Academy Awards, USA
1985 |
Winner Oscar |
Best Music, Original Song The Woman in Red (1984)
For the song "I Just Called to Say I Love You".
|
Primetime Emmy Awards
1986 |
Nominee Primetime Emmy |
Outstanding Guest Performer in a Comedy Series The Cosby Show (1984)
For playing himself. For episode "A Touch of Wonder".
|
Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program An All-Star Celebration Honoring Martin Luther King Jr. (1986) |
BAFTA Awards
1985 |
Nominee BAFTA Film Award |
Best Original Song The Woman in Red (1984)
For the song "I Just Called to Say I Love You".
|
American Music Awards
1987 |
Nominee American Music Award |
Favorite Soul/R&B Male Artist |
1986 |
Winner American Music Award |
Favorite Soul/R&B Male Artist |
Favorite Soul/R&B Male Video Artist |
ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards
2000 |
Winner ASCAP Award |
Most Performed Songs from Motion Pictures Wild Wild West (1999)
For the song "Wild Wild West".
|
1997 |
Winner ASCAP Award |
Most Performed Songs from Motion Pictures Dangerous Minds (1995)
For the song "Gangsta's Paradise".
|
1992 |
Winner ASCAP Award |
Most Performed Songs from Motion Pictures Jungle Fever (1991)
For the song "Gotta Have You".
|
Brit Awards
1977 |
Nominee Brit |
International Album
For "Songs in the Key of Life."
|
CableACE Awards
1985 |
Nominee ACE |
Performance in a Music Special Stevie Wonder Comes Home (1984) |
Golden Globes, USA
2017 |
Nominee Golden Globe |
Best Original Song - Motion Picture Sing (2016)
For the song: "Faith".
|
1985 |
Winner Golden Globe |
Best Original Song - Motion Picture The Woman in Red (1984)
Song: "I Just Called to Say I Love You"
|
Grammy Awards
2010 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best Male Pop Vocal Performance
For the song "All About the Love Again."
|
2009 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals
For the song "Never Give You Up"
|
2007 |
Winner Grammy |
Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals
For the song "For Once in My Life"
|
2006 |
Winner Grammy |
Best R&B Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group
For the song "So Amazing"
|
Best Male Pop Vocal Performance
For the song "From the Bottom of My Heart"
|
||
Nominee Grammy |
Best R&B Album
For the album "A Time to Love"
|
|
Best Male R&B Vocal Performance
For the song "So What the Fuss"
|
||
Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals
For the song "A Time To Love"
|
||
Best R&B Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group
For the song "How Will I Know"
|
||
Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals
For "A Time To Love"
|
||
2005 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals
For the song "Moon River"
|
2003 |
Winner Grammy |
Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal
For "Love's In Need Of Love Today"
|
Nominee Grammy |
Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals
For the song "The Christmas Song"
|
|
1999 |
Winner Grammy |
Best Male R&B Vocal Performance
for "St. Louis Blues"
|
Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocal(s)
Herbie Hancock (arranger)
for "St. Louis Blues" artist: Herbie Hancock
|
||
Nominee Grammy |
Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals
For "How Come, How Long"
|
|
1998 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best Music Video, Short Form Babyface: How Come, How Long (1997)
Kenneth 'Babyface' Edmonds (artist) |
Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals
For "How Come, How Long (Track)"
|
||
1997 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best Pop Instrumental Performance
For "Kiss Lonely Goodbye (Harmonica With Orchestra) (Track)"
|
1996 |
Winner Grammy |
Best Rhythm & Blues Song
for "For Your Love" artist: Stevie Wonder
|
Best Male R&B Vocal Performance
for "For Your Love"
|
||
Lifetime Achievement Award |
||
1992 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or for Television Jungle Fever (1991)
For the song "Gotta Have You".
