List of people who have won Academy, Emmy, Grammy, and Tony Awards


EGOT, an acronym for the Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony Awards, is the designation given to people who have won all four awards. Respectively, these awards honor outstanding achievements in television, recording, film, and theatre. Achieving the EGOT has been referred to as the "grand slam" of show business., sixteen people have accomplished this feat.
The EGOT acronym was coined by actor Philip Michael Thomas in late 1984, when his role on the new hit show Miami Vice brought him instant fame, and he stated a desire to achieve the EGOT within five years. However, he intended that the "E" should be for the Primetime Emmy Award, and not a Daytime Emmy nor any of the awards presented at the other types of Emmy ceremonies. Nevertheless, 3 of the 16 EGOT winners have won only the Daytime Emmy.
The term gained wider recognition in the 2010s after a series-long arc in the 4th season of the sitcom 30 Rock featured the character of Tracy Jordan setting out to achieve the EGOT.
Robert Lopez is youngest person to achieve EGOT status at 39 years & 8 days old. He is also the quickest having won his last award 9 years & 8 months after his first. Lopez is also the only person to achieve the "Double EGOT", having won all four awards at least twice.
A variation of the accomplishment is the PEGOT, though there are conflicting definitions. Some sources state that the "P" refers to the Peabody Award, while others claim it means the Pulitzer Prize., only Barbra Streisand, Mike Nichols and Rita Moreno have achieved this status by winning the Peabody, while Richard Rodgers and Marvin Hamlisch have achieved it by winning the Pulitzer.
Another variation is the REGOT, which includes a Razzie. Alan Menken has a REGOT due to his Razzie win with Jack Feldman for Worst Original Song for “High Times, Hard Times" from Newsies. Due to her Razzie win for Worst Actress for Rent-a-Cop and, Liza Minelli has a REGOT if you include her Grammy Legend Award.

Winners of all four awards

Notes:
The artist also subsequently won one or more additional competitive awards.

The artist also received one or more honorary or non-competitive awards.

The artist also earned the Triple Crown of Acting, with singular acting wins in the Emmy, Oscar and Tony awards.

The artist has won a Daytime Emmy Award, not a Primetime Emmy Award.

The artist was awarded posthumously.

The artist has subsequently achieved multiple EGOTs.

Legend, Lloyd Webber, and Rice achieved their EGOTs simultaneously with their shared Emmy Award for producing Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert

Additional winners of all four (including non-competitive or special/honorary awards)

Five other artists—Liza Minnelli, James Earl Jones, Barbra Streisand, Harry Belafonte, and Quincy Jones—have also received all four awards, but at least one of the awards was non-competitive, i.e., special or honorary in nature.

Qualifying awards summary (competitive only)

Richard Rodgers

Richard Rodgers, a composer, received his fourth distinct award in 1962. Between 1945 and 1979, Rodgers received a total of 13 awards.
Helen Hayes, an actress, received her fourth distinct award in 1977. Between 1932 and 1980, Hayes received a total of 7 awards. She was the first woman to win all four. Hayes was also the first person to win the Triple Crown of Acting, with singular acting wins in each of the Emmy, Oscar and Tony awards, winning her third in 1953. Counting only the first award of each type, she also has the distinction of the longest timespan between her first and fourth award of any showbiz Grand Slam winner.
Rita Moreno, an actress, received her fourth distinct award in 1977. Between 1961 and 1978, Moreno received a total of five awards. She is also the first Hispanic winner and the first winner to win a Grammy as their second award. In addition, she became a Kennedy Center Honoree in 2015 and on March 28, 2019, it was announced that she would receive a Peabody Award.
John Gielgud, an actor, received his fourth distinct award in 1991. Between 1948 and 1991, Gielgud received a total of six awards. Gielgud was the first winner to win any award other than the Oscar as their first award. At age 87 when he won his Emmy, he was also the oldest winner, and is the first LGBT winner.
Audrey Hepburn, an actress, received her fourth distinct award posthumously in 1994. Between 1953 and 1994, Hepburn received a total of six awards. She was the fifth person to complete the feat and the first to do so posthumously. She was also the first winner to win two of their awards in consecutive awards shows. She is one of the only two EGOT winners to not win multiple awards in any of the four award fields.
Marvin Hamlisch, a composer, received his fourth distinct award in 1995. Between 1973 and 2001, Hamlisch received a total of 12 awards. Before Alan Menken joined the group in 2020, Hamlisch had the most Oscars of any Grand Slam winners. In 1974 he became the first winner to have won a "General Field" Grammy – taking Song of the Year and Best New Artist. He was also the first Grand Slam winner to have won multiple legs of the feat for the same work – an Oscar and a Grammy for song "The Way We Were".
Jonathan Tunick, a composer, conductor, and music arranger, received his fourth distinct award in 1997. Between 1977 and 1997, Tunick received a total of four awards. Tunick is the first Grand Slam winner to have won an Emmy as their second award as well as the first to win the Tony as their fourth award. He is also the second person to not win any multiple awards in any of the four award fields.
Mel Brooks, a director, writer and actor, received his fourth distinct award in June 2001. Between 1968 and 2002, Brooks received a total of 11 awards. Brooks was the first person to win the Emmy as the first award, and the first winner to have won his Oscar for screenwriting.
When he appeared on the January 30, 2015 episode of Real Time with Bill Maher, Brooks called himself an EGOTAK, noting that he had also received awards from the American Film Institute and Kennedy Center.

