Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album
The Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album has been awarded since 1959. The award had several minor name changes:
- In 1959 the award was known as Best Performance, Documentary or Spoken Word
- From 1960 to 1961 it was awarded as Best Performance - Documentary or Spoken Word (other than comedy)
- From 1962 to 1963 it was awarded as Best Documentary or Spoken Word Recording (other than comedy)
- From 1964 to 1965 it was awarded as Best Documentary, Spoken Word or Drama Recording (other than comedy)
- In 1966 it was awarded as Best Spoken Word or Drama Recording
- From 1967 to 1968 it was awarded as Best Spoken Word, Documentary or Drama Recording
- From 1969 to 1979 it was awarded as Best Spoken Word Recording
- From 1980 to 1983 it returned to the title of Best Spoken Word, Documentary or Drama Recording
- From 1984 to 1991 it was awarded as Best Spoken Word or Non-Musical Recording
- From 1992 to 1997 it was awarded as Best Spoken Word or Non-Musical Album
- Since it has been awarded as Best Spoken Word Album
Years reflect the year in which the Grammy Awards were handed out, for music released in the previous year.
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2000s
- Grammy Awards of 2005
- Bill Clinton for My Life
- Grammy Awards of 2004
- Paul Ruben (producer) & Al Franken for Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right
- Grammy Awards of 2003
- Charles B. Potter (producer) & Maya Angelou for A Song Flung Up to Heaven
- Grammy Awards of 2002
- Jeffrey S. Thomas, Steven Strassman (engineers) & Elisa Shokoff (producer) & Quincy Jones for Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones
- Grammy Awards of 2001
- Rick Harris , John Runnette (producers) & Sidney Poitier for The Measure of a Man
- Grammy Awards of 2000
- LeVar Burton for The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr.
1990s
- Grammy Awards of 1999
- Christopher Reeve for Still Me
- Grammy Awards of 1998
- Charles Kuralt for Charles Kuralt's Spring
- Grammy Awards of 1997
- Hillary Rodham Clinton for It Takes a Village
- Grammy Awards of 1996
- Maya Angelou for Phenomenal Woman
- Grammy Awards of 1995
- Henry Rollins for Get in the Van - On the Road With Black Flag
- Grammy Awards of 1994
- Maya Angelou for On the Pulse of Morning
- Grammy Awards of 1993
- Earvin "Magic" Johnson & Robert O'Keefe for What You Can Do to Avoid AIDS
- Grammy Awards of 1992
- Ken Burns for The Civil War
- Grammy Awards of 1991
- George Burns for Gracie - A Love Story
- Grammy Awards of 1990
- Gilda Radner for It's Always Something
1980s
- Grammy Awards of 1989
- Jesse Jackson for Speech by Rev. Jesse Jackson
- Grammy Awards of 1988
- Garrison Keillor for Lake Wobegon Days
- Grammy Awards of 1987
- Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Chips Moman, Ricky Nelson, Roy Orbison, Carl Perkins & Sam Phillips for Interviews From the Class of '55 Recording Sessions
- Grammy Awards of 1986
- Mike Berniker (producer) & the original Broadway cast for Ma Rainey's Black Bottom
- Grammy Awards of 1985
- Ben Kingsley for The Words of Gandhi
- Grammy Awards of 1984
- William Warfield for Copland: A Lincoln Portrait
- Grammy Awards of 1983
- Tom Voegeli (producer) for Raiders of the Lost Ark - The Movie on Record performed by various artists
- Grammy Awards of 1982
- Orson Welles for Donovan's Brain
- Grammy Awards of 1981
- Pat Carroll for Gertrude Stein, Gertrude Stein, Gertrude Stein
- Grammy Awards of 1980
- John Gielgud for Ages of Man - Readings From Shakespeare
1970s
- Grammy Awards of 1979
- Orson Welles for Citizen Kane
- Grammy Awards of 1978
- Julie Harris for The Belle of Amherst
- Grammy Awards of 1977
- Henry Fonda, Helen Hayes, James Earl Jones & Orson Welles for Great American Documents
- Grammy Awards of 1976
- James Whitmore for Give 'Em Hell Harry
- Grammy Awards of 1975
- Peter Cook & Dudley Moore for Good Evening
- Grammy Awards of 1974
- Richard Harris for Jonathan Livingston Seagull
- Grammy Awards of 1973
- Bruce Botnick (producer) for Lenny performed by the original cast
- Grammy Awards of 1972
- Les Crane for Desiderata
- Grammy Awards of 1971
- Martin Luther King Jr. for Why I Oppose the War in Vietnam
- Grammy Awards of 1970
- Art Linkletter & Diane Linkletter for We Love You Call Collect
1960s
- Grammy Awards of 1969
- Rod McKuen for Lonesome Cities
- Grammy Awards of 1968
- Everett M. Dirksen for Gallant Men
- Grammy Awards of 1967
- Edward R. Murrow for Edward R. Murrow - A Reporter Remembers, Vol. I The War Years
- Grammy Awards of 1966
- Goddard Lieberson (producer) for John F. Kennedy - As We Remember Him
- Grammy Awards of 1965
- That Was The Week That Was for BBC Tribute to John F. Kennedy performed by the That Was the Week That Was cast
- Grammy Awards of 1964
- Edward Albee (playwright) for Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? performed by Melinda Dillon , George Grizzard , Uta Hagen & Arthur Hill
- Grammy Awards of 1963
- Charles Laughton for The Story-Teller: A Session With Charles Laughton
- Grammy Awards of 1962
- Leonard Bernstein for Humor in Music
- Grammy Awards of 1961
- Robert Bialek (producer) for FDR Speaks
- Grammy Awards of 1960
- Carl Sandburg for A Lincoln Portrait
1950s
- Grammy Awards of 1959
- Stan Freberg for The Best of the Stan Freberg Shows
10-26-2009 08:16:03
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The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