|
Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male
For "Gotta Have You (Single)"
|
||
Best Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or for Television
For "Jungle Fever (From Jungle Fever)"
|
||
1989 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best Male R&B Vocal Performance
For "Characters"
|
1988 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male
For "Skeletons (Single)"
|
Best Rhythm & Blues Song
For "Skeletons (Single)"
|
||
1987 |
Winner Grammy |
Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal
Elton John (artist) Gladys Knight (artist)
For "That's What Friends Are For".
|
Nominee Grammy |
Record of the Year
For "That's What Friends Are For"
|
|
1986 |
Winner Grammy |
Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male
For "In Square Circle".
|
Nominee Grammy |
Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male
For "Part-Time Lover (Single)"
|
|
1985 |
Nominee Grammy |
Song of the Year
For "I Just Called To Say I Love You (Single)"
|
Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male
For "I Just Called To Say I Love You (Single)"
|
||
Best Pop Instrumental Performance
For "I Just Called To Say I Love You (Instrumental) (Single)"
|
||
Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male
For "The Woman In Red (Track)"
|
||
1983 |
Nominee Grammy |
Record of the Year
For "Ebony And Ivory (Single)"
|
Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male
For "Do I Do (Single)"
|
||
Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal
For "What's That You're Doing (Track)"
|
||
Best Rhythm & Blues Song
For "Do I Do"
|
||
Best Rhythm & Blues Song
For "That Girl"
|
||
Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocal(s)
For "Do I Do (Track)"
|
||
Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal
For "Ebony And Ivory"
|
||
1981 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television Special
For "Stevie Wonder's Journey Through The Secret Life Of Of Plants"
|
Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male
For "Master Blaster (Jammin')(Single)"
|
||
Best Rhythm & Blues Song
For "Let's Get Serious (Single)"
|
||
Producer of the Year, Non-Classical |
||
1977 |
Winner Grammy |
Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male
For "I Wish"
|
Best Producer of the Year |
||
Album of the Year
For "Songs In The Key Of Life"
|
||
Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male
For "Songs In The Key Of Life"
|
||
Nominee Grammy |
Best Pop Instrumental Performance
For "Contusion (Track)"
|
|
Best Inspirational Performance
For "Have A Talk With God (Track)"
|
||
Best Instrumental Composition
For "Contusion (Track)"
|
||
1975 |
Winner Grammy |
Best Rhythm & Blues Song
For "Living For The City" artist: Stevie Wonder
|
Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male
For "Boogie On Reggae Woman"
|
||
Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male
For "Fulfillingness' First Finale"
|
||
Album of the Year
For "Fulfillingness' First Finale"
|
||
Nominee Grammy |
Best Rhythm & Blues Song
For "Tell Me Something Good"
|
|
Best Producer of the Year |
||
1974 |
Winner Grammy |
Album of the Year
For "Innervisions"
|
Best R&B Song
For "Superstition"
|
||
Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male
For "Superstition"
|
||
Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male
For "You Are The Sunshine Of My Life"
|
||
Best Rhythm & Blues Song
For "Superstition"
|
||
Nominee Grammy |
Song of the Year
For "You Are The Sunshine Of My Life (Single)"
|
|
Record of the Year
For "You Are The Sunshine Of My Life (Single)"
|
||
1972 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male
For "We Can Work It Out (Single)"
|
1971 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best Rhythm & Blues Song
For "Signed, Sealed, Delivered (Single)"
|
Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male
For "Signed, Sealed, Delivered (Single)"
|
||
1969 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best Rhythm & Blues Vocal Performance, Male
For "For Once In My Life (Single)"
|
1967 |
Nominee Grammy |
Best Rhythm & Blues Solo Vocal Performance, Male or Female
For "Uptight (Single)"
|
Best Rhythm & Blues Recording
For "Uptight"
|
Hollywood Music In Media Awards (HMMA)
2016 |
Nominee HMMA Award |
Best Original Song - Animated Film Sing (2016)
Ariana Grande (performed by)
For the song "Faith".