Mike Nichols

Mike Nichols, a director, actor and comedian, received his fourth distinct award in November 2001. Between 1961 and 2012, Nichols received a total of 15 awards. Nichols was the first slam winner to win the Grammy as their first award, the first winner to have won multiple awards for directing. When counting all awards won—not just the first of each type—Nichols has the longest timespan of awards among Grand Slam winners, at 51 years.
Whoopi Goldberg, an actress, comedian and talk-show host, received her fourth distinct award in 2002. Between 1985 and 2009, Goldberg received a total of 6 awards. Goldberg is the first African American winner, the first to win the Oscar as their second award, and the first to win two of their different awards in the same year.
Notes: Although she has not won a competitive Primetime Emmy award, she has been nominated several times. The fact that she does not have a competitive Primetime Emmy Award has led to debate over her inclusion in the "official list." In the 30 Rock episode "Dealbreakers Talk Show*#0001", Goldberg addresses this when questioned by character Tracy Jordan about her Daytime Emmy: "It still counts! Girl's gotta eat!"

Scott Rudin

Scott Rudin is an American film, TV and theater producer. He received his fourth distinct award in 2012. Between 1984 and 2019, Rudin received a total of 20 awards making him the record holder for most awards won among the people who have won all four awards in competitive categories, up until Alan Menken displaced him with 21 wins in 2020. Rudin is the first winner who is primarily a producer.
Robert Lopez, a songwriter, received his fourth distinct award in 2014. Between 2004 and 2018, Lopez received a total of 10 awards. Like fellow EGOT winner Whoopi Goldberg, his Emmy awards are Daytime Emmys. Lopez is the first Filipino and Asian to achieve this feat. He is also the youngest winner to receive all four awards in competitive categories, as well as the fastest to complete his qualifying run of EGOT award wins.
He received his Grammy Award for The Book of Mormon in collaboration with fellow EGOT winner Scott Rudin, making them the first pair of Grand Slam winners to have been co-winners of the same award. Lopez is also the first person to have won the Oscar last, which he won with his wife Kristen Anderson-Lopez. He is also the first winner to win the so-called "Double EGOT", winning each EGOT award twice.
John Legend, a musician and producer, received his fourth distinct award in 2018. Between 2006 and 2018, Legend received a total of 14 awards. Legend has won the most Grammy Awards, 11, of any EGOT recipient, and is the first recipient who is primarily a musical performer. In addition to being the first black man to achieve EGOT status, Legend is the first person to receive the four awards in four consecutive years. He is also the first, and to date only EGOT recipient to have won both a competitive Primetime and Daytime Emmy Award. Legend, Andrew Lloyd Webber, and Tim Rice all simultaneously became EGOT recipients on September 9, 2018, when they were collectively awarded the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Variety Special for Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert.
Andrew Lloyd Webber, a musical theatre composer, songwriter and producer, received his fourth distinct award in 2018. Between 1980 and 2018, Lloyd Webber received a total of 13 awards.
Tim Rice, a lyricist and producer, received his fourth distinct award in 2018. Between 1980 and 2018, Rice received a total of 12 awards, and shares some of his awards with his regular collaborator Andrew Lloyd Webber.
, composer and songwriter, received his fourth distinct award in 2020. Between 1989 and 2020, Menken received a total of 21 awards. He has the most Oscar wins by a grand slam winner and is the second most prolific Oscar winner in the music categories after Alfred Newman. He is also notable for frequently having multiple songs from the same film nominated for major awards.
  1. 1989: Best Original Score – The Little Mermaid
  2. 1989: Best Original Song – "Under the Sea" from The Little Mermaid
  3. 1991: Best Original Score – Beauty and the Beast
  4. 1991: Best Original Song – "Beauty and the Beast" from Beauty and the Beast
  5. 1992: Best Original Score – Aladdin
  6. 1992: Best Original Song – "A Whole New World" from Aladdin
  7. 1995: Best Original Musical or Comedy ScorePocahontas
  8. 1995: Best Original Song – "Colors of the Wind" from Pocahontas
  1. 1990: Outstanding contribution to the success of the Academy's anti-drug special for children – "Wonderful Ways to Say No" from the TV special Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue '
  1. 2020: Outstanding Original Song in a Children’s, Young Adult or Animated Program – "Waiting in the Wings" from Rapunzel's Tangled Adventure
  1. 1991: Best Recording for Children – The Little Mermaid: Original Walt Disney Records Soundtrack
  2. 1991: Best Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or Television – "Under the Sea" from The Little Mermaid
  3. 1993: Best Album for Children – Beauty and the Beast: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
  4. 1993: Best Instrumental Composition Written for a Motion Picture or for TelevisionBeauty and the Beast: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
  5. 1993: Best Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or Television – "Beauty and the Beast" from Beauty and the Beast
  6. 1994: Song of the Year – "A Whole New World " from Aladdin
  7. 1994: Best Musical Album for Children – Aladdin: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
  8. 1994: Best Instrumental Composition Written for a Motion Picture or for Television – Aladdin: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
  9. 1994: Best Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or Television – "A Whole New World" from Aladdin
  10. 1996: Best Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or Television – "Colors of the Wind" from Pocahontas
  11. 2012: Best Song Written for Visual Media – "I See the Light" from Tangled
  1. 2012: Best Original Score – Newsies''

