BIGGER and MORE EXPENSIVE. It was the cinema equivalent of a dinosaur standing up to its full height just before the meteor hit.
The ceremony itself was hosted by Bob Hope for the twelfth time, another symbol of Hollywood's comfort with tradition. Behind the scenes, the evening revealed the cracks in the system: several winners weren't even present, having fled to Europe for tax purposes or to find work as the studio system crumbled.
What makes March 29, 1960, truly significant is this: it was the last time a film of Ben-Hur's type—a massive biblical epic produced in the old studio manner—would dominate the Oscars so completely. Within a few years, films like The Graduate, Bonnie and Clyde, and Easy Rider would revolutionize American cinema. The auteur theory would replace the studio mogul. Location shooting would replace backlot sets. The ancient Romans would give way to anti-heroes on motorcycles.
So on this day in 1960, as Charlton Heston accepted his Oscar and William Wyler collected his third Best Director trophy, Hollywood celebrated its past mastery while unknowingly standing at the precipice of its future. It was a glorious, golden sunset—and everyone was too busy applauding to notice the sun was setting.
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