Skip to main content

On and off screen, Olivia de Havilland exhibited grit and grace


On screen and off, Olivia de Havilland embodied grit and grace.  (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

(CNN)Olivia de Havilland represented a throwback to a bygone era, one of the last vestiges of Hollywood during its glamorous golden age. On screen, her characters held their own opposite Scarlett O'Hara and Robin Hood, appearing in black and white and florid color.

Although she was a beautiful, often demure personality in movies, de Havilland exhibited a grit offscreen that might have helped explain her longevity, dying decades after many of her co-stars, at the age of 104.
As if to punctuate that point, the actress sued the FX network production of "Feud: Bette and Joan," a series devoted to Bette Davis and Joan Crawford, for its depiction of her as a supporting player, making clear that even as a centenarian, she was not someone with which to trifle.
    De Havilland, famously, had gone to court to protect her rights before, suing Warner Bros. -- at the height of her career -- after the studio suspended her for demanding more substantial roles and rejecting scripts. Sidelined for the duration of the lawsuit, de Havilland won the case, and in the process struck a blow for the freedom of actors that had been bound by the strictures of the studio system.
    Born in Japan to British parents, de Havilland moved to California as a child and was noticed in a school play by the director Max Reinhardt, who cast her in "A Midsummer Night's Dream." (Her sister, Joan Fontaine, also became a famous actress, although their relationship was notoriously stormy.)
    De Havilland was still in her teens when she stunningly arrived on screen opposite the swashbuckling Errol Flynn, co-starring in "Captain Blood" in 1935 before playing Maid Marian in "The Adventures of Robin Hood" three years later.
    The next year, Warner Bros. -- with whom she had signed a seven-year contract -- loaned her to producer David O. Selznick to portray the kindly Melanie in "Gone With the Wind," losing out on an Oscar for best supporting actress to her history-making African-American co-star, Hattie McDaniel.
    After her court victory, de Havilland embarked on a varied series of roles in the 1940s that established her as more than an ingenue and great beauty. She won an Oscar in 1946 for "To Each His Own," followed by playing a mental patient in "The Snake Pit," then earned another Academy Award for her performance as an unassuming woman courted for her fortune by an ambitious suitor, played by Montgomery Clift, in "The Heiress."
    In the 1950s, de Havilland's film career slowed to a trickle, though she continued to appear on stage and TV, and in the movie "Hush ... Hush, Sweet Charlotte." Her last roles were in TV movies in the late 1980s, and she eventually retired quietly to France.
    Throughout her career, de Havilland exhibited a quiet grace and strength, even when cast in what amounted to damsel-in-distress roles. All told, she and Flynn would co-star in eight movies, serving as a virtual model for dashing romance that has survived across the decades. (De Havilland spoke about their relationship, and some of her other Hollywood dalliances, in a People magazine interview that coincided with her 100th birthday.)
      In an 2015 interview with Entertainment Weekly, de Havilliand said watching "Gone With the Wind" didn't make her sad, even though all of her co-stars were gone. "When I see them vibrantly alive on screen, I experience a kind of reunion with them, a joyful one," she said.
      While de Havilland's long life might be over, her storied career will stay, as she so eloquently put it, vibrantly and joyfully alive.

                                                                                              source:CNN

      Comments

      Popular posts from this blog

      Google just put a photo of the Pixel 4A on its store 38 .Is the next budget Pixel finally coming soon?

      Image: Google Where is Google’s Pixel 4A? Sitting right on the company’s online store, as it turns out. Google seems to have mistakenly published an image of the Pixel 4A on its Canadian store. The text says “Nest Wifi,” but uh... that’s no Nest Wifi. The phone has already leaked extensively over the last few months, but this is a marketing render direct from Google — and it suggests that the 4A might finally be coming sometime in the near future. Note also that the screen has a date of May 12th on it, which is pretty solid confirmation that Google did originally plan to launch the 4A during its annual developers conference before it was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Nest Wifi, you say? I don’t think so. RELATED The 4A seen in the photo has a matte black finish with a light blue power button and the large camera cutout we’ve seen in prior leaks; there’s just one camera in there, though. Thankfully the headphone jack is still up there at the top. The phone is believed to have 

      This is the first known particle with four of the same kind of quark-The exotic particle could be a unique testing ground for ideas about how quarks interact

      In a never-before-seen particle, four quarks of a feather flock together. Physicists think they have detected the first conglomerate of four quarks incorporating more than two of the same kind. This tetraquark contains  four quarks of the charm variety : two charm quarks and their antimatter counterparts, called anticharm quarks, researchers report online at arXiv.org on June 30. Quarks — fundamental building blocks of matter — typically make up three-quark particles, like protons and neutrons, or quark-antiquark pairs, like pions and kaons. Physicists have observed some more exotic  quark quartets  ( SN: 4/11/14 ) and  even quintets  ( SN: 7/14/15 ). But the new four-quark particle, dubbed X(6900), is the first four-quark particle with all of the same type. Since charm quarks and their anticharm counterparts are among the heaviest types of quarks, it is also the first tetraquark to include more than two heavy quarks. “It’s a pretty exciting finding,” says physicist Matthew Shepherd of

      Ed Sheeran: 'I'd binge eat until I was sick'

      Sheeran has revealed how his "very addictive personality" led him to binge on food and alcohol during the early days of his success. Speaking at an  online summit on anxiety and wellbeing  , the star said he had suffered panic attacks and hated the way he looked after becoming famous. He hit a particularly rough patch during his 2014-15 world tour. "I felt, 'What was the point?' In a dark way, like, 'Why am I around? What is the point?'" he said. The star said credited his wife, Cherry, and a more healthy lifestyle for helping him turn his life around. "She exercises a lot, so I started going on runs with her. She eats quite healthily so I started eating quite healthily. She doesn't drink that much so I wasn't drinking," he said. "I think that all changed things." If you're affected by any of the issues raised in this story, the BBC's Action Line can help you find support. In a wide-ranging interview with documenta