    Winners including non-competitive awards

The following artists have also received all of the four major awards. However, in each case, one of these awards has been received only in an honorary or other non-competitive category.

Barbra Streisand

Barbra Streisand, a singer and actress, received her fourth distinct award in 1970. Between 1963 and 2001, Streisand received a total of 18 awards. Having completed the showbiz Grand Slam at age 28, she is the youngest winner, and with just six years elapsing between her first award and her final award, Streisand also completed the Grand Slam in the shortest amount of time. She is also the only winner to have won an Oscar in both a music and an acting category. She is also the only winner to have won all of her competitive awards for her debut performances. She also received the Peabody Award, the AFI Life Achievement Award, the Kennedy Center Honor, the Cecil B. DeMille Award, the National Medal of Arts, the American Society of Cinematographers Board of Governors Award, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
  1. 1968: Best Actress in a Leading Role – Funny Girl
  2. 1976: Best Music, Song – "Evergreen "
  1. 1965: Outstanding Individual Achievements in Entertainment – Actors and Performers – My Name is Barbra
  2. 1995: Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program – Barbra Streisand: The Concert
  3. 1995: Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Special – Barbra Streisand: The Concert
  4. 2001: Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program – '
  1. 2001: Outstanding Special Class Special – Reel Models: The First Women of Film
  1. 1964: Best Vocal Performance, Female – The Barbra Streisand Album
  2. 1964: Album Of The Year – The Barbra Streisand Album
  3. 1965: Best Vocal Performance, Female – "People"
  4. 1966: Best Vocal Performance, Female – My Name Is Barbra
  5. 1977: Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female – "Evergreen "
  6. 1977: Song Of The Year – "Evergreen "
  7. 1980: Best Pop Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal – "Guilty"
  8. 1986: Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female – The Broadway Album
  9. 1992: Special Grammy Award: Grammy Legend Award '
  10. 1995: Special Grammy Award: Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award '
  1. 1970: Special Tony Award: Star of the Decade '

    Liza Minnelli

Liza Minnelli, an actress and singer, received her fourth distinct award in 1990. Between 1965 and 2009, Minnelli received a total of 7 awards.
  1. 1972: Best Actress in a Leading Role – Cabaret
  1. 1973: Outstanding Single Program − Variety and Popular Music – Liza with a 'Z'. A Concert for Television
  1. 1990: Special Grammy Award: Grammy Legend Award '
  1. 1965: Best Leading Actress in a Musical – Flora the Red Menace
  2. 1974: Special Tony Award for "adding lustre to the Broadway season" '
  3. 1978: Best Leading Actress in a Musical – The Act
  4. 2009: Best Special Theatrical Event – Liza's at The Palace...!