|
Image Awards (NAACP)
2008 |
Winner Hall of Fame |
Peabody Awards
2002 |
Winner Peabody Award |
Winner America: A Tribute to Heroes (2001)
Bruce Springsteen Sylvester Stallone Take 6 U2 Eddie Vedder Mark Wahlberg Sela Ward Don Was Robin Williams Neil Young Pope John Paul II Eli Attie Chris Connelly Marshall Herskovitz David Leaf Ann F. Lewis Peggy Noonan David Wild Edward Zwick Mike Campbell Robert Shrum Muhammad Ali Bill Clark Terry Edmonds Phil Rosenthal Amy Brenneman Wes Borland Eugene Pack Mariah Carey Adam Clayton Jim Carrey Bono Tom Fontana Jon Bon Jovi Beth McCarthy-Miller Halle Berry Joel Gallen Sheryl Crow Tom Cruise Cindy Crawford George Clooney The Edge From the beginning of the program with Bruce Springsteen singing "My City in Ruins" to the closing ... More From the beginning of the program with Bruce Springsteen singing "My City in Ruins" to the closing moments with Willy Nelson leading a panoply of stars in singing "America, the Beautiful," America: A Tribute to Heroes is an exceptional salute to those lost in the events of September 11, 2001. Bare stages lit with hundreds of candles in New York, Los Angeles, and London provided the somber, unadorned setting for this unique program carried live, commercial free, by more than 30 radio, television and cable networks, including ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, PBS, UPN, the WB, BET, Comedy Central, Court TV, the Discovery Channel, E!, Fox Family, FX, HBO, HBO Latino, Lifetime, MTV, PAX, Showtime, Sundance Channel, Telemundo, TLC, TNN, TNT, Univision, and VH-1. A number of Westwood One and Clear Channel Communications radio affiliates also simulcast the special telethon, which raised more than $150 million for the victims of 9/11. Leading this unprecedented cross-network effort was Executive Producer and Director Joel Gallen, Coordinating Producers Michael Dempsey and Carol Donovan, Director Beth McCarthy, and Writers David Wild, Peggy Noonan, Phil Rosenthal, Bob Shrum, Anne Lewis, Eli Attie, Tom Fontana, Chris Connelly, Terry Edmonds, Marshall Herskovitz, Ed Zwick, David Leaf, Gene Pack and Bill Clark. Moving musical numbers alternated with equally moving tributes. Those performing included Springsteen, Tom Hanks, Stevie Wonder featuring Take 6, George Clooney, U2, Will Smith, Muhammad Ali, Faith Hill, Kelsey Grammer, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, Jim Carrey, Enrique Iglesias, Neil Young, Cameron Diaz, Alicia Keys, Robin Williams, Limp Bizkit with John Rzeznik of The Goo Goo Dolls, Dennis Franz, Jimmy Smits, Billy Joel, Calista Flockhart and Dixie Chicks. All involved donated their talent and time, while ABC, CBS, NBC and FOX underwrote costs surrounding the production of this outpouring of honor for those lost on Sept. 11, 2001. |
Razzie Awards
2000 |
Winner Razzie Award |
Worst Original Song Wild Wild West (1999)
For the song "Wild Wild West".
|
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
1989 |
Winner Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Trophy |
Performers |
Soul Train Awards
1989 |
Nominee Soul Train Award |
Best R&B/Urban Contemporary Music Video Stevie Wonder: Skeletons (1987) |
1988 |
Nominee Soul Train Award |
Album of the Year - Male
For the album: "Characters"
|
Best Single - Male
For the song: "Skeletons"
|
||
1987 |
Winner Soul Train Award |
Heritage Award for Career Achievement
Award for lifetime achievements.
|
Nominee Soul Train Award |
Album of the Year - Male
For the album: "In Square Circle"
|
The Kennedy Center Honors
1999 |
Winner Kennedy Center Honors |
TV Land Awards
2003 |
Nominee TV Land Award |
Favorite Guest Performance by a Musician on a TV Show The Cosby Show (1984) |
Walk of Fame
1994 |
Winner Star on the Walk of Fame |
Recording
On 1 February 1994. At 7050 Hollywood Blvd.
|