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Actress.
Born Vivian Mary Hartley, on November 5, 1913, in Darjeeling, India.
Her father had moved to India from Britain as a young man; when
Hartley was six years old, her family returned to England, where she
attended convent school. She also studied in Europe, where she
became fluent in French and Italian (she later dubbed her own films)
as well as English. At age 19, she married Leigh Holman, a prominent
British barrister. The couple had a daughter, Suzanne, in 1933.
After an apprenticeship at the
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, she made her first successful stage
appearance in a 1935 production of The Mask of Virtue, as
Vivien Leigh (from her husband�s name). She made her film debut in
Things Are Looking Up (1935). In 1937, she made her first
screen appearance opposite her lover, Laurence Olivier, in the
costume epic Fire Over England. Even before she had met him,
the beautiful, headstrong Leigh reportedly told friends she would
marry Olivier, who was already a successful theatre and film star.
By the end of 1935, the two had begun a passionate (and very public)
affair, though both were married to other people (Olivier to the
actress Jill Esmond).
In 1938, Leigh moved to
Hollywood in order to be with Olivier and to campaign for the most
sought-after role in history�that of tempestuous Southern belle
Scarlett O�Hara in producer David O. Selznick�s film version of
Margaret Mitchell�s novel Gone with the Wind. After a
two-year nationwide talent search, including auditions by some of
Hollywood�s leading actresses, Leigh won the coveted role in
December 1938, after filming had already begun. With the premiere of
the film a year later, Leigh became a major star, capturing an
Academy Award for Best Actress. The film won a total of eight Oscars,
including Best Picture, Best Director (Victor Fleming), and Best
Supporting Actress (Hattie McDaniel, who became the first
African-American ever to capture an Academy Award). Clark Gable, who
co-starred as Rhett Butler, and Olivia de Havilland, who played
Scarlett�s kindly rival Melanie Wilkes, also earned Oscar nods,
for Best Actor and Best Supporting Actress respectively.
Leigh�s new stardom pushed
her affair with Olivier into the international spotlight, and in
1940 Esmond and Holman both filed for divorce from their wayward
spouses. Leigh and Olivier were married in August 1940. Though she
lost the co-starring role in Alfred Hitchcock�s Rebecca
(1940) to Joan Fontaine, Leigh went on to appear with her new
husband in a U.S. stage production of Romeo and Juliet in
1940 and two films, 21 Days (1940) and That Hamilton Woman
(1941). After the filming of the latter, the couple moved back to
London to live and act on stage. Their collaborations included a
London production of Macbeth, various touring productions in
Australia and New Zealand in 1948, and repertory productions of Antony
and Cleopatra and George Bernard Shaw�s Caesar and
Cleopatra in 1951.
Plagued by tuberculosis (which
she began suffering from as early as 1945) and manic depression,
Leigh appeared in only eight films after Gone with the Wind.
In addition to That Hamilton Woman, she also starred in Waterloo
Bridge (1940), opposite Robert Taylor; Caesar and Cleopatra
(1946), opposite Claude Rains; Anna Karenina (1948); The
Deep Blue Sea (1955); The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone
(1961), opposite Warren Beatty; and Ship of Fools (1965). Her
best received film after Gone With the Wind was Elia Kazan�s
A Streetcar Named Desire (1951), co-starring Marlon Brando,
Kim Hunter, and Karl Malden. Leigh first played the aging Southern
belle Blanche DuBois in a 1949 stage version of the Tennessee
Williams play�she earned her second Academy Award for Best Actress
for her emotionally wrenching performance in the film version.
Leigh�s increasingly poor
physical and mental health contributed to the demise of her
always-turbulent marriage to Olivier. A 1957 London production of
Shakespeare�s Titus Andronicus marked the last joint
onstage appearance by the couple, who divorced in 1960. Olivier went
on to marry another actress, Joan Plowright; he died in 1989.
During the 1960s, Leigh
continued to make a series of impressive stage appearances,
including her 1963 Broadway debut in Tovarich, for which she
won a Tony Award for Best Actress. In later years, she grew unable
to maintain a show for a long run, as her deteriorating health led
her to frequently miss performances. Leigh made her last stage
appearance in a 1966 production of Ivanov, alongside her
longtime companion, the actor Jack Merivale, with whom she had lived
since her divorce from Olivier. Leigh died of tuberculosis in London
on July 8, 1967.
� 2000 A&E Television
Networks. All rights reserved.
Filmography:
1935 Look Up and Laugh
1935 The Village Squire
1935 Gentlemen's Agreement
1935 Things Are Looking Up
1937 Storm in a Teacup
1937 Fire Over England
1937 Dark Journey
1938 Sidewalks of London
1938 A Yank at Oxford
1939 Gone with the Wind
1940 21 Days
1940 Waterloo Bridge
1941 That Hamilton Woman
1946 Caesar and Cleopatra
1948 Anna Karenina
1951 A Streetcar Named Desire
1955 The Deep Blue Sea
1961 The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone
1965 Ship of Fools
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