    James Earl Jones

James Earl Jones, an actor, received his fourth distinct award in 2011. Between 1969 and 2011, Jones received a total of 7 awards.
  1. 2011: Academy Honorary Award '
  1. 1991: Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama SeriesGabriel's Fire
  2. 1991: Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie – Heat Wave
  1. 2000: Outstanding Performer − Children's Special – Summer's End
  1. 1977: Best Spoken Word Recording
  1. 1969: Best Leading Actor in a Play – The Great White Hope
  2. 1987: Best Leading Actor in a Play – Fences
  3. 2017: Special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Theatre '

    Harry Belafonte

Harry Belafonte, an actor, received his fourth distinct award in 2014. Between 1954 and 2014, Belafonte received a total of 6 awards.
  1. 2014: Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award '
  1. 1960: Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program – Tonight with Belafonte - The Revlon Revue
  1. 1961: Best Performance Folk – Swing Dat Hammer
  2. 1966: Best Folk Performance – An Evening With Belafonte/Makeba
  3. 2000: Grammy Hall of Fame Award
  1. 1954: Best Featured Actor in a Musical – John Murray Anderson's Almanac''

    Quincy Jones

Quincy Jones, an American record producer, actor and composer, received his fourth distinct award in 2016. Between 1964 and 2016, Jones received a total of 31 awards — the highest number of awards of any grand slam winner. He has 27 Grammy Awards and a Grammy Legend Award received in 1992.
  1. 1994: Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award '
  1. 1977: Outstanding Music Composition for a SeriesRoots
  1. 1964: Best Instrumental Arrangement – "I Can't Stop Loving You"
  2. 1970: Best Instrumental Jazz Performance - Large Group Or Soloist With Large Group – Walking in Space
  3. 1972: Best Pop Instrumental Performance – Smackwater Jack
  4. 1974: Best Instrumental Arrangement – "Summer in the City"
  5. 1979: Best Instrumental Arrangement – "The Wiz Main Title "
  6. 1981: Best Instrumental Arrangement – "Dinorah, Dinorah"
  7. 1982: Producer Of The Year
  8. 1982: Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocal – "Ai No Corrida"
  9. 1982: Best Arrangement On An Instrumental Recording – "Velas"
  10. 1982: Best Cast Show Album – '
  11. 1982: Best R&B Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal – The Dude
  12. 1984: Producer Of The Year
  13. 1984: Best Recording For Children – E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial
  14. 1984: Album Of The Year – Thriller
  15. 1984: Record Of The Year – "Beat It"
  16. 1985: Best Arrangements On An Instrumental – "Grace "
  17. 1986: Best Music Video, Short Form – "We Are the World – The Video Event"
  18. 1986: Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal – "We Are the World"
  19. 1986: Record Of The Year – "We Are the World"
  20. 1991: Producer Of The Year
  21. 1991: Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocal – "The Places You Find Love"
  22. 1991: Best Arrangement On An Instrumental – "Birdland"
  23. 1991: Best Jazz Fusion Performance – "Birdland"
  24. 1991: Best Rap Performance By A Duo Or Group – "Back on the Block"
  25. 1991: Album Of The Year – Back on the Block
  26. 1994: Best Large Jazz Ensemble PerformanceMiles & Quincy Live at Montreux
  27. 2002: Best Spoken Word Album – Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones
  28. 2019: Best Music Film – Quincy
  1. 2016: Best Revival of a Musical – The Color Purple

    Three competitive awards

The following people have each won three out of the four major entertainment awards in competitive categories.

Missing a Tony Award

  1. John Addison
  2. Julie Andrews
  3. Burt Bacharach
  4. Alan Bergman
  5. Marilyn Bergman
  6. Jon Blair
  7. George Burns
  8. Cher
  9. Common
  10. Michael Giacchino
  11. Alex Gibson
  12. Brian Grazer
  13. Hildur Guðnadóttir
  14. Ron Howard
  15. James MollPA
  16. Morgan Neville
  17. Randy Newman
  18. Sid Ramin
  19. Caitrin Rogers
  20. Martin Scorsese
  21. Barbra Streisand◊, NCA
  22. Peter Ustinov†, ◊
  23. John Williams
  24. Robin Williams
  25. Kate Winslet

    Missing a Grammy Award

  26. Jack Albertson†, TC
  27. Anne Bancroft†, TC
  28. Ingrid Bergman†, TC
  29. Shirley Booth†, TC
  30. Ralph Burns
  31. Ellen BurstynTC
  32. Viola DavisTC
  33. Melvyn Douglas†, TC
  34. Bob Fosse
  35. Jeremy Irons◊, TC
  36. Glenda JacksonTC
  37. Jessica LangeTC
  38. Frances McDormandTC
  39. Liza Minnelli◊, NCA
  40. Helen MirrenTC
  41. Thomas Mitchell†, TC
  42. Al Pacino◊, TC
  43. Christopher Plummer◊, TC
  44. Vanessa RedgraveTC
  45. Jason Robards†, TC
  46. Geoffrey RushTC
  47. Paul Scofield†, TC
  48. Maggie SmithTC
  49. Maureen Stapleton†, TC
  50. Jessica Tandy†, TC
  51. Tony Walton

    Missing an Emmy Award

  52. Henry Fonda†, ◊
  53. Oscar Hammerstein II†, PP
  54. Elton John
  55. Alan Jay Lerner
  56. Frank Loesser†, PP
  57. Benj Pasek
  58. Justin Paul
  59. Stephen SondheimPP
  60. Jule Styne

    Missing an Academy Award (Oscar)

  61. Harry BelafonteNCA
  62. Leonard Bernstein†, ◊
  63. Jerry Bock†, PP
  64. Martin Charnin†, PA
  65. Cy Coleman†, ◊
  66. André De Shields
  67. Fred Ebb†, ◊
  68. Cynthia Erivo
  69. Anne GarefinoPA
  70. George Grizzard
  71. Julie Harris†, ◊
  72. Hugh Jackman
  73. James Earl Jones◊, NCA
  74. Quincy Jones◊, NCA
  75. Rachel Bay Jones
  76. John Kander
  77. Alex Lacamoire
  78. Cyndi Lauper
  79. Katrina Lenk
  80. Audra McDonald
  81. Bette Midler
  82. Lin-Manuel Miranda◊, PP
  83. Cynthia Nixon
  84. Trey Parker◊, PA
  85. Ben Platt
  86. Billy Porter
  87. Marc Shaiman
  88. Bill Sherman
  89. Ari'el Stachel
  90. Matt StonePA
  91. Charles StrousePA
  92. Lily Tomlin◊, PA
  93. Dick Van Dyke
  94. James Whitmore†, ◊
  95. David Yazbek

    Three awards (non-competitive)

In addition to the above winners, the following people have each won three out of the four major entertainment awards in either competitive categories or non-competitive special and honorary categories.
  1. Howard Ashman†, ◊ won two competitive Oscars, five competitive Grammy Awards, and a Special Emmy Award.
  2. Fred Astaire won three competitive Emmy Awards, a Special Academy Award, and a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.
  3. Robert Russell Bennett won a competitive Emmy Award, a competitive Oscar, and two Special Tony Awards.
  4. Irving Berlin won an Academy Award, a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, and a competitive Tony award.
  5. Carol Burnett won six competitive Emmy Awards, one competitive Grammy award, and a Special Tony award.
  6. Walt Disney won 26 competitive Academy Awards, seven competitive Emmy Awards, and a Grammy Trustees Award.
  7. Ray Dolby won an Academy Scientific and Technical Award, two Technology & Engineering Emmy Awards, and a Special Merit/Technical Grammy Award.
  8. Judy Garland†, ◊ won an Academy Juvenile Award, two competitive Grammy Awards, and a Special Tony Award.
  9. Eileen Heckart won a competitive Academy Award, a competitive Emmy Award, and a Special Tony Award.
  10. Barry Manilow won two competitive Emmy Awards, a competitive Grammy Award, and a Special Tony Award.
  11. Steve Martin won the Honorary Academy Award, a competitive Emmy Award, and five competitive Grammy Awards.
  12. Laurence Olivier†, ◊ won two competitive Oscars, five competitive Emmy Awards, and a Special Tony Award.
  13. Stephen Schwartz won three competitive Oscars, three competitive Grammys and the Isabelle Stevenson Award, a non-competitive Tony Award.
  14. Bruce Springsteen won 20 competitive Grammys, a competitive Academy Award, and a Special Tony Award.
  15. Thomas Stockham won an Academy Scientific and Technical Award, a Technology & Engineering Emmy Award, and a Technical Grammy Award.
  16. Cicely Tyson won three competitive Emmy Awards, a competitive Tony Award, and an Academy Honorary Award.
  17. Eli Wallach won a competitive Tony Award, a competitive Emmy Award, and an Academy Honorary Award.
  18. Oprah Winfrey won competitive Emmy Awards, a competitive Tony Award, and the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, a non-competitive Academy Award.

    Four nominations

The following people have not won all four awards in competitive categories, but have received at least one nomination for each of them:
  1. Lynn Ahrens
  2. Alan Alda
  3. Woody Allen
  4. Judith Anderson
  5. Kristen Anderson-Lopez
  6. Julie Andrews
  7. Alan Arkin
  8. Howard Ashman
  9. Burt Bacharach
  10. Lauren Bacall
  11. Elmer Bernstein
  12. Leonard Bernstein
  13. Ralph Burns
  14. Ellen Burstyn
  15. Richard Burton
  16. Sammy Cahn
  17. Keith Carradine
  18. Diahann Carroll
  19. Stockard Channing
  20. Glenn Close
  21. Cy Coleman
  22. Fred Ebb
  23. Cynthia Erivo
  24. José Ferrer
  25. Henry Fonda
  26. Jane Fonda
  27. Morgan Freeman
  28. Judy Garland
  29. Jack Gilford
  30. Brian Grazer
  31. Joel Grey
  32. Julie Harris
  33. Katharine Hepburn
  34. Jeremy Irons
  35. Hugh Jackman
  36. James Earl Jones
  37. Quincy Jones
  38. John Kander
  39. Angela Lansbury
  40. Michel Legrand
  41. Jack Lemmon
  42. John Lithgow
  43. Kenny Loggins
  44. Steve Martin
  45. Bette Midler
  46. Liza Minnelli
  47. Lin-Manuel Miranda
  48. Paul Newman
  49. Laurence Olivier
  50. Al Pacino
  51. Trey Parker
  52. Dolly Parton
  53. Benj Pasek
  54. Justin Paul
  55. Christopher Plummer
  56. Sidney Poitier
  57. André Previn
  58. Lynn Redgrave
  59. Vanessa Redgrave
  60. Mark Ruffalo
  61. Adam Schlesinger
  62. Paul Scofield
  63. Marc Shaiman
  64. David Shire
  65. Paul Simon
  66. Glenn Slater
  67. Will Smith
  68. Tom Snow
  69. Kevin Spacey
  70. Bruce Springsteen
  71. Sting
  72. Barbra Streisand
  73. Meryl Streep
  74. Lily Tomlin
  75. Stanley Tucci
  76. Peter Ustinov
  77. Jimmy Van Heusen
  78. Denzel Washington
  79. James Whitmore
  80. Scott Wittman
  81. Hans Zimmer

    PEGOT

A PEGOT winner is someone who has won all four EGOT awards as well as a Peabody Award or Pulitzer Prize.
EGOT winners who have also won a Peabody Award:
  1. Barbra Streisand
  2. Mike Nichols
  3. Rita Moreno
EGOT winners who have also won a Pulitzer Prize:
  1. Richard Rodgers
  2. Marvin Hamlisch
People who have won a Peabody, and are only missing one EGOT award:
  1. Carol Burnett
  2. Martin Charnin
  3. Anne Garefino
  4. James Moll
  5. Trey Parker
  6. Matt Stone
  7. Charles Strouse
  8. Lily Tomlin
  9. Cicely Tyson
  10. Oprah Winfrey
Of these ten, only Charnin is deceased as of 2020. Parker and Tomlin were nominated for a 1999 Oscar for Best Original Song and 1975 Oscar for Best Supporting Actress, respectively, but did not win.
People who have won a Pulitzer, and are only missing one EGOT award:
  1. Jerry Bock
  2. Oscar Hammerstein II
  3. Frank Loesser
  4. Lin-Manuel Miranda
  5. Stephen Sondheim
Of these five, only Miranda and Sondheim are still alive as of 2020. Miranda was nominated for a 2017 Oscar for Best Original Song but did not win.